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Plane to pavement: Why you should ditch the airport cab and walk instead

Plane to pavement: Why you should ditch the airport cab and walk instead


My social media search for extreme meanness when travelling came about while I was in transit at Doha airport. The Qatari hub has almost universally dreadful WiFi, and the only decent coverage you get is at Starbucks through the coffee chain’s own system (you also get an excellent view of the airfield).

I needed just 10 minutes of decent connectivity and I toyed momentarily with the idea of just perching at a table without buying anything. Fortunately I treated myself to a large, tasty latte (20 riyals, under £5) along with the megabytes. But it made me wonder what other travellers get up to.

Even I shuddered to learn of some of the moneysaving tricks, from daring to tip 1 per cent at a New York City restaurant to over-haggling in Delhi in order to save 3p.

Yet among the two-dozen or more responses to my request for acts of travel parsimony, I sympathised with those related to airports.

Someone tweeting as Angry Maths Teacher reports: “I tipped 0 per cent at Chicago O’Hare airport for Garrett Popcorn because tipping someone 20 per cent to put popcorn in a bag is insane.”

I was also taken with the efforts travellers make to avoid high-priced airport fares. Steve M urged: “Avoid the ridiculous $8 [£6.60] AirTrain fee at New York JFK by taking the Subway A train to Ozone Park-Lefferts Boulevard and the Q10 bus along Lefferts Boulevard to the (free) AirTrain station of the same name. Voila, that’s a free pint!”

And Matthew Hisbent gives the taxi drivers at Corfu airport a wide berth. “I always walk into Corfu Town via the stadium route,” he reports.

Walking to and from airports is something that should be encouraged. Agreed, it is usually impractical and sometimes impossible: there is no legal way to reach Heathrow Terminals 2 and 3 on two feet. But let us celebrate the European airports where the city centre is only a stroll away.

Of major Continental airports, Pisa is probably the easiest. Just head into town on the Via Asmara. Centrale rail station is just half-an-hour away, with the tower leaning prettily about 15 minutes further. Plenty of places to pause and replenish, too.

Nice-Côte d’Azur, the main hub for southern France, is significantly further out from the centre. But where the airport perimeter ends, the Promenade des Anglais begins and your hour’s walk is flanked by the Mediterranean.

An hour of your…

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