Jun 252010

It’s been a while since my days of constant international business travel; I’d forgotten just what a pleasure it can be.

In recent weeks, a pan-European project has taken me on multiple day-trips, and all my fondest memories have flooded back.

Especially over the past 24 hours, as a French Air Traffic Control strike left me stranded in Barcelona. More specifically, in Barcelona airport.

So, while they’re fresh, here’s a collection of Rutherford’s Laws of Air Travel. Let me know your suggestions;

We’ll build the definitive user guide for those foolhardy enough to follow us.

The Arrival-Departure Inverse: the earlier you are for your flight, the greater the likelihood that it will be delayed.

The Arrival-Departure Revelation: only after you have checked-in will the airline tell you that your flight has been delayed.

The Arrival-Departure Corollary: the later you are for your flight, the greater the chance that:

A) it will be on time;

B) the person in front of you, when asked if they have been given anything to include their luggage, will answer ‘yes – duelling pistols’;

C) you’ll choose the security queue in which everyone ahead of you has a pin in their leg.

Doc Marten’s Inspection Relationship: the longer the laces on your shoes, the more likely you will be asked to take them off at security.

The Exposed Toe Multiplier: raises the Doc Marten Inspection Relationship to 1:1 when you have a hole in your sock.

The Intel 20: the number of signs, pictures, videos and verbal reminders  needed to ensure that the man with six frequent flyer gold cards takes his laptop out of his case for X-ray.

M C Escher’s First Law of Airport Design: the destination sign-posted at the bottom of a staircase is never sign-posted at the top.

M C Escher’s Second Law of Airport Design: never give customers in Terminal coffee shops  line of sight of the information display boards.

The “Are We Having Fun?” Rule: the longer you wait for your cancelled flight, the more people you will see on their way to their holiday destinations.

The No-Turning-Back Probability Calculation: the longer the escalator, the greater the chance that you are on the wrong one headed to the wrong gate. The probability gets closer to 1.0 the nearer you are to departure time.

The Scargill Power Union: all batteries run down at the same rate, whether or not each device is in use. At the moment your mobile cuts out – aka the moment you need to your office / Client / home – your Blackberry, laptop and mp3 player will shut down in sympathy.

Tic Tac Toe Paradigm: when the plane is half empty, the seat allocation system will always put you with two other people to complete a row of three.

The Law of Temporary Innumeracy: all people are rendered number blind when entering a plane; if you have seat 19C, you will attempt to sit in 18C or 20C, because for the duration of you journey 19 will cease to exist as an intellectual construct.

The Sound-Distance Constant: one screaming child for every 250 miles flown in Economy.

The Travis Bickle ‘Looking at Me’ Calculation: distance from airport to destination (miles) x duration spent in taxi (minutes) = number of times you will see the driver glare at you in his rear-view with bloodshot eyes .

The Travis Bickle Conversion Rate: 1 ‘Looking at Me’ glare = 1 unit of local currency ($, £, €). The total ‘Looking at Me’ payment is made as a gratuity for letting you out of the car without physical harm.

The Hour-Minute Co-efficient: the hour in which you arrive at your hotel (based on the 24 hour clock) determines the number of minutes you must walk to your room. Arrivals on or after 00h00 usually sleep in reception.

The Sweaty Collar Certainty: when you have an enforced overnight stay – and you need your only shirt laundered – you will discover that you have arrived on a little known public holiday, and that the laundress has taken the evening off. Along with the kitchen staff.

KEY TERMS FOR FUTURE REFERENCE

Boarding: we’d like you to stand in a queue and watch passengers disembark from the flight you’ll be getting on when we’ve cleaned it in about 20 minutes

Estimated Time of Departure: we really have no idea, but the system won’t accept a blank field

Gate Closes: gate will still be open (unless you’re 10 seconds late, when it means ‘the gate has already closed, and no amount of negotiation or charm will get you on the flight. Have a nice day.’)

Popularity: 19% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark
  • Mail
    This is my comment. My comment is my friend. It is like many other comments, but this is my comment.
  • paulrutherford
    Yes...thank you Jeremy. As pithy as ever.
  • Peter smith
    Paul / Paula "As someone who has only met you on an international airplane trip..."

    Maybe you should write a whole new book on the role of the departure lounge in facilitating social media interaction in the non-virtual world?
  • Actually, we didn't even meet in the departure lounge. I think it was a Virgin flight, that used to have pairs of facing seats with a not-very-convincing, fan-shaped screen between them. And this woman - in a hoody with a streaming cold was sat facing me. How could I resist?
  • Paula Berger
    Yes, I do remember that the flight was freezing and I was buried in many layers before emerging midway through the flight to start a long conversation with you. I think it was BA though. You make me sound quite unappealing, so it's probably best that we've maintained all contact electronically ever since. I do have to add to this (in response to Peter Smith) that a month after this flight I met someone at the bookstore in Heathrow and he proposed to me 5 years later based on an almost exclusively electronic relationship. I didn't accept, but I seem to meet interesting people on my way to and from Heathrow.
  • Paula Berger
    As someone who has only met you on an international airplane trip, and having arrived back in the US last night from Copenhagen, I feel exceptionally well qualified to add a few tidbits here:

    - If there is no line at immigration, your bags will take at least 45 minutes to arrive at baggage claim. The corollary is that if there is a long wait at immigration, your bags will have made it to the carousel in recordbreaking time and are now stored somewhere else in baggage claim so the carousel can be used for another flight.

    - Never fly through CDG if you have checked bags. It is the black hole of luggage. Bags that go in virtually never come out the same day (or even week) as they went in.

