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  • In a perfect world the following words wouldjust make no sense. Yes, indeed, in a perfect world… We are talking about how much logistics, and air cargo in particular, is missing by overlooking women’s skills, but we are doing this sideways, as it is convenient at the FlyingTypers. Women’s skills can be ignored knowingly or as a habit, in any case it is a missed opportunity at best.

    This is not the main concept of this Podcast,but it cannot be ignored if you wish to fully understand its content.An accomplished businesswoman speaks hereunderand teaches us a few lessons.

    Make no mistake listening to Donna Mullins is a learning curve.There was so much to learn!

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  • It begn in February at Louisville Kentucky at Air Cargo and just ended March at Hong Kong at World Cargo Symposium. Here is an up clode and personal look at the people and business scene at air cargo trade show so far in 2024 and a peek ahead to what is next in April

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  • Doha, Qatar - “Qatar Airways Cargo confirms that Mark Drusch has been appointed as Chief Officer Cargo effective immediately.” This in Qatar’s Press Release: “with over 25 years in senior airline management roles, Mark is a well-known figure in the aviation world. His most recent role was SVP Revenue Management, Alliances and Strategy at Qatar Airways where he led the development and implementation of the company’s revenue strategy as well as managing strategic alliances with key partner airlines. Prior to joining Qatar Airways, Mark spent 20 years at Delta Air Lines, Continental Airlines and Lufthansa LSG Sky Chefs as Senior Vice President where he led the transformation in commercial airline strategy execution, revenue management, network planning and alliances. In addition, Mark was CEO and co-founder of e-Rewards and e-Miles, leaders in online panel research and online advertising.” In other words, we are talking of a man with a distinguished background, were it necessary to remind the public.

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  • If you want to learn about August Martin, the great aircargo pilot who flew for Seaboard World Airlines during the 1950’s, the name August Martin as an internet search, most often comes up as “August” 28, 1963,the day “Martin” Luther King whose birthday we celebrate Monday delivered hisnever to be forgotten “I Have A Dream,”speech at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. August Martin was agentle man, who would be remembered in history as the first African American to serve as Captain on a U.S. scheduled flag carrier.Put another way,before “Augie” as his friends called him, there had never been a black airlinecaptain on the bridge of any U.S. airline.

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  • Now hear this here is the true cradle of modern air cargothinking from some airline people long gone and nearly forgotten.Once upon a time there were two giant all cargo airlinesoperating from the USA to pointsinternationally.From Los Angeles to the Pacific & Asia was Flying Tigersand from New York Across the Atlantic to Europe,Africa,the Middle East and India was Seaboard World Airlines.This is about Seaboard World Airlines and specifically some excellent people thatlearned air cargo from its people.On October 1, 1980 Seaboard World Airlines was absorbed byThe Flying Tiger Line, Inc., and on December 16, 1988 The Flying Tiger Line, Inc., was absorbed by the Federal Express Corporation.I was thinking about people in our business recentlywatching Fred Smith on TV talking air cargo.Once upon a time there was John Mahoney at Seaboard talkingair cargo.

    That was 50 years ago.

    Interesting that the last big time air cargo type, Smith outon the hustings commanding the widest audience of any airline executive in world history (he certainly has alsobeen on top the longest) can look back to a time when big ideas of how to air cargo came from a company he ended up buying.

    Here we share some Seaboard thinking and also several directquotes from Mahoney that in 2024 although the talk is aged as we move along 50 years later at jet speed, still makes perfectly good sense.

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  • Talked to Bob Rogers the force behind ULD Care.

    Bob is based in Hong Kong where Christmas and theNew Year was celebrated with the "usual Hong Kong enthusiasm" and of course we are only a few weeks away from doubling down with Chinese New Year as Year of the Dragon approaches asa big celebration this year.

    So in January while the world takes off in 2024 is the lastmonth of the Year of the Rabbit before February on the Chinese Zodiak Calendar debuts the Year of the Dragon .

    While hoping that we all still got some of good cosmic fortune left ULD Care is out with some good ideas on the subject closest to Mr. Rogers heart and as usual he is kicking the cans.

    We also share some further thoughts of our friend Bill Spohrer whose passing we first reported January 8,2023.

    Welcome to today's Flying Talkers!

