Sounded great. Until the politics board shut down the federal inspectors. Now you are delayed until that place gets its act together.
The Travel Thread
Re: The Travel Thread
Sounded great. Until the politics board shut down the federal inspectors. Now you are delayed until that place gets its act together.
I am, I said.
Re: The Travel Thread
Flies, rods, reels, waders, boots, day pack, and several layers of extra warm/dry stuff that I would not normally travel with if I wasn’t going to hang out in a rainforest in February for a week.
Re: The Travel Thread
i’d imagine that to ship that stuff, either overnight or 2nd or 3rd day, would be cheaper (though not by much) than the ~$150 extra bag fee.
Re: The Travel Thread
The wise move would be for all of us to speculate on the costs rather than ousdahl actually looking into it.
I only came to kick some ass...
Rock the fucking house and kick some ass.
Rock the fucking house and kick some ass.
Re: The Travel Thread
I can’t imagine this is a good forum to get reliable info on this, but you already knew that. My concern would be with your packing abilities, luggage getting to a destination WITH the passenger, and possible damage by either transport method. It would suck to be there and not have you equipment. What do the fishing forums say?
I flew with something over the holidays that was to be a Christmas present. I weighed doing my own boxing and paying $35 to my fave airline for an extra checked bag vs mailing. First, a box of proper proportions was tricky to find. UPS store wanted $60 to box, pack, and ship (and this item is super light). Ultimately, I decided on 3rd option of gate check my item. Airline gave it a white ticket rather than a pink (a mistake on their part and exactly what I told them not to do). Something got broke on it. Airline reimbursed me for a brand new one (no questions asked; ~$200) after I submitted the Amazon receipt of my replacement. Amazon Prime had also delivered a day late so they gave me a $20 credit. Fortunately, not having the item for about 4 Days was not a problem for me.
One more thing, for the sake of conversation, have you considered renting equipment at your destination or getting one of your future sponsors to ship you some new toys to try out??? I’m being serious here.
Side story: Many moons ago, I road tripped around CO, ID, and WY with mountain bikes on my car. That was really dumb as kickass rentals were available everywhere, I assume they would have been fun to try out, and I know I would been less concerned about theft and damage transporting my own bikes long distances.
Finally, having actually considered your question, you better tell me what the experts say.
I flew with something over the holidays that was to be a Christmas present. I weighed doing my own boxing and paying $35 to my fave airline for an extra checked bag vs mailing. First, a box of proper proportions was tricky to find. UPS store wanted $60 to box, pack, and ship (and this item is super light). Ultimately, I decided on 3rd option of gate check my item. Airline gave it a white ticket rather than a pink (a mistake on their part and exactly what I told them not to do). Something got broke on it. Airline reimbursed me for a brand new one (no questions asked; ~$200) after I submitted the Amazon receipt of my replacement. Amazon Prime had also delivered a day late so they gave me a $20 credit. Fortunately, not having the item for about 4 Days was not a problem for me.
One more thing, for the sake of conversation, have you considered renting equipment at your destination or getting one of your future sponsors to ship you some new toys to try out??? I’m being serious here.
Side story: Many moons ago, I road tripped around CO, ID, and WY with mountain bikes on my car. That was really dumb as kickass rentals were available everywhere, I assume they would have been fun to try out, and I know I would been less concerned about theft and damage transporting my own bikes long distances.
Finally, having actually considered your question, you better tell me what the experts say.
Re: The Travel Thread
Which is more likely, that your shit gets damaged by the airport baggage handlers or by a postal employee?
Should you go USPS, UPS, FEDEX, DHL? Is there a way to have an uber driver deliver it and meet him there?
If you ship it, what kind of box are we talking about vs. the type of luggage you'd use if you go the airport route?
Bigger issue, how you gonna get that shit back home? I mean assuming this is a round trip we should probably argue everything twice, once for the outgoing trip and once for the return.
Should you go USPS, UPS, FEDEX, DHL? Is there a way to have an uber driver deliver it and meet him there?
If you ship it, what kind of box are we talking about vs. the type of luggage you'd use if you go the airport route?
Bigger issue, how you gonna get that shit back home? I mean assuming this is a round trip we should probably argue everything twice, once for the outgoing trip and once for the return.
