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Yeah. I was thinking that was why everyone clapped too!The pilot talked about surviving the storm, or surviving the teenage girls?
Yeah. I was thinking that was why everyone clapped too!The pilot talked about surviving the storm, or surviving the teenage girls?
I’m a Wellingtonian by birth, can tell you that when that wind is howling, clapping is quite common in WLG and for good reason.One landing in WLG got a clap!
That was answered somewhere on AFF. Yes on 380 but no on other planesI don't know if the pilots can hear it at all. ?
The way I see it is possibly a safely thing that you allude to, maybe a hark back to days when pilots might have commandeered the plane more like a cowboy pilot or in a region where planes / flights were not known to have a good safety record.Only experienced clapping in Central and South America plus Carribean (basically Latino countries). I used to find it unnerving like those local passengers were surprised we landed safely (whereas for me that is expected).
I believe that Sydney’s smile+nod+wave to the bus-driver, when exiting the bus, is considered as weird globally as applauding when the ‘plane lands is to us …Maybe it's a "thank you" to the pilots which has become somewhat ritualistic
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That was pretty much our experience too, bored guards looking for something to do. We were working with a UK company back then, and there were a lot of the Brit embassy staff on board. I think they were happy to be leavingWeeks of drunk uniformed 16yo gun-toting mini-Hitlers barking unexpected random unexplained orders at you has an unnerving effect ...