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  • Return with us now to those glory days of international aviation yesteryear aboard The China Clipper.Speed Gibson is high adventure at 10,000 feet (3,048 meters) and its range was 3,200 miles (5,150 kilometers). Once upon time Pan Am was America's "airline to the world" and Hong Kong was mysterious and aviation and short wave radio were the way to go and tell the story.Speed Gibson of the International Secret Police was a radio adventure series written by Virginia Cooke. It was centered on the adventures of Speed Gibson, a fifteen-year-old pilot who, through his uncle Clint Barlow, becomes a member of the International Secret Police.Our gift to you just for fun.Happy New Year and best wishes for a great 2024 from your frinds at Flying Talkers--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/geoffrey-arend/support

  • One From The Heart Here we take a deep dive right out of the gate as 2024 debuts into Alitalia and Italian air cargo.

    We also recall learning for sure of two fave books in the private library of Pope John Paul 11 .

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  • One of the joys of Summer, aside from the beach and theBeach Boys’ Good Vibrationsand warmed up weather and outside get-togethers is cruising along with all ofthe same, during August, on a long, slow languorous glide, like the water rideat Palisade’s Park into September. No need to rush, we have time.

    Speaking of cruising there seems to be a lot of that goingon right now. No need to blush either, boy: we have some other game in mind… Theword cruising as well as the world of cruising hold some glamour, in particularin summer, although I can hardly imagine climbing aboard any ship with severalthousand people onboard these days or doing anything unexpected now that we areall so much older and wiser, after COVID especially, right?

    Elsewhere the pencil and the sword, thin river-boats ofViking Cruises all over Europe hold some allure even here in North America, butthey seem to be less daunting, a bit more manageable today than they would havein Lindisfarne about 1000 years ago. We are telling a tale of swift developmentin logistics and industry, far from battle and invasion.

    Great that YouTube and Amazon Prime TV here in the USA havepicked up the narrow-boat phenomenon going on in the UK.

    Small boats, in fact barges of historical nature, carryingmostly coal in the past, are a history lesson in cargo transportation in theland where you can ply the over 4,000 miles of canals and imagine how thesewaterways and former tow paths sparked the Industrial Revolution, the VictorianEra and in fact were key in making Great Britain a world power.

    Actually the Thames remains today an antidote to London’sstifling traffic for some selected operators and as much as London, Amsterdamand New York have shaped global trade in the last four centuries, both grandand mean, depending… there are still so many smaller details in the waterwaysof Anglia that their full story cannot be entirely told.

    For me especially, during the Dog Days with heavy rain here inNew York City recently, confined indoors by the weather, watching a You Tubesponsored series titled “Travels by Narrowboat” for a couple of sessions wasinformative and fun.


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  • As Air Cargo Europe finally meets this week with people gathering from all over the world in Munich, the outstanding development since last we met is the emergence of a company branded PayCargo.

    PayCargo is the brain child of Cuban-born Eduardo del Riego, who came to the United States of America as a child and embraced the American Dream. What Eduardo did was invent a well-funded, top financial service company head and shoulders above any we have ever seen, that delivers air and sea cargo flexible and totally reliable financial services solutions.

    PayCargo is not only sweeping the nation and in just a few short years has become the best and most favored way to pay quickly and efficiently; right now PayCargo is expanding taking hold all over the world.

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  • LogiPharma was held April 25-27 in Lyon, France at Palais des congrès de Lyon. The event was slick well-organized and interesting, full of heavy duty business, and lots of people and action at a great venue. If you want to know where many of the airlines looking for business and new horizons post COVID were, they were in France discovering that engaging the pharma in 2023 is good over there, Pierre!

    "One From The Heart" recalls the life and times of our friend, the late Joachim Frigger.

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  • The theme for International Women’s Month this year is “Celebrating Women Who Tell Our Stories.”

    Who better to represent air cargo during International Women’s Month 2023 than Tulsi Nowlakha Mirchandaney, who is celebrating over five decades in air cargo. Tulsi is Managing Director and Accountable Manager of Blue Dart Aviation and is our lead off story as we launch Women’s Month 2023.

    Blue Dart is based in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India and serves 7 Indian metro cities. Deutsche Post owns a 70% stake in the airline through its subsidiary Blue Dart Express. Blue Dart operates a fleet of 6 B757-200 freighters to leading India cities.

    “The only constant in my 28 years here,” Tulsi said unhesitatingly, “has been the enduring passion and resilience of the people who make up this amazing industry, and who have helped it grow and evolve through decades of varied challenges and turbulence”.

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  • Fruit and vegetable lovers will be 'loving it up' at Berlin’s Annual Fruit Logistica all this week at the massive Berlin ExpoCenterCity and CityCube in Germany, February 8-10, 2023.

