It seems air travel gets harder and harder to book. There are more
people flying these days, but all competing for the same number of
seats. I usually fly American through Dallas when going to
Hartford, especially in the winter. But something happened this
time, and I couldn't get a decent return routing on Sunday. I did
some searching on various websites, and found all the fares in the $350
range (even Southwest) and usually with either 3 flights to get home or
routing through a city that is risky weather-wise in the winter.
Then I found an amazing (and almost surreal) deal on Expedia: $264
round trip (and this is from Oakland, CA, not a red-eye, and only one
change of planes in each direction).
Now the surreal part... the tickets are issued by US Airways using
code share flight numbers. All four flights are on United or United
Express. If you go to the US Airways web site, the flights aren't
offered. If you go to United's web site, the fare on the same exact
itinerary is $353. It defies logic, but I think I can explain why
US Airways had so many financial woes... selling tickets at $90
under market prices and then not getting any part of the business doesn't
appear very lucrative.
73,
Andy Oppel, N6AJO
Vice Director, Pacific Division
American Radio Relay League (ARRL)
The National Association for Amateur Radio
n6ajo@arrl.org
home: (510) 864-2299
cell: (510) 851-6214