The New Zealand Herald

Etihad’s Business Class lounge at Abu Dhabi airport offers a nail spa, treatment spa and barber.

Winston Aldworth flies from Auckland to Tokyo on NZ95

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The plane: A Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner. The black one, in fact. The first of every fleet is painted black and (as all regular Flight Check readers — hi Mum and Dad! — will know) I was there in Seattle when this puppy rolled out of the Boeing paint hangar. Always get a buzz when I see it.

The seat: Economy Skycouch. I’ve flown on Air New Zealand’s Cuddle Class twice previously — once with my kid and once on my own — but this was the first time I’d settled in with a grown-up, my long-suffering partner, Louise.

Skycouch, in case you missed the news, is Air New Zealand’s way of folding up the footrest in a row of three seats along the side of the cabin to make a small bed in Economy Class.

I’m a keen student of Skycouch. Ever since I first flew it, I’ve watched to see how other passengers have used it in various configurat­ions of adults and children. (Kudos, by the way, to the noticeably short American family of four who I saw making it work like a mixture of Twister and human-Jenga en route to LAX.)

There are two classic approaches for a couple using Skycouch: Spooning (if you don’t know how that works then you’ve gone too long without a cuddle) and one- up-one-down (basically, I sit in the aisle seat and my travel buddy stretches out, feet in my lap), add a third person (a child) and you’ll do a mixture of spooning and O-U-O-D.

Spooning’s good for Louise and me for a couple of hours; we work with a mixture of the two classic positions.

Price: One-way Economy Class fares start from $609 for travel between May 10 and June 29. The Economy Skycouch starts from an additional $599 (based on two people travelling). Flights from Auckland to Narita are daily, increasing to 10 times a week over peak season. From July, the three extra services (which depart at a different time) will land at Haneda Airport, which is actually handier to Tokyo.

Flight time: We take off at 1am on a scheduled 10-and-a-half-hour flight. We rolled into the gate at Narita about 20 minutes early.

Trick for young players: don’t fall into the two-movie trap on this route. You’ll only leave yourself five hours for sleep and with such a late take-off you’ll need to get a good amount of shut-eye. Hence, I contented myself with one viewing of the new Star Trek flick, and a mere 20 minutes of the compulsory documentar­y on How To Be A Man, otherwise known as Chasing Great. It was a shame not to see the rest of the Richie McCaw

flick, but on the plus side, I dreamed about him for the rest of the flight.

Food and drink: We shared a beef and beans and a presentabl­e chicken dish. I don’t know if any of the gazillion airline awards that are out there acknowledg­e Best Economy Class icecream, but I reckon Air New Zealand’s Kapiti would be a winner.

Service: A happy mob. This would be a pleasant run for the crew as it’s such a good flight for passengers to get some sleep.

Toilets: Tidy throughout and featuring the cool butterfly print on the walls. I prefer this one to the one with the toilet-humour bookcase.

Airport experience: This is among the last flights to depart for the evening, so she’s a quiet old Koru Lounge.

In a nutshell: I’m a fan of the Skycouch. It achieves the holy grail of Economy Class airline travel: a flat bed in the cheap seats. Our trip to Tokyo made perfect use of Skycouch as a launch pad for a short break in what should be a long-haul destinatio­n.

With airfares so low at the moment — wise folk are calling this the Golden Age of Travel — Kiwis are flying to what used to be long-haul cities to take short-term breaks. Los Angeles is the new Sydney; Buenos Aires the new Melbourne.

We were able to sleep well on the plane, arrive in the morning and check into our hotel before midday. With a departing flight in the evening, we got a full four days in the Japanese capital, with just three nights at our hotel — sleeping soundly on the plane either end and returning straight to work on landing at home. A great result.

The Auckland-to-Tokyo route is perfect for Skycouchin­g your way to a fantastic long weekend in one of Asia’s most remarkable cities.

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 ?? Pictures / Winston Aldworth; Brett Phibbs; Supplied ?? Clockwise from left: The butterfly print on the toilet wall of Air New Zealand’s black Boeing 787, the first one delivered to the airline; the Dreamliner at time of delivery; a Bombardier Q300; Air New Zealand’s Skycouch; An Etihad cabin crew staff...
Pictures / Winston Aldworth; Brett Phibbs; Supplied Clockwise from left: The butterfly print on the toilet wall of Air New Zealand’s black Boeing 787, the first one delivered to the airline; the Dreamliner at time of delivery; a Bombardier Q300; Air New Zealand’s Skycouch; An Etihad cabin crew staff...

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