Go Back  FlyerTalk Forums > Miles&Points > Airlines and Mileage Programs > United Airlines | MileagePlus
Reload this Page >

UA's Micronesia Island Hopper - consolidated questions, advice, ....

Community
Wiki Posts
Search
Old Jun 30, 2016, 1:45 pm
FlyerTalk Forums Expert How-Tos and Guides
Last edit by: thejaredhuang
Best seat advice
See update in post 500
See update in post 690


Best seat on the Island Hopper .. {closed to new posts}

An Island Hopper [Micronesia] Definitive Guide on Where to Sit [UA B737] {this thread}

FAQs derived from findark's post (post #500)
What is the Island Hopper?

The Island Hopper is a United route between Honolulu and Guam, stopping at the islands of Majuro, Kwajaelin, Kosrae, Pohnpei, and Chuuk in between. The Island Hopper operates in both directions, and skips Pohnpei on certain days. You are allowed to get off the plane and "transit" at each stop except for Kwajaelin, which is a US Army base.

This route is similar to Alaska Airlines' "milk run" routes in rural Alaska. All of these routes serve as lifelines for the residents living in areas served by the routes, as the sole connection providing supplies and transportation to/from the rest of the world.

What is the Island Hopper schedule (as of 1/14/19)?
UA154 (the full Hopper) departs HNL Mon/Fri and flies HNL-MAJ-KWA-KSA-PNI-TKK-GUM.
The shorter UA154 flies from HNL on Wed and does HNL-MAJ-KWA-PNI-TKK-GUM (skips KSA).
UA132 departs Sun and flies HNL-MAJ-KSA-PNI-TKK-GUM (skips KWA).

UA193 (GUM-ROR-MNL)departs GUM on the evenings of Tue/Fri and flies GUM-ROR-MNL.

The Hopper arrives around 1800+1, so in order to do the entire flight without a stopover you would need to depart HNL on UA154 on Monday morning.


Should I experience the Hopper?

If you like hopping through short segments, with beautiful island views, as well as a constant parade of amazing cloudscape between islands, the Island Hopper may be for you!

Which direction (west or east) is better?

The prevailing wisdom here seems to be in favor of taking UA154 (HNL-GUM). findark did 155 from GUM to HNL, and I think there were some overlooked benefits. The eastbound Hopper has the advantage of doing all the fun stuff in the morning and afternoon when you're fresh and eager to enjoy. 14 hours onboard a 737 is a long time*, and doing it eastbound you can give in to the exhaustion and conk out for the final MAJ-HNL segment. Even the HNL arrival was actually not too bad - it's only 10:50pm Guam time, so if you head on to a hotel you're pretty much in line for a night's sleep.

The most notable downside of taking the Hopper eastbound is that you visit MAJ in darkness. We ran about 25m late the whole way, and it was full dark by the time we touched down in MAJ. Whichever way you go, don't do it on a Wednesday! Kosrae was my favorite island, and it would be a shame to miss it.

*And, I learned, while the flight mechanic hops off in MAJ and the pilots get to work in shifts, the cabin crew are on duty for the whole 14 hours. They were understandably a bit burnt out by the middle of MAJ-HNL, but were simply outstanding nonetheless - greeting kids and handing out wings as they boarded in MAJ.


What's with the plane configuration?

The Hopper is currently flown by a GUM subfleet 737-800 (currently Version 4 on the United website - Row 1 is set back several inches which yields fewer E+ seats). The seatmap is loaded as the "Asia local" 737 map, which looks roughly like a 737-700. Like with other "generic" maps, it will update to the full seatmap about 4 days before departure, when the additional rows will appear.

1AB are blocked for the augmented flight crew, who change places with the pilots in the cockpit at MAJ. 2AB are also blocked because the crew rest seats at 1AB will recline until almost touching row 2, and it is usually used for crew storage.

Where should I sit?

The key here is understanding approach and wind patterns, along with each airport's runway configuration. The following stops and runways are on the north side of their respective islands:

TKK (4/22), PNI (9/27), KSA (5/23)

The following stops have runways on the south side of their atolls:

KWA (6/24), MAJ (7/25)

The prevailing winds at this latitude blow from the east, so a typical landing goes from west to east (into the wind). Therefore, in order to have best views on final approach and initial takeoff, you want to be on the starboard (right, F) side for TKK, PNI, and KSA, and on the port (left, A) side for KWA and MAJ. If you are flying westbound, or you land backwards at any stop on the eastbound flight, then the flight may need to position into the approach, usually by overflying the island at higher altitude out to sea. In this case, both sides of the aircraft will get views, although the closer views belong to the "correct" side. In my case, we landed "backwards" on 22 at TKK, and used the regular 9, 5, 6, and 7 at the other stops.

