people started clapping just after we landed
I travel about 70,000 miles a year on scheduled but only recently on low cost and never on charter.
On a recent flight with a well known low cost airline I was quite amused when people started clapping just after we landed. I couldn't decide whether it was an expression of appreciation or relief or simply well wishers accompanying one of the crew on their first flight. I had never come across it before. |
It happens a lot.
"Englanders" do it a lot on charter flights to their equivalent of Mecca called Spain - if they are not too drunk to slap their hands together. I have seen it happen in China too where pilots are advertised as "heroes". |
I don't think it's an English thing, people in the Former Soviet Union have been doing it for years though in their case it's sheer relief. Things are not as bad as they were in the FSU, I've taken a few internal FSU flights over the last 6 months (up until earlier this year my employer actually forbaid such flights) and I noticed that they had things like seat belts, cabin crew and no passengers standing in aisle because of lack of seats. Flying internally in this region in the mid 1990's really was an experience.
I have been on scheduled European flights where a few people have applauded on landing but normally they are glared at by the other passengers and soon shut up. |
I've only ever seen this on flights in the US, I've never seen it over here in the UK.
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Originally Posted by SXB
(Post 2831980)
I don't think it's an English thing, people in the Former Soviet Union have been doing it for years though in their case it's sheer relief. Things are not as bad as they were in the FSU, I've taken a few internal FSU flights over the last 6 months (up until earlier this year my employer actually forbaid such flights) and I noticed that they had things like seat belts, cabin crew and no passengers standing in aisle because of lack of seats. Flying internally in this region in the mid 1990's really was an experience.
I have been on scheduled European flights where a few people have applauded on landing but normally they are glared at by the other passengers and soon shut up. |
I've experienced it a few times on TAP, always makes me smile.
I guess it is just a case of non-regular SLFs just happy to made it back to terra firma :D |
I do it if I see my baggage arriving on the belt after flying with Iberia!!!;)
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Experinced clapping, upon landing, for the first time on Alitalia Rome - Montreal in 1971. It is true it happens more on charters, but majors are not immune. AC, AF, LH Canada - Europe get it from time to time, in various degrees of enthusiasm.
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I think on every flight I've taken to and from Israel, people clap.
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It happens quite a lot on flights to holiday destinations and other charter flights.
I will never forget a time very early in BKKE's career as SLF, when I used to hop a friend's pilgimage charters to Lourdes for the duty free. On one occasion, an engine failed with a loud bang during the takeoff run and we came to an abrupt stop. Apart from me, the plane was full of pilgrims, who are normally very enthusiastic clappers. However, on this occasion, every single one of them were silent, furiously crossing themselves and offering up prayers of thanks! |
Lots of ppl do it after arrival in Gibraltar flying GB Airways usually for the following reasons:
Flight actually on time No low cloud and visibility good enough for approach Pilots manage to avoid ships in the bay Road actually closed and no stray cars - people -footballs hit during touch down Pilots managed to stop aircraft rolling of end of runway and into water Breaking of aircraft on landing not gut wrenching - which sometimes it is Sandwiches actually editable - not always the case! Nivsy:p |
I think it's rather nice, actually.... :)
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It happens a lot on flights to and from Africa. There was a thread that mentioned it in the African aviation section a few months back.
I've been through a few airports where I really wanted to clap when the aircraft took off! |
Years ago, it always happened on the Italian flights when I worked for Monarch - Pisa, Genoa, Rome (Ciampino), Milan - when the passengers were all Italians, not British holidaymakers.
They were usually quite noisy inflight too!!!!! :) |
seems to happen most of the time and on ALL the holiday destination flights.
if is for '' well we made it''... fine.... if its ''congratulations to the pilot for a landing like that ''...or''are we on the ground??''...do'nt they know we do landings like that all the time ...and we do'nt need to be clapped for it....!!!:D :D |
I can imagine when they permit the use of mobile phones in flight an additional safety announcement will have to be made asking passengers to put their phones down before they clap least they slip out of their hands and poke someones eye out!
