Unless you’ve been living under a rock and haven’t heard, the days of the iconic 747 as a passenger jet are coming to end for many of the world’s airlines. Before you freak out, please know that the 747 will continue to fly for the foreseeable future. Most of the 747s that will continue to fly will do so as freighters, and the passenger version of the 747 will continue on with a few select airlines around the world. The last two US airlines flying this most beautiful flying machine, Delta and United, will retire their 747s by the end of 2017.
So much has been written about this plane. The ways in which it influenced and inspired commercial are innumerable.
My first ride on the Queen of The Skies was with Swissair: PHL – BOS – ZRH. Riding in the upper deck solidified my love of this aircraft.

Swissair 747-300 photo credit: Eduard Marmet via wikimedia commons
As I reminisce over the almost 30 years of aviation experience, I think of the number of times and different airlines 747s I’ve flown on (thus far). Here’s the list:

Air France 747-400 photo credit: AirlineGuys

Air New Zealand 747-400 photo credit: Pedro Aragao via wikimedia commons

Delta 747-400 photo credit: AirlineGuys

Japan Airlines 747-400 photo credit: Aero Icarus via wikimedia commons

Photo credit: Africaspotter at wikivoyage shared, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=22688609

Northwest Airlines 747-200 photo credit: Paul Spijkers (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)%5D, via wikimedia commons

NWA 747-400 photo credit: planephotoman http://www.flickr.com/photos/planephotoman/93492771/

Qantas 747-400 photo credit: AirlineGuys

TWA 747-200 photo credit: Jon Proctor http://jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=5960616

Virgin Atlantic 747-200 photo credit: Ralph Kunadt

Virgin Atlantic 747-400 photo credit: Adrian Pingstone via wikimedia commons
How many 747s have you flown on?