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-   -   Do you get drunk on long flights? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/do-you-get-drunk-on-long-flights-348274/)

JandaO Aug 15th, 2003 07:28 AM

Do you get drunk on long flights?
 
Maitaitom you need not answer :)

I have 1-2 drinks sometimes but I am not a big drinker.

olivia Aug 15th, 2003 07:35 AM

No, because it just makes me feel more dehydrated than the dry air already does. Just wine with dinner, usually.

JandaO Aug 15th, 2003 08:54 AM

Wow, It looks like no one wants to admit this one.....

cigalechanta Aug 15th, 2003 08:59 AM

I have a few drinks befor dinner and wine with it. Nice buzz relaxes me.

maitaitom Aug 15th, 2003 09:05 AM

"Maitaitom you need not answer "

In an upset, I don't get drunk on long flights. I usually have one of those fine bottles of wine they serve (vintage June), and then, at some point, attempt to sleep. I do drink plenty of water (no Scotch added).
((H))


BoulderCO Aug 15th, 2003 09:06 AM

Couple of beers, wine with dinner, a Bailey's after dinner and I'm ready for a snooze. Probably the only way I can get to sleep on a plane. No problems with dehydration - I drink plenty of water too.

hightide Aug 15th, 2003 09:10 AM

I drink on flights like I vote: early & often. Actually being a hyper person, a smoker, flying wuss, and cursed (blessed?)with a severely short attention span, this is the only way I can handle LONG flights. I also drink lots of water so no dehydration. Get an aisle seat though, trips to the toilet may be frequesnt, but hey, they say you're supposed to get up and walk around frequently on long flights anyway. Cheers!!!

JOANNAPVB Aug 15th, 2003 09:14 AM

Yes - it relaxes me -

cmt Aug 15th, 2003 09:22 AM

No. I just have wine with the meal, and that's it. Actually, I've never gotten drunk in my life, though I DO drink. I just drink wine with meals, or after-dinner drinks, and never drink alcohol on an empty stomach.

Statia Aug 15th, 2003 09:22 AM

It's very tempting to catch a buzz to help me go to sleep, but I'm always afraid of feeling icky when I arrive. So, I stick with the wine that comes with the dinner.

However, I certainly toss back a few once I arrive!

JandaO Aug 15th, 2003 09:24 AM

maitaitom,
you know I was just funnin' ya....
I have had those June vintages also. Arent they special? Kind of reminds me of some wine I have had in Italy. NOT.

maitaitom Aug 15th, 2003 09:33 AM

"Arent they special?"

Yes. Especially the chilled red wines.
((H))

capo Aug 15th, 2003 09:39 AM

Drunk, no. But at a crusing altitude of 30,000+ feet, I'm always high when I fly. :)

suze Aug 15th, 2003 09:50 AM

I used to, and I am using the literal definition of DRUNK ... but I'm just too old now! I get jetlag so bad and a hangover only makes that worse. Plus I can't sleep on planes, so I'd just end up a mess upon arrival.

Having said all that, I *am* normally a hearty drinker so probably do rack up 4-5 drinks total ... but it *is* a 9 hour flight ~LOL!

Therese Aug 15th, 2003 09:54 AM

Not hammered, but a nice buzz. On night flights I take a sleep med, so don't drink much (plus I'm asleep, so it'd be difficult to manage unless I used an I.V.).

ira Aug 15th, 2003 11:38 AM

I find that a "beer and a bumper" puts me to sleep.

