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-   -   Airport Security and Travel Rods (http://www.fishingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=3366)

Robert Brinson December 30th, 2003 04:40 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I'm planning on taking a trip in '04 to do some fly fishing, and I was
wanting to get a good 4 pc. rod for that and future trips. However,
with airport security being what it is these days, I did not know if
it is permissible to carry-on your fly rod. I would not want to have
to check it, as it would be too expensive an item to just get lost in
the luggage abyss. Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.

Robert Brinson

Dave LaCourse December 30th, 2003 04:59 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
Robert Brinson writes:

snippage

Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.


I flew from Boston to Billings this year and Boston to Bozeman last year and
experienced no problems with carrying my three piece Winston aboard. I also
had reels packed in my carry-on. Flies are another thing. Don't try to get
through security with them

With intermediate stops at Minniapolis one year and Cincinnati the next, I
observed lots of fly fishermen with carry-on roads, some even with two piece
(long tubes).

Of course, ymmv.

Dave

http://hometown.aol.com/davplac/myhomepage/index.html








Dave Martel December 30th, 2003 07:23 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
My experience mirrors Daves. I must look like some kind of terrorist,
though, because I was *not* allowed any rods on; even my reels were
scrutinized way above and beyond the normal (if such a thing even exists
today). I was almost made to strip off all lines--even the backing. Another
Pilot came over--recognized the fly equipment--and told the screeners to let
me through.

I'm flying to Bozeman this coming summer--and FedExing most of my
equipment out ahead of time. A pain in the ass? You bet--but not as much of
a PITA as stripping all my reels. As did Dave L.; even though I wasn't
allowed any rods (all 3; and 4 piece travel, by the way) on to the planes I
traveled on; I saw *plenty* of guys carrying on rods--even 2 piecers. So to
answer your question: NO, there is *no* standardization of rules between
airports. Portland (ME.) and Logan (Boston) seem to be the worst, in my
experience. Bozeman and Salt Lake seem to be the easiest, again, my
experiences only. As always, YMMV. Good luck.

Dave M
"Robert Brinson" wrote in message
om...
I'm planning on taking a trip in '04 to do some fly fishing, and I was
wanting to get a good 4 pc. rod for that and future trips. However,
with airport security being what it is these days, I did not know if
it is permissible to carry-on your fly rod. I would not want to have
to check it, as it would be too expensive an item to just get lost in
the luggage abyss. Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.

Robert Brinson




Dave LaCourse December 30th, 2003 07:30 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
Dave Martel writes:

NO, there is *no* standardization of rules between
airports. Portland (ME.) and Logan (Boston) seem to be the worst, in my
experience. Bozeman and Salt Lake seem to be the easiest, again, my
experiences only. As always, YMMV. Good luck.

Dave M


Any western terminal would be easiest because they see so many folks traveling
there to fish. Logan is strict - I had trouble getting my fly tying equipment
aboard - *before* 9/11, but they made me empty a flask of 18 year old single
malt and said nothing of the weapon looking rod case I was carrying.
Dave

http://hometown.aol.com/davplac/myhomepage/index.html








Thomas Gnauck December 30th, 2003 08:02 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I try and fish internationally a couple of times a year here is this year
report:
Bozeman to Mexico: Rod, reel and flies to 1/0 no problem
Mexico to Bozeman: Rod & reel- no problem Flies no go for me, my two buddies
on the other hand walked right through
luckily a guy at Alaskan gave me a box to check them.

