TheTraveler
Line Up and Wait
To the commercial guys who hang out way up there burning jet fuel...I've got a question.
I've flown way more than my fair share as a passenger on Int'l flights multiple directions, including over to Europe and back multiple times per year. The track heading back to the US from Europe, the Middle East, etc., in my experience, is nearly always the same...comes off the European continent, avoids Iceland by quite a ways, just touches the bottom tip of Greenland, and over to Canada.
I've been watching this Turkish flight TK5 today, and I'm surprised on how far off the track it is. I've never been on a flight crossing the Atlantic that has gone this far north (except the once in a while Asia flights that jump the pole). I see it's also delayed, likely because of this changed track.
What do you think the reason would be for heading so far off track to the north? Simply weather and turbulence? Something else?
I've flown way more than my fair share as a passenger on Int'l flights multiple directions, including over to Europe and back multiple times per year. The track heading back to the US from Europe, the Middle East, etc., in my experience, is nearly always the same...comes off the European continent, avoids Iceland by quite a ways, just touches the bottom tip of Greenland, and over to Canada.
I've been watching this Turkish flight TK5 today, and I'm surprised on how far off the track it is. I've never been on a flight crossing the Atlantic that has gone this far north (except the once in a while Asia flights that jump the pole). I see it's also delayed, likely because of this changed track.
What do you think the reason would be for heading so far off track to the north? Simply weather and turbulence? Something else?