
How to become a real high flyer... woman's journey from air hostess to top pilot
For many pilots, their interactions with passengers are limited to announcements over the PA.
However, Sarah Johnson has an expert knowledge of the people she carries, as a former air hostess.
The 39-year-old Scot spent seven years in cabin crew for Emirates as she saved the £70,000 needed to fund her pilot training.
She said: 'I've always been fascinated by planes, even as a girl.'
But when she left school and studied to become a translator at a Spanish university, she didn't dare believe that she would one day become a pilot.
Ms Johnson, from Birse, Aberdeenshire, said: 'Attitudes to women pilots were different 20 years ago. I thought I was being silly – I was good at languages and becoming a translator was the road set out for me.
'But I couldn't shake the feeling that I wanted to be a pilot. I saw an opportunity to become a flight attendant, which meant that at least I'd be flying.'
In 2010 she moved to Dubai to work for Emirates and said: 'Flying to Japan and Australia was amazing but I wanted to be flying the plane. I got into so much trouble as cabin crew because no one could ever find me. I'd be in the cockpit when I had the chance.'
Ms Johnson embarked on a gruelling schedule, attending flying school in Los Angeles during layovers after 17-hour flights from Dubai. She said: 'The training was intense – after long-haul flights to Australia or New Zealand, I'd be up all night studying principles of flight or air law. It was tough.'
After getting her pilot's wings, Sarah landed a job with Ryanair as a cadet pilot, moving up to junior pilot, senior first officer and then captain two years ago.
Ms Johnson, who lives in Palma, Mallorca, with her financial consultant fiancé, said: 'I still can't believe I'm captain. When I had only two stripes, I used to put them together on my shoulder and look in the mirror, imagining what it would be like to have four as captain. My favourite part is the take-off.
'Every time I press the take-off thrust, it's such a thrill.
'A special moment was when I had my mum Chris and dad Martin as passengers. Of course, Dad made a dad joke about being relieved we landed safely. I can't see myself ever changing career. I'm lucky to have a job like this.'

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The Sun
41 minutes ago
- The Sun
How we do Dubai for dirt cheap – £30-a-night rooms, lesser-known airports, £2 meals and free attractions
DUBAI is a bucket list destination for Brits, thanks to its five-star hotels, year-round sunshine and celebrity fans, but all this also makes it harmful on the wallet. So we've tried and tested some of the best ways to slash the cost of a holiday to the desert city. 11 Editor of The Sun's Fab Daily, Joel Cooper thought Dubai was out of his price range, until he started looking into money saving hacks. He said: "I always wanted to go, but news stories about luxury hotels, £10,000-a-night suites and the premium bar and restaurant scene put me off. "However, when I started doing some research, I discovered there is a way to do Dubai on a budget - it's just no one talks about it." Joel's genius tips start before you've even left the UK. He said: "Rather than booking flights to Dubai directly, it is often much cheaper to fly to Abu Dhabi instead. "In fact, my flights were half the price - saving £250 before I'd even left home. "Most of the hotels in Dubai are located between Dubai airport and Abu Dhabi airport - admittedly they are closer to Dubai but getting from Abu Dhabi is easy. "There is a coach for around £7 that takes you directly from Abu Dhabi airport to Dubai, dropping off at the Ibn Battuta Mall, which is in the centre of town. "They run every hour and the journey takes one hour to get to Dubai. "Before going, I didn't know anything about Abu Dhabi, but it's so close to Dubai, you could be forgiven for thinking it's the same place." Dubai hotel with world's largest waterpark 11 Stay for less Accommodation is known for being high-end and pricey in Dubai, but one British chain has been making in-roads with incredibly affordable hotel rooms - Premier Inn. Writer Scott Campbell told The Sun that the Premier Inn brand in the Emirates has taken things to the next level. He said: "The hotels are surprisingly cool and I've booked rooms from just £30. They have rooftop pools, 24-hour gyms, shuttle buses to the beach and suave terrace bars. "The best Premier Inn in Dubai can be found in Barsha Heights. '"It's around 15 minutes by taxi from the glitz and glamour of Dubai Marina and an even shorter journey to The Palm with its trendy all-inclusive beach clubs." Similarly, holidaymakers can save hundreds by swapping taxis for the Metro. Scott said: "The Dubai Metro is very safe and efficient and serves all the main tourist areas in the city. "Although hailing a cab is quite wallet-friendly, coming in at around £7 for a trip to the Marina from the Premier Inn, the city's Metro line is only ten minutes away on foot. "Fares start at just 65p for a ride, or £1.20 in the quieter 'gold' carriage — because where else would have a first- class metro carriage other than Dubai?" If it is too hot outside, there is even a free bus to take guests to the station from the budget hotel. 