:O |
.......but only recently on low cost and never on charter The clapping thing is a follow-on from the days when a cap would be passed around collecting tips for the driver! As Tight Slot says, it is rather nice, rather polite and rather British! |
On a flight some years ago, just out of the island of Mauritius (Technical fuelling stop) on a SAA B747, we had an really “bad” engine failure and the flight returned to Mauritius………….as the a/c touched down the passenger cabin erupted in applause….one drunk passenger stood up, turned around, looked at everybody and with a straight face said…..”you people applauding….you can’t swim can you”!!!
E |
Have noticed it on every flight I have taken (I guess about half a dozen returns) with Eva on their LHR-BKK-TPE route.
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the spanish do it alot
I have flown on lots of Low cost airlines flights to the spanish mainland for (fag run) and every flight the spanish pax clapped on landing but there was one flight to italy where I felt like a pop star I was working at STN for RYR it was the airlines first flight to TSF when the a/c was making its way to the stand I noticed people clapping and waving flags around the fence area think there is a school next to the airfield |
Always on a VIVA LAS VEGAS McCarran Intl. arrival
worked for an airline where we always got applause on arrival at Las Vegas, Nevada. (US gambling and entertainment mecca for those unaware...)
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The only time I've experienced the 'clapping' was Skyeurope from Manchester to Bratislava. The weather was clear with no wind. In other words, not a particularly bad landing.
What was also strange was the woman across the aisle from me. She was reading her book all through the approach and landing, and once we were down, and the clapping started, she started as well. It was as if it was a reflex action. She heard clapping, and then joined in. She soon stopped though when she realised I was looking. |
Originally Posted by Sumatra
(Post 2831916)
I travel about 70,000 miles a year on scheduled but only recently on low cost and never on charter.
On a recent flight with a well known low cost airline I was quite amused when people started clapping just after we landed. I couldn't decide whether it was an expression of appreciation or relief or simply well wishers accompanying one of the crew on their first flight. I had never come across it before. I just wanted to say that it is very much an Italian thing too. It happens regularly on BA scheduled flights - especially on our Italian flights, and I believe it's a mixture of feeling the relief of being still in one piece (Italians are very superstitious) and that they have finally reached their destination. Having said that, it usually happens when big parties of leisure passengers are involved (teenagers are the worst LOL) and usually with those who are non-frequent fliers. I remember I did it myself with my friends once when I was much younger - it was great fun and the cabin crew couldn't stop laughing!! So don't worry - it's a bit like being at a football match where everybody wins :E FBW:) |
[quote
The clapping thing is a follow-on from the days when a cap would be passed around collecting tips for the driver! quote] Hey, maybe those of us without hats need to start voting them back into the uniform and passing them around at the end of a flight! Could be a way of upping the wages. I can beat clapping on a flight though. I was unfortunate enough to be on the last BA flight back from MAN (not working thank God), the night England qualified for the World Cup. The poor little BA 737 was chocka full of "slightly" inebriated football supporters instead of it's normal mostly sensible pax and went barreling down the runway to a loud, rowdy chorus of Que sara sara both on take-off and landing. I am pleased to say that after a short spell of counselling the aircraft was able to fly again! |
When I was commuting between London and Munich on LH for 18 months, there was a particular statement that elicited applause.
Whilst taxing to the stand, some (not all) of the captains would say (but only in German) "Welkom by Freistaat Bayern." Welcome to the Free State of Bavaria. This alwaye drew applause from the cabin. During my time in Bavaria, the locals would say, "You don't want to go to the North of the country [Hamburg/Berlin] because it's all full of Germans." ;) |
Can confirm the earlier comments about it being a very Russian thing to do. Happens on all the internal flights in Russia and marks out the Russians on international flights arriving in Russia. Not surprising coming from a nation noted for a fatalistic pessimism.:hmm:
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Originally Posted by Sumatra
(Post 2831916)
I travel about 70,000 miles a year on scheduled but only recently on low cost and never on charter.