MizzEve Aug 15th, 2003 11:42 AM

I never drink when I fly, unless I'm in 1st class. Afterall, I can't (wo)man the emergency exit if I'm drunk :-)

Marilyn Aug 15th, 2003 12:30 PM

I try, but am rarely successful these days. Have managed to occasionally have "too much fun" in the past, however.

hightide Aug 15th, 2003 12:36 PM

If I might digress from the thread topic: Sure fire cure for a hangover (on or off a plane): Take a night-time cold tablet before you go to sleep and drink lots of water. Usually a hangover is either allergic reaction or dehydration. You'll wake up feeling great - don't forget to drink a big glass of water when you awake so the cold tablet doesn't dehydrate you. Works every time... (cold tablet also helps you sleep on the plane - make sure it's a night-time tab though or you'll REALLY be flying!!!)

sophieD Aug 15th, 2003 12:37 PM

I hate to fly so I take drugs. No need to drink :)

swalter518 Aug 15th, 2003 12:42 PM

I don't normally get drunk but I'll have a drink or two. Funny story with my husband, flying home on Luftansa after spending 2 weeks in Germany, he wanted to show off his newly acquired German and confidently ordered an "Aufweidersein" instead of the Warsteiner he was looking for. He said it with such great certainty that the flight attendants responded smiling, "Germany says goodbye to you too, now would you like a Warsteiner?" Shortly thereafter we heard much laughter from the flight attendant area.

Marilyn Aug 15th, 2003 12:50 PM

hightide, re: those night time cold tablets. Good idea, except they make me kind of groggy and I wouldn't like not being able to wake up on an airplane if I needed to. I prefer Ambien.

By the way, the ingredient in those pills (like Tylenol PM) that helps you sleep is the same stuff that's in Sominex -- should you wish to have a sleep aide without the analgesic.

DiAblo Aug 15th, 2003 01:00 PM

Hell, yes...but then I'm the pilot...talk about PRESSURE!

Giovanna Aug 15th, 2003 01:15 PM

Let me put it this way--I couldn't fly without the plane, but a nice red wine (January vintage; much better than June) before dinner, one with dinner and maybe a cognac after creates a nice warm glow. I feel cozy in the dark (overnight flights)and sometimes sleep, sometimes watch movies and always manage to somewhat pleasantly pass those long boring hours from California! Cheers. ((D))

dln Aug 15th, 2003 01:21 PM

We have mandatory cocktail hour at our house at 6:00 and I see no reason to change habits because I'm on a plane. A few drinks, yes of course, but never drunk. What's the point? It's not as if you can go anywhere and enjoy it;;)

maitaitom Aug 15th, 2003 01:21 PM

"January vintage; much better than June.."

Giovanna, judging from the wine you're served, you obviously are in business or first class, while I languish in coach. As a fellow Californian, I will follow your lead and have a cognac after dinner (perhaps instead of dinner).
((H))

Giovanna Aug 15th, 2003 01:28 PM

I wish Maitaitom. Never have graced one of the hallowed seats in the front of the plane! No need to skip one of those delicious dinners, just have cognac for dessert! It will help you to forget dinner what you were served. :-p

SoloAlex Aug 15th, 2003 01:32 PM

i was getting close to drunk on my last flight to London (had two beers for lunch in the still-being-renovated concourse with no food in sight) and the better part of a bottle of Chateau Rothschild with dinner on the flight - i was upgraded to US Air's envoy class, so why the hell not? ;)

unfortunately for me, too much alcohol actually keeps me awake. i was so excited by this trip i probably wouldn't have slept anyway. the flight attendants kept the water coming though.

hlphillips2 Aug 15th, 2003 01:33 PM

Oh this reminds me of a funny situation, flying back from New Zealand I was seating in the middle seat between a lovely professor from NZ and a fellow from LA (on the aisle). When the flight attendent offered each of us some wine, the American requested two whiskeys, then when she'd turned her back to the row next to us he reached over and grabbed 2 more out of her cart. He drank all four bottles quickly, had two glasses of wine with dinner. Then still had a full glass on his tray when he passed out about an hour later. In the middle of the flight the professor needed to get into the aisle, so we carefully took turns holding the American's glass while climbing over him to get out. The professor noted "I'd discard his drink, but I do believe he means to have it for breakfast".

lm Aug 15th, 2003 02:39 PM

Never drunk but I do enjoy a few glasses of wine. The airline glasses are much smaller than I use at home so they really need to pour some before it equalizes. It helps me sleep on those long flights as well. A little Bailey's on the rocks is pleasant also.

ira Aug 15th, 2003 02:52 PM

Since this is a small and intimate group, I needn't worry that the masses might take advantage if I reveal my secret:

Somewhere in the middle of the night, when just aboout everyone is asleep, go forward to the first class galley and chat up the flight attendants.

