I think I count six: The US, Thailand, China, Vietnam, Nepal and Indonesia.
China, the U.S., India (i think…can’t remember), the Philippines, Peru, and Belize.
I think that’s it.
One!
U.S., Canada, China, New Zealand
19:
US
Mexico
Guatemala
Honduras
Panama
Brazil
Venezuela
Ecuador
Peru
Argentina
India
Philippines
Nigeria
Cameroon
Gabon
South Africa
Madagascar
Australia
New Zealand
U.S. Canada England. Germany Austria. Luxembourg.
US, Canada, Iraq, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan (Gesundheit), Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, and one other place. (15)
Some of those were not commercial flights but the were domestic.
Doesn’t have to be commercial. Any ol’ flight will do.
US, Canada, Germany
US, Canada, (former) Yugoslavia, (former) USSR
To expand, my one domestic flight in Nepal was unique in that it was Kathmandu to Kathmandu. It was a sightseeing flight around Mt. Everest – or as much around it as one can go and not enter Chinese airspace – on Buddha Air.
[ul]
[li]Australia[/li][li]New Zealand[/li][li]India[/li][li]Indonesia[/li][/ul]
Just one, the United States.
United States
In that case, Canada; a float plane on Rainy Lake in Ontario.
Australia, Canada, Spain and the US.
I would have had two in China, except that in 1996 a flight between Hong Kong and Beijing was international.
I wonder if it still sort of is. Would a Chinese visa be recognized today in Hong Kong or vice versa? Or like their money, do you still need different?
Spain, France, Italy, US, UK, Costa Rica.
U.S.
New Zealand
Tanzania
Mexico
U.K.
Peru
USA, Angola, Ecuador, Egypt, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, United Kingdom. Most of the ones outside the US were oilfield charters.
Pakistan. US. UK. France. Saudi Arabia. Turkey.
Do helicopter rides count? Then UAE. Balloons? Then Greece, and I landed about 40 miles away. ;).