raviepoo
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I bought a ticket to Hawaii on Orbitz. Because of a technicality I was forced to use paper tickets instead of E tickets. The tickets arrived promptly. Before the flight I received several notifications that my itinerary had changed. I looked at the altered flight times and went about my business. A day before the trip I got an email from Orbitz confirming my flights.
On the day of the trip I got to the airport a little more than 90 minutes before take off. I brought my paper tickets with me. I did not bring the emailed confirmation of mye itinerary, as I had the paper tickets. This turned out to be a BIG mistake.
At the ticket counter the Continental ticket agent gave my ticket a funny look and said, "Oh you have a connecting flight? I don't see that in here."
Quiet panic ensued.
After quite a long time and quite a few phone calls, I was left with this situation:
The Hawaiian Airlines flight printed on my ticket did not exist, due to a schedule change.
The flight I had been switched to was an "illegal connection" (not enough time to get to the gate) so I had been dumped from it.
No other flight was available that evening.
The next flight to my destination was at 7:40 the next morning.
No, the airline could not help me out with a hotel in Honolulu, despite the fact that I was not going to be able to use my pre-paid hotel room in Kona.
Time had passed during the transaction so I had better run to the gate and get right on the plane.
What a way to start a vacation!
The Continental agent was very nice and tried to be helpful. Just the same, there was no getting around the economic loss of paying for a hotel room in a city that I could not get to. I suppose I should have called the airlines before my trip to confirm my flights, but I trusted the email that Orbitz sent me.
When I got home after the trip, things became even uglier. The Hawaiian Airlines flight that was on my paper ticket did not exist, sure enough. But the really bizarre part was that my itinerary, and all of the subsequent emails from Orbitz noting time changes of flights, listed that connecting flight as a flight on Aloha Airlines. The itinerary and the tickets that Orbitz issued did not use the same carrier for the second leg of the trip! How the heck did that happen? Maybe I should have taken the emailed itinerary but I assumed that the itinerary on the fromt page of the ticket package would be enough to allow the ticket agent to pull my flights out of the computer.
For all I know, there might have been an empty seat on an Aloha Airlines flight that evening with my name on it. All the sturm und drang at the airport and the scramble to find a place to overnight in Honolulu might have been completely unnecessary.
This has left me with an extremely bad taste in my mouth. I will never take a flight again without calling the airline to confirm first. And I will probably not buy any more tickets from Orbitz unless I can convince them to compensate me for the unused hotel room.
On the day of the trip I got to the airport a little more than 90 minutes before take off. I brought my paper tickets with me. I did not bring the emailed confirmation of mye itinerary, as I had the paper tickets. This turned out to be a BIG mistake.
At the ticket counter the Continental ticket agent gave my ticket a funny look and said, "Oh you have a connecting flight? I don't see that in here."
Quiet panic ensued.
After quite a long time and quite a few phone calls, I was left with this situation:
The Hawaiian Airlines flight printed on my ticket did not exist, due to a schedule change.
The flight I had been switched to was an "illegal connection" (not enough time to get to the gate) so I had been dumped from it.
No other flight was available that evening.
The next flight to my destination was at 7:40 the next morning.
No, the airline could not help me out with a hotel in Honolulu, despite the fact that I was not going to be able to use my pre-paid hotel room in Kona.
Time had passed during the transaction so I had better run to the gate and get right on the plane.
What a way to start a vacation!
The Continental agent was very nice and tried to be helpful. Just the same, there was no getting around the economic loss of paying for a hotel room in a city that I could not get to. I suppose I should have called the airlines before my trip to confirm my flights, but I trusted the email that Orbitz sent me.
When I got home after the trip, things became even uglier. The Hawaiian Airlines flight that was on my paper ticket did not exist, sure enough. But the really bizarre part was that my itinerary, and all of the subsequent emails from Orbitz noting time changes of flights, listed that connecting flight as a flight on Aloha Airlines. The itinerary and the tickets that Orbitz issued did not use the same carrier for the second leg of the trip! How the heck did that happen? Maybe I should have taken the emailed itinerary but I assumed that the itinerary on the fromt page of the ticket package would be enough to allow the ticket agent to pull my flights out of the computer.
For all I know, there might have been an empty seat on an Aloha Airlines flight that evening with my name on it. All the sturm und drang at the airport and the scramble to find a place to overnight in Honolulu might have been completely unnecessary.
This has left me with an extremely bad taste in my mouth. I will never take a flight again without calling the airline to confirm first. And I will probably not buy any more tickets from Orbitz unless I can convince them to compensate me for the unused hotel room.