Liam’s possesses a fine pair of lanky lalls and doesn’t look good with his knees wedged against his chin so I booked emergency exit seats for the flight to Palma. You can do that on Sleazyjet these days (for an extra fee, obviously) and this helps to mitigate the scrum at the gate where it’s every man for himself and the Devil takes the hindmost. Senior citizens have been known to break a hip in the sprint. As Liam enjoyed the extra inches, our neighbours gathered around us: a squawking clutch of bottle-blond Essex grannies with fake nails, fake teeth, spray-on tans and spray-on micro-skirts. They hit the bottle as soon as soon as the captain switched off the fasten your seat belt sign. Drinking the plane dry, they even demanded a discount as they polished off the bar. The saintly cabin crew indulged them with grace and patience. We were relieved that an emergency landing was not required since these pissed-up ladies would have struggled to see the doors, let alone release them and the only brace position they knew was chucking up in the gutters of Magaluf. One senior attendant, a slightly camp Spanish trolley dolly with an Andalucian lisp, had clearly seen it all before. He looked over at us with a wearied expression, throwing his eyes up to the clouds in resignation. Almodóvar met Essex and lost every time.
Jack Scott
Imagine the absurdity of two openly gay, married, middle aged, middle class men escaping the liberal sanctuary of anonymous London to relocate to a Muslim country. I chronicled our exploits with the mad, the bad, the sad and the glad in a blog for the whole world to ignore. Then came the book which became a critically acclaimed best seller. Its success opened out a whole new career for me, firstly as an author, and now as an indie publisher. Who'd have thought it? Certainly not me.
In June 2012, we ended our Anatolian affair and paddled back to Britain on the evening tide, washing up in Norwich, a surprising city in eastern England, then to the wilds of Norfolk as the only gays in the village. I’m sometimes nostalgic for our encounters with the hopeless, the hapless and, yes, the happy go lucky. They gave me an unexpected tale to tell and for this I thank them.
Ahh, Easyjet. I’d rather walk.
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Not with my dodgy legs 🙂
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Oh good Lord! I generally dislike the experience of flying, and drunken traveling companions is just too much! At the end of the Jamaica – London flight, I often feel like giving the cabin staff a medal each as they say goodbye to us all, trying to conceal their feeling of relief! They are indeed saintly. Happy holidays!
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At least it was only 2 hours 😉
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. . my daughter ended her flying career as purser on ‘Maiden Seattle’ (geddit) doing the Tokyo run for Beardie of Virgin fame – the stories she told you wouldn’t believe – although having to drive through Essex these days to get anywhere, you probably would!
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So little surprises me these days. I take it all in my stride 😉
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Ha…so you two are missing us Gumbet Gals soo much you had to visit our sisters in Magaluf!
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I think we attract ’em! 😀
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Should take Easy Jet to Inverness – a very refined crowd on those flights.
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Ah, the refined Highlanders. We should give it a go!
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“.a squawking clutch of bottle-blond Essex grannies with fake nails, fake teeth, spray-on tans and spray-on micro-skirts.”
This had me giggling but what worries me are the spray-on micro-skirts. Tee-hee. You sound so unflappable. Entertaining, you are.
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Got me a little worried too. Glad they didn’t bend down! 🙂
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I see you ordered the ‘in-flight entertainment package’ 😉 Have fun in sunny Spain
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It certainly was entertaining 🙂
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