packing help!

pixie1115

New Member
Ok, we are leaving in 3 days and I started to pack finally. Can I bring glass jars in my checked bag? Can I bring food in the carry on at all? How about in the checked bag?

Can I use our smallest suitcase as a carry on? It is about the size of a child's suitcase if you know what I mean?!
 

kstella

Member
The airline should have no problem with glass jars in your checked bags. Just make sure they are well padded because luggage handlers aren't exactly gentle! Yes, you can bring snacks in your carry on, just no liquids. It sounds like the size suitcase you are thinking of using for a carry on should be just fine.

Have a great trip! I have to resist the urge every day to start packing, but we don't leave for another month and 1 day.:(
 
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marine1

New Member
um glass jars they may have a problem with that if theres any liquid in it. read this ok. this happened awhile back but still relevant.

Reagan National Airport Security Screeners Threaten to Arrest Mom Over Son's Sippy Cup

Tuesday, June 19, 2007
foxnews_story.gif

This is a partial transcript of "The Big Story With John Gibson," June 18, 2007, that has been edited for clarity.
JOHN GIBSON, HOST: The "Big Outrage": "They took my son's sippy cup!" Airport security screeners confiscate a lot of carry-on items that could pose a threat to passengers like pocket knives or scissors, but does allegedly taking a toddler's beloved sippy cup and threatening to arrest his mother over it go way too far? "Big Story" correspondent Douglas Kennedy has the dramatic tape of this airport saga.
DOUGLAS KENNEDY, BIG STORY CORRESPONDENT: Yeah, John, airport security screeners are supposed to keep our skies safe, but critics say they're supposed to be safe from terrorists, not from sippy cups.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
KENNEDY (VOICE-OVER): She was stopped by airport security, grabbed by the arm and surrounded by officers. But this woman wasn't bringing on box cutters. She simply had a sippy cup for her baby boy.
MICHAEL BOYD, AVIATION SECURITY EXPERT: What, again, it brings up the fact we really don't have professional security.
(Story continues below)
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KENNEDY: The incident occurred at Reagan National Airport when former Secret Service agent Monica Emmerson attempted to get through security, her 19-month-old son carrying a plastic cup with water.
BOYD: Regardless of the circumstances, what the Transportation Security Administration just did is corner a woman and an infant with a sippy cup. That doesn't make me feel real safe.
KENNEDY: TSA rules restrict containers more than 3 ounces of liquid, and Emmerson admits her son's sippy had 4 ounces. Still, TSA critics say the rules are sometimes enforced arbitrarily and that TSA security personnel oftentimes overreact. Mike Boyd is an aviation security expert.
BOYD: The problem is we really don't have security. We're looking for things like sippy cups. We're not looking for terrorists, that's the real issue. So we have thousands of people in white shirts screening people looking for sippy cups and lip gloss and not trying to make us any safer, that's the main problem. The system's broken.
KENNEDY: In its official report, the TSA says the sippy cup had 6 to 8 ounces of water and that Emmerson called the prohibition "stupid" before, the report said, pouring the water on the floor. Emmerson says she was trying to open the top to dispose of the water when she accidentally spilled it out of nervousness. In either case, the TSA detained her, making her scrub the floor while her boy cries and runs away, causing them both to miss the flight.
BOYD: What we have to do is have professional security and we won't have professional security until we put professionals in charge.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
KENNEDY: Boyd says airports need professional security teams and TSA officials need to be replaced with security experts. Until that happens, John, he says airport security will remain an embarrassment.
GIBSON: This one ought to be a real embarrassment. I mean, that's a former Secret Service agent, right?
KENNEDY: Yes, that's right.
GIBSON: She's not exactly the one to go around challenging authority, you would think.
KENNEDY: They say she, you know, she acted like she was a big shot and tried to flash her badge. But, you know, in the end this is woman who's carrying a sippy cup.
GIBSON: And they made her clean up the floor?
KENNEDY: And they made her scrub that floor while her kid is crying like 20 feet away.
GIBSON: Douglas Kennedy, thank you.
Content and Programming Copyright 2007 FOX News Network, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Transcription Copyright 2007 Voxant, Inc. (www.voxant.com), which takes sole responsibility for the accuracy of the transcription. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No license is granted to the user of this material except for the user's personal or internal use and, in such case, only one copy may be printed, nor shall user use any material for commercial purposes or in any fashion that may infringe upon FOX News Network, LLC'S and Voxant, Inc.'s copyrights or other proprietary rights or interests in the material. This is not a legal transcript for purposes of litigation.
 
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Monty

Brilliant...and Canadian
In the Parks
No
A Secret Service agent [or former one] should have the sense to know better. Any terrorist wishing to get a quantity of liquids onto an aircraft would know if they started allowing "sippy cups" because it seems silly to ban them and would start using that as a methodology. I read that article differently... She did challenge authourity by commenting that "the prohibition was 'stupid'" and then whether on purpose or by accident spilled the contents on the floor [on the one hand she's a Secret Service agent who wouldn't challenge authourity, but on the other she's distraught and nervous and can't open a sippy cup? Gimme a break!].

