Busiest Flight Routes in the World….Sapporo -Tokyo Sector is on the Top of The List…!!!

Busiest flight routes in the world revealed … with number one carrying SEVEN MILLION passengers a year (and the two cities will surprise you)

  • More than 14 million people travel between Sapporo and Tokyo every year 
  • Six of the world’s 10 busiest routes are found in Asia
  • No cities in Europe or North America managed to crack the list 

More than seven million people travelled on the busiest flight route in the world in 2013 – but the two cities may surprise you.

It wasn’t the short hop between the Brazilian cities of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro or the two-hour journey between Beijing and Shanghai in China.

Surprisingly, it was the 90-minute trek from Sapporo to Tokyo in Japan.

Crowded: The busiest flight route in the world is Sapporo to Tokyo, with the return leg a close second

Crowded: The busiest flight route in the world is Sapporo to Tokyo, with the return leg a close second

Data prepared by FightStats for The Huffington Post shows that 7.4 million passengers travelled from Sapporo to Tokyo on 29,858 flights last year.

The return leg is the world’s second busiest route, transporting 7.3 million passengers on 29,484 flights.

Tokyo has the world’s most populous metropolitan area with more than 35 million residents, while Sapporo, in comparison, is home to just two million people.

An online search displays dozens of daily flights from Sapporo to Tokyo’s Narita and Haneda airports, departing every five to 30 minutes on a number of carriers.

All Nippon Airways is one of the carriers that ferries nearly seven million passengers from Sapporo to Tokyo

All Nippon Airways is one of the carriers that ferries nearly seven million passengers from Sapporo to Tokyo

FlightStats says more than 8.3 million people take to the skies every day on more than 93,000 flights.

The third busiest route in the world in 2013 was Seoul to Jeju in South Korea, while the return flight was the fourth busiest.

Almost seven million people flew each way on about 37,000 flights in 2013.

The Sao Paulo-Rio de Janeiro route rounds out the top five with just over six million travellers. The return flight is the sixth busiest flight.

Six of the world’s 10 busiest routes are in Asia, while the others are located in Brazil and Australia.

Sydney to Melbourne and the return leg are the ninth and 10th busiest routes.

Tokyo was by far the busiest city for airport travel, claiming four spots. The routes between Tokyo and Fukuoka also cracked the list.

No cities in Europe or North America made the top 10.

BUSIEST ROUTES IN THE WORLD

  1. Sapporo-Tokyo (29,585 flights, 7,404,740 passengers
  2. Tokyo-Sapporo, (29,484, 7,376,637)
  3. Seoul-Jeju, South Korea, (37,167, 6,939,204)
  4. Jeju-Seoul, (36,809, 6,872,450)
  5. Sao Paulo-Rio de Janeiro (37,520, 6,094,249)
  6. Rio de Janeiro-Sao Paulo (37,420, 6,085,195)
  7. Tokyo-Fukuoka, Japan (25,214, 5,886,273)
  8. Fukuoka-Tokyo (25,130, 5,872,756)
  9. Sydney-Melbourne (26,534, 4,997,700)
  10. Melbourne-Sydney (26,512, 4,978,161)

Source: FlightStats

The website FlightAware compiled a list of the busiest routes on a single day, using July 30, 2014 as an example.

On that day, the busiest route in the world saw 94 flights travel from Seoul’s Gimpo International Airport to Jeju International Airport.

The busiest route in the US on July 30, 2014 was Los Angeles to San Francisco with a total of 55 flights.

Source:::: http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Natarajan

Reasons You are Stressed Right Now…!!!

Things Stressing You Out Right Now

While most stress triggers like money or work are easily identifiable, many minor daily activities are unknowingly contributing to more stress in your life. Alas the daily grind of annoyances and mild anxieties will have a long term effect. The key to combating these sorts of stressors is recognizing them and not letting them bother you. Here are 10 things you can try to avoid.

