I’ve seen this episode of Star Trek. You have to fly back through the storm along the opposite vector you entered from
And you also need to reverse the polarity of the shield extangulator before doing so!
perkele
Joko saa mennä torille?
Ei saa mennä torille, vaan pitää mennä torille.
Airsick lowlanders aren’t used to such heights
What’s that Nimi? You can’t see the picture too well?
No Nimi, I’m not going to let you take a peek.
Just tell the judge you don’t understand how they got smaller and Finnair… I’ll see myself out.
I assume since it’s the FAA they flew out of Finland to America. America is further south and anyone who has looked at a map knows that things shrink when they are closer to the equator.
Storms are cold yo, shrinkage to be expected.
I think I’ve flown in a slightly lengthier version of this to Tenerife.
I was on it just this Tuesday…
Of the 976 ever produced, only 22 DC-9’s remain in operation (as of last February according to Wikipedia). Not exactly a common plane to come across.
You’re reading it a bit more literally than it was intended. “Flying sardine can to the Canaries” being the gist I was going for.
You mean to say that plane will always be holding short?
THIN air
“Yah broski, i did honey i shrunk the kids but with a plane”
Of course. I should have known the answer is just “Finland”