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On Jan 6, 9:52*am, wrote:
On Mon, 5 Jan 2009 17:38:33 -0800 (PST), riverman wrote: On Jan 6, 9:17*am, Dave LaCourse wrote: 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 Take it from me...the 'official' policy is meaningless. Be prepared to have to check in your rods, flies, reels, forecepts and nippers....it all depends on the security personnel. Coming through Prague once I had a woman stop me at the x-ray machine and open my rod tube to see my 5-piece 5 wt. She asked what it was, then insisted that it had to be checked in, but I noticed supervisor looking over at it and asked him if that was okay. He was a fisherman, admired the rod, and said to go ahead and carry it on. If he had not been there, I would have had no recourse. Personally, I'd come prepared with a photocopy of the TSA guidelines and have your gear packed in such a way that IF you had to check it in, it would be well-padded. Then try to talk your way through any obstacles, starting with the check-in counter, airside/landside security, gate security and finally boarding. I've gotten stopped for various items at each level...having some nitwit right outside the plane stop you and take something away after 5 other people have approved it is the worst. Don't produce the photocopied TSA guidelines unless its a last resort. And even if you have a 10 hour layover, don't leave the transit terminal! You'll have to go through all levels of security again. --riverman Yeah, make sure you have a copy of the TSA guidelines in both Czech and Russian when traveling from Russia to Prague... HTH, R ...hmmm...what's "hee-hee-hee" in Cyrillic...?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Actually, it was from Latvia via Prague, so I would have needed the guidelines in Latvian, Russian and Czech. :-) Worse yet, I have seen it explicitly stated at one check-in that fishing gear was NOT allowed on planes. My interpretation is that the airlines/airport/crabby woman at the x-ray machine all have the ability to impose restrictions greater than the TSA guidelines, but not lesser. I suspect that these guidelines are for the airlines, not to ensure any rights for the passengers. That's why I suggested that Dave not produce any paperwork unless it was a last resort. --riverman |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Travelling Vises | riverman | Fly Fishing Tying | 16 | April 24th, 2004 11:41 AM |