Griswold’s Road Trip

Solid

Active Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2012
Posts
566
It’s starting to get real. Check in for the first leg done, still not packed off course.

A trip planned for a while doing a US east coast road trip to mark a birthday milestone. Flying in and out of New York driving south to Miami and back another way over five weeks. Longest holiday in 20 years. No more than 4 hours driving in a day in a giant American SUV.

For the actual flights, flying Asiana in J from Sydney to Seoul and then on to New York the next day. On the way back reverse but not leaving the airport.

We are slightly more than the Griswold’s being two parents and three kids under 15 as opposed to the holiday legends who were 2 and 2.

Couple of comments on the Asiana experience so far, recognising they will be merged “eventually”.

1. Very good pricing for J to New York over the Christmas period at ~$7k AUD. For a family of 5 still expensive but not compared to other airlines.
2. Clunky website.
3. Good communication, there has been a couple of 5 or 10 minute schedule changes since we booked. Email received and a follow up call from their Sydney office to confirm the schedule changes are ok. Not sure if this is just a J thing.
4. As we have a more than 10 hour layover on the way to New York we are offered a hotel by Asiana that they pay for. This is not proactively offered and you have to book this against the ticket by calling them. However as they called about the schedule changes I did it then. We don’t know where it is and will be given a voucher at check in at Sydney which we redeem at arrivals in Seoul. From what I’ve read it online it “works well” and is well sign posted but I am alert but not alarmed. Anyway what’s the worst that could happen.
5. For kids meals you can’t add online but have to call. Again did it on one of their calls to us. The flights from
Western ports (Sydney / New York) have only “western” kids meals loaded but the Seoul flights have a choice of western or Korean which you preorder like BTC.

Ended up joining everyone up to Asiana Miles. Again clunky and annoying website but should earn star alliance status (for travellers over 12) and can use points on their partners and their usage process looks reasonably flexible for now. Not that we need status on this trip but may come in handy in the future on flights on Air NZ or SQ.

Will try to post as we go along.

As a side for those that have or have family members with ADHD, Ritalin and similar are illegal in South Korea however you can get an exemption if you are travelling and it is for personal use prescribed by a doctor.. As we are leaving the airport on the way over we applied for one. The website application is relatively straightforward being in English and Korean but you need a lot of supporting documents to upload including letters from a doctor confirming diagnosis and usage rather than the normal doctors letter which just says their prescription.. 6-10 business day processing time and the approval is in Korean only. You have to declare at customs and according to the approval even with approval of you don’t declare you are breaching the law.
 
On board with the Griswold fam +1.
If I may ask, where will the milestone birthday be @Solid ?
Should be a terrific family trip - enjoy!
A quirk of the pricing (and perhaps suitable for AFF) midnight on the birthday in question will strike likely somewhere over the Phillipine Sea, landing back in Sydney the morning off. If still awake might have a celebratory drink at the onboard bar on the Asiana A380.

The trip itself is the celebration, but of course likely to be more festivities back home.

Two of the Griswold offspring also celebrate their birthdays during the trip. One will be in Savannah and one in Orlando.
 
Keep Rusty on a tight leash
Our Rusty equivalent is our oldest, 13 almost 14. He has been a bit anxious about the trip because of the negativeness about the US on social media but have been continually reminding him the lived experience of people in the US is completely different.

He just said he is keen to get out and explore our first stop in the US so that’s a good sign.

Anyway electronic arrivals form for South Korea now done for our overnight stay, we are finally packed and about twelve hours before we will be at the airport.

Again I found the South Korean arrivals form website clunky like all the other South Korean websites I’ve used. It wouldn’t process unless you put in a South Korean address, we don’t know the hotel until we get there so put in Asiana’s head office.
 
Read our AFF credit card guides and start earning more points now.

AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements

Looking forward to the report!

Some others might have advice as to the best place to credit your miles!

For example, both Singapore airlines and Air canada’s Aeroplan both allow you to redeem for virgin domestic flights. It all depends of course which booking class you’re in for business, and the number of miles you’ll earn.

And your future travel plans.
 
Safely ensconced in the Air NZ lounge after herding all the cats through check in, security and immigration. The lounge is down near get 54 and the boarding gate for our plane is at gate 10. It’s been described to us at check in and the lounge as a “good 10 minute walk”.

I had expected for us to collect our suitcases but they have been checked all the way through, luckily we all have a change of clothes in our carry on in case the bags went missing.

Step 1 of the mystery layover hotel has been a success with us being provided the paper with the instructions the other end at check in which is below. It also says not to collect your bags.

Next stop OZ602.

IMG_6387.jpeg
 
It’s starting to get real. Check in for the first leg done, still not packed off course.

A trip planned for a while doing a US east coast road trip to mark a birthday milestone. Flying in and out of New York driving south to Miami and back another way over five weeks. Longest holiday in 20 years. No more than 4 hours driving in a day in a giant American SUV.

