Hello all,
I really appreciate your responses. Basically this is my beef with Delta:-
CAR SEATS
I couldn't get any definitive information from Delta over what car seats the airline would accept. I emailed them, stressed we were flying from England with an English car seat, and received a form letter back stating the seat needed to be FAA approved.
I called Delta's London office and asked a woman there what the European equivalent to the FAA would be. The woman had no idea.
The kid and I paid Gatwick airport a visit and the Delta desk assured me most newer car seats are accepted. However, if the crew didn't like our seat I may have to hold the baby the entire trip or hold the baby with the fasten the seatbelt sign is turned on.
It seemed Delta didn't have any information they could provide, and using a car seat on their plane was going to be a total crap shoot. It took me a couple of months to decide on a forward facing car seat for the plane because of this.
SKYMILES
I had ample amount of AirMiles for a free ticket, but I was unable to use the airmiles in May, and was forced to use them for July. I declined this option, as the paid ticket would have cost £1000. Flying in May for both of us cost roughly £700.
Stupidly since I still had AirMiles to use, I opted to use them to pay for the US part of the trip. So the Gatwick to Atlanta and back was paid for, but the Atlanta to Mobile, AL and back was taken care of in AirMiles.
I had no idea this scenario would create such havoc for Delta. They booked both our tickets as two completely separate reservations each. This created massive problems on the return trip.
FOOD
At Gatwick airport I ordered the baby a fruit plate for the transatlantic trip. After we were up in the air I was informed they had no record of the order, and luckily they can give us one because they had an extra plate.
A week before the baby and I were to return to England, I called Delta to reserve a fruit plate. The woman on the phone swore Delta didn't do fruit plates. When I asked to speak to a supervisor, I was put on hold for 35 minutes and eventually had to hang up. I called back later that day and another Delta employee told me the plate was already booked under daughter's reservation. Did we get a plate on the return trip? No.
I fully planned on bringing as little as possible, but because I couldn't get any consistent answers from Delta, I brought a very heavy bag containing food stuffs. I brought a thermos with hot water, a plastic container with water, several sachets of formula, fruit puree pots and other things because in the end my worst fears were realized.
THE RETURN
On the return trip, once we got to Atlanta I noticed I wasn't given my boarding pass for us at the Atlanta/Gatwick flight in Mobile. After asking the employee at the counter, he told me Charlotte and I were booked as no shows. I asked him why twice, as we were on time and the schedule was following to plan, and he refused to give me answer.
He was able to find us different seats. Originally the baby was going to have a window seat. We ended up sitting in the center with a man sitting to her right side. Luckily he was very nice, but it took a lot of energy from me because the baby was grabbing at him. The man was doing a crossword, and Charlotte showed interest in his pen top. He gave it to her and I had to explain to him the top was a choking hazard.
When our flight arrived at Gatwick, a Delta employee approached a couple of elderly travellers to figure out if any of them wanted to use the motorized cart service. I flagged the employee down to ask him if baby and I could use it as well, and he said he would check. Later on he returned and said we could.
Our small group waited until everyone else got off the plane. I carried my heavy bag, the baby's car seat and the baby, got to the top and the cart man said babies were not allowed to ride.
Needless to say I had no one to flag down at that point, so I had to put the baby in her seat, drag it along the floor with the strap and carry my big heavy bag all the way to customs.
Sorry for the long story, and thank you to those who have read it. I was so angry when I was told we were booked as no shows. I was almost angry enough to just over the counter and pummel that employee who didn't even make eye contact with me. And the flight attendant on the same flight who said she would help me board, carrying my very heavy passport and boarding pass and nothing else. (The car seat wasn't heavy and could have been easily carried by her.)
I have never been in such a situation where I felt I was going to lose it, and had I not had the baby, I probably would have been arrested.
I don't care if a plane is cramped, as it's expected. But if Virgin provides seats and a stroller service and maybe a little courtesy when flying alone with a small child, they'll be worth the cost.
We plan on flying out to the US again Christmas 2007. By that time, Charlotte will be 2 years, 3 months old.
My husband is in the process of applying for a job that'll take us to the Isle of Man. Our prospects look good at the moment, and if we make the move, we'll be much better off financially. This probably means the baby and I can fly back to the US once a year and all three of us can fly once a year. But I'll only attempt that with a more reasonable airline.
L