You should absolutely have a window seat - why else are you here?! The best seats are therefore any window in the Business cabin (note that 1A and 2A are blocked), 7AF and 8AF in Economy Plus (10AF has a misaligned window but is okay, the missing window will kill you in 11 and then the wing really starts intruding), and anything nice and far behind the wing in Economy. In this vein, I declined an upgrade on GUM-TKK since only 2E was left, and we flew in 4A/7F, 2F/4A, 2F/3F, 3A/4A, 3A/4A, 2F/7F.


What can I do at the stops?

The best thing to do is get off the plane! You can take tarmac photos and get amazing close-ups of the plane. You will then be shepherded into the gate area, where there are restrooms (some lacking soap and/or towels) and often locals selling souvenirs and snacks. On our trip, the most substantial souvenirs were available at MAJ. If the flight is running late they will make an announcement requesting transfer pax to stay on the plane; however, as obviously savvy travelers who were along for the whole ride and could get on/off quickly with no bags to stow, we got absolutely no pushback from the purser whenever we went outside anyway.

If you do disembark, you are required to take all carry-on baggage with you. They conduct a security sweep onboard the aircraft and will remove unclaimed bags. As is mentioned many times in this thread, KWA is the exception - as it's a US Army base you cannot get off unless ticketed to there. On our flight, we were requested not to take photographs but were allowed to look out the window. I didn't see anything terribly interesting.

You can also use WiFi in the terminal/transit area when you disembark and at some stops you can get your passport stamped. MAJ, PNI, and KSA have confirmed free WiFi. Passport stamps have been confirmed at PNI, KSA, TKK without "exiting" just ask security about getting a stamp at these 3 airports and they should be able to accommodate you.

Should I check my bags?

Yes. As annoying as it was to wait ~10 minutes for our bags in HNL, it was a lot less annoying than having to haul them around each stop, and find bin space again once on board.


What is the food situation?

Going east is a slightly different meal schedule than west. GUM-TKK and KSA-KWA are coded Snack, and MAJ-HNL is Dinner. The first and last meals are reasonably substantial in J (think like a Breakfast and Dinner code) and somewhat small in Y (somewhat less than a meal in int'l Y - was six pieces of fruit and a muffin in the morning, followed by a turkey sandwich for dinner). The middle snack was just a pass of the snack basket up front; neither of us sat in Y that segment but I would guess they just offered almonds. Additionally, every segment they were offering J pax some packaged almonds.

My general verdict is if going the distance in Y, pack some snacks or buy them at the stops along the way. If you're in J then there's enough food for 14 hours of sitting.


And how about IFE?

Look outside! That's actually about all the IFE there is. The GUM fleet has no WiFi and only DirecTV. Note that DirecTV does not work outside of CONUS, so really it just has the 8-10 looping movies of DirecTV (slightly different movie set for an Asian audience). The movie loop resets at each stop, so unless you want to watch the first 1h30 of a movie six times, there's not much use to the IFE. It is at least free in Y. I brought a book and read it for the middle 20 minutes of each segment and until I fell sleep on MAJ-HNL.


Can I get an upgrade on the Hopper?

Empirically, yes! We were offered upgrades of 11/12 eligible segments; I declined a GUM-TKK upgrade to keep my window, and my companion's MAJ-HNL upgrade was eaten by UA IT (agent in MAJ apologized profusely but understandably wasn't going to remove the already-handed-out upgrades to the next 2 pax on the list).

In order to have any shot, however, you need to be able to split the direct flight into six segments. This generally cannot be done on a mileage ticket or a paid through fare, and would need to be done via multi-city ticketing if visiting an island. In my case, I spent a very long time getting an extremely wonderful pmCO agent who was able to hack my ticket together with 9 connections on the way home. As this is also the only way to choose different views for the different approach directions, I recommend asking for this rather than for upgrades. It causes quite the headache for UA systems, but in the end I felt like it was a huge benefit to fly pretty much all of it in J. Absolutely something I credit to the value of being 1K: I was able to ring the 1K desk many times to get agents to deal with the various hiccups that came along with a PNR that had eight tickets and at one point 36 segments attached to it.

The first five Hopper segments (going east) are CPU eligible; MAJ/HNL requires a GPU. We had GPUs on our reservation and did a mixture of advance clearing and clearing at the gates in the islands (where amazingly enough they had the new J BPs waiting!).


Where to stay and what to do in GUM and HNL?

I think this depends on lot on which way you're going. Flying east, we arrived in GUM around 11pm (maximizing time in Tokyo, but not crazy enough for the 2am arrival), and spent the night at the Days Inn Tamuning. It was at the very bottom of my quality standards, but quite affordable and with 9h45 of total ground time all in the dark I did not want to pay double for a beachfront property I would never enjoy.