Then return to your seat with some of the goodies from the front of the plane.

Don't tell anyone.

dln Aug 15th, 2003 03:35 PM

Ira, you're a hard one to top. Have a ((d)) on us!

wpcx2 Aug 15th, 2003 03:45 PM

Some time ago after an especially horrific plane crash, I read an industry damming analysis by a major news magazine reporter which indicated that in plane crashes where one might walk away alive, over 50% of those who did not/could not were alcohol impaired and some percentage who had no alcohol in their systems were trapped by a drunk unable to function in a crisis. I really, really hate seating anywhere near a drinker on a plane because I don't want to have to worry about a safe evacuation when they're in my way. Also, while it makes some passengers go to sleep, it causes an equal number to become overly loud and/or demanding of flight attendants. You know what they say: instant a..hole, just add alcohol. Know this isn't what the query intended but it is a slant seldom, if ever, discussed. I would be very interested if there are any recent statistics about this.

maitaitom Aug 15th, 2003 04:08 PM

"over 50% of those who did not/could not were alcohol impaired and some percentage who had no alcohol in their systems were trapped by a drunk unable to function in a crisis."

It is an interesting statistic, but since these sober people did not survive, I wonder how they figured out it was a drunk person that kept them from surviving.

I had a friend who survived the U.S. Air crash in the early 90s at LAX. She was sober, but her foot got caught underneath a seat and she could not get up. She would have died, but fortunately one of her business associates spotted her on the way to the exit and got her out.

By the way, she said you could barely see inside the aircraft and none of those lights on the floor that supposedly direct you to the exit were functioning.

What's really damning to the airline industry is that they could make safer planes. Until they do, I believe fate, more than anything else, determines whether you live or die in a survivable crash (of which, unfortunately, there are not too many).
((H))




nsw55 Aug 15th, 2003 04:10 PM

Gee, I fly in the cheap seats. At the rate many of you are talking, it's at least $20 per person. I guess I'm too cheap to have that much fun.
If I were in a plane crash, the least of my worries would be whether I was slightly alcohol impaired!

obxgirl Aug 15th, 2003 04:32 PM

"What's really damning to the airline industry is that they could make safer planes."

What do you think the airline industry could do to make safer planes?

anotherjudy Aug 15th, 2003 04:53 PM

Well, not blotto variety drunk, but tipsy, yes. A couple of scotches before whatever you want to call that food they serve, wine with it and then a cognac (or two) and I can get some sleep before arriving in Europe. Yes, I drink a lot of water with all this good stuff.
Once, having ordered my second (maybe third?) of the little bottles of scotch, a BA flight attendant, in his haughtiest voice, informed me that "It will only keep you awake." I responded, "well, that depends on how much of it I drink."

Mary_Fran Aug 15th, 2003 04:53 PM

My trips to Europe are so precious to me that I haven't drunk alcohol at all, because I don't want to risk anything that will cloud my senses. At home, ]I love my beer and wine, but when traveling to Europe, I haven't imbibed at all.

I can't imagine getting off the plane in Amsterdam September 2nd feeling goofy or, worse yet, hungover!

What I really wonder about, though, is how you can manage to get drunk in economy class, as infrequently as the beverage cart rolls past. Is there a bar you can belly up to that I don't know about?

sfowler Aug 15th, 2003 05:00 PM

No.

cigalechanta Aug 15th, 2003 05:20 PM

I think that some people get drunk because it's freebies and they dont usually drink that much when they are paying. I was raised with wine always on the table, my parents were born in Europe but alot of people do not drink wine with their dinners or lunches, so they will feel the effects more.


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