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Bestseller
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Author Morris, Doug, author.

Title This is your captain speaking : stories from the flight deck / Doug Morris.

Publication Info. [United States] : ECW Press, 2022.
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Summary For everyone from frequent fliers to aviation geeks, travel buffs to nervous travelers, Captain Doug Morris tells you everything you want (and need!) to know about flight Captain Doug Morris has been writing for his airline's inflight magazine for 23 years and has answered a gamut of questions. This Is Your Captain Speaking will draw from his extensive experience and explain everything you ever wanted to know about airline travel: whether airliners have keys, why the bumps, what aircrew get up to on layovers, what's the deal with "mile high memberships", how to become a pilot. It also provides entertaining anecdotes from air travel's unsung heroes - flight attendants. It's the A to Z of airline travel with a twist of humor. The flight deck door will always be closed, but Doug exposes the unique inner world of aviation to the public. From the science of weather to the theory of flight, Doug Morris chats about the A to Zs of the airline world. It takes 55 departments to get an airliner off the ground and Doug brings to light all the people involved - with some entertaining anecdotes along the way. Captain Doug Morris flies the B787, aka the Dreamliner, worldwide for an airline with a maple leaf emblazoned in its livery. He is a meteorologist and has written for his company's inflight magazine for 23 years and counting. He resides in downtown Toronto with his wife and has three adult children. This is his fourth book. Cracking the three-letter airport code. When booking a flight, reading your trip's itinerary, or looking at the tags on your checked baggage, you'll notice three-letter codes that identify airports. Sometimes it makes sense: BOS is Boston, MIA is Miami. But how do you get MCO for Orlando? Often, especially in Canada, where every three-letter code begins with a "Y", they are illogical abbreviations. For most of us, it is one of the mysteries of travel. I will try to dispel some of the secrecy and unravel this Da Vinci Code mystery of flight. So why not CHI instead of ORD for one of the busiest airports on the planet? History, along with geographical locations, names of airports, and personal tributes - with politicians' names ranked up there - are what these three letters cater to. Years ago, the National Weather Service devised a two-letter identification system (blame it on the weatherman) to keep a handle on weather throughout the United States. When aviation was at its infancy, airlines simply adopted the system. However, expansion meant that towns without weather stations needed codes as well, so IATA (International Air Transport Association) created three-letter identifiers for airports around the world. Canadian weather offices associated with airports used "Y," which made them easy to identify as Canadian. For some airports, it is easy to decipher: YVR is Vancouver, YWG is Winnipeg, and YQB stands for Quebec City. But where did they get YYZ for Canada's busiest airport, Toronto Lester B. Pearson? Pearson, by the way, was a Canadian prime minister. There is still some shade of doubt about its true origin, but Toronto's original airport, located in the town of Malton, had been assigned YZ for its Morse code telegraph identifier. Incidentally, Chicago's ORD is derived from "Orchard Field," and the airstrip's moniker is a tribute to pilot Lieutenant Commander Edward O'Hare. Orlando's MCO stemmed from McCoy Airforce base. It's neat to know that FFA is for First Flight Airport in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Sales and Market Bullets - Doug Morris has written a monthly column for enRoute, Air Canada's inflight magazine, since 1997. - Doug Morris is an expert in commercial aviation, having flown more than 25,000 flying hours - the equivalent of driving from New York to Boston and back every day for six years, and is a certified meteorologist, working as a forecaster with Environment Canada
System Details Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Subject Aeronautics, Commercial -- Anecdotes.
Aeronautics -- Anecdotes.
Air travel -- Anecdotes.
Airplanes -- Piloting -- Anecdotes.
Airplanes -- Anecdotes.
Electronic books.
Added Author hoopla digital.
ISBN 9781773057972 (electronic bk.)
1773057979 (electronic bk.)
Music No. MWT14740333
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