Inspired by my coworkers assertion that she has been to New Jersey because she had a layover in Newark.
If the only time someone has been to a state (or country) is within an airport as a layover, would you (the Millions, this is a poll) describe that person as having been to said state/country?
I specifically try to set foot OUTSIDE the airport - even if it means just walking out to the parking deck and back - so I can count that state. If I never leave the airport, then I don’t count it as having been to that state (sorry Minnesota).
Great question! I have gone back and forth on this, but I don’t personally count this, unless I take a taxi ride to the downtown area and back or something.
Heh. I wouldn’t say I’ve been to Michigan even though I’ve transferred in Detriot.
But odder still, every year I drive from Orlando to DC for an online gathering. Yet I’ve never flown into DC: only as a layover. And odder still: the prices are only a couple hundred dollars, yet we invariably transfer through National. I’d wager that if I flew into national it might be more expensive due to location relative to Dulles. (Or, to totally hijack, is it more due to the fact that Dulles handles the larger aircraft and National handles the smaller?)
It should count, just as being on a boat that cruises a river that is within the borders of the state or driving nonstop across a state. I don’t count flyovers, though, but probably could be persuaded even on that.
I faced this dilema while transferring planes in SLC. Since I actually had to walk outside to get off / on the plane, I decided to count it as being in Utah.
Not sure if I would count it if I never was outside the terminal.
Despite spending a lot of time in New York State, I have only been to NYC once. A change of planes at LaGuardia. So I count that as a trip to NYC.
Note that the stay was longer than my trip thru New Hampshire on I-95. Or my trip to Delaware when I wound up too far north on the Maryland shore and had to double back.
A second, an hour, a day. If I’m on the ground, it counts.
Depends on the context. If for some reason I want a higher number to boast about, I count my layover in the UK as an extra country. But, ordinarily, I don’t mention it, since I never even had a chance to get off the airplane. Certainly, I spend more time discussing places I’ve actually experienced–I’m not sure how much unique regional experience the average airport contains.
Our family rule is that not only do airports not count, you have to do two things for a state or country to count: [ul]
[li]set foot on the ground[/li][li]ingest something or …um…leave something behind[/li][/ul]
I don’t count airport layovers as having been there, though as it happens, at present, I have ended up actually going somewhere in every state I’ve ever had a layover in.
So far I have - well, it would be easier to say the states I don’t have: Alaska, Hawaii, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, Louisiana, Idaho, Montana, both Dakotas, West Virginia, and New Mexico. Among Canadian provinces I am missing only Newfoundland. Oh, and Mississippi. As a state, not a province.
I don’t count it as such, but I’m more of an obsessive tourist than most. I don’t count drive-throughs either, I only count if I’d actually done something tourist-like in the given state.
Heck I wouldn’t even say I’d been to “Newfoundland and Labrador” unless I’d actually done something in Newfoundland AND in Labrador (which I have).
I don’t count airports, although I gave myself an exception when I had to spend 36 hours in the Munich airport thanks to the fine folks at Lufthansa. Actually, I sometimes count that as having lived in Germany, because I think I aged 10 years as a result of my airport visit.