Completely off topic, but Canadians may loose out with our Thanksgiving date of choice, but we make it up at Christmas. Between Boxing Day (December 26th), and New Years Party Prep day (the 30th and 31st), you'll be hard pressed to find many offices fully staffed. Many aren't open at all. It's basically a week or so off, though TECHNICALLY they aren't real holidays. And to bring it back on topic, Canadian airlines (and airports) don't have the intense days of travel that are found in the US. Christmas travel will be slightly heavier on the 20th/21st weekend, the 27th/28th weekend and Jan 3rd/4th weekend... Of course a single good snow storm can make a mess of it all. Matthew On Nov 27, 2003, at 10:14 AM, B787300@xxxxxxx wrote: > Ah so, Ba, or is it Ha? At least Americans picked a day to make a > four day > weekend out of it. > > Jose Prize > Fan of Turkeys, like Baha > > In a message dated 11/27/2003 11:47:10 AM Eastern Standard Time, > bahadiracuner@xxxxxxxxx writes: > >> Subj: RE: Holiday >> Date: 11/27/2003 11:47:10 AM Eastern Standard Time >> From: <A >> HREF="mailto:bahadiracuner@xxxxxxxxx">bahadiracuner@xxxxxxxxx</A> >> To: <A >> HREF="mailto:AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx">AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx</ >> A>, <A HREF="mailto:B787300@xxxxxxx">B787300@xxxxxxx</A> >> Sent from the Internet >> >> O Canada , Jose :) >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: The Airline List [mailto:AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of >> B787300@xxxxxxx >> Sent: Thursday, November 27, 2003 9:15 AM >> To: AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> Subject: Re: Holiday >> >> >> Six weeks late? He did it the day before Thanksgiving. How can he >> be six >> weeks late? >> >> Jose Prize >> Fan of wondering >> >>