This COULD be a long story, and if you know me, you know I tend to make them so. TRYING to be brief.
I have an AA flight to LAX and a subsequent large trip from there in jeopardy. IN CASE my CLE->LAX flight gets canceled (good chance) I wanted a backup flight. So I booked a SW flight to cover this ... this, hoping that the next leg of the trip stays intact. All wishful thinking, but I'm covering all bases.
In case the whole trip falls through, I have a less-exciting trip to New Orleans planned. It will still be fun.
In short, I had a flight from CLE->MSY booked. But then I added CLE->LAX on the same day. SW in their smartness figured out I can't take both flights and just canceled my LAX flight.
If I book a SW flight under my wife's account on the same day, will they notice that? We will be each other's passengers on all flights. Ideas?
Another option just came to mind and I'll work on that. I want to book SW because of the easy refundable miles. Any other commitment and I lose $ or miles of flight not taken.
I have an AA flight to LAX and a subsequent large trip from there in jeopardy. IN CASE my CLE->LAX flight gets canceled (good chance) I wanted a backup flight. So I booked a SW flight to cover this ... this, hoping that the next leg of the trip stays intact. All wishful thinking, but I'm covering all bases.
In case the whole trip falls through, I have a less-exciting trip to New Orleans planned. It will still be fun.
In short, I had a flight from CLE->MSY booked. But then I added CLE->LAX on the same day. SW in their smartness figured out I can't take both flights and just canceled my LAX flight.
If I book a SW flight under my wife's account on the same day, will they notice that? We will be each other's passengers on all flights. Ideas?
Another option just came to mind and I'll work on that. I want to book SW because of the easy refundable miles. Any other commitment and I lose $ or miles of flight not taken.