Latin American airlines rock! Can we have them here?
It has been so refreshing to fly those little regional airlines in Latin America in the last couple of weeks. I have taken 4 regional flights so far and I love how well it has worked for me. Granted, the planes look about 50 years old, while the pilots look about 20, but they do seem to know what they are doing.
I appreciate that they operate like trains, without any of that insane ticket pricing structure we have all reluctantly gotten used to: "The air ticket you looked up yesterday for $250? Um, that will be $600 today. Why? Just because. Check back tomorrow, it might come down again. Umm, why?"
I have forgotten how nice it is to walk up to a counter and buy an air ticket for a flight that takes off 30 minutes from now. I did exactly that a few of days ago in Panama City. I walked up to an Aeroperlas counter and bought a one way ticket to Bocas del Toro for $70. If I bought the ticket 2 weeks before or 6 months prior, it would have still been $70. I love that - first come, first serve. Makes budgeting for travel much easier. Even better - if you miss the flight (which I did on one ocassion), they will issue you a new ticket to the same, or different, destination at no extra cost. How cool is that?
Try the same thing in the US or Europe, even with those so-called budget airlines, sometimes. They will charge you $2000 for a $200 ticket if you want to fly the same day. Changes? Yeah, right. The airlines would rather have the seat empty than charge something sensible. I remember taking a course on airline pricing structure in college and I remember that the overly complicated way air ticket pricing is set didn't make any sense to me then. Clearly, it still doesn't.
Filed under: South America, Costa Rica, Panama, Airlines
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Nov 28th 2007 @ 8:47PM
Chris M. said...
Recently myself and three companions were flying from Calgary, AB, to Houston, Panama city, Lima then Cusco. We were all set for our approximately 24 hour journey, and about halfway through when the flight out of Panama got canceled, no idea why. While in North America, we were on Continental, at this point, we were scheduled on Conti's partner airline, Copa. That night, they bussed everyone who was scheduled on this flight to a hotel and put us up for the night and fed us. The guy at the Panama airport was SO helpful, especially considering how little Spanish we spoke. So after a restful night in Panama, we arrived in Lima where we missed our connector to Cusco. The problem here was that we didn't book this leg on the same ticket...Copa put us up in the Lima airport Radisson and took care of rescheduling our LAN airways flight for us...Speaking of LAN, what an awesome carrier. Although a little leg work was required on our part, both carriers went out of their way to accommodate us, and it broke up our horrendous 24 hours of travel nicely...And we stayed in a five store hotel that we totally wouldn't have otherwise.
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Nov 29th 2007 @ 2:29PM
Jamie said...
That makes so much more sense! They could even have holiday blocks of increased prices....so long as it never depended on what day you bought your ticket.
Sadly it looks like our airlines are just getting weirder and werider price wise
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Nov 30th 2007 @ 9:10AM
trs80 said...
AA/AE have a monopoly in the Caribbean region.
Everybody know that AA use his position in the market to set abusive fares.
A 45 minutes trip between two destination in the Caribbean can cost up $500. When you can travel to USA for less even to Europe if you find a good deal.
Maybe if AA and AE compete in the same routes we can get access to low fares.
AA STOP THE ABUSE
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Jan 21st 2008 @ 8:39AM
Victor said...
As an alternative to AA to fly to the caribbean. Go to Panama and fly Copa to Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti, Dominicana and Trinidad & Tobago
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