1. Other stressed people

While you might actively be avoiding your own stress triggers, other people around you might unknowingly be increasing your stress levels.  A 2014 German study found that participants observing others being stressed by tasks had rising levels of cortisol, a stress hormone.  Stress can also be triggered by traumas of those around us, such as people experiencing illness. You’re reminded that these things can happen close to home and you fall into a thinking pattern filled with anxiety and negativity, which stresses you out unnecessarily.

2. Multitasking

It may seem like you’re being efficient but this buzz word actually decreases productivity and increases stress. In 2012 a study at the University of Irvine looked at people who dealt with emails while working, as well as people who dealt with emails at a separate time. The former were less productive in their other daily skills. Physically their heart rate also showed more variability, which indicates mental stress. Doing one thing at a time is more fruitful, and better for your health. You can do a good job, and you might be surprised to find you’ll have more time.

3. Your significant other

Even if you’re happy and are in a healthy relationship, living with someone inevitably leads to annoyances. Stress can be caused by simple things, like leaving the toilet seat up, or heavier issues like money or co-parenting. So how do you avoid this kind of stress? The answer is striving for balance, in spending the right amount of time together, open and honest communication, compromise, and remembering why you love your partner and then acknowledging this daily. Let your partner be a stress-release factor in your life, and not the cause of it.

4. Taking a break

While taking a break from a stressful situation to watch a movie, or meet a friend can be helpful, sometimes you’re so anxious that you’re unable to truly let go and enjoy the present. It creeps back into your mind, making you bad company, and applying further stress to your mind and body. During such moments, it is important to work on being mindful and focusing on the present. Stress and anxiety do, temporarily, go away when you’re truly absorbed in your surroundings.

5. Everyday annoyances

Small daily encounters, like rude customer service or waiting in long lines, have bigger affects on your mood than you realize. You want to present yourself as composed and on top of things. Your reaction, whether you adapt and conjure a new plan, or throw a pity party and get upset, makes the difference. If you are more like the latter, this can contribute to a mindset steeped in pessimism and victimization, which will eventually eat you away. You have to be realistic, acknowledging that some things are beyond your control and remind yourself that you’re doing your best.

6. Easy fixes

A lot of our coping methods to combat stress are counterproductive. You work longer hours, stop exercising, or eat more junk food. These seem like easy fixes, but the truth is foregoing healthy eating and physical activity actually stresses your body out, because these actions strengthen our bodies’ ability to fight stress effectively.

 

7. Tea and chocolate

There are many reports mentioning how bad coffee is, but equally guilt culprits are chocolate and tea. This two treats are often relied on for relieving stress. However, what’s not often discussed is that they have as much caffeine as our friend coffee. Caffeine is known to make stress worse by irritating digestion, causing irritability and disturbing sleep patterns.,..

8. Digital devices

Whether for business or pleasure, technology can wreck your sleep patterns if you use your smartphone, tablet or computer too close to bedtime. Similarly, smartphones and laptops mean we are always in touch, contributing to the work creep phenomenon. By checking email outside office hours, your work stress enters your leisure time. Emails remind you of your responsibilities and it’s really hard to put those ideas to rest, especially if they are bombarding you at all hours of the day.

9. Too much good health and exercise

While not as severe as ill health, too much focus on maintaining your health through diet and exercise can have an adverse affect on your stress levels. Diets with carb restrictions have been shown to increase sadness and stress, while other restrictive meal plans lead to tiredness. This focus on perfectionism can have dangerous side effects, such as orthorexia and gymorexia, modern conditions where extreme obsession for health food and working out respectively, affect your ability to function adequately.

10. Watching your favorite sport

All sports fans know watching your favorite team play is not a passive activity. There’s a mix of tension, excitement, frustration and elation, whether your team wins or loses. The trouble is your body can’t distinguish between good or bad stress, and watching sports can set off your sympathetic nervous system. This means adrenaline is released, and the blood flow to your heart can be reduced. In the short term this has few consequences, but repeated exposure can lead to high blood pressure and increase heart disease risk.

