10 Things You Should Never Pack in a Checked BagAirfarewatchblog10 Things You Should Never Pack in a Checked BagPosted by Caroline Costello on Tuesday, January 21, 2014
(Photo: bradleygee via flickr/CC Attribution)
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) maintains a complex system of rules for
transporting both carry-on items and checked bags on flights. Some objects are prohibited on planes at all times, while others may be checked and not carried, or vice versa. Confused? "When in doubt, leave it out," says the TSA. If only it were that simple. Packing the wrong thing in your checked bag has the potential to ruin your trip—especially if that bag gets lost, broken, or roughed up by baggage handlers. A simple rule of thumb: Pack anything of value or importance in your carry-on bag, in case your luggage gets lost by the airline. But there's more to keep in mind. Here, in no particular order, are 10 things that you should always leave out of your checked bag.
Note: This article is presented to you as part of our "Flashback Friday" initiative, in which
we highlight some of the most popular stories from our archives. It was originally published by SmarterTravel in December 2012.
(Photo: Gnilenkov Aleksey via flickr/CC Attribution)
Jewelry and Valuables
Of course, it's not probable that your checked bag will be lost by an airline. According to a
report by SITA, a company that gathers statistics for airlines, .012 percent of passengers' bags were reported damaged, lost, or delayed in 2010. But if you happen to fall in that .012 percent and your checked bag contains an antique watch, a family photo album, or your wedding ring, you're in trouble.
Most carriers require passengers to submit claims forms when bags are lost. Your airline
will then tally the depreciated value of the contents of your missing suitcase—if your claim is accepted, that is. Airlines will pay no more than $3,300 per passenger for bags lost on domestic flights. All in all, it's unlikely that you'll receive compensation equal to the full value of your lost possessions.
We recommend leaving jewelry and other valuables at home when traveling, but if you must
bring these items on the road, be sure to store them safely in your carry-on bag.
(Photo: swimparallel via flickr/CC Attribution)
Identification, Passports, Boarding Passes, and Essential Documents
All necessary documents, whether they're work or insurance papers or other sensitive
information, should be kept with you in your carry-on bag. But there is another solution—back it up. If you plan to put papers of importance in checked luggage, keep copies (either hard photocopies or copies on a flash drive) on your person.
Bottom line: Any important documents you've packed in your checked luggage should be
photocopies, not originals. And any documents that include sensitive or private information should be kept out of your checked luggage altogether.
(Photo: jollyUK via flickr/CC Attribution)
Cash and Credit Cards
All checked bags are screened electronically, but select checked bags are opened by TSA
agents and screened by hand. When packing a checked bag, be aware that a security agent—a stranger, essentially—may be rummaging through your things at some point. There have been reports of TSA workers stealing electronics, money, and other valuables from passengers' bags; as expected, such occurrences are rare. But as a precaution, your cash, checkbook, and credit cards should be kept with you in your carry-on bag.
There's always a chance that your suitcase could get damaged en route, too. If a busted
zipper befalls your bag, any packed cash will be easy pickins for thieves.
(Photo: Janitors via flickr/CC Attribution)
Laptop and Electronics
Take it from the TSA. A representative from the agency offered this advice for flyers:
"Electronics ... should be packed in carry-on luggage because they are typically fragile, expensive, and more prone to breaking if transported in checked baggage." The threat to your electronics is two-fold: you need to protect your devices from burglary (see previous slide) as well as breakage. No matter how many beach towels you've wrapped around your laptop, it's still at the mercy of baggage handlers and bumpy flights while in transit.
(Photo: glasseyes view via flickr/CC Attribution/Share Alike)
Lighters, Matches, and Flammable Items
The TSA has a handy checklist of prohibited items on its website. Some of the objects
on the list are as obscure as they are obvious: gun powder, hand grenades, tear gas, vehicle airbags (packed to protect a checked laptop, perhaps?). But items of note include lighters, matches, and flammable objects, which anyone going on a camping trip (or travelers who smoke) might need to pack.
Lighters without fuel may be packed in checked luggage. However, lighters with fuel may
only be packed in checked luggage if they're in a Department of Transportation-approved case; an example of this is the Zippo Air Case. Matches are prohibited in checked baggage, and flammable items, such as paint or liquid fuel, should be avoided as well.
(Photo: Akirahnu via flickr/CC Attribution/Share Alike)
All of Your Clothes
If your luggage disappears into the mysterious black hole of missing checked bags, you'll
thank your former self for putting a clean pair of underwear and some socks aside in your carry-on bag. An entire outfit—enough to get you through a day or two at your destination in case your airline loses your suitcase—is even better. Other daily essentials, like a toothbrush, a comb, key toiletries (though liquids must be in containers no larger than 3.4 ounces), and whatever else you might need if your bag gets lost should be placed in your carry-on as well.
