Saturday, May 31, 2008

Stay at home. It makes sense.

I've plugged this over on No Rock, but - sitting here hoping my body clock will adjust to this time zone sometime soon - I think every traveller will enjoy Michael Moran's Sod Abroad, a book that should persuade you never to set foot in overseas again, or at least amuse you on the plane should you fail to follow its advice.

Stay out of the green and into the black if you know what you're doing when you go pack

I'd been meaning to write something about the US preflight screening 'lanes' that are being piloted at some airports - you're invited to join a black, orange or green lane depending on your experience and confidence at having your hand baggage x-rayed, the size of your group and so on. The black lane is for those of us who have our shoes off and laptops out as soon as we've been given our boarding pass - and it's as much about not having less-experienced travellers intimidated by business people getting impatient as they move through more slowly.

As it happens, I've just posted a comment to the TSA blog which sums up my experience, so I'll just recycle, if I may:

Just got back from the US, where I traveled through Salt Lake and Denver, and am a big fan of the new system - the thing that really surprised me was that people were surprisingly self-aware in choosing lanes; prior to the trip I'd assumed that the black lane would attract people who were over-confident about their familiarity with the system, but that wasn't really the case. Indeed, I'd suggest that there are people who could take the black route who aren't - that passengers tend to underestimate rather than overestimate their experience.

Overall, a very positive experience. Thank you!