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bringing fish on a plane
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 14:58
by jimmyB
Has anyone put a bag of fish in your carry-on luggage? What if you go to a shop while you are on travels and see something you have to own? What happens now with the restrictions on liquids?
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 15:05
by Chrysichthys
Well, having a live fish proves that the liquid is just water. (Unless the airline is really paranoid).
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 15:26
by bronzefry
Although I agree that the live fish is proof, the airlines and security ARE that paranoid and won't see it that way. I would think shipping would be the better, albeit more expensive option. It would be a shame to have to leave a fish at the airport.
Amanda
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 15:59
by MatsP
Packed correctly (i.e. polystyrene insulated box and possibly heat-packs) it should be OK to take live fish as checked luggage. You may have to go through some extra steps in the process of checking it in [like take it to a "special" section of luggage handling, as it's fragile].
Check with the airline before you purchase the fish tho', and make sure you get the answer in writing with an emergency number you can call when you're at the "remote" airport trying to get back home.
Also bear in mind that international travel is a different story, you may well need many different types of documents to export/import fish, and the bureucracy involved may involved multi-week waits for the paperwork to clear someones desk... Using professional trans-shippers will work here, but it'll cost... No such thing as a "free-lunch", as usual.
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Mats
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 16:06
by Reginator
Any idea how that would work within the EU? I've often thought of going to Germany/Netherlands/UK to buy fish and bring them back to spain, but have no idea if it is possible without a tonne of paperwork....
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 16:11
by MatsP
I would be surprised if you need any special paperwork for "tropical" fish (i.e. fish that will not normally survive in our natural environment, and not listed on the "prohibited species list" here in England for example).
But I'm not sure.
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Mats
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 16:29
by jimmyB
The problem with the paperwork is that I would buy the fish on a whim as i see them on a trip, I would not know ahead of time what i was going to buy. It would be a spur of the moment purchase decision based on what I see available. I certainly could not plan weeks in advance.
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 16:33
by MatsP
Yes, I understand that. But asking the airline to confirm that you are allowed (or not) based on your favourite one or two airlines would give you an idea of whether it's allowed or not. Then you carry the letter together with your travel document when you go traveling, and assuming you go on the same airline as you've got documents from, it should work...
Obviously doesn't work for international, but it should be OK for within the country...
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Mats
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 17:12
by jimmyB
I am thinking about exploring an angle based on my "special dietary requirements".
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 17:17
by MatsP
jimmyB wrote:I am thinking about exploring an angle based on my "special dietary requirements".
What, you can only eat live fish?
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Mats
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 18:04
by WhitePine
To bring fish back in the USA, you need them inspected by a us fish and game officer. They will normally let you come through with a couple of fish. Any more than 3 or 4 fish, they will want to see an import license. Make sure to mention that they are for personal use and NEVER mention that you might breed them. They get pretty testy if you mention breeding. It was a pita to get any information... you are better off just calling your local field office or the office nearest to the major airport you come back to.
http://www.fws.gov/offices/
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 22:59
by pictus_man_77
Just make sure you dont put those M*****F***ing snakes on that M*****F***ing Plane!
I hope someone gets this joke.
Otherwise its pointless.
Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 23:25
by Dave Rinaldo
pictus_man_77 wrote:
Otherwise its pointless.
Posted: 25 Aug 2006, 00:09
by medaka
Just make sure you dont put those M*****F***ing snakes on that M*****F***ing Plane!
I hope someone gets this joke.
Otherwise its pointless.
Yes, very Droll!!

Posted: 26 Aug 2006, 14:28
by bronzefry
The sequel:
Fish on a Plane Is Samuel L. available?
Amanda
Posted: 29 Aug 2006, 21:17
by George
I and friends have put fish in breather bags in checked luggage. So far no problems. I would think there would be less problems in US domestic but we were international coming into the US. If US fish and wild life is there and sees the fish maybe you would have a problem but so far the fish have been ignored.
George
Posted: 30 Aug 2006, 04:59
by Barbie
US Domestic flights are now restricting any liquid at all in your carry on luggage. I would have to say that even I would be leery of trying to charm my way through the security check points with bags of fish right now.
Barbie
Posted: 09 Jan 2007, 00:32
by f3mg
Allow me to pull up to this very interesting topic...
I, as many others, go often to Germany (the best shops in the EU, as far as I know) so I wonder lots of us must have thought about it.
Has anyone done it inside the EU? Carry in, or checked the question is - has someone done it?
Francisco
PS: And, as someone already noted, paperwork is out of question... I just go there 2/3 days, and I'm lucky if I end up having that 2 spare hours to sneak into the closest shop, let alone think in bureacracy...