On a recent flight with a well known low cost airline I was quite amused when people started clapping just after we landed. I couldn't decide whether it was an expression of appreciation or relief or simply well wishers accompanying one of the crew on their first flight. I had never come across it before. |
When ever I fly with HLX from the UK to Germany, the German passengers on board always clap when we land.
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Originally Posted by jetset lady
(Post 2834889)
.....chorus of Que sara sara .....
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I've gone many times in and out of Italy (used to live there) without applause. Sometimes, it does happen, but most of my recollections are of fairly quiet landings.
The last time I can remember applause in the cabin was riding a CY A320 LCA-FCO. A remember an uneventful final, passing through scattered thin low cloud cover. Then the pilot goes TOGA and pulls up hard and to the right. Then WHAM! #1 has a classic full-pyro compressor stall, flames shooting out the front and the back, and the airframe shuddering like someone had whacked it with a bat. Immediately - and I mean immediately - everyone in the cabin breaks into thunderous applause. We hang there, flying straight but in a slight left bank 30 seconds. Then the captain comes on the PA and explains "there was another aircraft on the runway and we'd be on the ground in five minutes". More than one guy in the cabin snickered, and I heard loud remarks in Greek, Italian and English to the effect that the pilot had simply screwed up the approach. |
Now that we know when and how it happens, I'd like to ask a question: Does it bother you? If you are CC or on the FD are you embarassed, amused, don't care? As a pasanger I am always unconfortable and embarassed when people clap around me.
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I can't speak for others but as CC, I quite like it. Applause is considered a way of showing appreciation and I'd rather that than the opposite! Of course, there are the occasions following a particularly dodgy landing when it's down to just plain relief that we're on the ground, the right way up and facing the right way but hey, that's always good too!! :ooh: :D
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Happens on all the internal flights in Russia and marks out the Russians on international flights arriving in Russia. |
Pax Vobiscum
I can understand why the Russians applaud, some of the stuff I witnessed flying around there in the mid 1990's was, I kid you not, staggering. Non functioning seat belts was the most common, on the occasions when there were cabin crew (sometimes there were none) they just told you to tie the belt in a knot if the buckle wasn't there or didn't work. On occasion there were no belts at all and on one flight I remember the belt was substituted with a piece of rope. Armenian and Azeri airlines often flew overloaded with people standing in the aisles, this still happens today as a colleague of mine flew from Yerevan to somewhere in Nagarno Karabakh last month and reported 'standers' |
http://. Non functioning seat belts ...dn't work.
Heck, I saw that happen in the min-nineties (97 to be exact), on a Tower Air flight (JFK-ORY) during their brief run at trying to be a regularly-scheduled airline. Seatbelt of the guy next to me was installed backwards. On popping the cushion, we found that a pin was installed to prevent seatbelt from "deplaning" -- so we couldn't fix it. Called the FA over, "It's your seat, sit in it" Interestingly, the aircraft never got above FL220, and there was no applause on landing (but plenty of relief). |
Going to Strasbourg on a charter with a large choir, hold ups and frustrations abounded. We were so happy to finally land (albeit with hot coffee still in some mitts) that we broke into the 'Hallelujah' chorus! One up from clapping!:)
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I like the clapping as well. I used to fly to Frankfurt every other week (had a girlfriend there) and I would say clapping occurred on 20-25 percent of the flights outbound. But inbound never. No idea why.
Probably the most touching incident was where about the half the outbound flight consisted of some elderly Jews of German descent -- the bulk of whom were returning to their ex-homeland for the first time in years, or perhaps since the 30s. When we touched out there were floods of tears and clapping. It was most poignant. |
Any flight from Glasgow will end with the clapping thing..dunno why tho..
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Any flight from Glasgow? I must have been drunk on all of these hundreds of flights had ex Glasgow then! Thats worrying - dont recall one bout of handclapping!:{
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Non functioning seat belts was the most common, on the occasions when there were cabin crew (sometimes there were none) they just told you to tie the belt in a knot if the buckle wasn't there or didn't work |
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