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[B129]Baggage Carry On Restrictions
by Susan Banks Sr, Sus
The rules of travel have varied so much in the last few years, with strict ordinances regarding air travel, questionable car searches that may vary in regulation from state to state, and the feeling of never really being ultimately sure what is appropriate or inappropriate in the travel universe any longer. In most cases, if you decide to fly the formerly affable skies, your airline or airport website will have an accurate and up to date list regarding what is okay and what is not okay regarding your luggage. As if packing for a trip wasnt difficult enough, now we all have to do it with cloudy and hazy regulations and a list we print out from the airlines.

The first rule of travel complacence is easy; dont try to thrust on a carry on that you know is not really a carry on. You will get yourself into the discouraging situation of trying to argue your way onto the plane with an outsized bag that just wont do. Youre not going to succeed. Once upon a time you would, but not anymore. Now, you will simply be forced to check it and risk being charged an additional fee for having too many baggage items. Plus, youre going to end up traveling without your usual band of comfort items that you could have had if you just scaled down into regulation sized carry on luggage. The simple fact is that there used to be joggle room, and now, there is none.

Most airlines restrict luggage by the length of the flight. A domestic flight may go for 2 pieces of baggage plus one carry one per person (sometimes including and sometimes excluding children under 3 years of age) while others limit the baggage content to one piece of checked luggage and one carry on. Additional pieces of baggage run anywhere from $50 to $200, depending on the airline and the size of the flight and while mess of miscellaneous stuff they dont release to the public. Airlines have been struggling since the disaster of 9-11. Some will make up the continued lost revenue anyway they can, including charging phenomenal fees for additional luggage. It is just cheaper to have your extra necessary luggage shipped, even overnighted, if you just cant do without it.

Foreign flights often hold the same code, two pieces of checked in baggage and one or two carry on pieces per person. Again, the child may not be granted such grace if they are particularly little. If you havent purchased a seat for your small child (which is legal up until the age of three) then dont expect to have them counted in the luggage count. No ticket, no luggage. Most people who are taking a long term trip out of the country, or a permanent trip out of the country, find this limit a little exasperating. However, from experience I can vouch for the frustration of arriving in a foreign country for the first time, negotiating language barriers and awkward gestures, while trying to lug around three hundred pounds of belongings packed carefully away in small and large luggage cases. Even with the help of carts on wheels (assuming the country you land in has them) eventually you have to hash out all of this material up a flight of steps or into a narrow passage. This can become a little more than merely tormenting. It can become downright risky. Again, the best thing to do if your baggage exceeds the international flight limit is ship everything that you can bear to part with in advance. Some regions take as long as four weeks to hand over your goods. If your trip is short, try consolidating. If you have to, acquire what you need to while youre there and then ship it back to your dwelling. Youre not likely to end up waiting helplessly for your underwear from Australia or your pajama bottoms from Costa Rica.

No matter how up to date or current you are regarding flight policy, always check in with the airline the day before you go. Policy changes dont always make it to the net in a rational length of time, and policy changes regarding luggage and especially carry on material can change in a heart beat. Its always better to show up with the latest information than to believe your experience from even just a few months earlier will still ring true. Hindrance at the airport is simply twice as frustrating as the same feeling somewhere else. Its written into the literature that way.
Susan Banks Sr has sinced written about articles on various topics from Vegetarian Diet, Modelling and Home Security. Susan is a regular contributing copywriter to Fuzing.com. This critique is brought to you in conjunction with from the. Susan Banks Sr's top article generates over 550000 views. to your Favourites.
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