Showing posts with label Tiko. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiko. Show all posts
Friday, June 27, 2014
Regular Domestic Flights of Cameroon Airlines, c.1977
The domestic operations of Cameroon Airlines, as published in the "Transport" chapter of an old promotional hardback profile of the central African nation, c.1977. The nation looks dashingly dinosaurish as always, the rounded edges of its peculiar profile squared off in an early computer graphic program.
Interestingly, it is Yaoundé which appears to be the major hub; bigger, more commercial Douala is an after-thought in the lower-left corner of the country, looking no more important than tiny Tiko. However, through some oversight, the capital city is not shown as featuring an international airport. Douala does not participate in the Garoua central air artery, which links Maroua and Yagoua and terminates at the Chadian capital, N'Djamena, the only non-domestic city shown on the map.
The information is quite similar to the airline's own literature from the same period (published here in 2011), with slight changes in domestic webbing.
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Nigeria Airways: Detail of the Domestic and Regional Network, April 1966
Still Nigeria Airways, still all pink. The state airways corporation operated a zig-zaging domestic network, shown here as an inset of the previous post from April 1966. Note how, in a wonderfully curious gesture, an arrow points northeast from Maiduguri, promoted as a gateway to the Middle and Far East. The North-Eastern State, gateway to Baghdad and Hong Kong. Today, Maiduguri has barely a handful of weekly domestic flights.
Kano, Nigeria's oldest airport, was the starting gate of the northern routes to Europe for both Nigeria Airways and other airlines, and at least today still has intercontinental attention from KLM.
Labels:
Benin City,
Calabar,
Enugu,
Gusau,
Ibadan,
Jos,
Kaduna,
Kano,
Lagos,
Maiduguri,
Nigeria Airways,
Port Harcourt,
Sokoto,
Tiko,
Yola
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