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Photos: Soups at Obento-ya, Minneapolis
Posted by
Scott Norris
on 04 February 2012
Labels:
Japanese food,
Minneapolis
/
Comments: (0)
Obento-ya is our favorite Japanese restaurant here in the Twin Cities - an intimate, inexpensive bistro serving homestyle izkaya cooking and sushi. I took our daughter there last night after school...
You can never go wrong with a nice big bowl of udon. The shrimp and vegetables are lightly battered and fried - seaweed and green onion on the side to mix in.She loves the miso with tofu cubes - and so do we. If you have a cold or are feeling run-down, a nice bowl of this will bring your health and spirits right back up.
Hainan Airlines - American Airlines codeshare services: potential routes for Summer 2012
Posted by
Scott Norris
on 29 January 2012
Labels:
American,
Beijing,
codeshare,
Hainan Airlines,
Shanghai,
Transpacific flights
/
Comments: (0)
In December 2011 American Airlines and Hainan Airlines
announced they would begin a transpacific codeshare arrangement. American would
place its AA code on Hainan’s flights between Seattle and Beijing, and on
domestic Chinese flights from Beijing. Hainan would place its HU code on
American’s flights from Beijing to Chicago, and from Shanghai to Chicago and
Los Angeles, as well as on connecting flights in North America on American.
(Click map below for expanded view of transpacific codeshare services:)
Each carrier’s rivals on either side of the Pacific had already
created strong cooperative links (Air China and its subsidiary Shenzhen
Airlines with Star Alliance partner United Airlines; China Southern and China
Eastern with SkyTeam partner Delta), so travel industry observers figured a
hookup between American and Hainan was likely as they were the last major
carriers left unaffiliated.
Details of specific flight connections are still being
worked out between the companies and are unlikely to be announced before Spring
2012. However, I’ve examined the current Winter 2012 timetables for each
carrier to anticipate just what kinds of new connections are likely to be
offered:
At Shanghai, neither carrier brings much to the
relationship. The Chinese government allocates routes, fares, and frequencies
among the various domestic carriers (much like how it was done in America
pre-deregulation), picking who gets to dominate certain cities. The authorities
have decided Hainan Airlines will have the slimmest presence in the country’s
largest city – giving them only 7 daily flights from the international airport
at Shanghai-Pudong, and just 5 daily flights from the downtown airport
Shanghai-Hongqiao.
American’s arrival from Los Angeles gets in too late to
connect to any HU departures at Pudong. The Chicago arrival comes in a bit
earlier, allowing for connections to the major city Xi’an and resort center
Haikou. Heading eastbound, there
is a possible daily connection from Haikou to the Los Angeles flight, and on
the Chicago flight, travelers from Haikou, Xi’an, and Lanzhou could make
connections.
With these meager connecting opportunities in the People’s
Republic, the value of the codeshare agreement as far as Shanghai is concerned
is to help Hainan’s local sales team book more corporate travel into the U.S.A.
(Click map below for two-way connections via PVG:)
(Click map below for two-way connections via PVG:)
At Beijing, Hainan Airlines has a much stronger presence,
running a connecting hub with multiple banks of flights to dozens of domestic
cities – as well as a growing number of overseas destinations. The HU flights
to and from Seattle connect smoothly to many Chinese cities. Hainan’s operation
is based out of the “old” side of the airport; mostly in Terminal 2, with a few
flights from Terminal 1 just next door.
American Airlines has a daily run from Beijing to Chicago.
AA flight #186 leaves PEK at 6:55 am on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday,
and at 7:55 am on Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday. This flight arrives ORD
before breakfast and delivers connecting passengers to their final destinations
in the Midwest and East Coast by lunchtime. AA flight #187 arrives inbound from
Chicago at 11:30 pm Beijing time.
American’s flights use the new Terminal 3 complex on the far side of the
airport.
You may suspect that late-night arrivals and early-morning
departures at Beijing don’t make for easy connections, and you would be
correct. As it stands today, any connection heading into China or heading out
to the U.S. would require an overnight stay in Beijing. (On the airport grounds
are two full-service hotels: a Hilton and a Langham Place.)
The late-night-early-morning timing was not American
Airlines’ choice; they had requested mid-day slots when the route was approved.
The Beijing airport authority had other ideas. Perhaps now with a strong local
advocate it might be possible to shift the timing of the Chicago run to allow
for good connections on both ends so that AA and HU can both profit. (A
separate question would be if American could move its flight to Terminal 2 to
allow “walking” connections instead of requiring passengers to use shuttle
buses.)
If we assume the timing for AA #186 and #187 stays as-is,
early-morning departures from Beijing that American may want to put their code
on could include:
- Chengdu
- Chongqing
- Dongying
- Fuzhou
- Guilin
- Hailar
- Harbin
- Kunming
- Lanzhou
- Manzhouli
- Mudanjiang
- Shanghai-Hongqiao
- Shanghai-Pudong
- Shenzhen
- Urumqi
- Wenzhou
- Xi'an
- Xiamen
Flights from these cities get into Beijing late at night, so
may be potential code-share candidates:
- Changchun
- Changsha
- Changzhi
- Chengdu
- Chongqing
- Haikou
- Hailar
- Hangzhou
- Harbin
- Hohhot
- Jiamusi
- Jinjiang
- Kunming
- Mudanjiang
- Nanchang
- Nanning
- Ningbo
- Qiqihar
- Sanya
- Shanghai-Hongqiao
- Shenzhen
- Urumqi
- Wenzhou
- Wuhai
- Xi'an
- Xiamen
- Yinchuan
Cities that have both inbound and outbound potential
codeshare are shown on this map (click for larger view):
To recap, while the Hainan-American partnership is
important, at present there are few new service possibilities for
U.S.-originating passengers looking to travel beyond Beijing. If American’s
Chicago-Beijing flights can be rescheduled, however, a significant number of
new connections may become possible. The HU-AA connections through Shanghai
will be useful for only one or two cities, and are not likely to develop
further.
We will keep watching developments in this association with
great interest – follow @weninchina on Twitter and bookmark this blog for the
latest news.
Steaming cauldron of Congee!
Also tonight at Hong Kong Noodle, we ordered this US$8 ... cauldron... of chicken congee. That order was enough for 7 servings! (Looking forward to leftovers tomorrow!)
Read more about wonderful congee at our weninchina article: http://www.weninchina.com/Food/Congee.html
Read more about wonderful congee at our weninchina article: http://www.weninchina.com/Food/Congee.html
Food photo - Beef Brisket LoMein
Had a wonderful meal tonight at Hong Kong Noodle at the University of Minnesota. Here's the beef brisket lo mein. That beef just flakes apart West Lake-style, sublime flavor. The steamed greens were just that right texture between snappy and melt-apart.
Atlanta airport new international terminal almost ready
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