TK1912 ZRH-IST
A321ceo J
TC-JSY
On time
Although I flew the reverse of this route on an A330 a couple of days ago, TK mix it up between wide bodies and narrow. This morning was an older A321 but still with proper J recliner seats. This was the first flight in a one way J TK points redemption ZRH-IST-TAS.
ZRH has at least three check in zones so it was a couple of hundred metres walk from the shuttle drop point to Check In 2 and then around to the row 4 counters to find the TK desks. No one in the J line so had boarding passes pretty quickly. Interestingly, no questions at all about heading to Uzbekistan. Although Aus passports don’t need a visa, I was expecting to have to show that I had onward travel out of the country (having booked a one way flight in) but nothing was asked of me.
TK offer a choice of two lounges for this flight and neither of them are their *A partner Swiss’ home lounges (Swiss Business or Swiss Senator lounges). The flight was leaving from the E gates (non-Schengen satellite terminal requiring a short underground shuttle journey), so I accepted a pass for the Aspire lounge to see what it was like figuring I could decamp to the LX lounge if I didn’t like it. It was quite small and relatively basic, but had some breakfasty items and a push button coffee machine and large windows looking out of the airfield. As I only had 40 minutes until boarding I just stayed put there.

This was the scene out the window at the boarding gate. Although I left the lounge when boarding flashed up on the monitor, boarding hadn’t actually started at the gate.
After five or so minutes we were allowed to board. TK maintains a separate lane for J / *G boarding so no real need to line up anywhere. The boarding line stopped pretty early on the jet bridge though so maybe the crew weren’t ready.

Obviously a Swiss home port.
Once seated there was the PDB choices of water, TK standard raspberry drink or a type of homemade lemonade: I usually take the raspberry drink. Hot towels were next. Four rows of 2-2 J recliners on this aircraft and only one seat vacant.
Interestingly, the last pax to board were a very elderly male monk, a slightly less elderly lady with the group and two middle aged monks. One of the middle aged monks was in the first row of Y and the other three behind me in J. The old man monk looked to be virtually immobile and maybe limited in sight as he was guided by both hands by the other younger monk seated in J with him. He shuffled very, very slowly to his row 4 seat. He was a big unit too. An evacuation would have been… not worth thinking about.

This B777 pulled up beside us whilst they were ‘finalising paperwork’.
On taxi out the Swiss love of a good ski jump was evident in the design of one of the runways.
It was a smooth, just over two hour flight. Breakfast was served with a choice of three mains available. TK serve a tray with fruit, yoghurt, some small cold meat cuts, olives, cheese etc first up. When done with that ‘appetiser’ they then bring out your choice of main. The first serving by itself is probably enough food for most people and likely about what a main meal is from Australia’s main two. The free internet access via wifi didn’t work for the first hour but I guess they reset the system as the ‘Wifly’ network disappeared for a bit and then both it and satellite internet access were active. A little slow but useable for the rest of flight.

Much like on departure from IST a few days ago, there was another aircraft paralleling us on descent (another A321 I believe). Also it’s interesting how Istanbul has expanded with its version of urban sprawl: no massed ‘quarter acre block’ subdivisions, but rather clusters of multi-storey apartment blocks.
This aircraft was sitting at an end gate as we taxied in. Who remembers TAA/Australian Airlines when they used to fly A300s? Now, this is the most modern A300-600R variant but is still apparently 38 years old.

Air tours of Iran? Not something I would have picked as a large market???
It turns out to be a regular Iranian RPT operator.