We've traveled to the Big Island of Hawaii more than half a dozen times in the last ten years. But I'll remember yesterday.
We live about 12 miles north of Seattle, and Sea-Tac is south of the city. If there’s no traffic it takes 35 minutes to get from our house to the airport. Yesterday was Sunday. We decided to leave home at 8 a.m. to have time to catch our 10:05 flight.
It’s sometimes a challenge to find a ride to the airport if
our time away is long enough that we don’t want to leave our car in a lot nearby.
Usually we can find a friend or an offspring to drop us off for $20. Once in a
great while we resort to the airport shuttle.
Yesterday my brother-in-law Virgil was our ride. He and my
sister Alyx live in their RV behind our house, and Virgil is often blessedly
helpful. He dropped us off at the Alaska curb and carried our luggage to the
sidewalk. For free.
We checked our bags in five minutes. This year we’re MVPs on
Alaska Airlines (last year we flew 25,000 miles on Alaska or its partner
airlines, so we get a special check-in line until the end of this year). The
agent was friendly and envious of our Hawaii destination.
The security line was short.The TSA security person who
checked my identification and ticket was friendly, even as he told me that my
driver’s license expired on September 20, my last birthday – seven weeks ago.
But it was still valid as a personal identification.
The TSA-Pre line was even shorter (a couple of years ago we
paid $100 each for five years of preferred security. We no longer have to take
off our coats or shoes, and recently we no longer had to remove our CPAP
machines from their case. Now that Art has a pacemaker (in addition to an
artificial hip and an artificial knee) he gets a special machine for his
pieces-of-metal check. He was through security as quickly as I was. We had an
hour before our plane left, so we enjoyed a leisurely breakfast.
By the time we finished our meal, used our respective
restrooms and walked to gate C-15, nearly everyone had boarded the plane. I
noticed a man and three young boys standing near the desk. As we approached the
gate, one of the women murmured “Myers”. She said to us, “Would you mind
trading your seats (7-D and 7-F) for seats further back that aren’t together?
Three boys are traveling alone, and they’re nervous flyers, and they’d like to
be seated together.” I said, “That’s fine.” Then I added, “Can we get a bonus
of some kind?” We followed the lady over to the desk and received two new
boarding passes and the promise of 2,500 frequent flyer miles each. Art’s new
seat was 12-A (a window seat) and mine was 21-D (an aisle).
We made our way onto the plane. The man just ahead of us
said, “Do you have an aisle seat?” I said yes. He said, “Would you be willing
to trade it for a window seat?” I said okay. So my final seat was 17-A – in an
exit row with about a foot of extra legroom. Score! I’m flying to Tucson on
December 3 with Larisa, our Designer Cat, and she’ll be in a soft-sided Sherpa
carrier that fits beneath the seat. In the next few days I’m going to change to
17-A on that flight. The two of us will have ample room - as long as the
airline allows a pet carrier in the exit row.
I chatted with my seatmates, telling them I was happy for
the extra legroom and explaining my travel plans. The man said he was a
veterinarian, and he recommended Feliway as a product that you spray into the
carrier. It is a synthesized version of the pheromes produced by cats that
tells them they’re in a safe place. He said it should work well to maintain
Larisa’s peace of mind rather than the Happy Traveler which I tried out last
week and which got her loaded.
The six-hour flight was routine except for 25 minutes of the
worst turbulence we’ve ever experienced. Fortunately, I remembered that no
plane has ever fallen out of the sky from rough air. I looked out at the wing
on my side only once. It was bending and shaking. I reminded myself that these
airplanes are built and tested for extreme conditions.
Our luggage arrived quickly at the carousel. We crossed the
street just as the Thrifty shuttle bus pulled up, and we were the first ones on
– as opposed to the 45 minutes we waited last September in Boston. At our
destination, Art handled the luggage while I disembarked. I was the first
person in line at the Thrifty counter. The agent was friendly as he informed me
that my driver’s license had expired. “I’ll need your husband’s license.” I
went outside and got his license. A few minutes later, “I’ll need the credit
card with your husband’s name on it. I got his credit card. “Your husband will
need to sign the contract.”
I always drive
when we’re out of town. Art has never signed the contract. I told the agent. He
said, “Well, you can go into Kona to the police station. I hear that sometimes
they’ll give a waiver that allows a person to drive while they’re here on an
expired license.” I thanked him and went outside, replacing Art as the keeper
of the luggage.
(I went to the police station the next day. The agent was
incorrect. Driving with an expired license in Hawaii is a crime. I would be
required to come back for a court and potentially a $500 fine. The police were
friendly and sympathetic, but no. I considered the car I backed into last year
in Hawaii and could not justify saying to myself that I’m a really good driver
and willing to take the risk.)
We retrieved our car, a Ford Focus, and drove south eight
miles to Costco to pick up the basics. Then drove north 30 miles and upslope
another six to Paniolo Greens at Waikoloa, where we always stay. Checked into our condo and shortly
thereafter welcomed our guests Danielle and Philip. They live on the other side
of the island and were staying the night with us. Danielle and our daughter
Laura are friends from their Navy days. We’d met Danielle only once, and Phil
never, but we had a great dinner and conversation. The perfect end to our
travel day!
10 comments:
Good thing you checked about the driver's license. Guess that task will need to be added to those lists you are making.
Funny that the DMV didn't send you a notice. They do that here in California. As a matter of fact, if your driving record is good, California will automatically renew your license through the mail. Terry and I both had that happen this year.
After my license was stolen (when my entire purse was stolen out of my car) I decided to renew for a full five years, but I do have to remember that eventually I'll need to renew it again! I don't think they remind you in Washington state.
What a whole lot of positive events happened to the two of you on your travel there. I hope it's a great vacation. I'm a little jealous, too, since it's freezing cold here with an icy wind! :-)
Except for that nasty turbulence, you had a blessed flight. Each trade got better and how neat to have sat with a veterinarian.
Hoping you have a great stay in paradise.
Bet I know what you'll get renewed when you get back.
I have never made it to Hawaii. It is more of a trip from the east coast, But maybe "someday." Enjoy your visit.
I discovered that my drivers license had expired when we flew to Philadelphia two months ago. Apparently notifications are not sent any more.
You certainly got lucky with all of your connections on this flight. I hope the good trip vibes continue.
I enjoy reading about all your travel escapades. Never a dull moment!
You sure do travel a lot. How nice that the day worked out well except for the license.
Here in the UK we're lucky that we still get reminders to renew our licence or I'm sure I'd forget. I'm glad the flight went well except for the turbulence. Enjoy your time in Hawaii.
Wow, I've never had that many things go right on a travel day! Enjoy your stay on The Big Island!
But I don’t understand, weren’t you in Tucson?
What happened to Tucson?
Wherever you are, have a great time.
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