Bozeman to Honduras: Checked the flies and reels, carried on the rods (3
pc)- Taca looses luggage for 2 days- sucks to be me-forced to drink and
watch permit for 2 days (there are worse things)
Honduras to Bozeman: Checked the flies and reels , carried the rods, forgot
a box of flies $100+ in my carry-on fanny pack- ended up forced to chuck
$100+ flies in the San Pedro Sula trash

Bozeman to Mexico: Checked Flies, carried on Rod & reel, security found one
loose 2/0 clouser in one rod tube- strip searched for more- not happy,
buddies think its funny
Mexico to Bozeman: Checked all but rods- no problem- happy but only because
of trip insurance

The bottom line- I wouldn't try and carry on anything that even resembles a
fish hook.
The irony- Would you rather have a terrorist with a No. 14 Hopper after you
or the guy with the butt section of a 12 wt.?
I suspect it won't be long before rods can't be carried on.


¡Buenas Suerte!

t.


"Dave Martel" wrote in message
t...
My experience mirrors Daves. I must look like some kind of terrorist,
though, because I was *not* allowed any rods on; even my reels were
scrutinized way above and beyond the normal (if such a thing even exists
today). I was almost made to strip off all lines--even the backing.

Another
Pilot came over--recognized the fly equipment--and told the screeners to

let
me through.

I'm flying to Bozeman this coming summer--and FedExing most of my
equipment out ahead of time. A pain in the ass? You bet--but not as much

of
a PITA as stripping all my reels. As did Dave L.; even though I wasn't
allowed any rods (all 3; and 4 piece travel, by the way) on to the planes

I
traveled on; I saw *plenty* of guys carrying on rods--even 2 piecers. So

to
answer your question: NO, there is *no* standardization of rules between
airports. Portland (ME.) and Logan (Boston) seem to be the worst, in my
experience. Bozeman and Salt Lake seem to be the easiest, again, my
experiences only. As always, YMMV. Good luck.

Dave M
"Robert Brinson" wrote in message
om...
I'm planning on taking a trip in '04 to do some fly fishing, and I was
wanting to get a good 4 pc. rod for that and future trips. However,
with airport security being what it is these days, I did not know if
it is permissible to carry-on your fly rod. I would not want to have
to check it, as it would be too expensive an item to just get lost in
the luggage abyss. Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.

Robert Brinson






daytripper December 30th, 2003 10:31 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
On Tue, 30 Dec 2003 13:02:08 -0700, "Thomas Gnauck" wrote:
[snippered]
The bottom line- I wouldn't try and carry on anything that even resembles a
fish hook.
The irony- Would you rather have a terrorist with a No. 14 Hopper after you
or the guy with the butt section of a 12 wt.?
I suspect it won't be long before rods can't be carried on.


Well, yeah! You could put someone's eye out with one of those ;-)

/daytripper (god forbid they figure out a broken butt end would be much worse)

asadi December 30th, 2003 10:56 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
How would ya feel just traveling with a couple of doobies and no
equipment?...

gotta visit ma - and ma don't share...

john


"Robert Brinson" wrote in message
om...
I'm planning on taking a trip in '04 to do some fly fishing, and I was
wanting to get a good 4 pc. rod for that and future trips. However,
with airport security being what it is these days, I did not know if
it is permissible to carry-on your fly rod. I would not want to have
to check it, as it would be too expensive an item to just get lost in
the luggage abyss. Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.

Robert Brinson




Sierra fisher December 30th, 2003 11:38 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I have a seven piece Redington Wayfarer, and I have been able to pack
everything I need to start fishing in my carryon ...except for flies...and
have been able to get it through customs everywhere except Vancouver. They
objected to the lines, leaders and tippet

Re carrying rods. If the package is small, you have a very good chance of
getting it on board. If you have a Sage rod case that holds 5 or 6 rods,
the chance is less. the stewardesses have a bigger problem with it than
security.

Also, remember that most household insurance does not cover lost luggage,
only stolen luggage...and they decide the difference. The best way to get
insurance for lost luggage is to get a credit card that will give you up to
$3000 of insurance if you pay for your tickets with the card. ATT cards
have this insurance. Citibank offers it on a few types. Most cards issued
in Canada and Europe have it.