11 It's also worth checking if the hotel you stay at offers a shuttle bus to the beach. This can save you money in taxis there and back, especially if you plan on going a few times during your trip. Scott added: "The Premier Inn hotel offers a complimentary shuttle to Al Sufouh, known as the Secret Beach by locals, due to it being lesser known and less crowded as the famous Kite Beach." Al Sufouh and Kite Beach are both public beaches and not owned by the exclusive hotel resorts and so they are free to use. This is perfect for doing Dubai on a budget because pop-up stalls and food trucks line the beach path. You can pick up homemade empanadas for £7 or an excellent and sizeable burrito for £11 from La Patrona, without the excessive service charges and extras required at a posh hotel. 11 Find a budget brunch Boozy brunches in Dubai are one of the most popular pastimes for the under 30s. But, extravagant spots like Burj Al Arab and The Palm can become very pricy indeed, with some starting at £80 before you add alcohol on. However, budget travelers to Dubai can still indulge in the boozy, boujee pastime with a more cost-effective brunch in a less exclusive location. Scott said: "The Premier Inn has its own bar, Mr Toad's, where a Saturday 'drunch' offers unlimited drinks for three hours for £25. 'With a pint in Dubai usually costing around £9 on average, after only three drinks you'll easily make back the cost.' Meanwhile, Finance manager, Kristina Williams used to live in Dubai and has a list of cheap things to do that she shares with family and friends who came to visit. 11 11 She said: "One of the most popular sights in Dubai has to be the fountain show in Downtown Dubai. "The Dubai Fountain, which is outside the Dubai Mall, is the tallest dancing fountain in the world and totally free to watch, so it's ideal for families. "The famous Aquarium is also located at the Dubai Mall. "If you don't want to pay to spend a whole day there, I recommend taking the kids to see the largest part of the aquarium completely free of charge. "The enormous glass tank actually makes up a huge wall inside the shopping centre." Not everything in Dubai has to cost money. Kristina says there are lots of beautiful outdoor spaces that are free to use. She said: " AL Qudra, the desert area, has a free cycling track and running track. It's popular in the early evening when the sun starts to go down. "You can just go and soak up the atmosphere, spot camels and go bird watching. 11 "There is also a free walking path on the Palm. It's great for a casual stroll, with lots of affordable cafes and shady spots along the way. "This is my favourite, as it looks out to sea and you can see the famous Atlantis hotel and get the obligatory selfie outside." Being a former local, Kristina knows where to eat too. "We always go to the Deira area, which is Dubai's old town, for a cheap dinner - you can get a curry for £2 and they are always so good. "We spend less there as the area isn't known for its alcohol, so it's always more affordable than the Dubai hotels that cater to tourists." A VIP liaison's guide to Dubai Romika Fazeli runs a VIP concierge company called Emirates World Club, providing millionaire clients with everything from luxury hotel bookings to shopping trips or restaurant recommendations. Here are her top tips. "When it comes to private beaches, Jumeirah Beach Hotel is pure luxury and there are no crowds, or the beach at Al Qasr Hotel has beach club events most weekends with resident DJs, amazing cuisine and great beach side service. "The city has some of the best shopping in the world with over 50 malls and even a month long shopping festival. " The Dubai Mall and Mall of the Emirates are the two most popular shopping destinations in the city centre, housing high-street, boutique and luxury designers, from Louis Vuitton to Balenciaga. "Other great places for shopping are Dubai Festival City Mall, City Walk, Dubai Marina Mall and Dubai Outlet Mall." Or if you want to be seen with the 'in' crowd, the hottest places in the city right now are Ce La Vi, Lucky Fish, the restaurants at West Palm Beach, and Sal at Burj Al Arab.


Daily Mail
11 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Are turbulent times ahead for Rolls-Royce?