In HNL, I took up the excellent recommendation in this thread of the Best Western Plaza Honolulu. It was the cheapest of the few airport hotels in HNL. Having cleared customs by 3:45 (we arrived late), it was off to bed quickly. The arrival is only ~11pm Guam time, so I highly recommend going straight to a bed on arrival in HNL. Afterwards, we took advantage of the 24h connect rule to spend the whole day in HNL before continuing on home to SFO. We were pretty exhausted after another redeye home, but the beach time in Hawaii was well worth it, especially after being taunted by all the beautiful mid-Pacific islands.

Big Metal Bird Episode 8: Island Hopper - 2018
Originally Posted by COEWR2587
They just did a video in the Micronesia island hopper flight which is pretty interesting
https://youtu.be/TPueM5OF1Wc
Print Wikipost

UA's Micronesia Island Hopper - consolidated questions, advice, ....

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Jul 9, 2014, 3:22 pm
  #46  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Northern Calif./Eastern Ida.
Programs: Amethyst Premier Plutonium Medallion
Posts: 20,648
doesn't matter who you ask, it won't happen, in some of the airports you're not allowed to leave the airport if you are not a passenger who is scheduled to arrive there as the destination of your journey. in other words, connecting passengers can't leave the airport for security and local regulations reasons, which will not be waived for you to have a joy-run around the island. i guess you could run a mile around the terminal in any case, 40 minutes stopover is just that...offload pax/cargo, reload pax/cargo/gas, and off you go.

it's generally accepted that the island hopper is best flown westbound due to the fact that most if not all of the flight happens during daylight hours, while flying eastbound from GUM to HNL, the last couple of stops are in the dark.
PV_Premier is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 4:49 pm
  #47  
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 8
I was actually thinking of the same thing but instead of running, I was thinking of staying overnight in some (not all) of the islands for some offshore fly fishing and then catching the same flight to the next island the following day. Is this possible?
flipnidaho is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 4:53 pm
  #48  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Los Angeles / Basel
Programs: UA 1K MM, AA EXP, Hyatt Globalist
Posts: 26,930
Originally Posted by flipnidaho
I was actually thinking of the same thing but instead of running, I was thinking of staying overnight in some (not all) of the islands for some offshore fly fishing and then catching the same flight to the next island the following day. Is this possible?
You'll be paying for a separate ticket to each destination then.

You are allowed to get off at each destination (at least I was) except KWA, which is a U.S. military installation.

When I flew, many got off at MAJ, so you likely will have room to run laps on the plane!

Seems rather silly, I must admit.
MatthewLAX is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 4:58 pm
  #49  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Northern Calif./Eastern Ida.
Programs: Amethyst Premier Plutonium Medallion
Posts: 20,648
you'd have to buy separate tickets for each leg. my guess is that it would price much higher than you'd expect. there's at least one stop (KWA i think it is) where you can only visit with military approval. search google for "island hopper flyertalk" for several trip reports and more informative threads (which might also be linked in the forum master wiki at the top of page 1).

the flight doesn't operate daily, that's another issue you would run up against.
PV_Premier is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 5:11 pm
  #50  
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: NYC
Programs: UA *G; Delta Diamond; AA EXP; Marriott LT Plat; Hyatt Globalist
Posts: 480
Island Hopping (Will I be Able to Deplane and Briefly Exit the Airport at Each Stop?)

I was one of the people who had a mechanical at KWA, so we were there for 13 hours. I would agree with everyone else that during a normal connection between islands, you will not be able to leave the terminal.
awc4 is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 5:18 pm
  #51  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Los Angeles / Basel
Programs: UA 1K MM, AA EXP, Hyatt Globalist
Posts: 26,930
And I just have to add that I flew LAX-HNL-Island Hopper-GUM-NRT instead of LAX-NRT direct. It was fun, in a way, but I wish I would have flown direct.

The island-hopper is operated with a crappy plane with no IFE (except a moving map) or wi-fi. It's a long day when you finally arrive in GUM after leaving HNL so early.
MatthewLAX is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 5:28 pm
  #52  
DEN
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Golden, CO USA
Programs: UA 1K 2MM, Hilton Diamond
Posts: 767
Originally Posted by Asia1
Question: who do I ask to get permission to make the run on each island? United? the local authorities? somebody else? or some combination of the above?

Crazy question, but how many people in the world can say they have run on all those islands and prove it?
To answer your question: Each country's Immigrations and Customs office, perhaps starting with the Visitors Bureau but there really is no incentive for them to help you since you’re not staying or spending any money.

People forget that these islands (except for Guam) are sovereign independent nations who are in control ( usually with US assistance and review ) of their Island security and Immigrations. There is no reason for them to let you out to run around in a circle for 15 minutes and running around the tarmac might get your arrested or shot.

If you want to fill out your dance card, you have to stay for at least one dance!

One additional note: Not knowing your citizenship, you may have to get Visas also.

