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Wallaby Route

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Air route between Australia and South Africa
Map of Qantas' original Wallaby Route from 1952

TheWallaby Route or "Wallaby Service" is a term coined byQantas (formerlyQantas Empire Airways), referring to the commercial passenger air route betweenAustralia andSouth Africa.[1]

First flown in 1948, its name was inspired by the route's short ‘hops’ used to cover the long distance,[1] similar to the hops of thewallaby; a marsupial largely endemic to, and culturally associated, with Australia. The name "Wallaby Route" for their new Australia-South Africa service was chosen by Qantas Empire Airways after considering hundreds of suggested titles.[2] The chosen name of "Wallaby" was suggested byMajor-General Christoffel 'Boetie' Venter, then manager of South African Airways.[3] The name choice was also to indicate its relationship to Qantas' famous "Kangaroo Route" connecting Australia and the United Kingdom.[3]

The first Wallaby Route flight

[edit]

Qantas Empire Airways first flew the Wallaby Route to South Africa on 14 November 1948 with a survey flight operated with anAvro Lancastrian from Sydney via Melbourne, Perth, Cocos (Keeling) Islands, and Mauritius to Johannesburg.[4][5] Connecting the two continents with direct commercial air flight for the first time. The initial survey flight took a total of 41 hours and 52 minutes of flying time done over seven days of November 14–20. Combining a 10-hour 21 minute flight from Sydney to Perth, an 8-hour 5 minute flight to the Cocos Islands, a 12-hour 8 minute flight to Mauritius, and a final 9 hour 40 minute flight to Johannesburg.[1][4] The return eastbound route included an additional stop at Réunion due to the fuel & weight restrictions from the high altitude of Johannesburg.[1]

Evolution of the Wallaby Route

[edit]

6 Hop Era (1952-1957)

[edit]
  • On 1 September 1952, the first scheduled passenger service left Sydney for Johannesburg. Qantas carried 27 passengers on the inaugural flight, utilising their popularLockheed Constellation L-749A aircraft that had proven to be a great success in their replacement of the Lancastrians on the Kangaroo Route.[6][7] The westbound Wallaby route 'hopped' from Sydney, to Perth, the Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Mauritius, and arrived in Johannesburg approximately 2 days and 18 hours later.[6][8]
  • In 1955, Qantas replaced the aircraft with itsSuper Constellation L-1049 and replaced the Melbourne stop with a stop in Darwin, resulting in a reduction in the route's travel time to 30 hours.[6][9]

5 Hop Era (1957-1967)

[edit]
  • In 1957, Qantas andSouth African Airways (SAA) announced a partnership to operate the Wallaby Route on alternating weeks, SAA with its DouglasDC-7B aircraft and Qantas with its Super Constellations. With the powerful DC-7B's extra range, SAA could skip Réunion completely. The remaining difference was SAA's service terminated in Perth where Qantas' continued on to Sydney via Melbourne.[10]
  • in 1963 Qantas introduced itsLockheed L-188 Electra aircraft to the route, reducing the flight time to around 26 hours 30 minutes.[11] The April 19, 1963 eastbound Wallaby Route flight was noteworthy as it was the last ever passenger flight of Qantas' Super Constellations.[7]

3 Hop Era (1967-1982)

[edit]
  • In March 1967,[12] with Perth Airport's runway extension now completed and capable of handling jet aircraft,[13] both Qantas and SAA replaced their respective Lockheed Electras and DC-7Bs with their newBoeing 707. With the jets' superior range, the Melbourne and Cocos Islands stops were eliminated from the Wallaby Route[14] reducing the Sydney-Johannesburg connection to only 2 stops, Perth and Mauritius, and a reduced flight time of approximately 18 hours.[11][15][16]
  • From 1976 to 1982 Qantas suspended all operations between Australia and South Africa. During this time SAA continued to operate, introducing their 747SPs on the route in 1977 before changing over to the larger 747Bs.[17][18][19]

2 Hop Era (1982-2001)

[edit]
  • On November 14, 1982[20] Qantas restored service on the Wallaby route to Zimbabwe (Harare) using its new 747SP aircraft with Johannesburg direct services (re)added later. Reducing the Wallaby Route (to Harare) to 1 stop (Perth).[21]
  • On October 27, 1987,[16] SAA ended its Wallaby Route service,[22] eventually restarting in January 1992 after the demise of apartheid using a 747-200.[23]

