Irish Daily Mirror

IN FOR THE LONG HAUL

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on the individual route.

As you might expect, before each flight there is passengers’ luggage and any cargo to be unloaded, plus the now-empty catering carts to be removed.

After a thorough clean of the cabins by 20 staff for one hour, the fresh meals and drinks, luggage and cargo are loaded, security checks are carried out and the crew boards ready to greet the passenger s once again. It’s a well-practised routine.

Day 1 London to Los Angeles, California, USA

(time difference -8hrs)

G-XLEG operates flight numbers BA269 and BA268 again on her round trip from Heathrow’s Terminal 5 to LA’S LAX.

Powered by four mighty Rollsroyce Trent 900 engines, each producing up to 84,098lb of thrust, G-XLEG thunders down Heathrow’s Southern runway and climbs out of West London into the wild blue yonder on the outbound flight.

Heading across the Atlantic Ocean and North America, the trip clocks in at 10 hours 56 minutes; the route typically skirts the tip of Greenland, crosses a swathe of central Canada and heads down to LA over US western states such as North Dakota or Montana, Wyoming, Utah and Nevada or Arizona.

Later that day, the overnight return from Southern California – helped by tailwinds – is shorter at 9hrs 8mins. ■■Journey distance: round trip of around 10,900 miles.

Day 2 London-doha,

(+3hrs)

Qatar

After landing from LA mid-afternoon,

G-XLEG is set for overnight flight BA123 to the capital of the Middle East host nation of the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

Once cleaned and loaded, it’s a nippy 6hrs 16mins to the Persian Gulf city’s award-winning Hamad Internatio­nal Airport hub, typically routing across Belgium, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Romania, the Black Sea, Turkey, Iraq and the Persian Gulf.

Day 3 Doha-london

The afternoon return from Doha is flight BA122, which clocks in at 7hrs 21mins.

■■Journey distance: round trip of around 6,520 miles.

Day 4 London-miami, Florida, USA (-5hrs)

G-XLEG is heading back west across the Atlantic today, flying BA207 and BA206 on a round trip to The Magic City.

The route can either head out across Ireland and the ocean, or go more northerly and down the eastern seaboard of Canada and America.

On the latter, if you are by a window on the right-hand side of the plane and it’s a clear day, you may well get a superb view of New York City from 40,000ft!

On this outward trip the duration is 8hrs 34mins, while the return leg straight across the Atlantic to Cornwall is 8hrs 15mins. ■■Journey distance: round trip of around 8,800 miles.

Day 5 London-miami, Florida, USA (-5hrs)

And... repeat! G-XLEG is heading straight back to Miami, but takes 11 minutes longer to get there and seven minutes less to complete the return journey.

■■Journey distance: as before, around 8,800 miles.

Day 6

USA (-8hrs)

London to Los Angeles,

Back on familiar jetlag territory, G-XLEG is flying BA269 and BA268 on a round trip to the sunny City of Angels.

While the outbound time is a quicker 10hrs 29mins, the hop back across The Pond from LAX is a little slower at 9hrs 35mins (more time to get some shuteye for the passengers!) ■■Journey distance: again around 10,900 miles.

Day 7 London-johannesbu­rg, South Africa (+2hrs)

New day, new country, new continent. After returning from Florida, G-XLEG is heading to the Rainbow Nation for a round trip to ‘Joburg’, or ‘Jozi’, which operates as two overnight flights – BA57 and BA54.

The outward route to OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport goes over France, the Mediterran­ean Sea, Algeria, Niger, Chad, Central African Republic, Republic of the Congo,

Democratic

Republic of the Congo, Angola, Zambia and Botswana, while the inbound service pretty much reverses the same route.

Heading down to the southern hemisphere summer takes 10hrs 7mins, while returning to Heathrow’s Terminal 5 adds 35mins, with the bonus of near jetlag-free travel on both legs.

Landing back on Heathrow’s Northern runway after a short stack over Kent, G-XLEG’S week of flying around the world is complete. ■■Journey distance: round trip of around 10,520 miles.

Aviation never stands still for long and for G-XLEG it starts all over again the following day (back to Joburg, then off to San Francisco, Dubai, Miami and Chicago, should you be wondering).

Captain Mike Blythe, BA’S A380 Flight Training Manager, said: “I’ve been lucky enough to fly the superjumbo for nine years since British Airways first welcomed the aircraft into its fleet in 2013.

“I’m constantly impressed by the sheer size of the A380 and its ability to carry hundreds of our customers to their chosen destinatio­ns every day. The cabin is so quiet, spacious and comfortabl­e.

“I love flying into LAX. The views of the Los Angeles Basin as we make our approach are spectacula­r and as a destinatio­n, there is so much to see and do.”

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