    It may come as a shock to some shippers to learn that one of the biggest challenges to safe handling of lithium batteries or lithium anything is the paperwork.
    Enter an IATA-initiative branded Center of Excellence for Independent Validators (CEIV), a process that now can assure auditing the action and providing confidence for lithium battery shipping.
    Created by IATA Cargo in 2021, Qatar Airways and its global handler Qatar Aviation Services just received certification of the duo’s outstanding ongoing handling of lithium battery shipments.
    Qatar Aviation Services is the first ground-handling company to be certified in this manner globally.

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  • A Billion Here a Billion There . . . Remember the Price-Fixing Air Cargo Surcharges scandal that rocked the global air cargo industry in late 2010 when  in Europe for example 11 legacy carriers were found guilty after Lufthansa and Swiss threw everybody under the bus and elsewhere got immunity, as eager prosecutors in countries around the world handed out fines?

    On again, off again, the case has continued for the past dozen years. In America and elsewhere once young lawyers looking to make political or law careers have entered middle age and still may still  file an appeal.

    Well, while you were putting your kids through Grade School, High School & most of College if you have been (happily) married, (we hope so) for that long, the airlines have been fighting the price-fixing fines.

    Now apparently, finally Air France /KLM beat the rap on December 20, 2022, and were issued an annulment for their €3.9 million fine according to Linklaters (www.Linkaters.com)

    I sat down at a favorite watering hole The Oyster Bar in Grand Central Station in New York City with the late Bruce McCaffrey the lifetime Qantas Cargo USA  hand who ran North & South America and masterminded  the Qantas Freight West Imperial cargo transfer facility at LAX, after he was thrown under the bus by Qantas. 

    It was 2008 .

    In ill health,  bowed but not broken, Bruce died a few years later.

    Recently Air France /KLM beat the"Price fixing" rap on December 20, 2022 joining a growing list of airlines, and were issued an annulment for their €3.9 million fine according to Linklaters (www.Linkaters.com).

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  • Bill Spohrer died December 16 in Sarasota, Florida at age 91. Air Cargo lost a giant that quietly walked among us and made one hell of a difference in air cargo, changing the face of Miami Airport completely by innovating that airport some decades ago, into the pole position of global leadership in perishables.

    It was Bill that changed "Corrosion Corner" in the air cargo area at Miami International into a huge refrigerator masquerading as an air cargo facility that eventually became a cornerstone of UPS operations at that gateway.

    Bill was the driver in the creation of The International Air Cargo Association where he served as that organization's first President. He also was instrumental in the founding of Air Cargo Americas. Both are forces for good in organized air cargo today.

    In the here today, gone tomorrow world of air cargo, Bill was for all seasons, and now he should be remembered as among the greatest air cargo builders of the 20th Century.

    Here is Bill's story, written in 1993 by the greatest aviation historian R.E.G. Davies, when Ron was Curator of Air Transport at The National Air Museum in Washington, D.C.

    Ron died in 2011, after many decades at NASM, having authored 30 books, including more than a dozen detailed histories of the leading airlines of the world and the Berlin Airlift.

    Happy New Year 2023!

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  • Here is an update as trade shows begin to take shape for 2023.
    The International Air Cargo Association said its Executive Summit 2023 will be held in Brussels November 6-8, 2023 at the exquisite, recently renovated, historic Skyhall.
    Inaugurated in 1958, to receive the many visitors of the first post-war World Exhibition, Skyhall was nothing short of ground-breaking. One of its outstanding features was the 1,800-meter high, glass-fronted transit hall with its seemingly floating arched roof.
    Interestingly the TIACA Executive Summit will take place in Brussels almost one month to the date FIATA International Federation of Freight Forwarders Associations closes its World Congress Event (October 3-6, 2023) , making 2023 the year of a big double header win for BRU Gateway.
    Dare we imagine some interaction of these two stalwart world transportation organizations?
    TIACA said that it is working with Brussels Airport Company to organize a first class conference, which will bring together over 300 decision makers from across the globe to network, showcase their companies and products, as well as learn and debate pressing issues affecting the entire industry.

    This story prepared by Marco Sorgetti includes a visit with iconic FIATA activist and airport expert Jean-Claude Delen

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  • How Miami Landed Its First Asian Scheduled Carrier

    Once upon a time in 1994 I found myself in Taipei, Taiwan sitting at lunch with Peter Yap, who was the top cargo executive for China Airlines Cargo.

    At one point, Peter looked at me and said:

    “The trouble today is finding markets that offer great growth potential and also support from the local gateway.

    “Very rare,” Peter said.

