“Low Fly Zone: Pull-Up”

“Low Fly Zone: Tree Hugger”

“Low Fly Zone: Literally Sticking the Landing”

“Straight Shot”

© EricBrazier.com

“It’s A Lot of A Lot”

“You Spin Me Round”

“Flight of the Navigator”

“Stop…. Hangar Time”

“Tether Tables on a Plane”

Or, what happens on a photo shoot to any unattended flat surface.

“Lift”

“Grate-Check”

“Skyfall”

“Skyward”

“Ground Lock”

“Gift-Wrapped”

“Up, Up and Away” – Neon sign at West Town Bar & Grill, Hamilton

“An American Tail”

“Pearson”

“Mad Props”

  

“Thrust; Don’t Push” – @RollsRoyce jet engine under wraps at Air Canada’s maintenance hangar, Pearson Airport, Toronto

20140430-071301.jpg

“Hi” – Toronto Island ferry passengers wave @porterairlines flight

Photo

“Sunscreen & Jetstreams” – Lookin’ up from the beach at Toronto Island

“Impressive” – Fuselage of a Purolator cargo plane, Hamilton

2011_tdm_img_8160

“I Bet He’s Really Good at Paint-By-Numbers” – Plane undergoes deicing at Pearson Airport, Toronto

“Different Alphabet; Same Warning” – Seat-back on a Royal Air Maroc flight, Casablanca, Morocco

“Group Distraction” – Movie-time on a KLM transatlantic flight to Amsterdam

In my opinion, the introduction of the in-seat TV screen is the greatest thing to happen to flying since escape hatches.

Finally, we are in control of what we want to watch.

However, the sight of a hundred or so people tightly packed next to each other wearing headphones and intenty staring at their own personal screen definitely diminishes any sense of flying as a shared experience.

Flying used to be an adventure. Now it’s an inconvenience. Security measures in our post-9/11 world have a lot to do with that, but a general malaise towards the engineering marvel that is scheduled mass passenger flight already exsisted before our ‘war-on-terror’ reality.

Heaven help us if the entertainment system were to go down. We may have to read, or introduce ourselves to our elbow neighbour, or stare out the window at a sight that human eyes had never seen a scant century ago.