Before he boarded the plane, Les Price had already been forced to pay for an extra ticket.
The airline’s rules for passengers weighing more than 20stone required him to buy two seats  for himself. 
But when he got on board, insult was 
added to injury. For a dismayed Mr Price found his seats for the flight 
to Ireland were not even next to each other – they were either side of 
another traveller’s seat. 
And on his return journey the situation was even more farcical, with his allocated places two rows apart.
Mr Price, 43, had booked his tickets in advance of the flight.
But he said the unnamed airline’s employees did not seem to understand its policy on heavier passengers.
‘When I got to the airport I had to explain to all the staff why I had two tickets,’ he said yesterday. 
‘They didn’t have a clue. When I finally
 got on the plane one was an aisle seat and the other was by the window –
 in a three-seat row. 
'On the way back from Ireland one seat was in row 17 and the other in row 19.’ 
Mr Price, of Brynithel near Newport, 
South Wales, said the incident was one of many everyday difficulties he 
has faced since he began struggling with his weight.
The unemployed widower, who sleeps on 
the ground floor because he cannot manage stairs, said: ‘From the age of
 about ten I put on around a stone each year it seemed.
‘But I was the same as everyone else, 
working, playing rugby, training, so I wasn’t inactive. I’d work 70 or 
80 hours a week and play rugby on a Saturday. I wasn’t a layabout.’ 
Mr Price then injured his back in an 
accident. He added: ‘I lost my mobility, developed sciatica and I didn’t
 get out of the house for three months.
‘Even if the boys took me out they would
 pick me up and drop me off  and when I was at the pub they’d go to the 
bar and get my drinks for me.’
When his wife Zeruiah died from cancer 
in 2009 he admits he turned to comfort eating. ‘I fell into a 
depression,’ he said. ‘I couldn’t be bothered to cook, would eat 
takeaways and want to treat my step-daughter Charlie because her mother 
had died.
‘When I was working, I had to get the 
calories in. I’d be up at 5am and have a cooked breakfast later. I also 
worked for a bakery, which involved physically hard lifting, moving 
things around.’ 
Earlier this year a travel expert 
advocated a ‘pay-what-you-weigh’ airline pricing scheme because heavier 
people cost more in fuel to fly.

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