The take-off of Rolls-Royce shares is the talk of the City. The engineering giant, synonymous with British manufacturing prowess, saw its share price hit a record high this month in one of the most remarkable comebacks ever seen in the Square Mile. Garlands have been strewn over its Turkish-born boss, Tufan Erginbilgic, who took the helm in 2023 and has been hailed as a miracle worker for bringing the aero-engine maker back from the brink of financial ruin in the pandemic. Not only has Rolls-Royce recovered, it has become one of the best performers in the FTSE 100 index. But there's a rule in the world of big money: if something looks too good to be true, it probably is. This could be the case for Rolls-Royce and 'Turbo' Tufan, who earned the nickname due to the ferocious pace at which he works. Amid all the excitement, the City has overlooked a damaging row between Rolls-Royce and airlines including British Airways and Virgin Atlantic – which some believe could soon bring the engine maker and its share price back to earth. The issue is Rolls's Trent 1000 engines, which power Boeing's 787 Dreamliner. The Trent 1000s proved popular but are showing their age after clocking up more than 20 million flying hours. And they have been dogged by serious maintenance problems stretching back nearly a decade, with hundreds of planes grounded and even routes cancelled. Both BA and Virgin were forced to cancel hundreds of long-haul flights and re-routed passengers when planes were taken out of service for unscheduled repairs. BA's prestigious routes to the Gulf States have been among the more prominent casualties. There was a furore last year when the airline scrapped direct flights from Heathrow to Bahrain and Kuwait, two of Britain's closest allies in the region, because of problems with the Rolls engines, some of which are prone to maintenance problems in hotter climates. Although flights to Bahrain were reinstated after a campaign led by The Mail, the Kuwait route and flights to Abu Dhabi remain suspended. This is a setback when businesses are desperate to forge trade links to the Gulf. Technical faults on the Trent 1000 have dogged Rolls since 2016, when a design flaw – which led to cracks forming in the turbine blades of some engines – was identified. According to Shai Weiss, the Virgin Atlantic boss, the Trent 1000 needs three times the attention of other turbines. The problems have so far cost Rolls up to £3 billion in repairs and payments to the airlines – and the row shows no sign of being resolved. If anything, it is likely to intensify as the summer travel season unfolds. Rolls-Royce has been spared President Trump's punishing trade tariffs under the recent US-UK trade deal. But it has been hurt by his America First policies: it missed out on one of the biggest ever engine orders from Qatar last month, losing to US rival GE. Not everyone, then, is convinced by the Rolls-Royce renaissance. The company's harshest critic is Willie Walsh, the former BA boss who now leads the International Air Transport Association trade body. The blunt Irishman has described the rise in Rolls shares as 'baffling' – and that was back in December, when the price was a good deal lower than today. Walsh accuses Rolls of basic engineering failings and of luring airlines to buy its turbines with, effectively, false claims. 'They built the engines and promised us great things,' he said. 'What they didn't say is: this engine is going to be 25 per cent more fuel efficient. But, by the way, you're going to have to change it every couple of months. 'I doubt anybody would have bought their engines if that's what they were saying.' But investors seem happy to set aside these concerns. Shares continue to be swept up in the hope Rolls will win lucrative defence contracts as Britain rebuilds its military strength. There's some sense to this: as well as making turbines for passenger planes, Rolls-Royce produces engines for combat vehicles, fighter jets, submarines, ships and helicopters. Rolls has also chosen to build the next generation of mini nuclear reactors. These factors have helped it overtake drugmaker GSK and data provider Relx to become Britain's sixth-largest company, with a valuation of £75 billion. Credit is certainly due to Tufan, who conducted a root and branch overhaul after taking charge. He put every aspect of the business under the microscope and imposed what he describes a 'zero tolerance for mediocrity' regime. Such is his obsession with performance that he instigated a three-and-a-half-month-long study of how Rolls fared against its rivals before he even arrived. This delved deep into internal processes and was the basis of a highly detailed strategy to rebuild the balance sheet and improve profitability. So far as the stock market is concerned, the medicine is working. There has been an astonishing £68 billion rise in the value of Rolls-Royce shares in the two years since Tufan arrived. Having lost £4 billion in a year in the pandemic, Rolls made an operating profit of £2.5 billion last year, its highest ever. Any investor shrewd enough to have bought £1,000 worth when he joined would now have a holding worth almost £8,500. That is an alchemy of wealth creation that even the tech giants of Silicon Valley would struggle to match. 