We are off to Playa Pesquera ,Cuba in August and booked with Portland holidays and fly from Manchester.On my latest Portland invoice it says the carrier will be-Thomas Cook Airways.So do Portland use TC planes and if so will it still mean a direct flight to Holguin or will we have to stop off in Varadero as some other tour operators flights do?,when we booked with Portland it never specified a carrier and we assumed it would be Portland/Thomson or Monarch.We were also told it was a direct flight and have heard horror stories of non direct flights that drop off at Varadero airport en route for Holguin.
Has anyone flown TCook to Cuba and was it a direct flight and why are we flying with TCook but booked through Portland Holidays?
I flew to Cuba with TCX to Holguin via Cayo Coco. It's not too bad, just means a short stay at the airport while the aircraft is prepared for the return flight. Have you got a flight number? TCX174K/L? I can't remember if the flights are direct or not during the summer season, its the quieter winter flights that opperate via other airports normally.
Darren
The outbound journey is with Thomsonfly and the inbound journey is with Thomas Cook airlines.
I have booked in the past with Direct holidays and they have used Thomson...
I don't know the reason for this, except the flight may already be booked up for one leg of the journey and in order to offer/sell the package holiday, they buy seats from other airlines to still be able to sell the complete holiday.
Sanjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
I phoned Portland and I was informed that because they are using Thomas Cook Airlines and Thomas Cook include meals on their flights, then we also will get one..on both journeys.
I queried this again when the tickets came through and I was told the same information, even though it says "no meals" on my booklet.
I'll let you know if it happens.
Sanji
However, the tour operators can't fly every single flight on their own airline. That would need a massive fleet, and would be uneconomical, especially in quite seasons as you'd have lots of aircraft sitting around doing nothing. Therefore tour operators will buy seats on other airlines for flights they can't operate themselves. Sometimes they will charter an entire flight with another airline. This is especially true of long haul flights. There probably isn't enough demand for each tour operator to operate their own flight from each airport. therefore some will operate from one airport, some from other airports, and they'll buy seats from each other. Thats why your not on Thomsonfly, but on Thomas Cook.
As for your actual flight I can't say whether it has a stop off or not. Ring up Portland or Thomas Cook to find out. Again the stop will be because there isn't enough demand for a flight to each airport, so they combine. Also bear in mind that "direct" in the airline world means you dont have to change planes. But this can still include a fuel stop.
I thought this was a bit naff, I realise now that I could have booked with First Choice and got a decent seat for the standard price.
Lorraine
hardly think it's a 'horror' story though if they did!!!
In Winter there are stops and doubling up as there is simply not the capacity to send two half empty planes to HOG and VRA!
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