SOURCE:::::www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Indian Airports Hold Top 6 Positions in South Asia Aviation Market…

Here we look closely at the airports of South Asia and highlight the region’s top performers. 

DATA: What are the Fastest Growing Airports in South Asia?

Ahead of this year’s Routes Asia forum, Routesonline is providing a snapshot on the leading airlines and airports and most used aircraft types across the region.  Here we look closely at the airports serving South Asia and highlight the region’s top performers.

Scheduled Air Capacity From South Asia (2005 – 2014)

Our analysis of published schedules for the past ten years shows that air capacity within and from South Asia has risen from 69,033,731 available seats in 2005 to 158,760,706 available seats in 2014.  This represents a growth of 130.0 per cent across the period, an average annual increase of 14.4 per cent.  In the past year capacity increased 7.3 per cent.

Year Available Capacity
2005 69033731
2006 88368144
2007 109348747
2008 118056955
2009 117414226
2010 125066419
2011 143163209
2012 143648290
2013 148024633
2014 158760706

Top Ten Airports in the South Asian Market (2014) ….

Delhi (DEL)    Mumbai (BOM)      Bangalore (BLR      Chennai (MAA)      Kolkata (CCU)   Hyderabad (HYD)     Colombo (CMB)        Dhaka (DAC)       Cochin (COK

Indian airports hold the top six positions in the listing of largest facilities for air travel within and from South Asia, highlighting the key role new entrants into the local market and infrastructure growth at airports in the country will have on the future of aviation in this region.

The big metropolis hubs of Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi and Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai lead the way with 16.8 per cent and 15.3 per cent shares of capacity within and from South Asia in 2014, respectively. With a faster rate of growth Delhi’s gateway has strengthened its prominence in the region with its share of available seats rising 0.3 percentage points between 2013 and 2014 following a 9.0 per cent rise in departure capacity.

The Indian airports hold seven of the top ten largest airports in South Asia with Kempegowda International Airport in Bangalore (6.2 per cent share); Chennai International Airport (6.1 per cent share); Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport in Kolkata (4.9 per cent share); Rajiv Gandhi International Airport in Hyderabad (4.5 per cent share) and Cochin International Airport (2.6 per cent share), the others.

The largest non-Indian airport in South Asia by departure capacity in 2014 was Bandaranaike International Airport, serving the Sri Lankan capital city of Colombo, which was ranked seventh with a 3.3 per cent share. The other non-Indian airports in the top ten were: Dhaka’s Shahjalal International Airport in Bangladesh (2.8 per cent share) and Karachi’s Jinnah International Airport in Pakistan (2.6 per cent share).

Fastest Growing Airports in the South Asian Market (2010-2014)

Looking at capacity data in the region across a five year period, it is Rajiv Gandhi International Airport in the Indian city of Hyderabad that has grown by the biggest margin with capacity up 68.6 per cent from 2010. The modern facility was opened in March 2008 as a replacement for the city’s former airport at Begumpet and is viewed upon as one of the most efficient facilities across the Asian market, regularly appearing highly in customer surveys.

The performance at Hyderabad over the last five years only just exceeded that of two other Indian airports. Pune Airport grew capacity 65.9 per cent between 2010 and 2014, while at Lucknow’s Chaudhary Charan Singh International Airport departure seats increased 60.6 per cent, despite capacity falling last year.

Outside of the dominant Indian market, Ibrahim Nasir International Airport, the main international airport in the Maldives, was the fastest growing airport in South Asia with departure capacity up 56.4 per cent over the past five years. Bandaranaike International Airport in Colombo, Sri Lanka also saw a notable 45.3 per cent capacity rise between 2010 and 2014, highlighting its emergence as a regional hub for the oneworld alliance and resurgence of tourism to the country.