1 Hop (Nonstop) Era

[edit]
  • In January 2001, Qantas started nonstop flights between Sydney and Johannesburg using their 747-400 aircraft with an average flight time of 14 hours 10 minutes.[24][25][6]
  • In 2003, SAA changed their Wallaby Route service to their new A340-200s but remained a 2 hop route via Perth. In 2020, SAA ceased Wallaby Route service operations as part of the impact of its bankruptcy.[26]
  • From 2020-2024, Qantas was the sole operator of the Wallaby Route using a Boeing 787-9 to connect Sydney and Johannesburg nonstop in 14 hours 30 minutes.[27]
  • On 28 April 2024, SAA resumed its Wallaby Route service, relaunching its nonstop route between Johannesburg and Perth.[28][29]
  • On 30 September 2024, Qantas converted its Wallaby Route operations between Sydney and Johannesburg to all A380s.[30][31]

Competing one-stop routes

[edit]

While no airline uses the "Wallaby Route" branding, two airlines offer non-stop services between South Africa and Australia, with each being theflag carrier of their respective nations. QANTAS offers the most services, with 6 weekly routes on theirA380 aircraft flying non-stop from Sydney.South African Airways however flies five-weekly to Perth, on the west coast of Australia, using theirA340 airframes.

Excluding flights connecting through Europe or the Americas, there are a total of nine airlines competing in the Australia-South Africa air market, with three of those connecting through East Asia and a further three through the Middle East. Only three airlines, Air Mauritius, QANTAS and South African Airways operate the "traditional" routing over the Indian Ocean, of which the latter two operate non-stop:

Competing one-stop Australia-South Africa flights[32](sorted by transiting country)
Australia OriginAirlineTransitSouth Africa Destination
Melbourne, SydneyAir China[33]ChinaBeijing–CapitalJohannesburg[note 1]
Brisbane, Cairns, Melbourne, Perth, SydneyCathay Pacific[34]Hong KongHong KongJohannesburg
PerthAir Mauritius[35]MauritiusPort LouisCape Town, Johannesburg
Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, SydneyQatar Airways[36]QatarDohaCape Town, Durban[note 2], Johannesburg
SydneyQantas[37][38]Non-StopJohannesburg
Adelaide, Brisbane, Cairns, Darwin, Melbourne, Perth, SydneySingapore Airlines[39]SingaporeSingaporeCape Town[note 3], Johannesburg
PerthSouth African Airways[40]Non-StopJohannesburg
Melbourne, SydneyEtihad Airways[41]United Arab EmiratesAbu DhabiJohannesburg
Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, SydneyEmirates[42]United Arab EmiratesDubaiCape Town, Durban, Johannesburg

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Routes operates with stopover in Shenzhen, as flight number CA867/8. The same aircraft is used
  2. ^Routes operates with stopover in Maputo, as flight number QR1375/6. The same aircraft is used
  3. ^Singapore Airlines flight to Cape Town operates with stopover in Singapore as SQ478/9; the same aircraft is used