'It's been a monster performer,' says Jamie Murray of Shore Capital stockbrokers. Rolls has a loyal army of 150,000 small shareholders who have stuck with the company through thick and thin since it was privatised under the Thatcher government in 1987. Younger investors are also enjoying the ride. Rolls is one of the most popular shares on investment platforms such as Trading 212 which are used by newer generations of share owners. There is no denying Tufan's actions – cutting costs, slashing 2,500 jobs and re-negotiating loss-making contracts – have been a big factor in transforming the 119-year-old company's fortunes. Naturally, Tufan has reaped personal rewards. He has pocketed £18 million in salary and bonuses in the last two years, including £7.5 million to persuade him to leave his former employer, BP. His performance is all the more impressive given the tough climate facing aviation – particularly a post-pandemic shortage of components and spare parts. Rolls-Royce is not the only manufacturer facing complaints. Problems with turbines made by American rival Pratt & Whitney have led to more than 40 of Wizz Air's planes being grounded. And investigators are still looking at what caused an Air India flight from Ahmedabad to Gatwick to crash just after take-off this month, killing 270 people. The Boeing Dreamliner, which was powered by recently serviced GE engines, had 'a clean history', Air India's chairman said this week. The question, then, is this: can Rolls-Royce's gravity-defying performance continue? Those with long memories know that Rolls – which was declared insolvent in 1971 due to cost overruns and development problems with its RB211 engine – has had a chequered past. Nationalised by Edward Heath's Conservative government, its fortunes have yo-yoed ever since. The famous car-making arm was separated out in 1973 and is now owned by BMW. Some say Tufan, a British and Turkish citizen with a background in engineering, has been a lucky general. His arrival at Rolls coincided with a post-pandemic bounce in flying among business passengers and holiday makers. But Tufan and Rolls-Royce will need more than luck in the months ahead. The problems with the Trent 1000 and other engines in the core civil aerospace business – which accounts for just over half of Rolls's £17.8 billion of sales and the bulk of profits – remain a dangerous Achilles' Heel. While Tufan cannot be blamed for the difficulties he inherited, he has so far not managed to draw a line under them – certainly not so far as the airlines are concerned. BA, for example, told The Mail on Sunday it was 'very disappointed' that it had been forced to make changes to its schedules because of the failings. 'Our teams continue to work closely with Rolls-Royce,' a spokesman added. And, while the original design faults on the Trent 1000 engines have now been fixed, Rolls accepts the supply chain shortages could last for another 18 months, meaning more delays, more grounded flights – and even higher air fares. 'The supply chain environment remains challenging,' said the spokesman, admitting that there had also been 'a significant increase in Trent 1000 major refurbishments' last year. Rolls has responded by committing £1billion to a series of upgrades across the Trent family of engines aimed at reducing the number and frequency of repairs. Erginbilgic hopes to put a new high-pressure turbine blade into all the engines in the Rolls fleet over the next two years in a move that will more than double the amount of time the Trent 1000 spends in the air. The improvements cannot come soon enough for customers and passengers. And, as for what this means for the stellar share price, experts are divided. Analysts at Bank of America think the company could be worth up to £100 billion – in other words, the shares could climb significantly higher. Its long-term success depends on whether the company can deliver cleaner, greener, quieter engines – and, in that respect, the Trent 1000 saga does not augur well. For the moment, Rolls is flying high. But its critics, while still in a small minority, are adopting the brace position – in case of a sudden and troubling loss of altitude.


Daily Mail
14 hours ago
- Daily Mail
How to become a real high flyer... woman's journey from air hostess to top pilot
For many pilots, their interactions with passengers are limited to announcements over the PA. However, Sarah Johnson has an expert knowledge of the people she carries, as a former air hostess. The 39-year-old Scot spent seven years in cabin crew for Emirates as she saved the £70,000 needed to fund her pilot training. She said: 'I've always been fascinated by planes, even as a girl.' But when she left school and studied to become a translator at a Spanish university, she didn't dare believe that she would one day become a pilot. Ms Johnson, from Birse, Aberdeenshire, said: 'Attitudes to women pilots were different 20 years ago. I thought I was being silly – I was good at languages and becoming a translator was the road set out for me. 'But I couldn't shake the feeling that I wanted to be a pilot. I saw an opportunity to become a flight attendant, which meant that at least I'd be flying.' In 2010 she moved to Dubai to work for Emirates and said: 'Flying to Japan and Australia was amazing but I wanted to be flying the plane. I got into so much trouble as cabin crew because no one could ever find me. I'd be in the cockpit when I had the chance.' Ms Johnson embarked on a gruelling schedule, attending flying school in Los Angeles during layovers after 17-hour flights from Dubai. She said: 'The training was intense – after long-haul flights to Australia or New Zealand, I'd be up all night studying principles of flight or air law. It was tough.' After getting her pilot's wings, Sarah landed a job with Ryanair as a cadet pilot, moving up to junior pilot, senior first officer and then captain two years ago. Ms Johnson, who lives in Palma, Mallorca, with her financial consultant fiancé, said: 'I still can't believe I'm captain. When I had only two stripes, I used to put them together on my shoulder and look in the mirror, imagining what it would be like to have four as captain. My favourite part is the take-off. 'Every time I press the take-off thrust, it's such a thrill. 'A special moment was when I had my mum Chris and dad Martin as passengers. Of course, Dad made a dad joke about being relieved we landed safely. I can't see myself ever changing career. I'm lucky to have a job like this.'