May 16, 2023 2:52 pm
05 June 2025
"This is your captain speaking, we have begun our descent into SeaTac. Please put your seatbacks and tray tables in their upright and locked positions. The local time is one-thirty-seven in the morning, and the temperature is fifty three degrees. Looks like we should be expecting rain today, hope everyone brought a jacket. For now sit back and relax, we'll be on the ground shortly."
It's been a long, relatively boring flight -- as trans-pacific air travel tends to be. Fortunately, no babies spent the entire trip crying. Attendants had been by to pick up any trash for the last time about twenty minutes ago. The flight was packed, and most passengers had been asleep. The announcement roused them, and attendants made sure to wake anyone who needed to put up their tray or seat (as if they made the difference between life and death).
Minutes tick by. The more perceptive notice the plane seems to bank lazily. The more experienced with this flight know that's atypical. Still, never know who could be in the way.
More minutes tick by. It becomes notable that the plane is circline the airport. No announcement though, and the attendants aren't talking. Passengers are beginning to murmur amongst themselves as the circling is notuced. For those with the vantage point, the head flight attendant answers the phone from her jump seat, and after hanging up unbuckles herself and heads to the fore of the plane. A minute later she rushes to each other attendant and whispers something, before returning to her jumpseat and strapping in. She seems to pause a moment, then picks up the phone.
"This is your captain again. We do apologize for that delay, we were having a bit of a communications issue with the flight tower. We're good to go now though, and we'll be on the ground presently. Thank you again for flying with us today."
The plane does, in fact, seem to finish its bank and then descend. Minutes later, that familiar and reassuring bump of the landing gears contacting the tarmac jostles everyone and the plane slows as it taxies to the terminal.
Eventually the plan stops completely, and the "fasten seatbelt" sign is extinguished. A bunch of people stand, others aren't in a rush. But the doors... don't open. The head attendant rushes around, and after a few more minutes the door opens and they deploy the emergency slide. About half the attendants exit the plane, the other half staying near the doors to assist passengers in their egress.
This flight has certainly taken a turn.
"This is your captain speaking, we have begun our descent into SeaTac. Please put your seatbacks and tray tables in their upright and locked positions. The local time is one-thirty-seven in the morning, and the temperature is fifty three degrees. Looks like we should be expecting rain today, hope everyone brought a jacket. For now sit back and relax, we'll be on the ground shortly."
It's been a long, relatively boring flight -- as trans-pacific air travel tends to be. Fortunately, no babies spent the entire trip crying. Attendants had been by to pick up any trash for the last time about twenty minutes ago. The flight was packed, and most passengers had been asleep. The announcement roused them, and attendants made sure to wake anyone who needed to put up their tray or seat (as if they made the difference between life and death).
Minutes tick by. The more perceptive notice the plane seems to bank lazily. The more experienced with this flight know that's atypical. Still, never know who could be in the way.
More minutes tick by. It becomes notable that the plane is circline the airport. No announcement though, and the attendants aren't talking. Passengers are beginning to murmur amongst themselves as the circling is notuced. For those with the vantage point, the head flight attendant answers the phone from her jump seat, and after hanging up unbuckles herself and heads to the fore of the plane. A minute later she rushes to each other attendant and whispers something, before returning to her jumpseat and strapping in. She seems to pause a moment, then picks up the phone.
"This is your captain again. We do apologize for that delay, we were having a bit of a communications issue with the flight tower. We're good to go now though, and we'll be on the ground presently. Thank you again for flying with us today."
The plane does, in fact, seem to finish its bank and then descend. Minutes later, that familiar and reassuring bump of the landing gears contacting the tarmac jostles everyone and the plane slows as it taxies to the terminal.
Eventually the plan stops completely, and the "fasten seatbelt" sign is extinguished. A bunch of people stand, others aren't in a rush. But the doors... don't open. The head attendant rushes around, and after a few more minutes the door opens and they deploy the emergency slide. About half the attendants exit the plane, the other half staying near the doors to assist passengers in their egress.
This flight has certainly taken a turn.