SOURCE::::: www .routesonline.com

natarajan

 

Message For the Day…” Core of Truth Will Never Change…”

When the moon is just a little arc in the sky and one desires to see it, a person indicates it by pointing a finger towards it. Or, when one desires to look at a particular star, a person says, “There, just above that branch of this tree.” The moon is far away, and the star is much farther. At the moment it could be seen just above the branch, but that is only a temporary location. Soon, the location changes. The finger can no longer be correct, for the star or moon moves across the sky. But the genuine characteristic never undergoes change. The form may suffer change; the name may change; times may change; and the space it occupies may change. But the core of Truth will not change. That core is denoted as existence, luminescence, and attractiveness(asthi, bhathi, priyam) in Vedantic texts. The above three together are the nature of God. On these as the basis, forms are constructed by the mind, and names for the forms follow.

Sathya Sai Baba

” A story that is not a laughing stuff…” !!!

John had a  terrible accident at work – he fell against a grinding machine and ripped off both of his ears. Since he was permanently disfigured, he settled with the company for a rather large sum of money and went on his way.

One day, John decided to invest his money in a small, but growing telecom business called Mixitup Communications.  After weeks of negotiations, he bought the company outright. But, after signing on the dotted line, he realized that he knew nothing about running such a business and quickly set out to hire someone who could do that for him.

The next day he had set up three interviews. The first guy was great. He knew everything he needed to and was very interesting. At the end of the interview, John asked him, “Do you notice anything different about me?”  And the gentleman answered, “Why yes, I couldn’t help but notice you have no ears.” John got very angry and threw him out.

The second interview was with a woman, and she was even better than the first guy. He asked her the same question,  “Do you notice anything different about me?” and she replied: “Well, you have no ears.”  John again was upset and tossed her out.

The third and last interview was the best of all three. It was with a very young man who was fresh out of college. He was smart. He was handsome. And he seemed to be a better businessman than the first two put together. John was anxious, but went ahead and asked the young man the same question: “Do you notice anything different about me?”
And to his surprise, the young man answered: “Yes. You wear contact lenses.” John was delighted, and said, “What an incredibly observant young man. How in the world did you know that?”

The young man fell off his chair laughing hysterically and replied, “Well, it’s pretty hard to wear glasses with no ears!”

SOURCE::::www.mastegg.com

Natarajan

Hong Kong’s Third Runway Backed by IATA and Cathay Pacific….

The HK$150 billion project has been backed by both Hong Kong flag carrier  Cathay Pacific, and the International Air Transport Association (IATA), with the interpretation that a third runway is necessary in order to see the aviation industry in Hong Kong flourish.  

Hong Kong’s Third Runway Backed by IATA & Cathay Pacific

Hong Kong International Airport (HKIA) is set to begin the construction of a third runway and associated infrastructure.

The HK$150 billion project has been backed by both Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific, and the International Air Transport Association (IATA), with the interpretation that a third runway is necessary in order to see the aviation industry in Hong Kong flourish.

Construction on the third runway is expected to commence next year, to be completed by 2023, and will help Hong Kong International Airport boost capacity to 100 million passengers and 9 million tons of cargo a year by 2030.

IATA have said that HKIA plays a crucial role as an economic catalyst – Hong Kong is home to some 3,500 regional headquarters and boasts a HK$250 billion tourism industry. The airport serves 63 million passengers and processes 4.4 million tonnes of cargo.

“IATA has long been an advocate of the need for a third runway in Hong Kong. And it is in the interest of everyone in Hong Kong to see the aviation industry flourish. Aviation and aviation-related tourism account for 8.2% of the Hong Kong economy. Increasing HKIA’s capacity to be able to serve 100 million passengers and 9 million tonnes of cargo by 2030 will ensure that the airport continues to be a pillar of Hong Kong’s success—provided the expansion is built, financed  and funded wisely,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO in a speech to the Foreign Correspondents Club of Hong Kong.

IATA has outlined a framework which will allow Hong Kong’s new infrastructure to be built without increasing airline charges, without placing a burden on taxpayers, without making it more expensive for travellers, without adding an extra burden to shippers and while increasing competitiveness of the hub’s air transport network.

