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Flights and walking poles a no-no

Caminando

Veteran Member
I was unable to take my walking pole on as cabin luggage with Ryanair from SDC to Madrid. It has been said on the forum that there was no problem here, but I had to dump mine.

The only way they do it is as hold luggage. 40 euros.

I wasnt a happy bunny. I´ll go back to cutting a stick next time.
 
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I think the general consensus on the forum with Ryanair is that if the walking sticks are collapsed and contained in the rucksack there isn't a problem. That is my most recent experience with them.
 
Yeah, how did they know you had them? Was it the airline or security that made you check them? Just curious for future travels. I'm looking at a pair of Diamondback collapsible poles that are carbon fiber, super light and fold very compactly to fit in my pack.
 
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€46,-
My walking pole was collapsed, in three sections, and invisible in the rucsac.The Xray machine showed it and they told me I couldnt take it.

I have the feeling that they are not always like this and it depends on who's on duty at the time.

Nevertheless thats what happened with me.

Its a risk.
 
With Ryanair it is always a bit hit and miss; depending which airport/country/staff they are more or less strict. In Milan they let me take 18kg of hand luaggage (3 more than allowed) without problem whereas in Frankfurt I had to pay extra because I was 0.3kg over the limit.

For this summer I got a doctors note telling them that I need hiking poles - not sure if its going to make a difference but it might work.
 
I can understand the drive not to have checked baggage on Ryanair and airlines with a similar fare structure, but most aviation safety/security agencies around the world require walking poles and ski poles to be carried in the hold. Where a justification is given, it relates to the potential for certain sporting equipment to be used as a weapon.

Given the wealth of material on the safety/security agency sites and individual airlines own conditions of carriage web pages that clearly state this position, I am a little surprised that anyone would try to carry poles on as cabin baggage. Perhaps a good reminder that the advice on the forum needs to be checked with other, more authoritative, sources if the issue is important.

sun is shining - I am sure we would all be interested in how successful you are with your medical certificate approach. My mind has already turned to the comic sketch of the airport scene where the protagonist is trying to explain that they cannot proceed to the aircraft without the aid of their walking sticks when they clearly intend to walk for days on end along the Camino.
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
As stated on another post, I took my super deluxe homemade screw together bamboo walking pole aboard Ryanair in my pack without trouble, probably because, being wooden, it didn't register on the Xray. As it happened, I forgot the pole at Betanzos, but in the event found I got on a lot better without it, so that problem won't arise again...
 
---comic sketch of the airport scene where the protagonist is trying to explain that they cannot proceed to the aircraft without the aid of their walking sticks when they clearly intend to walk for days on end along the Camino.
:D LOL
 
AGW1 said:
---comic sketch of the airport scene where the protagonist is trying to explain that they cannot proceed to the aircraft without the aid of their walking sticks when they clearly intend to walk for days on end along the Camino.
:D LOL

yes the stupidity of it all
& defend your -self against mad dogs that doesn't exist either. it's a mad world!
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.

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