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdQantas celebrates 60 years of flying to South Africa, retrieved2023-04-24
  2. ^Walkabout. Australian National Travel Association. 1953. p. 46.
  3. ^abFlight: The Aircraft Engineer. IPC Transport Press Limited. 1952. p. 769.
  4. ^ab"Indian Ocean Route - Qantas to Fly Direct Australia|South Africa Services: Cocos Base Re-constructed".Flight: The Aircraft Engineer. IPC Transport Press Limited. 1952. p. 78.
  5. ^Guttery, Ben R. (1998-01-01).Encyclopedia of African Airlines. Ben Guttery. p. 123.ISBN 978-0-7864-0495-7.
  6. ^abcd"Qantas Fact File"(PDF).Qantas. November 2002. p. 29. Retrieved2023-04-01.
  7. ^ab"QANTAS 'CONNIES' TRAVERSING THE GLOBE".www.key.aero. Retrieved2023-04-24.
  8. ^"Qantas Empire Airways Timetable May 1953".Timetableimages.com. 1 May 1953. Retrieved20 Apr 2023.
  9. ^"Qantas 1955 Timetable".Timetable Images. 1 Nov 1955. Retrieved20 Apr 2023.
  10. ^"SAA Timetable Feb 1958".Timetableimages.com. 1 Feb 1958. Retrieved20 Apr 2023.
  11. ^ab"10 hours off flight time".Canberra Times. 1967-02-04. Retrieved2023-04-26.
  12. ^"VH-JET#1 & Her Sisters".www.adastron.com. Retrieved2023-04-26.
  13. ^"Perth Airport Master Plan 2020".Perth Airport. 1 Apr 2020. p. 18. Retrieved20 Apr 2023.
  14. ^Friedberg, Lionel (2021-07-31).The Flying Springbok: A History of South African Airways Since Its Inception to the Post-Apartheid Era. John Hunt Publishing.ISBN 978-1-78904-647-2.
  15. ^"Qantas Timetable June 1968".Timetable Images. 1 Jun 1968. Retrieved20 Apr 2023.
  16. ^ab"Last 'Wallaby Route' flight leaves S. Africa may cancel Qantas flights".Canberra Times. 1987-10-28. Retrieved2023-04-26.
  17. ^"Inside the "other world" that is SOUTH AFRICA".Australian Women's Weekly. 1977-09-21. Retrieved2023-04-26.
  18. ^"Qantas to fly to Zimbabwe".Canberra Times. 1982-10-01. Retrieved2023-04-26.
  19. ^"ADVANTAGE TO SOUTH AFRICAN AIRWAYS".Canberra Times. 1981-02-04. Retrieved2023-04-26.
  20. ^"Flights on".Canberra Times. 1982-11-13. Retrieved2023-04-26.
  21. ^"Qantas Jumbo! The Fastest Way to the Heart of Africa".Canberra Times. 1982-10-19. p. 6. Retrieved2023-04-25.
  22. ^Pirie, G.H. (1990). "Aviation, Apartheid, and Sanctions: Air Transport to and from South Africa, 1945-1989".GeoJournal.22 (3):231–240.doi:10.1007/BF00711334.S2CID 189883660.
  23. ^Davies, R. E. G. (2016-08-24).Airlines of the Jet Age: A History. Smithsonian Institution.ISBN 978-1-944466-07-7.
  24. ^"IASC Decision [2000] IASC 217"(PDF).IASC.gov.au. 11 Dec 2020. p. 3. Retrieved26 Apr 2023.
  25. ^"2001 Qantas Annual Report"(PDF).AnnualReports.com. 2001. Retrieved26 Apr 2023.
  26. ^"South African Airways to fly again, after $2.38bn Government bailout - Executive Traveller".www.executivetraveller.com. 2020-07-15. Retrieved2023-04-24.
  27. ^"Qantas flights from Sydney to O.R. Tambo, Johannesburg".info.flightmapper.net. Retrieved2023-04-24.
  28. ^"South African Airways Plans Australia Return | Aviation Week Network".aviationweek.com. Retrieved2024-01-10.
  29. ^"Perth reconnects with Johannesburg as non-stop flights return".Australian Aviation. Retrieved2024-05-01.
  30. ^"New A380 route and codeshare to Africa | Times Aerospace".www.timesaerospace.aero. Retrieved2024-10-01.
  31. ^"New Superjumbo route and codeshare to Africa".Qantas Newsroom. 30 Sep 2024. Retrieved30 Sep 2024.
  32. ^"Flights from London Heathrow to Sydney".Flight connections.
  33. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by CA from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  34. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by CX from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  35. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by MK from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  36. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by QR from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  37. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by QF from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  38. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by QF from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  39. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by SQ from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  40. ^"List of destinations & airlines from Johannesburg International - FlightsFrom.com".www.flightsfrom.com. Retrieved2025-01-02.
  41. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by EY from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  42. ^"Direct nonstop flights (Operated by EK from GB-AUS)".FlightsFrom. Retrieved15 March 2023.
  43. ^LondonAirTravel (2022-05-01)."The History Of Flight Between The UK and Australia From 1935 Onwards".London Air Travel. Retrieved2022-11-29.
  44. ^"Quiz: Beach Boys Lyric or Qantas Route?".Qantas. April 16, 2019. RetrievedNovember 25, 2022.
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