the smart diver’s c.y.a. strategy
Lost dive bags are a traveling
diver's worst nightmare. Luggagerelated
complaints lodged with the
Department of Transportation are
soaring, according to Condé Nast
Traveler. In August 2002, baggage
claims represented 6.9% of all grievances
against airlines. By August
2004, luggage-related claims had tripled
to 20 percent of all complaints.
" ...his Sherwood regulator had been smashed, but
American Airlines told him it would not have been
covered since his soft bag didn't show any damage." |
Arriving at your destination
without your gear can affect your
entire trip, as Pat Cisar (Alberta,
Canada) found on a trip to Roatan,
Honduras. hough Continental had
assured Cisar that a 50 minute layover
in Houston was sufficient time to
transfer his luggage, "my dive bags
did not make the change." However,
on Roatan, an Anthony's Key Resort
staffer retrieved the bags the next
day. Cisar says "the resort let me use
dive equipment at no cost to ensure
I did not miss dives (only difference
really was the dive shop stuff was
new)."
When Air France failed to put
Carlo Casana's dive bag on a flight
from Milan to Mexico City, he didn't
have time to wait for the next flight
because he had to fly to Cabo San
Lucas to join a Solmar V cruise. He
hurried around Cabo and found gear
to rent for the week trip.
Aric Davis (Newport, RI) arrived
at San Pedro Sula on American
Airlines, but his dive bag didn't. AA
in Honduras promised to call him
soon, then a week later faxed him
a document for filing a claim. He
returned it, but never heard back. A
week later, Davis called AA in Texas
and was told that they had no record
of his missing gear. "Luckily," he says,
"Pura Vida Resort has great rental equipment." Days later Davis went
to the Roatan airport to change his
flight and stopped by the customs
office and there was his bag, with his
business card in plain view. An agent
told him it had arrived a week previously
and was "surprised" no one had notified him.
So, report your claims for missing
bags at the airport upon arrival
and try to enjoy the vacation. If your
baggage doesn't arrive and you can
get back to the airport to check, do
so. There may be little incentive in a
sleepy airport to track you down.
Sometimes resort or live-aboard
staff can intercede with local officials.
When Deb Frost (Tiburon, CA)
arrived in Pt. Moresby, PNG, her luggage
didn't. Frost enlisted help from
Golden Dawn staff who knew how to
keep after the Air Nuigini agent to
ensure her baggage got priority handling.
When it arrived two days late, a Golden Dawn rep picked it up at
the airport and brought it out to the
boat.
To Check or Not to Check
Opinions vary about whether to
check bags through or transfer them
yourself. Ken Knezick, president of
Island Dreams Travel (Houston, TX)
advises: "When interline connections
are involved, the safest route is to
collect one's bags from the baggage
carousel, haul them to the next airline
and check them in yourself. This eliminates one black hole along the
way." Knezick adds, "If a bag still fails
to arrive as expected, there will be no
question which airline had charge of
it."
But Cindi LaRaia, who runs Dive
Discovery in San Rafael, CA, believes
that baggage handling has improved.
She suggests that her clients check
baggage through to their final destination,
but leaves it to each individual
to decide.
Michael Hofman (San Francisco)
says he has had good luck throughchecking
his bags. "We saved an
hour or two [of waiting in long
lines] by checking our luggage at
San Francisco on the way to LA for
connections in the South Pacific." To
conform to the 44-50 lb. international
weight limits, Hofman split his stuff
into two lightweight duffels and "an
old-fashioned fold-up luggage cart
that held 100 lbs."
But if your baggage is checked
through, other problems can occur. A
delay in Lori Rocheleau's November
United flight from Boston caused
her to miss her Air Pacific connection
from Los Angeles to Fiji. She was
unable to get her luggage "because
it was checked through and the Air
Pacific counter was closed. They had no flights for three days." So, Rocheleau (Paxton, MA) "flew to
Honolulu, which we paid for, to meet
an Air Pacific flight to Fiji. Air Pacific
didn't charge us for the flight change
and the Beqa Lagoon Resort kindly
extended our stay." They also lent
and rented her dive gear and did her
laundry.