"Robert Brinson" wrote in message
om...
I'm planning on taking a trip in '04 to do some fly fishing, and I was
wanting to get a good 4 pc. rod for that and future trips. However,
with airport security being what it is these days, I did not know if
it is permissible to carry-on your fly rod. I would not want to have
to check it, as it would be too expensive an item to just get lost in
the luggage abyss. Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.

Robert Brinson



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kyle - mr rapidan December 31st, 2003 12:06 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
Philly to Denver to Missoula this September, I packed my Winston 5 piece
6'9" w/aluminum tube *and* my little chest pack (which contains reels,
tippet, flies, fisherman's friend clippers, etc.) in my carryon. No
troubles. Although they did make me drink water out of my nalgene and take
my boots off.




Robert Brinson December 31st, 2003 01:53 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
Thank you to everyone for providing your (humorous) airport stories. :-)

--
Robert Brinson
Linux - the choice of a GNU generation!

LRBtrout December 31st, 2003 02:52 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.


I took my pack rod as a carry-on during a trip this summer from Buffalo to
Newark to Asheville, NC to fish the mountains and had no problem. They did
open the tube at each check-in to examine it, but otherwise no problems.

Sierra fisher December 31st, 2003 02:22 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
Whether they're on the list or not, large flies for sal****er fishing are
considered possible weapons. I know a lot people who were told to check
them or toss them. I have heard of only one person that got some small
trout flies through. If you want to try to carry them on board, you had
better allow enough time to go back to the check-in counter or be prepared
to toss them. The security people don't lose arguements.



"Christian Figenschou" wrote in message
...
On 30 Dec 2003 08:40:55 -0800, (Robert
Brinson) wrote:

I'm planning on taking a trip in '04 to do some fly fishing, and I was
wanting to get a good 4 pc. rod for that and future trips. However,
with airport security being what it is these days, I did not know if
it is permissible to carry-on your fly rod. I would not want to have
to check it, as it would be too expensive an item to just get lost in
the luggage abyss. Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?


It seems many report problems carrying flies onboard. I have had no
problems doing that, passing through ORD, FLL, MIA and a bunch of
international airports. As far as I can tell, the flies will not
trigger a hand-inspection when x-rayed, but other items may,
especially forceps. Make sure you keep your forceps (and other metal
based things which might look like scissors/knives in the xray) easily
accessible, so they will be found before going through all your stuff.
Also, just in case, keep a small lockable backback in your carryon, so
you got something to stuff your gear into, should you need to check
it.

Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.


The TSA policy does not specifically cover flyfishing stuff, so you're
looking at an individual assessment. You can easily make a case that
your gear isn't any worse than many of the things on permitted list,
if the situation allows you to do so without getting into an argument,
the latter to be avoided at all costs.

http://www.tsa.gov/interweb/assetlib...12_18_2003.pdf

Some airports also have many different security points leading to the
same secured area, which will give you many retries should you
encounter the wrong guy.



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DW Dawg December 31st, 2003 05:26 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I've been advised by airline industry people to pack my lines and flies.

USUALLY, no problem with reels (sans lines) or travel rods.

DW

Mike Makela December 31st, 2003 07:00 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
If you must bring it on the plane, I suggest just checking all fly fishing
equipment, just make sure to insure all of it, which seems to keep it safe
and sound.

I would also recommend shipping it ahead of time to avoid the hassle all
together, if you have somewhere to ship it to (a hotel, or guide usually
would not object). At one of our Penns Creek Claves someone's rods (three
of them tied together) came up missing and he had to wait a few days for
them to find and deliver them, so definitely insure them (I don't believe he
did).

If you can ship it far enough ahead of time you can even check to make sure
it arrives O.K. before you leave and bring anything you forgot on the plane.
It may cost a bit extra, but you'll have peace of mind. You'll still have
to worry about your standard luggage, but it's also a lot less to bring back
and forth from the airport.

