Ok.. perhaps this is fairly obvious, but
there is really no better way to cross the Atlantic (in the
air) than via Concorde!
This is truly a fantastic experience!

However, I was not not
particularly pleased with their flight schedule
(departing JFK
@ 8:30AM, which for people who don't happen to live at the
airport means that one has to getup extremely early.
In the summer months the flight leaves at 12:30, which
makes it a bit more manageable for leisure travelers) .
But we made on time! There is also a very nice
place called the "Concorde Room" to have a full breakfast
and to peacefully watch the sun rise over the aircraft.

Once aboard one immediately notices that this is not
your typical aircraft. Frankly it is a
lot smaller than one would think. The interior
is somewhat smaller than a 737, and it is really quite
tight in the galley and the lavatories. The
seats, while very comfortable, are certainly nothing like a
Trans-Atlantic First Class seat on a 777, but then again,
you don't have to sit in this seat nearly as long!
The windows are tiny, and very thick. Imagine the
temperatures of the plane's skin at speeds that this plane
flies each day. In fact I understand that the heat
generated actually lengthens the plane in flight by several
centimeters!

Just prior to take-off, the pilot provides a little warning
to those who don't take this flight on a routine basis.
He warms that the noise and acceleration that one feels as
he turns on the after-burners is completely normal, and
there is no need to alarm oneself. There was a
noticeable change and you could really feel and hear
the power of those engines as we lifted off the tarmac!

On board and in the air one finds excellent food,
including a nice sampling of Beluga Caviar,
and the
"Concorde Cellar," as it is called,
which fortunately is quite well stocked.
It is really quite pleasant to have a nice sip of
Dom-Perignon
at 9:00AM., (However, considering the ultimate time change, this is
really quite excusable!) which in fact put all of
those on board in a rather festive mood for the rest of the
flight.
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British Airways is quite correct
when
simply stating that the flight
is a combination of

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Our cruising speed
across the Atlantic ! |
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If you are interested in any of the technical
specifications, or in booking your flight,
check out the following link. British
Airways has put together a nice Flash presentation
highlighting interesting facts about this plane,
both from a technical and passenger perspective.

(click on the BA logo for a Concorde tour
and to book your flight now...) |

A short three hours and
twenty seven minutes (17:25 the same day in London) after
leaving New York, we were in London. That was actually less
time than my flight from Houston to New York the previous night.
After many trips across on 777s and
747s, typically leaving in the
evening from NY and arriving in the UK at a miserable hour in the morning
the next day , It was great to make it across within the same day.
It puts one is such a different state of jet-lag that it is
hard to comprehend the distance traveled and that one has
really crossed the Atlantic.

We had the fortunate opportunity
to visit with the flight crew upon arrival to London.
The cockpit is really quite tiny.
What one sees, considering the vintage of
the technology is quite amazing!
It was quite obvious how much each of the
crew enjoyed their jobs; after all, they work at and within, the
pinnacle of the civilian aviation world. Upon landing, they
recounted stories of the 747 &
777 jets that happened to be following
flight paths below
us (i.e. 5 miles below us !) on our journey across
the Atlantic. Evidently there were a
few comments from the subsonic jets about turbulence from our
sonic boom. Our apologies for any wine spillage to those of you
who were passing below...
The flight crew made a very kind offer to take our
photograph in the cockpit !!
I could not be more happy about this photo: