This would make sense. |
It only makes sense if there are enough overhead bins for all passengers- there aren't |
Not your call to make. I get to decide. And I’ve dealt with waits for my luggage WAY longer than “15-20 minutes” especially in locations like Florida which can have extensive lightning delays. |
People would deliberately put their stuff at the front of the plane so they don’t have to log it from the back upon arrival. |
Me either. Just design the planes so overhead space is labeled. |
|
One of the issues is that people wheel on “carryons” that are too big. They place them in the overhead sideways and rarely are they called out. And sometimes they bring on their wheelie and their “personal item”
Which is a massive duffle bag. |
It’s a British term. Either PP is foreign born or trying to sound worldly. |
It's not a "British" term, it is a common English word with a German root. Amazing what people will argue about here, let alone insult someone over. https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=knapsack DP |
DP. You're going to wait one way or another. Wait on the plane for everyone to stow their wheeled carryons (slows boarding/takeoff dramatically), then wait for the process to reverse on landing. Or wait at the luggage carousel. Me, I'd rather wait in the airport. Ban the effing carryons. |
| I am on a flight now and the instructions printed inside the overhead bins are crystal clear - if you have a rolling suitcase, turn it on its side and put it in wheels first. Yet people are laying them flat, horizontally, thereby taking up the space that could be used for three bags. Amazing. I wish the flight attendant would be able to ask people to set their bags in correctly but that would take even more time during boarding. |
Remember that the flight attendants aren't even being paid during boarding. |
I wish the flight attendants would actually, you know, attend. Plenty of people just need a little help. My elderly mother asked for assistance and it was her fellow passengers who helped out as the “flight attendant” could not be bothered. I once asked for help when I was 6 months pregnant and the “flight attendant” actually rolled her eyes at me. Fellow travelers are usually the ones to assist one another and make things pleasant. So now that I’m not pregnant I do my best to keep an eye out for people who might need a hand storing bags the correct way. We’ve all been there as parents traveling with young kids, we’ve all been there as people traveling to a funeral in a daze of grief, we’ve all been there when we have shoulder or knee injuries, or infirm parents to assist, etc. Let’s help each other out with patience as fellow travelers. Because goodness knows the “attendants” are usually attending to rolling their eyes at passengers, giving knowing looks to one another and having little inside jokes over the intercom, and fawning over the passengers who look rich, hot, or both. |
All the more reason they should hustle to get the flight boarded and get in the air. |
DP. Snort. Will that make them any MORE $$$? No. Why on earth would an FA do that? They take an unbelievable amount of crap from rude and clueless passengers. I'm routinely astonished at how polite and helpful most of them are given customer behavior. |
I have flown extensively, domestically and internationally, and I 100% have seen and partaken in a lot more passengers-helping-passengers, passengers-being-great, than I have seen and experienced flight attendants helping. When an obviously pregnant woman gets an eye-roll, when an elderly woman is flat-out refused help, there is simply no excuse. None. |