    - Related to the law of law of inexplicable security mentioned here, if you have to reclaim bags on arrival in the US and recheck them for a connecting flight, at least one bag (if you're traveling with colleagues or family) will not make it on the next flight.

    I could probably write 100 more since I still travel internationally from the US every month, but I just got home and I'd prefer to forget...

  • An entire relationship based upon a 6-hour plane ride and sundry emails and postings. Sign of the times, eh? Great to hear from you Paula
  • Paddy Fawcett
    Great Post Paul

    There are probably some Gems of wisdom the frequent flyers can give. Rather than jump to your feet the minute the plane has landed reach impossibly backwards into the overhead locker and attempt to extract your luggage without dragging some invisible (and no doubt hard and pointy) ajacent luggage onto the person below, then proceed to stand in off balance weighed down by your laptop for 10 minutes - just stay seated, compose another email wait for tthe plane to clear and stroll off.
  • Andrew Moloney
    What about "The smaller the passenger, the bigger and heavier the suitcase that they'll bring on as hand baggage, and then not manage to reach or have the strength to get it into the lockers..
  • That's certainly added to the list - although I'll give you full credit if we're accused of being sizist
  • Mssmith1
    The law of inexplicable security: arriving into a US airport, I have to recheck my bags and have them scanned before I pick them up. When politely enquiring as to why this happens you will be taken into a side room by a fearsome security lady and told in no uncertain terms it's because the bags have of course been taken off the plane at this point. Of course.....

    The rule of immigration frustration. The longer and more tiring your flight, the more difficult your passage through immigration will be (whether it's the bureaucracy in India or the hostility in the US).
  • "The Law of Inexplicable Security" - has a certain poetry, doesn't it?
  • Alice Liddell
    Up in the AIR - I love it. Naturally I'm expecting your next entry to include a collection of tips gathered from frequent fliers, aimed at easing you through the airport experience.
  • Good suggestion Alice - although most frequent travellers I know are so hardened by the experience, their optimism has been ground out of them :-( Thanks for coming by the site and taking the time to leave a note.
  • Ralston McCracken
    I know that it will be of no comfort, but the User Guide applies equally well on the western side of the Atlantic, especially: "The Arrival-Departure Corollary: the later you are for your flight, the greater the chance that: A) it will be on time". Last year, I flew over 100 times on business over a 34 week period (yes, that's an average of over three flights every week) mostly within the USA, but it also included trips to Asia (where they seem to pack in twice as many people on an Airbus than elewhere in the world), South America and Europe. Rutherford's Rules are universal across the globe, sadly.
  • Interesting that you focused on 'Corollary A' - does that imply that you've missed a few :-) Thanks for dropping by and taking time to leave a comment. Always good to hear from you Ralston
  • Oskar Verkamman
    And on that day that everything goes extremely smooth from parking your car in the first row, 1 sec check in at the desk, no queue at security, flight leaves early, arrives early, you get out of the airport in less than 5 minutes.........you're warned, there will be a hell of a traffic jam of the motorway into the office........

    great Blog Paul, needed a good laugh after a working Saturday here in China....
  • All part of the service Oskar - 24/7 lifting of the spirits. The weekend of the visiting interim can be a lonely affair; I hope you're finding meaningful ways of staying in touch with the family
  • Boarding Cards:
    Why do I have to show my boarding card when purchasing a newspaper airside? How on earth could I have got there without one? Do they need to know the number of Daily Telegraphs on flight BA123?

    I show my boarding card to someone on the gate and then walk down a tunnel with no other exits; at the end someone else inquires whether I have a boarding card. Unless Scotty had beamed me down this is a pretty stupid question.

    Plastic bags for your liquids:
    Why is having one wrong size unallowable? I can understand someone taking through a plastic bag the size of a tent, but one that is a few centimeters different? Surely not connected with the fact they sell you the "right size" at £1 a go?

    Fast track:
    Pay the airport operator a supplement so that you queue barge the queues they have created so that they can sell you fast track.

    Security gate officer customer relationship training: No I made that up.
  • Telegraph readers on the right of the cabin, Guardianistas on the left
  • Mssmith1
    Daily Mail readers in cargo with the goats
  • Jsppi27
    Luggage : In trips with connecting flights, early luggage check in and reasonable transfer time to connecting flight increase likelihood of lost luggage. Late check in and short transfer times work opposite
  • Not sure who you are, as I don't recognise the email address - but thanks for dropping by and for your spot-on observation. The only time I have ever lost luggage was between a three hour stop-over
  • Michael
    Rutherford's parallelogram - ...But there are otherr airlines still taking off to my destination????

    Avoided announcements - We are boarding by seat row number, and nobody sitting in the front ten rows or holding an aisle seat will be permitted boarding until everyone else is on board. Oh and we shoot those who do not conform.

    Squeezing the beverage - You realise that the gathering pool of brown gunge around the base of your polystyrene cup, is the result of someone else's wanton attack with a plastic knife on the whole stack of cups back at the coffee shop.

    Duty Free (you have to have left the EU for this one) - you've queued interminably to check out, which is fine as you had nothing else to do. The lady in front, judgling a multitude of packages and a baby, can't find her boarding card and even when she finally does, she is totally unprepared to pay when to her total surprise she is presented with the bill. The time taken for the voyage through her possessions to find a credit card makes you wonder if you'll miss the plane after all
  • Oh, the number of times I have thought of #2
  • Peter smith
    Oh Paul - so, so true!

    Peter Smith
blog comments powered by Disqus