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Plane over Maho Beach, St. Martin © Shutterbug |
There is no time a southern escape is more required or more appreciated by a Torontonian than in February. The mercury has been below zero for weeks on end, and six-foot icicles are hanging from our eaves. They are also falling from the eaves, and hit my honey in the back of the head as she tried to clear a path to our recycling bins. Time to get away.
For the first time in recent memory, our flight was at a decent hour (11 a.m.), meaning we had the luxury of sleeping in until 6 a.m. before getting ourselves ready and taking the dogs to their home away from home–where they take off at a full gallop once released with nary a look back at us. Everything went according to plan, and the Park 'N Fly shuttle at the airport picked us up in five minutes. Thank God, because despite layering our summer clothing, February is simply too damn cold to bear for long without a parka. The speedy transfer was also appreciated because the couple waiting at the shelter with us were both smoking their brains out, and blocking the doorway with their bags. Yuck.
Our seats were towards the back of our Air Canada flight, a newer 767 plane with the first-class section set up with individual futuristic pods. Pod people. I wonder if I'll ever experience what it feels like to sit in that section? I was just thrilled we were not on a charter for a change. Air Canada feels cleaner, roomier, and just more…well, dare I say Canadian?
The plane had a couple of technical issues–a panel above me leaking condensation in a dirty stream upon takeoff, and an entertainment system that kept crapping out and requiring a reboot. We had to go through the painful onscreen menu several times, sit through mandatory advertising clips, start the show…only to have the screen go blank and start all over again. I don't know that this is such a great improvement over the "old days" when we just brought a book. That was my solution, as the passengers groaned.
Several minutes into the flight we became hyper-aware of the couple sitting across the aisle from us, as did pretty much everyone else. Their every thought was voiced at top volume. "JOHN IS 26 AND SHE'S 22. DO YOU KNOW THAT A GENERATION AGO THEY'D ALREADY BE MARRIED WITH A COUPLA KIDS?" I tried to ignore them and focus on my book. The wife took out a crossword puzzle book. "WHAT'S THIS WORD HERE? SEE IT HAS TWO Ts, BUT I CAN'T GET THE REST. LOOK AT 81 DOWN. 81 DOWN. DO YOU KNOW WHAT THAT IS?"
The husband was even worse. "I DON'T KNOW 81, BUT I SEE 42 ACROSS. IT'S "ARRIVE". TO GET THERE IS TO ARRIVE." Then he leaned over the aisle to peer across us at the view out the window, and proceeded to describe the scene in excruciating detail to his wife. She mentioned she was hungry, so they proceeded to discuss food options. This brought about a more spirited conversation about food in general, both their likes and dislikes, at which point I decided to put on my noise-cancelling headphones, even though the in-flight system was not working. I caught the eye of the man sitting in the row behind them, who was shaking his head and mouthing the words "oh my God" to me. At that moment, the husband let loose an explosive burst of laughter that startled the wife of the man behind them, who was trying in vain to sleep. Her eyes flew open and met mine, at which point all three of us rolled our eyes and muttered "holy shit".
We lasted half an hour. By this time none of us were making any attempt to hide our irritation, and my wife had started to passive-aggressively mimic some of the couple's louder conversation–but they remained painfully oblivious. People on the far side of the plane were looking at each other incredulously as the chatter continued, and I just couldn't take it any longer. I tapped the man on the shoulder and said, "Excuse me, I don't know if you realize this, but the people around you can't focus on anything but what you are saying. Would you mind keeping it down a bit?" To my surprise he seemed embarrassed, nodded and said, "Ok, sure." And that was it for the rest of the flight! That never happens!
The food/beverage carts took well over an hour to reach us at the rear of the plane, and of course the bulk of items available for purchase were sold out. This turned out to be a blessing, because my sister was seated a few rows ahead and ate what we would have ordered - and was sick for the rest of the day. We ordered the one and only selection available, which was a roast beef sandwich for each of us. The older flight attendant with close-cropped grey hair who had previously seemed rather unfriendly suddenly seemed quite apologetic. She said she would only charge us for one sandwich and would comp us some wine as well, saying with a smile, "It's the least I can do." My lovely wife's intermittent gaydar kicked in, and leaned towards me to whisper, "Membership has its privileges."
Before we knew it, we were there.
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