I only came to kick some ass...
Rock the fucking house and kick some ass.
Rock the fucking house and kick some ass.
Re: The Travel Thread
Ahhhhh!
just put down the deposit on a guided steelhead trip.
shit's getting real!
just put down the deposit on a guided steelhead trip.
shit's getting real!
Re: The Travel Thread
Had to cancel my Lexington travel this weekend. Bummer.
Re: The Travel Thread
Yep. But a really bad work travel week (and a newborn) made this an impossible fun-travel weekend.
Re: The Travel Thread
so what’s the craziest carry on luggage you’ve traveled with or sawed?
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In response to Ousedahl...
I once carried a cushioned toilet seat to Malta (not for me but a request for someone I was visiting there).
I also carried 50 lbs of beef for my dad. It was a particular meat he wanted that I was able to get from an Argentinian restaurant in NYC that he couldn't get in Sacramento where he lived at the time.
Both of those were pre 9/11, so TSA wasn't as restrictive.
Not crazy, but my important scuba gear, that I always pack in my carry on rather than my checked bag always gets pulled for inspection by TSA.
I once carried a cushioned toilet seat to Malta (not for me but a request for someone I was visiting there).
I also carried 50 lbs of beef for my dad. It was a particular meat he wanted that I was able to get from an Argentinian restaurant in NYC that he couldn't get in Sacramento where he lived at the time.
Both of those were pre 9/11, so TSA wasn't as restrictive.
Not crazy, but my important scuba gear, that I always pack in my carry on rather than my checked bag always gets pulled for inspection by TSA.
Re: The Travel Thread
I flew into San Juan, PR pre-9 11. Most of the "luggage" in the baggage claim was taped up cardboard boxes.
Defense. Rebounds.
Re: The Travel Thread
3 lb container of Welch's grape jelly. My grandfather loved this, and it was not available where he lived (overseas). I got a wholesale container and it was in my checked luggage. However, the airline said it was overweight (70 lb/bag allowed; mine was 74 lb). Took it out, and tried to give it to the check-in dude and he said he couldn't accept it. I stuffed it in my carry-on, wore one sweater and stuffed a few items in my camera bag to make room, and gave my grandfather the grape jelly. Of course, this was 1991!
Re: The Travel Thread
My story above was about traveling with a Kelty baby backpack. The weird part of that was that I was not traveling with a baby.
I am most proud of transporting two fresh buko pies from Los Banos, Philippines to KCI. That sounds boring, but you can’t get buko pie (a custard pie made with young coconut) in Kansas and they are so so delicious.
99, I think packing with boxes is common on international trips where people are bringing a lot of gifts. Like overseas workers and overseas families. Airlines allow a maximum of 65 linear inches and a cube is the most efficient way to maximize the volume. Suitcases, as you know, don’t come in cubes.
I am most proud of transporting two fresh buko pies from Los Banos, Philippines to KCI. That sounds boring, but you can’t get buko pie (a custard pie made with young coconut) in Kansas and they are so so delicious.
99, I think packing with boxes is common on international trips where people are bringing a lot of gifts. Like overseas workers and overseas families. Airlines allow a maximum of 65 linear inches and a cube is the most efficient way to maximize the volume. Suitcases, as you know, don’t come in cubes.
Re: The Travel Thread
good answers.
I have (post-9/11) carried on a fly rod several times without anyone saying anything more than "how's the fishin?"
The rod breaks down in to four pieces and fits in a storage/travel tube, about 2.5 feet long. Of course, this is a single hand rod.
This trip, I'm also bringing a Spey rod, which is a longer fancier two-handed fly rod, and the preferred tool for steelhead fishing in the PNW. It still breaks down into a tube, but a little longer yet.
Hoping no one at either TSA or the airline raises a fuss.
I have (post-9/11) carried on a fly rod several times without anyone saying anything more than "how's the fishin?"
The rod breaks down in to four pieces and fits in a storage/travel tube, about 2.5 feet long. Of course, this is a single hand rod.
This trip, I'm also bringing a Spey rod, which is a longer fancier two-handed fly rod, and the preferred tool for steelhead fishing in the PNW. It still breaks down into a tube, but a little longer yet.
Hoping no one at either TSA or the airline raises a fuss.