The Finn


"Robert Brinson" wrote in message
om...
I'm planning on taking a trip in '04 to do some fly fishing, and I was
wanting to get a good 4 pc. rod for that and future trips. However,
with airport security being what it is these days, I did not know if
it is permissible to carry-on your fly rod. I would not want to have
to check it, as it would be too expensive an item to just get lost in
the luggage abyss. Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.

Robert Brinson




Mike Makela December 31st, 2003 07:09 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 

"Mike Makela" ten.tsacmoc@alekamm wrote:

I would also recommend shipping it ahead of time to avoid the hassle all
together, if you have somewhere to ship it to (a hotel, or guide usually
would not object). At one of our Penns Creek Claves someone's rods (three
of them tied together) came up missing and he had to wait a few days for
them to find and deliver them, so definitely insure them (I don't believe

he
did).


Just to clarify the three rods were misplaced on the plane, not during
shipping.



Mike Makela December 31st, 2003 07:52 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
The key is insuring it for a hefty sum. They must hand it off with sign-off
as it travels. If you are still hesitant at doing this, ship it separately.

I would more paranoid about smaller items that you leave in your luggage
that you check such as reels, flies, etc. They can be stolen quite easily.
I think the main problem is just that, items getting stolen. Several items
have been stolen from close family and friends since 9/11, because there is
increased access to our luggage, and smaller items can be pocketed. I pack
all valuables separately and insure them.



"Greg Pavlov" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 13:33:26 -0600, Christian Figenschou
wrote:

On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 14:00:07 -0500, "Mike Makela"
ten.tsacmoc@alekamm wrote:

If you must bring it on the plane, I suggest just checking all fly

fishing
equipment, just make sure to insure all of it, which seems to keep it

safe
and sound.


Strange piece of advice, I must say..


It works for me: I've never actually lost
luggage tho I've had it delivered late on
two occasions. My guess is that I have
checked luggage about 300 times.





Francis Reid December 31st, 2003 08:25 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
The key is insuring it for a hefty sum. They must hand it off with sign-off
as it travels. If you are still hesitant at doing this, ship it separately.


I was at Marriots Fly shop in California a couple of years ago when a
guy came in with a multi-thousand dollar check from the airlines. He'd
insured and they'd lost six fly rods, with all of his accompanying
tackle (flies, reels...). He got a "personal shopper" to help him spend
his bucks. Talk about your kid in a candy shop.
Frank Reid

Mike Makela December 31st, 2003 09:04 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I'd hate to have to replace all of the gear, but a "personal shopper" and
thousands of dollars would be a good start.

Can't hurt to insure everything for more then they are worth to help reduce
the pain..

"Francis Reid" wrote in message
...
The key is insuring it for a hefty sum. They must hand it off with

sign-off
as it travels. If you are still hesitant at doing this, ship it

separately.

I was at Marriots Fly shop in California a couple of years ago when a
guy came in with a multi-thousand dollar check from the airlines. He'd
insured and they'd lost six fly rods, with all of his accompanying
tackle (flies, reels...). He got a "personal shopper" to help him spend
his bucks. Talk about your kid in a candy shop.
Frank Reid




Mike Makela December 31st, 2003 09:09 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I'd hate to have to replace all of the gear, but a "personal shopper" and
thousands of dollars would be a good start.

Can't hurt to insure everything for more then they are worth to help reduce
the pain..


"Francis Reid" wrote in message
...
The key is insuring it for a hefty sum. They must hand it off with

sign-off
as it travels. If you are still hesitant at doing this, ship it

separately.

I was at Marriots Fly shop in California a couple of years ago when a
guy came in with a multi-thousand dollar check from the airlines. He'd
insured and they'd lost six fly rods, with all of his accompanying
tackle (flies, reels...). He got a "personal shopper" to help him spend
his bucks. Talk about your kid in a candy shop.
Frank Reid





Mike Makela December 31st, 2003 09:18 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 

"Christian Figenschou" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 19:46:58 GMT, (Greg Pavlov)
wrote:

It works for me: I've never actually lost
luggage tho I've had it delivered late on
two occasions. My guess is that I have
checked luggage about 300 times.