(Photo: CarbonNYC via flickr/CC Attribution)
Medications
There's a theme here. If you can't live comfortably without it, don't pack it in your checked
bag. That old cliche, "better safe than sorry," should be lingering in the back of your mind when you're organizing your luggage. Accordingly, prescription drugs are best kept on your person.
Passengers are permitted to bring liquid medications onto planes, even if they exceed the
3.4-ounce limit for carry-on liquids. But you'll need to officially declare your oversized liquid medications when going through the checkpoint. Tell a security officer stationed at the checkpoint that you're carrying liquid medications, and hand them over for inspection. It helps to have a doctor's note or a medical ID card, but it's not required. The TSA also suggests that travelers label medications to facilitate the screening process.
(Photo: AMagill via flickr/CC Attribution)
Breakable Items
Don't blame it all on the baggage handlers. Sure, they've been known to bust up a prized
possession or two. But baggage handlers, under pressure to load hundreds of bags onto a plane in a short amount of time, are just trying to get your flight off the runway—with your luggage onboard. Sometimes this necessitates a good throwing arm. (Read more inConfessions of an Airline Baggage Thrower.)
Fragile items should always be packed in your carry-on bag. If you must bring home that
bottle of red you picked up in Bourdeaux, use a product like the VinniBag, which will protect the contents of your bag in case the bottle breaks.
(Photo: adpowers via flickr/CC Attribution)
Film
If you bucked the digital trend and snap travel photos on a camera that takes film, steer clear
of storing undeveloped rolls in your checked bag. The X-ray machines that the TSA uses to screen checked bags can damage film. Instead, put your film in your carry-on bag and ask the TSA agent at the security checkpoint to inspect your film by hand. The TSA suggests that travelers pack film in clear canisters or clear plastic bags to expedite the inspection process, but this isn't required.
(Photo: Wesley Fryer via flickr/CC Attribution)
Food and Drink
According to the TSA, flyers should avoid putting food and beverages in checked bags.
Passengers aren't prohibited from storing chow in checked bags, but it's a wise suggestion nevertheless. Bottled drinks are likely to explode or crack in transit, thus ruining the cashmere sweater tucked in your bag. And if your flight is delayed or your luggage gets lost for a while, your packed food might spoil.
If you're traveling internationally, you may be prohibited from bringing food to your destination.
Each country has its own rules about what kinds of foods can be brought across borders. Check the embassy website of the country you're visiting for more information.
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Sunday, January 26, 2014
10 Things You Should Never Pack in a Checked Bag
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Can Mezcal Save A Village?
Episode 512: Can Mezcal Save A Village?
NPR (blog) - In the mountains of Oaxaca, in southern Mexico, there are basically no jobs. Villages are empty of young men, who go elsewhere in Mexico or to the .
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Friday, January 24, 2014
Anyone else Scared by Jan. 21road block?
11. Re: Anyone else Scared by Jan.21road block
Jan 23, 2014, 4:09 PM
I have a feeling there is more to the lippfamilies encounter with a road block that would make them stay away from Mexico. And that is fine. If you can go by their travel map they haven't traveled extensivly so maybe a bit of culture shock as well?. Personally the charm of a "machette " is just another interesting site that you can see in almost every other winter/tourist destination.
Mike :)
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12. Re: Anyone else Scared by Jan.21road block
Jan 23, 2014, 4:22 PM
As someone who was on the edge of a riot in Oaxaca City a few years ago, let me share my thoughts. The teachers were protesting subsidies to private schools & President Calderon had come to Oaxaca on an unrelated matter
This link will give more info
We couldn't leave downtown b/c it had been blocked off - tear gas was used, & we were in movement en masse trying to stay out of the way. The local shop keepers & restauranters made sure we were kept out of the way of any "action". I would have no issue with going back to Oaxaca again some day, its a beautiful city & so are the people. All of us who are able to travel to Mexico, are so privileged, we need to have an understanding that there are may people in Mexico who have very little, & I am honoured that we are able to share their country with them.
Alan
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Oaxaca Whistle Language Struggles to Survive MANUEL RUEDA - 01/22/2014, 08:02AM / Updated 01/22/2014, 06:35PM
Oaxaca Whistle Language Struggles to Survive
MANUEL RUEDA - 01/22/2014, 08:02AM / Updated 01/22/2014, 06:35PM
The isolation of the Mexican town San Pedro Sochiapam, nested deep in the Oaxaca mountains, has probably helped to preserve its most famous cultural asset: A unique whistle language that enables people to communicate like birds.
"I think that it's been around ever since this town existed," said Marcelino Flores, a 67-year-old farmer, who studies the local Chinanteco language.