    “Taiwanese people love to eat fish and we cannot get enough of it, competing with Europe and elsewhere.”

    I looked at Peter, who was eager to do business, and thought about Miami.

    Our company had personally served and followed the gateway since 1975 with distribution of our Air Cargo News publication. We delivered ACN to the cargo area at Miami, back when it was located in the part of the airport that served the U.S. Army during World War II.

    The place was called Miami International Air Depot, or MIAD.

    I also thought about the two detailed history books we created about the airport after Amaury Zuriarrain brought us in to meet General Manager Richard Judy.

    Legendary Dick Judy green lit the first book and later an all-cargo book about MIA Cargo created for Miami Aviation Director Gary Dellapa.

    I looked at Peter and said:

    “Peter, come to Miami, bring a freighter into South Florida where all the fish you need will swim right into the airplane, and you will make history.”

    Celebrating Michael Chowdry, one of the most successful people in the history of air cargo founded Atlas Air Worldwide 30 years ago.
    The Pakistani native began flying in 1993 with one 747 freighter.
    Today Atlas is the largest ACMI operator on the planet.
    It's been 21 years since that sad day on January 24, 2001 when Mike, who was only 46, died whilst piloting his jet in Watkins, Colorado with Jeff Cole, a reporter on board.

    Election Day Strange Choice For TIACA Opening

    The International Air Cargo Association TIACA Air Cargo Forum (ACF) begins on November 8 Election Day across the U.S., which means to attend the first day of TIACA, unless you can figure out how to get to an absentee voting center, how will you be in two places at the same time a week from this Tuesday?

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  • The Garden City Hotel in Long Island, New York with its distinctive cupola originally designed by Stanford White atop the structure, has been a landmark hostelry in New York for over 125 years.
         Here was the ground zero center of the global aviation universe for a couple of days in 1927, situated at the exact spot from where a young air mail pilot and soldier of fortune named Charles Lindbergh spent his last moments sleeping fitfully upstairs, resting his head on a pillow for a few hours, while downstairs the press corps plugged in the rest of the world to the news that an attempt was about to take place for one man to fly across the Atlantic Ocean alone.
         Soon enough “The Lone Eagle”, as Lindy was dubbed, emerged from his slumbers and took the short ride over to Roosevelt Field in the early morning mist. The flight that changed the world took off in a tiny monoplane, heavy with fuel that caused it to barely skim over the tree tops at the end of the runway. From that point, the world held its breath and followed that flight.
         The next evening when Lindbergh landed at Le Bourget Field in France, the Garden City Hotel had hosted the first flier to cross the Atlantic. Today that Garden City Hotel no longer looks like it did in 1927: it was lost in a fire. In its place, The Garden City Hotel in 2022 is a big beautiful modern hostelry. It radiates opulence and success with few traces of its glorious past, aside from the one that has mattered for about 100 years.
         Surely this is the best place to celebrate reaching a milestone, with the greatest credentials tied to world avOn October 1st, EMO Trans Global Logistics people celebrated the 50th Anniversary of service to the U.S. In this place so hallowed to aviation the spirit and the finely crafted traditionalist hand of EMO U.S. founder, the late Joachim “Jo” Frigger was fondly remembered by Mr. EMO himself, Eckart Moltmann, who today at 84 travelled to honor and celebrate 50 years of service in the U.S. of the company now branded EMO Trans Global Logistics.
         EMO, an endearment attached to Eckart’s name as a young man, ended up being used as an "easy to remember and pronounce" branding device for the company he created in Stuttgart in 1965 as a one-man shop.
         EMO on this past Saturday night fondly recalled his friendship with Jo and admitted that he never dreamed that eventually the company he began, “would end in 2022 as a global power.”
         But this night’s celebration belonged to the visionary and inspirational leader of EMO Trans, Jo Frigger, his loss keenly felt in an outpouring of affection by those who knew him well.
         Today there is no doubt where the heart of EMO Trans beats: the EMO Trans World Headquarters, the seat of the global enterprise, is just down the street from the Garden City Hotel. Jo Frigger, it can be said without hesitation, is the person that put it all together in the U.S., half a century ago.

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  • Today PayCargo pulled off a show stopper announcement at International Air Transport Association (IATA) World Cargo Symposium in London announcing that the financial service company is spreading its wings beyond North America into Europe, the Middle East and Asia.
    PayCargo also revealed that they will be expanding their product offering and will be providing payment solutions for air waybill charges in addition to the ancillary charges they do today.
    PayCargo brought in air cargo industry expert Michael White to make it official at the World Cargo Symposium in London.

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