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rw January 6th, 2009 05:43 PM

FYI Travelling
 
Larry L wrote:
"rw" wrote


The most prudent course is to ship crucial stuff ahead of time.




I guess you mean ship it to your outfitter/ guide for the trip? Is there
a way to ship stuff to yourself when you don't have a contact of any sort in
your destination?

Larry L ( who got sidetracked by family milestones this downunder season but
still hopes to spend a few months 'troutbumming' in Patagonia and New
Zealand in future seasons and is trying to figure out all the logistics.
For instance, I'd want to take my WaterMaster and backpacking tent/ stove/
sleeping bag etc etc ... what is the cheapest and safest way to get a
fairly large quanity of stuff to a place where you can collect it after
getting a rental vehicle ...... I'm pretty much travel ignorant.. 'cept in
my truck )



If you're making a hotel reservation for your arrival they'll probably
accept a shipment in your name.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.

riverman January 7th, 2009 08:22 AM

FYI Travelling
 
On Jan 7, 1:43*am, rw wrote:
Larry L wrote:
"rw" wrote


The most prudent course is to ship crucial stuff ahead of time.


I guess you mean ship it to your outfitter/ guide for the trip? * * Is there
a way to ship stuff to yourself when you don't have a contact of any sort in
your destination?


Larry L ( who got sidetracked by family milestones this downunder season but
still hopes to spend a few months 'troutbumming' in Patagonia and New
Zealand in future seasons and is trying to figure out all the logistics..
For instance, I'd want to take my WaterMaster and backpacking tent/ stove/
sleeping bag etc etc *... what is the cheapest and safest way to get a
fairly large quanity of stuff to a place where you can collect it after
getting a rental vehicle ...... *I'm pretty much travel ignorant.. 'cept in
my truck )


If you're making a hotel reservation for your arrival they'll probably
accept a shipment in your name.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


If its within the US, you can mail it to the local post office
addressed to 'your name c/o General Delivery' and they will hold it
until you show up with an ID.
http://www.usps.com/receive/choicesf...therplaces.htm

This also works in pretty much every county, except you address it to
"your name c/o Poste Restante" instead. The system is as secure as
anything in that country...which goes both ways. In genreal, its very
reliable and commonly used among backpackers, etc.
http://www.peru-explorer.com/poste_restante.htm

--riverman

riverman January 7th, 2009 08:43 AM

FYI Travelling
 
On Jan 7, 1:11*am, "Larry L" wrote:

For instance, I'd want to take my WaterMaster and backpacking tent/ stove/
sleeping bag etc etc *... what is the cheapest and safest way to get a
fairly large quanity of stuff to a place where you can collect it after
getting a rental vehicle ...... *


The best way I have found to get stuff between countries (and you KNOW
I know what I'm talking about...) is to pack it in an action packer
and bring it on your flight as excess baggage. It arrives with you,
and its cheap to do.

The only glitch is if it is too long, which should be avoidable if you
have collapsable tent poles, etc, and if it is flammable (fuel tanks
for camp stoves, lanterns, etc). You can get around that by opening
them up and drying them and shipping them with the lids off (this
avoids them triggering the x-ray machine), or just buy local when you
arrive (which ensures that you get utilities that run off of fuel
cells available locally).

Don't underestimate how different things are outside the US before you
ship certain things over. You will probably find that your propane-
powered stove or lantern runs off of a completely different type of
fuel cell than is available anywhere else in the world, and that you
cannot get the proper mantles either. If you have a white-gas stove,
then you will discover that its impossible to find pure grade Coleman
white gas like we get in the US. Rather than invest in an
'international' Firefly stove that runs off of 'dirty' fuel (for $200
from REI), just buy a local stove from a local shop when you get
overseas, probably better quality than the REI stove and for 1/10th
the price.

Most airlines I know of allow considerable baggage to/from the US as
opposed to to/from other places (two bags at 36 kilos each instead of
a total of 20 kilos) and charge a reasonable rate for excess baggage
($120 for a third 36 kilo bag vs $20 per extra kilo). When I moved to
HongKong, we shipped 16 action packers loaded to the maximum allowable
weight because it was cheaper than shipping our stuff freight.

--riverman

asadi January 7th, 2009 02:17 PM

FYI Travelling
 

"Dave LaCourse" wrote in message
...
I'm preparing for an up-coming trip and was wondering what the
*official* restrictions are on fly rods, reels, but especially flies.
I have two large boxes with very big streamers as used in Kamchatka.
Even though I have gone through air port security with fly boxes on
previous trips, they were always small flies - 14 - 22, never big ones
like I have from Russia. So I went to the TSA site and found that not
only can you bring your fly rods regardless the size of the rod
holder, but also reels AND, most importantly, flies are legal. So, my
carry-on will be a backpack with vest, fly boxes, two Lamson 3.5s, my
trusty GS3s, boots, medicines, change or two of drawers/t-shirts,
etc., and my two four piece rods (7 and 8 weights) will be in a
carrying case.

Stopped by my local library this a.m. to get an audio book. I have
trouble reading on an aircraft and thought this would be a good idea.
I planned on down-loading it onto my I-pod, along with lots of jazz.
To my surprise they have books on "Playaway." It's a small MP3 player
half the size of an I-pod. Such a deal. I picked out a couple of
dramas and should be well entertained even if I am beat when I arrive
at my destination.

Dave



I haven't had any problems except when I forgot my all purpose tool in my
vest...they took that.. Make sure you put your tools, forceps and needle
nose in your baggage...

john



Larry L January 7th, 2009 05:51 PM

FYI Travelling
 

"riverman" wrote


Don't underestimate how different things are outside the US before you
ship certain things over. You will probably find that your propane-
powered stove or lantern runs off of a completely different type of
fuel cell than is available anywhere else in the world, and that you
cannot get the proper mantles either. If you have a white-gas stove,
then you will discover that its impossible to find pure grade Coleman
white gas like we get in the US. Rather than invest in an
'international' Firefly stove that runs off of 'dirty' fuel (for $200
from REI), just buy a local stove from a local shop when you get
overseas, probably better quality than the REI stove and for 1/10th
the price.




Thanks for the info/advice .... I'd actually been coveting that silly
MSR stove ( mainly because MSR and I go way back ... I have a 40+ year old
MSR ice ax ( their first product) around here somewhere ... and therefore it
sparks my nostalgia ;-)








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