Killing time
Today we fly to Manado in the north-eastern arm of Sulawesi. We had to checkout at 1000 as it was the required time for Tune Hotel. It wasn’t too much trouble to fill in the time till the 1550 departure:
- A leisurely breakfast at the patio of the hotel.
- Walked over to the Food Garden at the airport for cheap drinks and reading.
- Some more drinks and Wifi at another airport cafe (expensive) … the airport Wifi was a bit patchy.
It was better than the original 0650 departure at the time when we purchased the ticket; the flight was rescheduled some weeks afterwards.
After we boarded our flight bound for Manado, we were held up by an errant headcount caused by someone who had boarded the wrong plane to Denpasar instead. Fortunately, we managed to find quickly enough and on-load him rather than offload his luggage.
Should we even be flying?
Our feet felt a bit of vibration shortly after takeoff. The ground engineer onboard noticed that his bottle of water was ripply at the surface. He said there was something wrong but the pilots have logged it for attention.
Kim wasn’t comfortable with this. He didn’t feel that turbines should be vibrating, especially on a near new plane. His airline had an incident with a fanblade flying off but fortunately didn’t pierce the fuselage skin. Anyway, I’m sure he’ll be speaking to a pilot about this incident once he gets back to work later (as cabin crew).
Note: Upon returning to work, Kim asked a pilot within his own airline. Yes, it is OK to fly with that kind of engine vibration. Just unbalanced fanblade apparently.
From my side, I felt that the pilot wouldn’t be risking his own safety. We have previously noted AirAsia crew to be very safety-conscious. Who knows? Maybe the pilot may have been on the radio discussing the issue with maintenance base already.
Things are never what they seem
As it was a relatively long flight, we managed to get a conversation going with the crew.
- We were surprised to learn that many of the airline’s cabin crew have previously flown for Singapore Airlines or 5-star airlines like Malaysia Airlines … or been cooped up in air-conditioned apartments in the desert flying for Emirates or Etihad.
- And you’d think that an airline that charged me a measly MYR5 (plus fees and taxes, making it MYR53) for a 3h50 flight would pay its staff peanuts, right? Well, they claim to get paid about the same as Malaysia Airlines crew despite not having any overnights (and hence overseas allowances).
- Sometimes they will get less but they also spend less … apparently many crew found themselves having to deep dig to do all those fun things while overseas … sightseeing, clubbing, dining, drinking etc.
- But AirAsia does work them quite hard … the rosters are completely shorthaul except for a handful of crew who have a sprinkling of longhaul trips through each roster. They can get as little as 12 hours in London between arriving and picking up the returning flight … the flights re 14 hours and 13 hours!
Arrival Fiasco
Arriving at 1940 at Sam Ratulangi Airport in Manado, the crew were advised that the airbridge was broken and directed us down the stairs at the rear. We were taken to a side entrance of the terminal building then kept on hold while the keys were found. Obviously, this is a seldom-used entrance.
Once opened, the airport officials decided we should walk up the original airbridge instead of using that now-available entrance. Then they reverted to the side entrance. It appeared to be fiasco but it became apparent that they were trying to decide between the two evils:
- It would be inconvenient for us to clamber up the airbridge by the side steps.
- But if they let us in through the side door, the passenger flow through the health-check temperature scanning, visa fee payment counter, visa sticker counter and normal immigration counter etc would be rather awkward. The flow was setup for a normal airbridge disembarkation.
Our Big Night Out
The Lonely Planet guidebook suggests that there isn’t much to do in Manado itself. It is mainly the springboard to excellent dive sites. However, the guide’s drinking and clubbing section seems to packed with suggestions … places with the sophistication of London and New York, and others that are the size of aircraft hangars!
So, we decided to walk from our accomodation, Travello Hotel, to a nightspot called “Haha”. While the guidebook described it as a nightclub where people can get down to boogie, we found it to be also a combined entertainment centre featuring bowling alleys, pool halls, bar and restaurant. As it was a weekend, only the pool hall was open. It was good enough for a beer each before bed. Very adventurous in our old age, aren’t we?