Sounds to me like they should detain her for being deliberately disruptive at a security checkpoint, perhaps a year or two in jail would teach her that security is not a laughing matter [since she clearly didn't learn that lesson in the Secret Service].

OT, but the sippy cup incident has nothing to do with bring glass bottles in checked luggage. :brick::brick:
 
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figment3258

New Member
I believe you can bring glass jars in your checked luggage. I know you can bring glass baby jars of food on in your carry on to. as for the size of the suit case as long as it can fit over head you have no problem
 
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Nemo14

Well-Known Member
Just a word of caution about kid's cups. At the Orlando airport last spring we were behind a couple who had purchased a child's double-walled cup - the kind that has glitter and what-not floating in a cartoon- themed wall. The TSA agent would not allow them to take the cup on the plane, and they ended up throwing it away right there as their little girl sobbed. :rolleyes:
 
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ThinkTink721

Well-Known Member
Ok, we are leaving in 3 days and I started to pack finally. Can I bring glass jars in my checked bag? Can I bring food in the carry on at all? How about in the checked bag?

Can I use our smallest suitcase as a carry on? It is about the size of a child's suitcase if you know what I mean?!
Just make sure there are no liquids in the glass container.
I believe you can take food, as long as it's not liquid.
Yes, you should be able to use a small suitcase as your carry on.

Have a great trip!

:wave:
 
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MichWolv

Born Modest. Wore Off.
Premium Member
Ok, we are leaving in 3 days and I started to pack finally. Can I bring glass jars in my checked bag? Can I bring food in the carry on at all? How about in the checked bag?

Can I use our smallest suitcase as a carry on? It is about the size of a child's suitcase if you know what I mean?!

I'm on planes about twice a week, so I think I've seen everything.

Glass jars in checked luggage are fine, even if they hold liquids. Glass jars in carry-on baggage are fine as long as they don't hold liquids. If they hold liquids, they're out.

Food in carry-ons is OK, so long as it is solid. Potato chips OK. Hamburger OK. Crackers OK. Salad OK, but dressing not OK. Pudding not OK. And drinks are not OK. You get the idea. Note that once you clear security, you can purchase drinks and other things and bring them on the plane.

Baby food is an exception if you have a baby with you -- even though it isn't solid, it should be OK in reasonable amounts, but some TSA agents will force you to throw it out anyways. Baby formula should also be an exception, but some TSA agents will argue. Juice or milk for a small child is NOT OK. Only baby stuff.

As for the size of your carry-on, you should be fine as long as you're on a full-size jet. The overhead compartments can easily accomodate that size. Remember, though, you're usually only allowed 1 carry-on per person, plus a purse, briefcase, etc. If you are flying a Regional Jet, the overheads may be so small that you cannot bring your little suitcase on board.
 
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Phonedave

Well-Known Member
ok so here is the deal-we want to bring back sand, water and shells in glass spaghetti jars in our checked luggage, is taht ok?


That should be fine, but .......

Why not go to a camping store and get some wide mouthed plastic bottles with good lids. Not the cheap rubbermaid/tupperware ones. Some good Nalgene bottles. Should cost you about $6 - $7 each. A small price to pay to ensure that your souviners from the beach stay seperate from your underwear.

I would lay good money that those spaghetti sauce jars will either break, or at least leak.

And by packing that stuff, there is a good chance your bag will be searched, so either dont lock it, use cable ties, or use TSA locks, otherwise they may be cut off.


-dave
 
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shoppingnut

Active Member
A Secret Service agent [or former one] should have the sense to know better. Any terrorist wishing to get a quantity of liquids onto an aircraft would know if they started allowing "sippy cups" because it seems silly to ban them and would start using that as a methodology. I read that article differently... She did challenge authourity by commenting that "the prohibition was 'stupid'" and then whether on purpose or by accident spilled the contents on the floor [on the one hand she's a Secret Service agent who wouldn't challenge authourity, but on the other she's distraught and nervous and can't open a sippy cup? Gimme a break!].

Sounds to me like they should detain her for being deliberately disruptive at a security checkpoint, perhaps a year or two in jail would teach her that security is not a laughing matter [since she clearly didn't learn that lesson in the Secret Service].

OT, but the sippy cup incident has nothing to do with bring glass bottles in checked luggage. :brick::brick:

When you have items you use everyday, you don't think about them in terms of being a prohibited item, your comment that she should have know better just because she was a former agent is unfair. So have you ever tried to get the cover of a sippy cup open while you're hands were shaking or trying to keep any eye on your child to make sure they don't run off since at this point the stroller probably was already folded and put through the scanner. I can see how it spilled. They had no right to make her clean the floor, I wouldn't have.

She didn't challenge authority, she expressed an opinion, it sounds to me that Castro is running the TSA. TSA agents like that should be immediately dismissed because it is clear they are on a powertrip and not protecting the interests of the taxpayers. How about they detain everyone who has a kid because they are deliberately dissruptive when they aren't being watched properly. Great, put someone in our already overcrowded jails and destroy a family for trivial reasons, last time I checked I stilled lived in the US and not Russia.

The fact is we are no safer today with the TSA than we were before 9/11.
 
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