HKIA is consistently profitable, and IATA’s Tony Tyler has suggested the airport use its advantageous financial situation to fund its expansion by borrowing through commercial loans or bonds.

Flag carrier, Cathay Pacific has supported IATA’s suggestions to fund the project by saying that the third runway can be self-funded through existing income streams, especially as the number of passengers moving through the airport continues to grow.

“Hong Kong International Airport is extremely successful. It is the world’s busiest airport for international freight and the third busiest in terms of international passenger traffic. The Airport Authority enjoys the highest net profit of any airport in the world and benefits from strong cash flows, a healthy balance sheet, and growing income from retail and aeronautical streams,” said Ivan Chu, Cathay Pacific Chief Executive.

Cathay Pacific also believes that, as a public body, the Airport Authority should reinvest its income in the development of the third runway, so that the airport can maintain its premier hub status and continue to make an important economic contribution to Hong Kong.

Hong Kong’s air transport network is under pressure to remain competitive, after its share of the market connecting China to the rest of the world shrank from 20 percent to 17 percent between 2005 and 2013.

Its share on the ASEAN to North America market has remained at 10 percent, whereas the airport’s share on ASEAN to European traffic has contracted to 2.4 percent from 3.3 during the same period.

“There are lots of reasons why these changes are happening. The Middle East airlines are proving to be strong competitors with efficient and affordable hubs being a central piece of their success. And hubs closer to Hong Kong continue to improve their offerings to enhance the competitiveness of their networks,” said Mr Tyler.

SOURCE:::::::: Poppy Marello in http://www.routesonline.com

Natarajan

” How to Flatten Your Belly …” ?

How To Make Sassy Water to Flatten Your Belly

What is Sassy Water? And, will it really help you lose up to seven pounds and five inches in an insanely short time? According to the flat belly diets published in Prevention Magazine and The Daily Mail, the answer is yes. Lemon water has long been touted as a great way to cleanse your body, and help you lose weight. The addition of few new ingredients apparently boosts that weight loss power. Although, you’ll have to look up the diet on your own, the recipe is simple and healthy.

lemon

 

Difficulty: Easy

Instructions

1. First, you’ll need 3 1/2 to 4 quarts of water in a pitcher. Use filtered  water to make sure it is pure.

2. Thoroughly wash one lemon. Slice it very thin, and add it to the water.   You don’t need to squeeze the juice out, just drop the slices in.

3. Peel and thinly slice one cucumber, and add to the water. Add 12 fresh, clean mint leaves.

4. Next, you will need one teaspoon of finely grated ginger. Make sure it is fresh ginger, not the dried powder from your spice rack. Add the ginger to the water. Give it a quick stir, cover and place in the refrigerator over night. Drink it chilled throughout the following day.

5. Make a fresh batch every day for four days. Repeat as needed for great results.

Good luck!  

SOURCE:::::::www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day….” What is Ethical Life …? “

All action (karma) done for the sake of three goals viz. to leverage the Universe for the worship of the Lord, to establish peace and justice in society, and to control and coordinate the functions of the body, is sacrifice. The first is called a holy, sacrificial ritual (yajna); the second, charity(dhana); the third, penance (tapas). All human acts must subserve these three needs, and an ethical life is the foundation for attaining that stage. This ethical life is based upon discrimination between truth and falsehood. Just as the pearl is retained while the shell is  discarded, the essence that is Truth must be accepted and the nonessential rejected. For this, individual exertion and divine grace, both should be present. One should also constantly practice the great lesson that the body and the Atma are separate. This is a highly beneficial exercise. Such discrimination is necessary for secular as well as spiritual life.

Sathya Sai Baba

“கொஞ்சம் சிரிக்கலாமே” ….!!!

கொஞ்சம் சிரிங்க, பாஸ்…

“நீங்க உங்க மனைவிக்கு ரொம்ப பயந்து நடப்பவரா?”

“ச்சே, ச்சே… நடக்கறப்ப அந்த பயத்தை வெளில காட்டிக்க மாட்டேன்.”