But you would surely agree that the chances of it getting lost or
being delayed are dramatically bigger when checked compared to lugging
it on-board yourself?


Sure if you can get it on board, get through the security checks without
being strip searched, and not miss your flight.

F.Y.I. - I usually travel with a large aresenal of rods for a big trip, and
not all are travel rods. I've had to find the best way to get them there by
checking them. Shipping them is safer then checking them, but checking
them (w/insurance) is cheaper.



Mike Makela December 31st, 2003 09:24 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 

"Christian Figenschou" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 19:46:58 GMT, (Greg Pavlov)
wrote:

It works for me: I've never actually lost
luggage tho I've had it delivered late on
two occasions. My guess is that I have
checked luggage about 300 times.


But you would surely agree that the chances of it getting lost or
being delayed are dramatically bigger when checked compared to lugging
it on-board yourself?


Sure if you can get it on board, get through the security checks without
being strip searched, and not miss your flight.

F.Y.I. - I usually travel with a large aresenal of rods for a big trip, and
not all are travel rods. I've had to find the best way to get them there by
checking them. Shipping them is safer then checking them, but checking
them (w/insurance) is cheaper.




Mike Makela December 31st, 2003 09:24 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 

"Christian Figenschou" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 19:46:58 GMT, (Greg Pavlov)
wrote:

It works for me: I've never actually lost
luggage tho I've had it delivered late on
two occasions. My guess is that I have
checked luggage about 300 times.


But you would surely agree that the chances of it getting lost or
being delayed are dramatically bigger when checked compared to lugging
it on-board yourself?


Sure if you can get it on board, get through the security checks without
being strip searched, and not miss your flight.

F.Y.I. - I usually travel with a large aresenal of rods for a big trip, and
not all are travel rods. I've had to find the best way to get them there by
checking them. Shipping them is safer then checking them, but checking
them (w/insurance) is cheaper.




Scott Seidman December 31st, 2003 09:27 PM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
Christian Figenschou wrote in
:

On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 19:46:58 GMT, (Greg Pavlov)
wrote:

It works for me: I've never actually lost
luggage tho I've had it delivered late on
two occasions. My guess is that I have
checked luggage about 300 times.


But you would surely agree that the chances of it getting lost or
being delayed are dramatically bigger when checked compared to lugging
it on-board yourself?


Actually, you're talking about Greg here!

The less time he spends handling the rod, the longer it lasts :-)

Scott

Wayne Knight January 1st, 2004 02:34 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 

"Greg Pavlov" wrote in message
...

How could they make you drink water ?


In the early days of the post 9/11 histeria and witchhunt, there was a well
reported incident where the, ahem, security folks made a young mother drink
her child's breast milk.



Marshall Krasser January 1st, 2004 03:31 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
When I went to Sun Valley last fall. I printed out all of the below documentation
and carried the TSA's number 1-866-289-9673. I was told by one of their
agents, "If you have a problem carrying it on, just give us a call and we will
talk to the screener".

The below info is from:
http://www.tsa.gov/public/interapp/e...orial_1188.xml

Fishing Rods / Poles - Fishing Rods are permitted as carry-on and checked
baggage. However, please check with your air carrier to confirm that it fits within
their size limitations for carry-on items. Ultimately, it is the carrier's decision as
to whether or not it can be transported as carry-on baggage.

Tackle Equipment - fishing equipment, including small hooks, should be placed
in your checked baggage. Some tackle equipment can be considered sharp and
dangerous.