For the actual flights, flying Asiana in J from Sydney to Seoul and then on to New York the next day. On the way back reverse but not leaving the airport.

We are slightly more than the Griswold’s being two parents and three kids under 15 as opposed to the holiday legends who were 2 and 2.

Couple of comments on the Asiana experience so far, recognising they will be merged “eventually”.

1. Very good pricing for J to New York over the Christmas period at ~$7k AUD. For a family of 5 still expensive but not compared to other airlines.
2. Clunky website.
3. Good communication, there has been a couple of 5 or 10 minute schedule changes since we booked. Email received and a follow up call from their Sydney office to confirm the schedule changes are ok. Not sure if this is just a J thing.
4. As we have a more than 10 hour layover on the way to New York we are offered a hotel by Asiana that they pay for. This is not proactively offered and you have to book this against the ticket by calling them. However as they called about the schedule changes I did it then. We don’t know where it is and will be given a voucher at check in at Sydney which we redeem at arrivals in Seoul. From what I’ve read it online it “works well” and is well sign posted but I am alert but not alarmed. Anyway what’s the worst that could happen.
5. For kids meals you can’t add online but have to call. Again did it on one of their calls to us. The flights from
Western ports (Sydney / New York) have only “western” kids meals loaded but the Seoul flights have a choice of western or Korean which you preorder like BTC.

Ended up joining everyone up to Asiana Miles. Again clunky and annoying website but should earn star alliance status (for travellers over 12) and can use points on their partners and their usage process looks reasonably flexible for now. Not that we need status on this trip but may come in handy in the future on flights on Air NZ or SQ.

Will try to post as we go along.

As a side for those that have or have family members with ADHD, Ritalin and similar are illegal in South Korea however you can get an exemption if you are travelling and it is for personal use prescribed by a doctor.. As we are leaving the airport on the way over we applied for one. The website application is relatively straightforward being in English and Korean but you need a lot of supporting documents to upload including letters from a doctor confirming diagnosis and usage rather than the normal doctors letter which just says their prescription.. 6-10 business day processing time and the approval is in Korean only. You have to declare at customs and according to the approval even with approval of you don’t declare you are breaching the law.
Japan is very similar about prohibited drugs. Not only get approval but also declare on entry at a separate entrance.

Our TK flight changed by 10 minutes last night I checked into the booking and all our selected seats had disappaeared and we had to do them again. Maybe check yours.
 
For the purpose of the report I have decided to adopt the names of the Griswold’s for the travelling party. So we have Clark (yours truly), Ellen (my wife), Rusty (eldest son), Audrey Snr (eldest daughter) and Audrey Jnr (youngest daughter)..

Happy for suggestions of changes for the two little ones!
 
The first leg is done and dusted and ready for round 2, OZ222 Seoul to New York.

As for OZ602, the flight was on the whole a positive experience. I can see why people say what they do about the Oz hard product, it’s completely fine but uninspiring and not a lot of privacy if you value that. I can’t decide whether the colour scheme in the interior is retro cool or just bad.

IMG_6389.jpegIMG_6390.jpegIMG_6391.jpeg
 
No offer of a pre departure drink, amenities kit and slippers provided.

The all important food menu and drinks menu. For some reason I always like it when you have the cardboard menus. Clark (got to get used to referring to myself in the third person) went the korean option and Ellen the western.. During the flight the chicken sandwich and spicy ramen was also sampled.
IMG_6398.jpeg
IMG_6399.jpegIMG_6400.jpeg
 
Service during the flight was excellent, call bells answered very quickly, drinks proactively offered and refreshed proactively, The meals and flight details were all explained personally in great detail. All in all to me good service always makes the flight and for any “deficiencies” if you could call it that in the hard product.

Audrey Jnr had the crew wrapped around her little finger, there is nothing they wouldn’t do for her.

Although still a space, the onboard bar area isn’t utilised, but not a bad place for a change of scenery and a chat.

IMG_6412.jpeg
 
Drama for the gentlemen next to us though. Just before the doors closing he was given a note to say his suitcase hasn’t been loaded. I didn’t catch where he was transiting from but he mentioned a few times he had a 20 hour transit and tried to get his suitcase during transit and it wasn’t allowed.

He was wearing a tshirt, shorts and crocs with no other clothes and with an expected arrival temp of -1 was quite concerned.. He did say he was staying in Korea for a couple of days.

For some reason he couldn’t get his head around it, and kept repeating “this is not possible” to the crew,, who he kept summonsing back.

At some stage there must have been some form of resolution or solution offered as he was happy again..
 

Become an AFF member!

Join Australian Frequent Flyer (AFF) for free and unlock insider tips, exclusive deals, and global meetups with 65,000+ frequent flyers.

AFF members can also access our Frequent Flyer Training courses, and upgrade to Fast-track your way to expert traveller status and unlock even more exclusive discounts!

AFF forum abbreviations

Wondering about Y, J or any of the other abbreviations used on our forum?

Check out our guide to common AFF acronyms & abbreviations.
Back
Top