"A relative of my wife's who was 100 recently died, and she said that ever since she was small the police would call each other by whistling," Flores said.
San Pedro's "whistle language," known locally as El Chiflido, is actually a whistled form of the Chinanteco language.
When they whistle, chiflido users emulate the tonal sounds of Chinanteco, an indigenous language with 14 tonal combinations that sounds somewhat like Thai to the untrained ear.
Marcelino Flores is one of the last users of the whistled form of Chinanteco
Chiflido users can whistle thousands of ideas over long distances, and hold a complex conversation without uttering a single word.
"People in other towns are amazed at our ability to whistle, its something that makes me proud" said Flores, who has been visited by linguists from New Zealand, Canada and the U.S.
Like many indigenous tongues in Mexico however, the chiflido is slowly retreating into extinction. Flores estimates that some 150 people in San Pedro can use the chiflido. But Mark Sicoli, a Georgetown University linguist who specializes in Chinanteco, says that he found just seven senior citizens and two young people who were fluent in the whistle language.
“If one of those guys gets work out of town, then the language is under threat,” Sicoli said in a phone interview.
Part of the problem is that the whistle language no longer suits the lifestyle of local residents.
Its main purpose according to linguists, is to enable communication between farmers who are separated by long distances and deep valleys. It is also used by hunters who split away from each other, as they chase animals in the forests that surround San Pedro.
However, as the residents of San Pedro turn away from an agricultural lifestyle and migrate to cities, the chiflido is not as needed.
The Mexican government hasn't done much to rescue this tradition either, unlike Spain, which has invested heavily in saving a rare whistle language used in the Canary Islands.
Currently there is no program to teach the chiflido in the local school. And women don't practice the whistle language because locals consider it improper for females to whistle.
"Young men can do some whistling, but it's a weak form of whistling that goes no longer than 30 feet," Flores said.
"I am afraid this tradition is going to disappear."
But there is some hope.
See the above video for more on this unique whistle language, and two young people who are actually using it.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Proyectos ecològicos a bajo costo para preservar Zipolite, Mazunte y Puerto Angel...o si te interesa participar en la construcciòn y aprendizaje de una ecoaldea en Zipolite comunicate....
Proyectos ecològicos a bajo costo para preservar Zipolite, Mazunte y Puerto Angel...o si te interesa participar en la construcciòn y aprendizaje de una ecoaldea en Zipolite comunicate....
Green projects at low cost to preserve Zipolite, Mazunte and PuertoAngel ... or if you are interested in participating in building and learning in an ecovillage Zipolite comunicate ....,es
Green projects at low cost to preserve Zipolite, Mazunte and PuertoAngel ... or if you are interested in participating in building and learning in an ecovillage Zipolite comunicate ....,es
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Valentina Degan los esperamos con el SUSHI en el RESTAURANT-BAR "La PasiOn" de DOMINGO a JUEVES !!! no falten !!! ...y Mojito 2 X 50 pesos !!!!
los esperamos con el SUSHI en el RESTAURANT-BAR "La PasiOn" de DOMINGO a JUEVES !!! no falten !!! ...y Mojito 2 X 50 pesos !!!!
REHABILITÁCIÓS PROGRAM MEXIKÓBAN
Published on Jan 21, 2014
Elnézést hogy spanyolul beszélnek és angol feliratos. nem forditottam le, mert a képek magukért beszélnek. Ha valaki szeretne a programban részt venni, jobb ha beszél spanyolul, csak a repülőjegyet kell megvegye, cserébe ingyen szállást és étkezést biztósitanak. Sok svéd fiatal jön erre a programra, nagyrészük megbánja a körülmények miatt. Ezt csak azért közöltem ha valakit érdekel, utána ne engem hibáztasson hogy az igazságot elhallgattam, he he he
Piña Palmera egy rehabilitációs és oktatási központ a fogyatékos gyermekek és felnőttek számára. Ez egy privát jótékonysági szervezet, amely 1980 óta létezik, és a jótékonyságra feliratkozott több mint ötezer ember. Legtöbbje a személyzetnek önkéntes. Támogatója a svéd jótékonysági intézet, és nem áll kapcsolatban semmiféle politikai vagy vallási csoporttal. Jelenleg mintegy 350 ember élvezi a programot.
Piña Palmera egy rehabilitációs és oktatási központ a fogyatékos gyermekek és felnőttek számára. Ez egy privát jótékonysági szervezet, amely 1980 óta létezik, és a jótékonyságra feliratkozott több mint ötezer ember. Legtöbbje a személyzetnek önkéntes. Támogatója a svéd jótékonysági intézet, és nem áll kapcsolatban semmiféle politikai vagy vallási csoporttal. Jelenleg mintegy 350 ember élvezi a programot.
Monday, January 20, 2014
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