- Joined
- Feb 13, 2013
- Messages
- 1,575
Guys it's not often that I make a top-shelf mistake but when I do...it's usually a painful reckoning.
I'm headed to Kotzebue next week for a long river adventure, and my pilot informed me that airline flights have been missing bags or delaying them for backhaul due to whatever reason they wanna claim, so as usual I pack and ship ALL my equipment, food, fly fishing, survival gear...everything 4 people need for a 10-day float via AK Air Cargo Goldstreak at least 8 days ahead of time. Been doing this for nearly 30 years BTW.
So due to time on the ground being short when we land in Kotz, I packed and shipped my gear a week early so it reaches Kotz in time for our arrival and decided for Bush convenience to include contraband in my kit, which included embarrassing stuff like bug spray and PAM spray, 3 pints of booze, a small raft repair kit with a small can of glue, and my 10mm. No I didn't declare any of it because they wouldn't let me ship the important hazmat nor would I be able to buy in Kotzebue before heading into the field. So I chanced the shipment and they found the Hazmat then searched everything until all was discovered. They immediately confiscated my entire 400-lbs of cargo and my firearm, poored out the booze (apparently) and have to report the violation according to some HazMat and FAA regulation.
NOW comes the pain and the lesson for y'all:
Mistake #1: Don't risk hazmat or alcohol going to the Bush. While weed and alcohol is legal within the state, federal standards are radical. Local village policy also dictates if and how alcohol can enter the village. In Kotz you have to contact the liquor dispensary and buy an annual permit to buy or transport booze. The permit is cost prohibitive if you don't live there and use it more often than once or twice per season, but it's illegal to transport a small amount of spirits without that local permit. Then you have to declare and show permit at the AK Air agent counter.
Mistake #2: DO NOT walk away from the counter or exit the building BEFORE your cargo is screened by the Cargo agents. I did not wait for the screening and my gear was locked up in buearocracy immediately. There is a rule that AK Air Cargo cannot confiscate your gear until they have legal possession of it, which starts when you leave the building after checking in your gear. It may take 30-min or more to wait for the screening but insist that you want to be present when they screen your bags so that in the event they find anything, you are still legally in possession and they must simply refuse to ship items and return them to you. Problem solved if you are standing there, problem compounded when you are not.
ALL of my hunting and fishing and camping equipment are now in locked storage until two agencies respond to the AK Air agent's report, which they claim will take 2 weeks to SEVERAL months. If that doesn't give ya pause for alarm...I now have to buy or borrow all that gear anew lest I have nothing to hunt and survive with the rest of Alaska's season.
I could go on and on about the woes of this rookie mistake, but if any silver lining exists here it is with what I learned from Mistake #2. If you're traveling to AK this season or shipping cargo ahead of your travels, please take note of my recent errors and prevent the costly delays and aggravating setbacks I'm dealing with now.
LB
I'm headed to Kotzebue next week for a long river adventure, and my pilot informed me that airline flights have been missing bags or delaying them for backhaul due to whatever reason they wanna claim, so as usual I pack and ship ALL my equipment, food, fly fishing, survival gear...everything 4 people need for a 10-day float via AK Air Cargo Goldstreak at least 8 days ahead of time. Been doing this for nearly 30 years BTW.
So due to time on the ground being short when we land in Kotz, I packed and shipped my gear a week early so it reaches Kotz in time for our arrival and decided for Bush convenience to include contraband in my kit, which included embarrassing stuff like bug spray and PAM spray, 3 pints of booze, a small raft repair kit with a small can of glue, and my 10mm. No I didn't declare any of it because they wouldn't let me ship the important hazmat nor would I be able to buy in Kotzebue before heading into the field. So I chanced the shipment and they found the Hazmat then searched everything until all was discovered. They immediately confiscated my entire 400-lbs of cargo and my firearm, poored out the booze (apparently) and have to report the violation according to some HazMat and FAA regulation.
NOW comes the pain and the lesson for y'all:
Mistake #1: Don't risk hazmat or alcohol going to the Bush. While weed and alcohol is legal within the state, federal standards are radical. Local village policy also dictates if and how alcohol can enter the village. In Kotz you have to contact the liquor dispensary and buy an annual permit to buy or transport booze. The permit is cost prohibitive if you don't live there and use it more often than once or twice per season, but it's illegal to transport a small amount of spirits without that local permit. Then you have to declare and show permit at the AK Air agent counter.
Mistake #2: DO NOT walk away from the counter or exit the building BEFORE your cargo is screened by the Cargo agents. I did not wait for the screening and my gear was locked up in buearocracy immediately. There is a rule that AK Air Cargo cannot confiscate your gear until they have legal possession of it, which starts when you leave the building after checking in your gear. It may take 30-min or more to wait for the screening but insist that you want to be present when they screen your bags so that in the event they find anything, you are still legally in possession and they must simply refuse to ship items and return them to you. Problem solved if you are standing there, problem compounded when you are not.
ALL of my hunting and fishing and camping equipment are now in locked storage until two agencies respond to the AK Air agent's report, which they claim will take 2 weeks to SEVERAL months. If that doesn't give ya pause for alarm...I now have to buy or borrow all that gear anew lest I have nothing to hunt and survive with the rest of Alaska's season.
I could go on and on about the woes of this rookie mistake, but if any silver lining exists here it is with what I learned from Mistake #2. If you're traveling to AK this season or shipping cargo ahead of your travels, please take note of my recent errors and prevent the costly delays and aggravating setbacks I'm dealing with now.
LB