With carry-on luggage seriously
limited in coach class, a traveling
diver must consider carefully what
he carries aboard. There is only one
rule: carry on your pharmaceuticals
and anything you must have once you
land. After that, consider your destination.
Most land operations have
plenty of rental gear, so pack it all, except your prescription mask and
perhaps your computer. Your regulator
will not get damaged if packed
carefully in a dive bag, so pack it too.
Carry on enough "emergency
supplies" to survive at least 24 hours
without your bags. That means a set
of tropical clothes, including sandals,
your bathing suit, and toiletries you
cannot purchase along the way.
If you're a photographer and
headed to a liveaboard where delayed
luggage may never catch up to you,
you may want to get as much photo
gear into the passenger cabin as
you can. You can usualy expect your
stuff to catch up with you in the Caribbean, Fiji, and similar places,
but if you're off on the Bilikiki or the Manthiri or some other distant
liveaboard, there is an outside chance
that what you carry on the flight is all
you'll carry on the boat.
Smart live-aboard travelers do
arrive at least 24 hours before the
boat departs, in case there is a late
connection or a missed flight (many
live-aboards won't wait for you).
That's usually enough time for your
bags to catch up with you, so you
don't have to scramble to get outfitted.
And it gives you a head start wiping
out jet lag.
If what you carry on is critical,
spring for business or first class.
You're allowed at least two carry-ons,
maybe a small third one if you smile
a lot.
Trip Insurance
While it's no consolation when
your dive boat is in the middle of
the Indian Ocean while your gear is
still on land, you can generally get
compensated. But, even travel and
baggage insurance may not be satisfactory.
Flying home from the Bahamas,
Warren Platz's luggage didn't arrive
at LaGuardia until two days later.
Platz was carrying American Express trip and baggage insurance but says
he "couldn't buy even a clean pair of
underwear on them because there
was no 'delay' (as opposed to lost
or damaged) coverage on the way home."
Mike Elsner, who runs Blue Ocean
Divers in Binghamton, NY., did not
have his luggage upon arriving late in
Philadelphia on an Air Jamaica flight
from Montego Bay. Missing items
included his Inspiration rebreather,
open circuit equipment, dive computer,
gas analyzer, canister lights,
and other gear. Elsner's luggage was finally returned about two months
later. Meanwhile, he'd been forced
to purchase another rebreather to
complete his instruction commitments.
"This matter is not settled
with Air Jamaica," says Elsner, noting,
"I incurred costs of about $10,000."
Damaged Goods
Airlines don't make it easy to get
restitution for damaged bags or their
contents. First, they normally require
that you file a report within 24 hours
of arrival. They limit their lost or
damaged luggage liability to $2500/
passenger, with plenty of exclusions.
And note this: besides excluding
jewelry, cash, documents and other valuables, they generally exclude photographic equipment and electronic
gear as well
Richard Morrison (Salina, KS)
missed American Airlines' 24-hour
reporting period, because he didn't
schedule a dive until the third day of
his Cabo San Lucas trip, so he didn't
discover that his Sherwood regulator
had been "totally smashed" until it
was too late. AA's baggage office later told him it would not have been covered
anyway since his soft bag didn't
show any damage.
Think Ahead
So, when you're packing for your
next trip, think carefully about your
immediate needs at your destination.
Learn ahead of time what dive gear
you can buy or rent on the other end,
and pack accordingly. Most likely, all your gear and luggage will arrive with
you and intact. If it doesn't, at least
you can get through the first two days
without having to walk around in a
borrowed bathing suit and wingtips.
In the next issue, we'll look at
some diver problems and abuses
occurring at security checkpoints,
and describe what you can do about
them.