| It could also be a reaction to changing cabin pressures; air quality during the flight; the air at the new airport; temperature changes (moving from the air-conditioned cabin to the warm Florida air); any number of things, really.
It could be reverse motion sickness ... maybe she adapts well to the change "from on the ground to in the air" ... but doesn't adapt as well to "from in the air, to on the ground". Seasickness can work that way, I believe - some folks get "land-sickness" after being on a boat for an extended period, then coming ashore.
__________________ -- Sean Happy recipient of a BOO from HeatherD!   | |