Flights
One of the few things I’m stressing over about this trip are our flights. Partly because I don’t like change

. For this vacation, we’re doing things a little differently where our air travel is concerned.
As most of you know, we are big fans of Jetblue….so much so that we’ve flown Jetblue almost exclusively over our 14 trips. The assigned seating, the TV’s on each seat, and the availability of extra legroom seating have made them the perfect airline to fit our needs. Until we moved to Michigan, that is

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One of Steve’s non-negotiables is that our flights must be non-stop (and for the record, I wholeheartedly agree). The wasted time during a layover, coupled by the added layer of stress
(will we make our connection? What happens if our initial flight is late or delayed?), and the increased chance for lost luggage makes us both determined to avoid any flights which connect through large, unfamiliar airports. We want to get on the plane in Detroit home and off the plane in Orlando, with a nice little 2.5 hour siesta in between

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Unfortunately for us, Jetblue does not fly non-stop from Detroit to Orlando. They do fly non-stop to Fort Lauderdale (with some pretty decent rates too), so for both of our vacations in 2017, we opted to fly DTW to FLL and make the 3 hour drive to the resort upon landing (and back again at the conclusion of our week). We didn’t think it would be that bad…..but honestly, we hated it

. While we regularly drove from our old hometown in Ontario to Buffalo, New York in order to catch a well-priced Jetblue flight to Orlando (and didn’t mind doing so), one of the benefits to living near a major international airport here in MI was that it was supposed to be more convenient when we wanted to head south. By flying into FLL, we still ended up doing a ridiculous amount of driving on already long travel days, just at a different point in the trip. On the way home from our October vacation, we looked at each other and said…..we
have to find a better solution.
By "we", I knew that meant
ME. So, I began my search for options.
Our choices out of Detroit (or even Flint) for non-stops are limited, so we really only had two options: Delta or Frontier (before anyone suggests it, Southwest no longer flies nonstop from either airport…..trust me, I looked

). After much research and discussion, we ended up booking with Frontier. The cost with Frontier was very reasonable, the flight times weren’t horrible, and they have “stretch seating” available that offered more width and a better pitch than anything fare category with Delta except for first class. With the upgrade to their “Works” package (which included stretch seating, a checked bag, a carry on, refundability, and priority boarding for both of us on both flights) and trip cancellation, interruption and baggage insurance, we came in at a very reasonable $644 return ($322 each). There were lots of poor review about Frontier, but honestly most seemed to center around being nickled and dimed for each little component. With the Works package, that’s all paid for in advance and we’ll have no additional costs come travel time. We will have to bring our own snacks on board (not a biggie) and we’ll have no onboard entertainment (a Sudoku book for Steve and Oprah magazine for me should hopefully help to fill the time) but hopefully it will be a safe, and reasonably comfortable, option which won’t leave us with too many regrets.
Of course, I fret about it just the same. I’m kind of just wired that way, though

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Adding to my flying anxieties is a rather scary air travel experience from our October vacation that has left me more than a little uneasy. While I’m not fond of air travel at the best of times [as we taxi onto the runway, visions of the news coverage of every major plane crash from the past 10 years tends to flash across my eyes], our most recent arrival experience in Fort Lauderdale was not something I ever care to repeat

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To make a long story short, our plane (and old bird that had visibly seen better days) apparently suffered a malfunction of the landing gear while still in the air. The captain ended up turning away from the Fort Lauderdale airport so he could dump fuel prior to landing. After two separate tours of the cabin by one of the pilots (who walked up and down the aisles, stopping to look and listen at different points within the plane), the cockpit made an announcement telling passengers that there was no reason to panic (never a good sign

), and alerted us that emergency fire and rescue would be waiting on the runway for our touchdown “as a precautionary measure”. True to his promise, multiple fire trucks and ambulance vehicles were ready and waiting, lights a-blazing, as we landed in FLL with the most horrible smell of jet fuel permeating the cabin. We had the swiftest deplaning that we’ve ever experienced, partly because we all wanted to get out of that wretched stench

and partly because the Jetblue inflight crew was wasting no time in ushering us out the plane door.
Folks, that’s as close a call as I ever want to experience on a plane. I assume the landing gear at least partially engaged, as we didn’t land with a thump, bang or major scrape that we could hear or feel (though it was a less than smooth arrival

). I am pretty sure that the aircraft was taken out of commission for repairs as the landing affected the luggage compartment doors, and we had a lengthy wait at the terminal until they could free our suitcases from the underbelly of the plane.
Flying has always made me nervous, but now I’m a little extra so. At least until that recent experience has a chance to fade from memory a tiny bit.
And now we’re adding a new airline into the mix

. Focusing on the positives…..
We’re flying into Orlando

. 30 minutes from rental car pick up to the Welcome Center at SVR.
We’ve got stretch seating

. Even if we’re not “comfortable”, per se, we can console ourselves with the fact that we’ll be among the most comfortable folks on the plane.
And as Steve reminded me as we prepared for that scary landing in FLL,
“if we go down in a ball of flames, the good news is, we won’t feel a thing”. I kid you not

. That was the most comforting thing he could come up with, apparently

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Days to departure:
122! 