jukebox333
Active Member
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2011
- Posts
- 845
- Qantas
- Platinum
- Virgin
- Red
Last week, I was discussing Easter with my parents (who are 80 and 82) and they suggested they fly across from SYD to PER to spend Easter with the grandkids. I mentioned that both flight and hotel availability might be tight, but that it sounded like a good idea.
When the call ended, I went online to the Qantas website, and was surprised to see availability on every flight, and at least two seats in even the cheapest discount catagory, on the days they wanted to travel. I emailed them the details, and suggested flights that would mean I could collect them after work and drop them off in the morning the day they left.
Unfortunately, my "seats might be hard to find" comment implanted itself in the selective hearing of my mother, who rushed off to her Central Coast travel agent the next morning, without looking at emails. (she's 82 - what can I say - they don't get a lot of email!).
Now never mind I could have, and wanted to do all the legwork from my end, but what really got on my cough was that when they got to the TA and said they preferred to fly QF, the used car salesman.. er, TA, looked at his screen, and straight faced told them "there aren't any seats on Qantas, so you can choose between Virgin and Deathstar". So they are flying Virgin...
I was ropeable when I heard all this. I checked the website again, and there were STILL plenty of seats at all price points on QF. If it wasn't for the fact I'm in Perth and they are in Gosford, I'd have marched into the agency and ripped the shyster a new one. Needless to say Grandma and Grandpa have been told never to cross the threshold of that establishment again, and reminded that I can do all thier travel arrangements for them, even if I am on the other side of the country.
I think it's borderline illegal that for whatever reason (superior commissions, I would assume), that gullible people (and yes, I consider a pair of octagenarians gullible, even if they are my parents) are told bald faced lies about what products are available. And if I was Qantas, I'd be pretty damn angry that passengers are being syphoned off by unscrupulous operators.
When the call ended, I went online to the Qantas website, and was surprised to see availability on every flight, and at least two seats in even the cheapest discount catagory, on the days they wanted to travel. I emailed them the details, and suggested flights that would mean I could collect them after work and drop them off in the morning the day they left.
Unfortunately, my "seats might be hard to find" comment implanted itself in the selective hearing of my mother, who rushed off to her Central Coast travel agent the next morning, without looking at emails. (she's 82 - what can I say - they don't get a lot of email!).
Now never mind I could have, and wanted to do all the legwork from my end, but what really got on my cough was that when they got to the TA and said they preferred to fly QF, the used car salesman.. er, TA, looked at his screen, and straight faced told them "there aren't any seats on Qantas, so you can choose between Virgin and Deathstar". So they are flying Virgin...
I was ropeable when I heard all this. I checked the website again, and there were STILL plenty of seats at all price points on QF. If it wasn't for the fact I'm in Perth and they are in Gosford, I'd have marched into the agency and ripped the shyster a new one. Needless to say Grandma and Grandpa have been told never to cross the threshold of that establishment again, and reminded that I can do all thier travel arrangements for them, even if I am on the other side of the country.
I think it's borderline illegal that for whatever reason (superior commissions, I would assume), that gullible people (and yes, I consider a pair of octagenarians gullible, even if they are my parents) are told bald faced lies about what products are available. And if I was Qantas, I'd be pretty damn angry that passengers are being syphoned off by unscrupulous operators.