Complete listing below:
http://www.tsa.gov/interweb/assetlib...12_18_2003.pdf

-Marshall


--
NOTE: Please remove "MY_WADERS" from my return Email address
if you wish to reply directly. Thanks, M



Mike Makela January 1st, 2004 03:57 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I know there was a sign-off process pre 9/11 on American Airlines, and am
assuming that process still is in affect where sign-offs are required where
the insured baggage exchanges hands (that could be a bad assumption. I'm
sure some of the processes must have changed though. They may not be as
concerned with the chain of custody, as they are with what is in the
baggage. That's a good question for the Airline/s you use. There could
definitely be a drop in service if discount airlines are used. I really
don't use insurance for the money reimbursement aspect, just to ensure
better handling, although Frank's shopping spree story was intriguing.

In the past, when you went to baggage claim, you had to pick up insured
packages from handlers. Not sure that is still in affect but asking the
airline should do it for you..

I'm not really a rod and reel whore...at least not until recently. The most
rods I have taken on a trip were 4 when I went to Alaska, but none of those
were travel rods and that was the source of my first panic driven inquiry
with the airlines as to how to ensure they would not be lost.

The Finn

"Christian Figenschou" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 16:24:12 -0500, "Mike Makela"
ten.tsacmoc@alekamm wrote:

F.Y.I. - I usually travel with a large aresenal of rods for a big trip,

and
not all are travel rods. I've had to find the best way to get them there

by
checking them. Shipping them is safer then checking them, but checking
them (w/insurance) is cheaper.


For obvious reasons I always try to make sure I have at least one set
of gear on-board, one rod, one reel, a box of flies + other vital
accessories. But then again, the most rods I've ever brought on a trip
involving air-travel is three (yes, I know I am a pathetic loser..)

The insurance aspect is interesting. However, equally important is
whether it is treated differently by the airline or not. Do you know?
Is there a coverage threshold that triggers special attention? If they
simply take their chances and are prepared to pay some extra $$$ if
they lose it, it doesn't really improve the odds of getting it there
on time. I'm also sure many credit cards would automatically provide
coverage beyond the airlines' standard liability.




Sierra fisher January 1st, 2004 04:00 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
They do take nail files away from you, and I would expect them to take
corkscrew and nitting needles too. I've lost two pair of finger nail
clippers with a one inch file attached!! Remember we are not discussing
what is reasonable. We are talking abut a bunch of minimum wage earners who
are now bearuocrats (sp?). What you might think is reasonable, and what we
may agree is not a weapon doesn't count!! We don't have the badge nor the
job.

I have not lost any flies, because I have not tried to carry then in my
carry-on luggage. I can learn by others mistakes.


"Christian Figenschou" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 06:22:46 -0800, "Sierra fisher"
wrote:

Whether they're on the list or not, large flies for sal****er fishing are
considered possible weapons. I know a lot people who were told to check
them or toss them.


Well, since I have gone through with large sal****er hooks, even had
them inspected twice, let's agree on they _might_ be considered
possible weapons by certain TSA people. By large I mean 3-4 inches
hook length, I see no reason why standard size (4-10) should be
considered any more dangerous as a weapon than permitted items such as
knitting needles, cork screws and nail files.

And never have I had my hooks examined due to seeing them on x-ray,
the search has always been warranted by spotting forceps and scissors.

Do you by any chance jump up and down, yelling "I got hooks.. Big
hooks, I tell ya!"? ;-) Which airports? How many experiences?



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Sierra fisher January 1st, 2004 04:06 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
The next time you go through Security with some fishing gear, and they tell
you that you cannot carry it on, are you going to bring up this web page?

Unfortunately, you're going to lose the argument!!



"Marshall Krasser" wrote in message
...
When I went to Sun Valley last fall. I printed out all of the below

documentation
and carried the TSA's number 1-866-289-9673. I was told by one of their
agents, "If you have a problem carrying it on, just give us a call and we

will
talk to the screener".

The below info is from:
http://www.tsa.gov/public/interapp/e...orial_1188.xml

Fishing Rods / Poles - Fishing Rods are permitted as carry-on and checked
baggage. However, please check with your air carrier to confirm that it

fits within
their size limitations for carry-on items. Ultimately, it is the carrier's

decision as
to whether or not it can be transported as carry-on baggage.

