MilesBuzz! - FF Miles and Wrinkles




View Full Version : FF Miles and Wrinkles


Punki
Dec 20, 01, 9:41 am
From time to time I hear folks (sometimes FAs) mention that frequent flying can cause increased wrinkles--of course PremEx who is a Million Miler+ flyer and lives in SoCal where the sun always shines, clearly belies this rumor. http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/wink.gif

Does anybody have any solid sources on information on this subject?

Footnote to Moderators: This subject is clearly very much a miles related subject and may be the most important determining factor in my future Frequent Flyer planning and plotting. http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif


Efrem
Dec 20, 01, 9:53 am
It's not the frequent flying. It's the resulting frequent smiling. http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif

svpii
Dec 20, 01, 10:00 am
If it doesn't cause wrinkles, it causes blemishes - don't you think it ought to be a law of nature that doesn't have to endure both blemishes and wrinkles in the same time frame? http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif

Before we get busted and this thread gets moved... here's a site w/ some good tips..

http://www.tips4trips.com/Tips/femmtips.htm


Punki
Dec 20, 01, 10:05 am
But what about wrinkles, Pam. I want to know about wrinkles.

P.S., The real tragedy is when blemishes and wrinkles exist at the same time on the same face. http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/frown.gif Bah!

l'etoile
Dec 20, 01, 10:07 am
Here are some more tips and some talk on the wrinkles issue. The relevant stuff is about halfway down under How do we prevent dehydration when we fly. Mentions a Boeing report that says, "In-flight cabin humidities gradually fall on long-distance, high-altitude flights to well below 10%, in many cases approaching 1%." Wow.

http://www.lifewater.ca/fly_tips.htm

[This message has been edited by letiole (edited 12-20-2001).]

svpii
Dec 20, 01, 10:25 am
Where I can really tell this is w/ my contact lens... I'm forever putting drops in my eyes on long flights...

l'etoile
Dec 20, 01, 10:31 am
Punki: I think if you sail as as much as you fly - or just live in a wet, foggy place - it all balances out. http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif

mdtony
Dec 20, 01, 3:58 pm
<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by letiole:
[B]"In-flight cabin humidities gradually fall on long-distance, high-altitude flights to well below 10%, in many cases approaching 1%." Wow.</font>

No wonder why my throat was so dry after flying from LAX to AKL. About halfway through the flight, I had to get some water and when I asked the flight attendant for some, it must have sounded like someone on his deathbed or Keith Richards.

highgamma
Dec 20, 01, 7:06 pm
Is Keith Richards on his deathbed? :-)

Gaucho100K
Dec 20, 01, 7:21 pm
My Lady Punki-- Im puzzled, you have NO wrinkles.... http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/biggrin.gif

KSAN
Dec 21, 01, 9:40 pm
Keith Richards only LOOKS like he's on his death bed. Those lines on his face are so deep you'd think he's done a lot of smoking/drinking/drugs or something! http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif

mhbaker
Dec 22, 01, 8:30 am
If the airlines keep substituing CRJs for mainline service, particularly on flights of 1.5+ hours, the wrinkling problem will be concentrated on our backsides.



SEO by vBSEO 3.2.0