Taking Flight

Travel Blog  •  Rob Verger  •  01.23.09 | 12:34 PM ET

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Welcome to World Hum’s blog focused on all things related to air travel. Here I’ll be chronicling the ups and downs of flying in today’s skies.

I’ll confess to a love of flying. It’s a fascinating combination of adventure and boredom, of leaving the earth and coming back, of departure and arrival. My grandfather flew DC-3s for the now-defunct Eastern Air Lines, and whether there’s a genetic component to my love of air travel or not, I don’t know. But I do love it. (Make no mistake—there is plenty that I, like every air traveler, occasionally find pretty miserable about flying, too.)

Perhaps what I enjoy most about air travel are the contrasts that movement and the resulting change of geography can reveal. Last week I flew from São Paulo, Brazil, back to my home in New York City. The afternoon before my night flight I sat by an open window, enjoying the last moments of warm, tropical air. At the pizza restaurant across the street, two waiters in white shirts and black aprons stood outside, killing time. One lit a cigarette. Birds—swallows, I think—swooped in the sky outside. Later, on the runway at São Paulo-Guarulhos International Airport, a powerful thunderstorm engulfed the airport and the pilot announced that they were delaying the departure until the weather improved. Fine with me. Finally, nine hours later, we touched down on a cold and clear New York City morning, and some time later, our taxi sat motionless on the Triborough Bridge, pulled over by the police: the driver hadn’t been signaling, the cop said.

That captures what for me is essential about air travel: motion and what it can reveal of different places in the world. This is a theme that Barry Lopez explored in his excellent piece “Flight,” which was first published in Harpers in 1995 and later anthologized in his book “About this Life.” I take it to be a kind of foundational text when it comes to exploring both the logistical and poetic sides of air travel. Lopez took more than 40 flights on 747 cargo planes to explore the global air freight industry, but he also ruminates on the feeling of skipping from location to location by plane, of the changing sense of place and time as you travel by air across the world. I’ll be touching on this theme—among many others—from time to time here.


Rob Verger

Rob Verger is a frequent contributor to World Hum and the site's former air travel blogger. His articles and photographs have appeared in the Boston Globe and other publications, and he's a former undergraduate writing instructor at Columbia University. If you like, .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) or follow him on Twitter.


6 Comments for Taking Flight

Nancy D. Brown 01.23.09 | 2:28 PM ET

Hi Rob,
Welcome to World Hum and cheers to your Air Flight blog taking off. 

A lot of my friends think I’m crazy when I say, in all sincerity, that I’ll hop a plane to anywhere.  I love travel and flying on a plane means I’m headed somewhere new, exciting or returning to a favorite destination.

Here’s wishing you many happy landings.
Twitter @Nancydbrown

Eva Holland 01.23.09 | 2:41 PM ET

Welcome “aboard”, Rob! (Har har.)

I used to absolutely love flying, but these days I have a hard time holding on to that sense of wonder. Seems like your blog will help.

Rob Verger 01.23.09 | 8:55 PM ET

Thanks, Nancy and Eva.

Nancy, as for your comment that “I’ll hop a plane to anywhere”—I couldn’t agree more!

—Rob

Michael Yessis 01.26.09 | 11:46 AM ET

Great start, Rob. Glad to have you here.

Sandy 01.28.09 | 7:20 PM ET

Hi, Mike
Have u traveled recently to Acapulco, MX.  Seems this year the air fare prices are OUTRAGEOUS!
What’s up with that.  Gas is at it’s lowest in years…
will be leaving Phila. pa. next week 2-8 for 2 weeks.  Love to hear anything you have to say if you’ve visited recently or whenever.  Or any info. on the best airline or $s.  just for airfare….  Been going for 7-8 years. every year.

Mohammad Zohaib Khan 02.09.09 | 2:06 PM ET

Thanks to share this beautiful thoughts. Glad to read about you.
Mohammad Zohaib Khan from Atlanta

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