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Beer (rec.drink.beer) Discussing various aspects of that fine beverage referred to as beer. Including interesting beers and beer styles, opinions on tastes and ingredients, reviews of brewpubs and breweries & suggestions about where to shop.

Traveling with Beer



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 15-10-2003, 12:04 AM
Mohawk Brewing
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Default Traveling with Beer

Has any one had any experience taking home brew on an airplane?
I want to take a few bottles on my next trip..
TIA


  #2 (permalink)  
Old 15-10-2003, 12:08 AM
Bruce
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Default Traveling with Beer

Mohawk Brewing wrote:

Has any one had any experience taking home brew on an airplane?
I want to take a few bottles on my next trip..
TIA



I've travelled with beer (both in checked luggage as well as carry on)
plenty of times without any problems. You might have a problem with
security if you are packing unlabeled home brew (I had a friend that had
it confiscated not too long after 9/11)

Bruce
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 15-10-2003, 06:09 PM
Expletive Deleted
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Default Traveling with Beer



On Tue, 14 Oct 2003, it was written:

Has any one had any experience taking home brew on an airplane?
I want to take a few bottles on my next trip..


Not homebrew but I've brought home a box of commercial beer in bottles on
the plane before.
(went to a conference in Sarasota, FL, and stopped in at World of Beer in
Clearwater. box was loaded with beer and other stuff from a Caribbean
grocery that we can't get here, no problems at the airport)

  #4 (permalink)  
Old 16-10-2003, 01:01 AM
Douglas W. Hoyt
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Default Traveling with Beer

Has any one had any experience taking home brew on an airplane? I
want to take a few bottles on my next trip.

I was once flying back to Chicago from Europe, and the person next to me
brought a full 24-bottle crate of Leffe with her as carry-on. She said it
was her favorite beer. The flight attendants helped her carry and stow it.


  #5 (permalink)  
Old 16-10-2003, 03:14 PM
plutchak joel peter
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Default Traveling with Beer

Douglas W. Hoyt wrote:
Has any one had any experience taking home brew on an airplane? I

want to take a few bottles on my next trip.

I was once flying back to Chicago from Europe, and the person next to me
brought a full 24-bottle crate of Leffe with her as carry-on. She said it
was her favorite beer. The flight attendants helped her carry and stow it.


I've known some people who had problems with unlabeled,
self-capped homebrew being confiscated. Who knows what evil
substance they could have in those bottles? Of course, we
all know it'd be easy to recap a commercial bottle, so there
should be no difference, but I guess they don't pay airport
security people to think.
--
Joel Plutchak plutchak@[...] | Boneyard Union of Zymurgical Zealots

"I don't like beer. I tried it once and thought it was terrible."
- Overheard at a restaurant
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 16-10-2003, 04:51 PM
The Submarine Captain
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Default Traveling with Beer

plutchak joel peter wrote:

I've known some people who had problems with unlabeled,
self-capped homebrew being confiscated.

Never had this kind of trouble, yet qv. below...

Who knows what evil
substance they could have in those bottles? Of course, we
all know it'd be easy to recap a commercial bottle, so there
should be no difference, but I guess they don't pay airport
security people to think.

I'll second your point... last time I flew from London to Edinbugh, the
security lady threw a fit over a tiny pair of foldable scissors, of the
very blunt type, I had in my jacket pocket. I tried to ram into her wee
little head that her insisting I sent that back home was utterly
ridiculous, and that the only thing I could decently damage with those
was paper, but she held on firm to it. I then ventured further :

- BTW, you've noticed as well that my hand luggage contains a bottle of
beer. Now that's a dangerous weapon...
- Erm, no, bottles are not forbidden...
- But then it can obviously be turned in seconds into a dangerous
weapon... I could seriously hurt someone with that. You realise how
ridiculous your double standards are ?
- I'm only doing me job sir...
- Doing your job does not dispense you from using your brain, Madam...
....
and it went on on that mode for a few more minutes. Amazing logics,
isn't it ? All in the name of duty-free sales !

I finally got my bottle on board of the plane, and the Ileft the
scissors to this lady, arghuing that postage yould cost more than the
scissors... Yet NOBODY in airport security realised I had my Swiss Army
knife, along with my keys and purse (keys and coin nicely blurring the
x-ray image, thanks), in the side pocket (ie on top or bottom of the
x-ray image, whilst the person watching the screen tends to look in the
middle...) of my hand luggage all the time. ;o

Problem is with all this "war on terror" nonsense, security personel
tend to think that applying the rules by the book is the only way they
can save the world. Single-handed, of course. Bruce Willis Syndrome,
anyone ?
I strongly feel it's a sacred mission for any citizen to challenge this
kind of crap whenever encountered. ;o)))

On the other hand, there are some security agents of a more relaxed
kind... on the way back from Edinburgh to London, as I put my shoses
(whose metal eyelets tend to be beep whilst crossing the metal detector)
on the x-ray's conveyor belt, one of the security agents grinned and
said with a wink : " I think this gentleman flies too often..." )
Yes. It can also be done with a smile and a healthy dose of common sense.

Cheers !

Laurent

--
Warning : you may encounter French language beyond this point.

Un vent de démence souffle sur les alpages... Laissons souffler et abritons-nous...
(F'murrr)

Laurent Mousson, Berne, Switzerland


 




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