Tackle Equipment - fishing equipment, including small hooks, should be

placed
in your checked baggage. Some tackle equipment can be considered sharp and
dangerous.

Complete listing below:

http://www.tsa.gov/interweb/assetlib...12_18_2003.pdf

-Marshall


--
NOTE: Please remove "MY_WADERS" from my return Email address
if you wish to reply directly. Thanks, M




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Wayne Knight January 1st, 2004 04:56 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 

"Wayne Knight" wrote in message
...

"Greg Pavlov" wrote in message
...

How could they make you drink water ?


In the early days of the post 9/11 histeria and witchhunt, there was a

well
reported incident where the, ahem, security folks made a young mother

drink
her child's breast milk.


That should read made a young mother drink breast milk she had saved for her
child.



Wayne Knight January 1st, 2004 05:05 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 

"Sierra fisher" wrote in message
...
The next time you go through Security with some fishing gear, and they

tell
you that you cannot carry it on, are you going to bring up this web page?

Unfortunately, you're going to lose the argument!!


Not if you are professional, firm, and courteous.

Been there done it



daytripper January 1st, 2004 05:06 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 23:56:02 -0500, "Wayne Knight"
wrote:


"Wayne Knight" wrote in message
...

"Greg Pavlov" wrote in message
...

How could they make you drink water ?


In the early days of the post 9/11 histeria and witchhunt, there was a

well
reported incident where the, ahem, security folks made a young mother

drink
her child's breast milk.


That should read made a young mother drink breast milk she had saved for her
child.


Yes, I was gonna make a crack about a whole lot of frustrated people, but I
didn't ;-)

/daytripper (that would have been so...wrong ;-)

Warren January 1st, 2004 05:44 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
wrote...
I'm planning on taking a trip in '04 to do some fly fishing, and I was
wanting to get a good 4 pc. rod for that and future trips. However,
with airport security being what it is these days, I did not know if
it is permissible to carry-on your fly rod. I would not want to have
to check it, as it would be too expensive an item to just get lost in
the luggage abyss. Has anyone had experience this year with fly rods,
reels, and other fly fishing gear as carry-ons and airport security?
Are policies consistent from airport to airport, or are they hit and
miss? Thanks for any help.


I just flew on Delta from Bozeman, Mt to Santa Barbara, CA. I was
able to take a 2 piece rod tube with me as carry on. I actually
tried to check it but was told to just carry it on. I had absolutely
no problems at all with carrying it on this time. Probably be
totally different next time judging from what I have heard from
others......
--
Warren
(use troutbum_mt (at) yahoo to reply via email)

Sierra fisher January 2nd, 2004 02:32 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I could care less if you carry your fles on. I just hope that you have the
balls to tell this group what happens the next time you try it.


"Christian Figenschou" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 20:00:30 -0800, "Sierra fisher"
wrote:

They do take nail files away from you, and I would expect them to take
corkscrew and nitting needles too.

[...]
I have not lost any flies, because I have not tried to carry then in my
carry-on luggage. I can learn by others mistakes.


Well, I hope you don't mind if the rest of us continue bringing such
items through security without incidents. I think your description of
airport security is dated, based on pre-TSA, pre-specific permitted
items lists, and definitely pre consistency and attitude improvements
throughout 2003.



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Mike Makela January 4th, 2004 04:14 AM

Airport Security and Travel Rods
 
I have in the past, check with your airline though, the rules are changing
these days.

Let me know what you find out,

"Greg Pavlov" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 14:52:54 -0500, "Mike Makela"
ten.tsacmoc@alekamm wrote:

The key is insuring it for a hefty sum. They must hand it off with

sign-off
as it travels. If you are still hesitant at doing this, ship it

separately.


Do you insure it at the time you check it ?
I didn't know that you could do that, I will
look into it next time.





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