And you forgot to cross yourself 42 timesTalldrink said:If this has been asked, tell me... Are Dominicans the only ones who clap when the plane arrives?
Talldrink said:If this has been asked, tell me... Are Dominicans the only ones who clap when the plane arrives?
Talldrink said:If this has been asked, tell me... Are Dominicans the only ones who clap when the plane arrives?
Funny you should ask that...jerryme said:I jus flew to Mexico from Atlanta US and noticed only the Mexicans form the US on the plane applauded when we landed. I remembered flying from NYC to POP and the Dominicans applaud, after the pilot has to yell at them to sit down and turn off their fricking cell phones for fifteen minutes so we could leave. Why don't Dominicans sit the frick down when they get on a plane??????????????
Talldrink said:If this has been asked, tell me... Are Dominicans the only ones who clap when the plane arrives?
Pib said:Funny you should ask that...
When you land in St. Marteen you don't see any land until the airplane is almost touching the ground and stop seeing it before the plane stops. Trust me, I wasn't applauding when the bird stopped because I was busy trying to locate my 'floating device'. :nervous:Chirimoya said:Almost spooky....![]()
If anyone has experienced landing in my home town's airport (Lambada, I know you at least know what this is like) you will understand why every planeload treats the pilots to cheers of sheer relief once it is clear the plane is not going to end up in the drink. I've never landed at the old airport in Hong Kong but based on what I've heard about the landing conditions there I am sure that even the stiff upper lipped stuffed suits used to put their sweaty palms together as a tribute to the pilot's life-saving aerobatics.
Chirimoya said:Almost spooky....![]()
In my experience, people in other places clap too. Latins, non-Latins and not so Latins. It's just another of those national traits that several nations claim as exclusively theirs. I've heard 'we Dominicans are like that' with regards to a whole load of characteristics, good and bad - hospitality, machismo, dancing, for example. While Dominicans can be hospitable, macho and good dancers, they are not the only inhabitants of planet Earth who can claim this.
Same goes for applause when the plane lands. You probably won't get it on a flight full of Eurocrats travelling from London to Brussels, but any combination of people returning to their home country, tourists looking forward to their holiday, delays or scares during the flight are sure to produce the conditions for a round of applause when the plane touches down.
If anyone has experienced landing in my home town's airport (Lambada, I know you at least know what this is like) you will understand why every planeload treats the pilots to cheers of sheer relief once it is clear the plane is not going to end up in the drink. I've never landed at the old airport in Hong Kong but based on what I've heard about the landing conditions there I am sure that even the stiff upper lipped stuffed suits used to put their sweaty palms together as a tribute to the pilot's life-saving aerobatics.