I spent 6 years in the PC in the Pacific, as backward as things may seem; security, immigration and customs are serious business to them.


DEN

Originally Posted by MatthewLAX
And I just have to add that I flew LAX-HNL-Island Hopper-GUM-NRT instead of LAX-NRT direct. It was fun, in a way, but I wish I would have flown direct.

The island-hopper is operated with a crappy plane with no IFE (except a moving map) or wi-fi. It's a long day when you finally arrive in GUM after leaving HNL so early.
I agree, the only reason someone would really want to take the Hopper is if they are going to stop over. Most people learn that the hard way, like you did!

My first flight into the central pacific was on a Air Micronesia 727C with the clam shell cargo door in front. You entered through the tail cone door and the rows were numbered backwards. There was Cargo between the passenger cabin and the flight deck...and they always smelled of fish (fresh fish for export to Japan).

DEN

Last edited by FlyinHawaiian; Jul 9, 2014 at 5:49 pm Reason: merge
DEN is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 6:02 pm
  #53  
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: PHL
Programs: UA Plat, 2MM
Posts: 1,860
If you could get off and run on these warm islands, who would ever want to sit next to a sweaty, smelly person ? Consider other people.
TonyBurr is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 6:05 pm
  #54  
DEN
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Golden, CO USA
Programs: UA 1K 2MM, Hilton Diamond
Posts: 767
Originally Posted by TonyBurr
If you could get off and run on these warm islands, who would ever want to sit next to a sweaty, smelly person ? Consider other people.
You obviously haven't been on the Island Hopper before
DEN is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 6:37 pm
  #55  
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: NYC
Posts: 9,125
I understand with an ANA award stopovers are allowed - so perhaps an alternative?

There supposedly is a visit Micronesia airpass but it is unclear whether it is still around or is still available.

http://kosraevillage.com/blog/micron...irpass-secrets

http://www.guampdn.com/guampublishin...ic_airpass.pdf
erik123 is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 7:40 pm
  #56  
 
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Houston, TX, USA
Programs: UA 1K, AA Lifetime Platinum, DL Platinum, Honors Diamond, Bonvoy Titanium, Hertz Platinum
Posts: 7,970
Originally Posted by MatthewLAX
You'll be paying for a separate ticket to each destination then.
... unless you get a single ticket with an "unlimited stopovers" feature. Even if it's part of a longer itinerary, such as EWR-SIN, if you can get it in full Y in one direction with unlimited stopovers, you could stop at lots of places along the way (not just the island hopper cities) for a relative bargain compared to point-to-point fares.
Steve M is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 9:06 pm
  #57  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Los Angeles / Basel
Programs: UA 1K MM, AA EXP, Hyatt Globalist
Posts: 26,930
Originally Posted by Steve M
... unless you get a single ticket with an "unlimited stopovers" feature. Even if it's part of a longer itinerary, such as EWR-SIN, if you can get it in full Y in one direction with unlimited stopovers, you could stop at lots of places along the way (not just the island hopper cities) for a relative bargain compared to point-to-point fares.
Can you provide an example? (ITA screenshot preferred)
MatthewLAX is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 9:51 pm
  #58  
 
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 5,814
Originally Posted by Steve M
... unless you get a single ticket with an "unlimited stopovers" feature. Even if it's part of a longer itinerary, such as EWR-SIN, if you can get it in full Y in one direction with unlimited stopovers, you could stop at lots of places along the way (not just the island hopper cities) for a relative bargain compared to point-to-point fares.
Even then, keep in mind that the hopper only runs twice (?) a week I think. Stopping over in an island for 3-4 days at a time is nice.... but I didn't see too much to fill 3-4 days worth of stuff.

Then again, I also was on the IH from hell so i'm still pretty biased + traumatized from the experience.
edcho is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 9:52 pm
  #59  
 
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: West Lafayette, IN
Programs: 1MM UA Gold
Posts: 179
Originally Posted by PV_Premier
...i guess you could run a mile around the terminal
My brother has a rule that you can't count a place as having been visited unless you peed outside of the airport.
jimbob likes this.
theise is offline  
Old Jul 9, 2014, 10:28 pm
  #60  
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: LAX
Programs: United Two Million Miler; United 1K, Hilton Lifetime Diamond, Hyatt Globalist, Bonvoy Platinum
Posts: 568
You state you run a mile in nine minutes. Is that in 90 degree sunny weather with high humidity? I run on Guam (at sunrise or dusk only) and I am sweating profusely just stretching to warm up.

There is also an issue of water. You don't want to be drinking the tap on some of those islands and you will need a lot of water, even after running only a mile.

Last edited by bloodyeyeballs; Jul 9, 2014 at 10:30 pm Reason: typo
bloodyeyeballs is offline  


Contact Us - Manage Preferences - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

This site is owned, operated, and maintained by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Designated trademarks are the property of their respective owners.