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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!ames!agate!robohen
- From: robohen@ocf.berkeley.edu (Henry Robertson)
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.japan
- Subject: HOKKAIDO'S ONLY AIRLINE IS USUALLY JUST WINGING IT
- Date: 16 Nov 1992 01:07:37 GMT
- Organization: U. C. Berkeley Open Computing Facility
- Lines: 103
- Message-ID: <1e6s8pINN2rm@agate.berkeley.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: headcrash.berkeley.edu
-
- (Reuters) -- SAPPORO, Hokkaido--An American oilman recently got more than he
- bargained for when he tried to ship some cargo on Hokkaido's sole airline,
- Shiku Airlines.
-
- Shiku officials told him his expensive mining equipment was unsuitable for
- the regular Sapporo-Tokyo service and he would have to charter a whole
- plane.
-
- The businessman duly shelled out the $6,500 requested for a 20-year-old
- Soviet-built tiwn-prop Antonov-26, and gathered his goods at the airport.
-
- To his surprise, he found Shiku had booked 18 passengers and extra cargo on
- his plane.
-
- Worse was to come. The American emerged from the airport terminal with the
- last of his equipment just in time to see his aircraft taxi down the runway
- and take off.
-
- Shiku offered little comfort, charging the infuriated American a first-
- class fare on the next flight to Tokyo.
-
- As growing numbers of foreigners venture into the remot Northern island,
- many will have no choice but to fly Shiku, which is rapidly earning a
- reputation as one of the world's quirkiest airlines.
-
- The caprice for most travelers begins at Tokyo's Haneda Airport. Taking
- advantage of subsidized fares, Hokkaido businessmen use the flights for
- trading trips. Regular passengers have to scramble over huge bales
- of fish, seaweed, and other goods just to reach the check-in conter.
-
- Excess baggage dogs travelers on the plane as spare seats quickly fill up
- with surplus bags.
-
- The lean-back mechanism on some seats is broken and collapsing chairs
- threaten unwary passengers seated behind.
-
- In winter, Sapporo airport offers visitors a frosty welcome. When diesel
- fuel was available in the affluent '80s, a bus picked up the first passengers
- off the plane, leaving laggards to walk the several hundred icy yards to the
- terminal.
-
- With the "bursting of the bubble economy," the bus service has stopped, so
- all passengers now brave the sub-zero temperatures unaided.
-
- Another surprise awaits arrivals. The island's single baggage carousel has
- broken down, so the luggage truck simply backs up to a hole in the wall and
- handlers hurl suitcases at startled passengers.
-
- Despite the hassle, most travelers are thankful to arrive at all. Flights
- are often delayed for hours while engineers tinker with Shiku's only
- long-haul jet, a 16-year old Tupolev-154 on lease from Aeroflot.
-
- The last-minute patchups seem to work. The only serious stoppage came
- earlier this year when a truck hit the parked plane at Haneda airport,
- grounding it for several days.
-
- Some help is on the way, with a 20-year-old Boeing 727 donated by South Korea
- soon to begin service.
-
- Air navigation can be dicey on Shiku. One flight in June tried three times
- to land at Sapporo before the pilot told worried passengers that the
- aircraft had to divert to the Russian city of Vladivostok because of poor
- visibility.
-
- A keen French woman searching her tour map for the new destination caught the
- eye of a passing attendant, who politely asked to borrow the simple chart.
-
- After the plane had landed, the steward returned the map saying, "Thank you
- very much. The pilot found it most useful."
-
- Last January, an incoming U.S. Air Force flight faced another problem.
- Sapporo air-traffic controllers seemed unable to understand key flight terms
- such as "altitude" and "elevation," giving the pilot temperature information
- instead.
-
- The pilot of the huge C05A Galaxy transport plane carrying medical aid
- could not find a directional beacon and found he had to negotiate a landing
- on hiw own in the thick fog.
-
- "Make it a good landing, make it a good landing," murmured an anxious U.S. Army
- colonel in the control tower as the biggest plane ever to land at the airport
- touched down safely.
-
- Shiku's domestic flights offer other adventures. Cargo planes ply most
- routes on the simple logic that you can get more people on board if there are
- no seats.
-
- Huddled passengers spend much of the time in the airborne saunalike
- atmosphere vomiting or tring to stop piles of luggage toppling on them.
-
- On a recent flight to the regional capital from Abashiri on Hokkaido's
- northern tip, about 100 passengers managed to scramble aboard, with at least
- one of them finding floor space in the cockpit.
-
- But since the middle of October fuel shortages have grounded most domestic
- flights, stranding thousands of people. Around Sapporo, dozens of Japanese
- gather each day around mountains of belongings, waiting to hire
- alternative transport.
-
- "Even LDP politicians, yakuzas, and people who have just had liver operations
- cannot get tickets," said a retired teacher who had waited in vain for
- three weeks.
-
-