Airplane menus these days can offer a wide range of drink options. But it’s rare to see water offered in permutations that include still, sparkling and toilet.
Then again, it’s rare to see a window decal warning to keep tongues inside the aircraft.
Such is life on Bark Air, the country’s self-proclaimed first dog airline, and a service which I found myself using one day earlier this fall.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single traveler in possession of a good dog must be in want of doing anything but flying. After years of letting in-cabin dogs slide by with the “emotional support” tag, most airlines these days don’t allow pups at your seat unless they can contort themselves into a carrier the size of a sandwich bag. For everyone else there’s the luggage hold. Most dog owners would sooner cut off a toe.
Then again, it’s rare to see a window decal warning to keep tongues inside the aircraft.
Such is life on Bark Air, the country’s self-proclaimed first dog airline, and a service which I found myself using one day earlier this fall.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single traveler in possession of a good dog must be in want of doing anything but flying. After years of letting in-cabin dogs slide by with the “emotional support” tag, most airlines these days don’t allow pups at your seat unless they can contort themselves into a carrier the size of a sandwich bag. For everyone else there’s the luggage hold. Most dog owners would sooner cut off a toe.
- 12/15/2024
- by Steven Zeitchik
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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