AirTran Airways to come to Columbus. It's not Skybus, thankfully.
Yesterday's news brought the welcome breath of new life to Columbus ever since Skybus did us wrong, jilting us like an uncaring, unfeeling lover.
I heard in a radio news broadcast that AirTran Airways will begin flights between Columbus and Atlanta, Fort Myers and Orlando starting November 6. As the news commentator noted, this does not mean there will be a rush on low cost airlines to Columbus. Jet Blue, for example, has been there and done that.
Still, when I think of how Jet Blue used to be here before Skybus RUINED IT, I feel like Kate Winslet, almost frozen to death, floating on that piece of wood after the Titanic sank, hoarsely crying out, "Come back. Come back."
I'm glad that AirTran has noticed that Columbus is a viable market for folks going to Florida. If you've ever been in Columbus, Ohio between January and April, you'll know why folks are eager to get out of here and head south. The gray skies make this a place to leave if ever the chance arises.
If only AirTran wasn't bailing out of Newburgh, New York and would make that a Columbus connection as well, I'd be ever so thrilled.
According to this article in the Columbus Dispatch, AirTran has been one of the best managed airlines in the past nine years. Skybus was exactly the OPPOSITE. I'm still stinging from the break-up.

If you haven't heard of the
Around this time four years ago, I was preparing for a semester abroad by frantically packing every item of clothing I'd ever worn, along with hundreds of CDs (remember those?), and a four month's supply of toiletries. Can you say overkill?
In warm-weather locales all over the Americas, the same scene is unfolding: US retirees, marching in lock-step in their all-white orthopedic shoes, are ditching traditional retirement communities and spending their golden years in destinations both less expensive and more exotic. And who can blame them? Prime real estate in these beautiful warm-weather countries-- places like Costa Rica, Nicaragua, and Ecuador-- costs a fraction of what similar land goes for in Florida and Arizona. And we all know the elderly have never been ones to pass up a good bargain.
Since I missed last week's Gadling Take FIVE, I am including posts from before last Friday and including more than five. As usual, it's hard to pick. 





















