Unfortunately for us, a lady sitting in our row wasn't concerned about a peanut allergy. She chomped away on her peanut butter sandwich.
Even after an announcement? Blah on her.
... BUT, when he was around 5- he ONLY ate pb sandwiches... As this was a 5 hour flight, we would have had issues in the past.. I would have had behavioral issues as I still do when his blood sugar gets too low.
If I had experienced this back then, I would have liked the opportunity to know that this would be the situation and perhaps I would have chosen another flight. I think that the airlines should give ALL the opportunity to take other flights if a situation like this occurs..
Good point.
From a peanut post several months ago, I realized that we needed to make sure we did have other things with us. For our next flight we actually found these cute 1oz packets of organic PB that went in one of our 311 bags along with tiny safe-for-DS jelly packets. So if we hadn't been able to eat the PB, we could have had jelly sandwiches, or just bread if necessary. Our snack wouldn't be destroyed, since the packs were in the 311 bags and therefore our sandwiches weren't pre-made and useless in the case of someone with an allergy.
I'm glad airlines serve such a potentially fatal snack at 30,000 ft! I mean who can live without peanuts for 3 hrs? Seriously, pretzels just don't cut it now do they?!
Besides, kids with peanut allergies don't deserve to fly... let alone go to Disney!!!
(Sorry, not trying to be inflammatory, just making a point! Getting tired of hearing what a hassle it is for parents who can't send peanut butter sandwiches to school for lunch just cause somebody else's kids might die from them... sheesh!)
Yeah, I don't understand your point.
So pretzels...unfortunately, the pretzels served on the flights we've been on have HFCS in them. While that's not going to kill my son, it's going to cause a freakout so that OTHERS might think about killing him... If they'd get pretzels made with normal sugar it would be fine...
Anyway, I read your post 5 more times and finally got it. And no, no one is saying any of what you're reacting to. It's all about education and thinking about other choices, and hoping that the allergic family tells the gate agents BEFORE anyone is boarded so that there's a chance for people to eat quickly or run and grab something else.
I take small snack bags of peanuts on planes all the time and eat them as my protein snack (dietary requirement for me is a certain number of grams of protein per day.) I have never been on a flight where we were asked to not eat peanuts due to an allergy.
And now, after reading this thread, perhaps you can bring something else along with the peanuts, for your needed snack. Just in case. I haven't been on a flight that has been announced as peanut-free, but like I said in my first post in this thread, it wouldn't feel good to kill someone!
As for peanut butter not spreading dust....yeah...while I'm sure that's true, the smell of PB is strong. And if an allergic someone is sitting back several rows and smells it, don't you think that's going to cause an emotional reaction? Don't you think it's going to scare them?
I know that with my occasional asthma, high emotions bring it on, or exacerbate it, like NOTHING else. Before the asthma, when I just had sneezing allergies, I had been known to have a massive sneezing fit during arguments with my mom.
Not sure if that sort of thing might happen to others, but I would HATE to have someone so SCARED that someone had a bag of peanuts that might harm them. I think I would prefer to not scare someone, so if it was a peanut-free flight, I would do without the PB.