May 21-22, 2022
Travel to Copenhagen
Because of a large credit on United from a COVID-cancelled
Portugal trip (which had to be used or lost) the only airline we could use to
go to Copenhagen was Lufthansa through Frankfurt. Although United is a partner with SAS, their
nonstops to Copenhagen from the States are not codeshares, and thus not
eligible for booking on United. It didn’t
go well. Rochester-Dulles on United was
fine. Lufthansa is the rare airline
still flying 747s, and Dulles-Frankfurt was on a 747-8, an absolutely enormous
airplane. This becomes relevant later in
this process.
We took off two hours late, guaranteeing that we would
miss our connection in Frankfurt to Copenhagen.
It seems Frankfurt is a very busy airport, and it clearly doesn’t have
enough terminal space. There are
airplanes parked all over the place with stairs up to them, and that’s what our
747 did. We parked on an apron by the
Lufthansa cargo terminal, but there were stairs there which were brought to the
plane. Unfortunately, there were no
busses to take us to the terminal, so we sat for about 20 minutes until the
first bus came. One bus for 364
passengers. Slowly, more buses
came. Ultimately, we got to the
terminal, and found the Lufthansa service desk.
Chaos. There were six
windows and five agents, and a line of dozens.
Passengers were angry, agents were grumpy, and, tired and frustrated, we
were grumpy too. When I finally got to
an agent (Joyce was sitting) I was told they have multiple flights to Copenhagen
but they’re all full. So I just stood
there and looked at the agent. Finally,
he said he would look at SAS, and he found a 3:30 PM flight which had just two seats. He took them grudgingly (I guess Lufthansa
will have to pay SAS) and gave me boarding passes. So instead of a mid-morning flight, we went
mid-afternoon.
But SAS was great.
It was only an hour and ten minutes, but they fed us a lovely meal:
North Germany was interesting to look at. I think the farmland is different from the US
farmland, in that there don’t seem to be farmhouses! There are vast plots of farmland, and
multiple small villages and as best as I could determine, the farm families
live in the villages:
Denmark is composed of one large peninsula going north
from Germany and multiple islands, east of the mainland. Copenhagen is on a large island. As we crossed the North Sea and came on the
first of the islands, it was easy to see how low they are and how a rising sea
level will be problematic:
We came to the large island of Zealand, which contains
Copenhagen, and the coast seemed to be made of white cliffs. There were vast yellow fields which we both
think were canola flowers.
But we’re
there now, checked into our hotel, and ready for a good sleep. Godnat!
Customer service and the word "airline" have no intersection. I am fighting with Delta on a credit they owe me. No human anywhere. Just an automated loop that goes in a large circle. At least you arrived. Sleep well. Michael
ReplyDeleteUgh, travel - air travel - seems to be less and less appealing. Hopefully, the good part will start now!
ReplyDeleteI just love that photo of Zealand Island. We've been seeing fields of small yellow flowers on tall stalks here as well. Maybe they're canola as well (which I think is the species that used to be called rapeseed--I can understand why they preferred to substitute a newfangled name for it).
ReplyDelete