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நோயாளி : டாக்டர் நீங்க ஒரு காரியம்….. செய்யணும்

டாக்டர் : நான் ஆபரேசன் மட்டும்தான் பண்ணுவேன்….. காரியம் எல்லாம் ஐயர் தான் செய்வார்.

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நீதிபதி: ஒரே வீட்டை ஏன் பதினைந்து முறை கொள்ளை அடிச்சே?

திருடன்: ஐயா நான் அவங்க பாமிலி திருடன், எப்புவுமே விஸ்வாசமா இருப்பேன்.

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1:- “ காதலிக்கும் மனைவிக்கும் என்னங்க வித்தியாசம்?”

கவிஞர்:- “ காதலி கரும்பைப்போன்றவள்
மனைவி இரும்பைப்போன்றவள்”

1: – ???

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ஆவி1 :விஷம் குடிச்சி சாக போனேன்..விஷத்துல கலப்படம் பிழைச்சிக்கிட்டேன்..

ஆவி2 :அப்புறம் எப்படி செத்த?

ஆவி1 :காப்பாத்த மருந்து கொடுத்தாங்க..மருந்துல கலப்படம் செத்துட்டேன்..

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டீச்சர்: நாம் பேசும் மொழியை ஏன் தாய் மொழி என்று சொல்கிறோம் ?

மாணவி : எப்போதும் அம்மாக்கள் பேசுவதாலேயும், அந்த வாய்ப்பு அப்பாக்களுக்கு குறைவாக கிடைப்பாதலேயும், நாம் பேசும் மொழி தாய் மொழி என்று அறியப்படுகிறது.

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டாக்டர்-“ஆபரேஷன் முடிந்து நீங்க நடந்தே வீட்டுக்குப் போகலாம்.”

நோயாளி -“ஆட்டோவுக்குக் கூடக் காசு இருக்காதா டாக்டர்?”

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பையன்-அம்மா எதிர் வீட்டு ஆண்டி பேரு என்னம்மா?

அம்மா-விமலாடா..

பையன்-அப்பாவிக்கு இது கூட தெரிய மாட்டேதுங்கும்மா அந்த ஆண்டிய “டார்லிங்”னு கூப்பிடுறார்.

‪#‎செத்தான்டா_சேகரு‬

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”இந்த ஒரு கீரைக்கட்டை ஐந்து ரூபாய்னு சொல்றீயே ,நேற்றுக்கூட இரண்டு ரூபாய்னு தானே சொன்னே ?”

”இப்பவும் ஒண்ணும் மோசம் போயிடலே.. .அந்த கீரைக்கட்டு இப்பவும் இருக்கு ,ஒரு ரூபாய்க்கே தர்றேன் ,வாங்கிகிறீங்களா ?

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வாத்தியார்-டேய் முட்டாளுக்கும் அடி முட்டாளுக்கும் என்ன வித்தியாசம்?

மாணவன்-நாங்க எல்லாரும் முட்டாளுங்க சார் நீங்க எங்களை அடிக்கிறதால அடி முட்டாள் சார்

நேத்து உன் மனைவிக்கும், உன் அம்மாவுக்கும் நடந்த சண்டைல, யாருக்கு பின்னாடி நீ நின்ன?”

“போடா நான் பத்திரமா பீரோ பின்னாடி போய் நின்னுக்கிட்டேன்.

How to Get Through Life …With a Smile !!!

How To Get Through Life!

Some simple advice on how to get through life with a smile, because as we all know – it’s how we walk the road that determines how much we enjoy it…

Sleep as much as you can….

getting through life

Read books that you enjoy…

getting through life

Show some affection.

getting through life

Change your looks.

getting through life

getting through life

Above all, be happy, 

Regardless of what
 
 
Your challenges may be…
 
getting through life

Have a great life!
 
May your troubles be less,
 
Your blessings more,
 
And may nothing but happiness
 
Come through your door.

 

Source:::::: http://www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan