henrus
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- Jun 23, 2016
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So a bit of a odd one but as the title suggests, is insect repellent/spray really banned on Qantas group airlines?
The back story... As many of you would be well aware, departures from most airports to Australia (except a few countries like NZ/US/SIN/JP) has a second liquids check right at the departure gate mainly to check for anything over 100ml.
A couple of days ago travelling from Bali (on a Jetstar flight) they were doing this check and had a print out of the Qantas dangerous goods page. I was travelling with someone who had their aerogard spary (photo of item below) taken off them because it's apparently banned as a "Qantas dangerous good"
Now on the Qantas website it does indeed list insect sprays but the picture implies to me that it's more aerosol insect sprays (the sort of thing you'd use to kill bugs around the house)
Was this a case of misunderstanding of the Qantas good dangerous goods rule or is this actually the case (if so I'd be guilty of taking the above aerogard product on other flights before and I'm sure many others are as well).
Looking at other airlines like Air New Zealand, American Airlines, Singapore Airlines, Virgin Australia all have dangerous good polices but instead list "insecticides" instead of insect spray.
The back story... As many of you would be well aware, departures from most airports to Australia (except a few countries like NZ/US/SIN/JP) has a second liquids check right at the departure gate mainly to check for anything over 100ml.
A couple of days ago travelling from Bali (on a Jetstar flight) they were doing this check and had a print out of the Qantas dangerous goods page. I was travelling with someone who had their aerogard spary (photo of item below) taken off them because it's apparently banned as a "Qantas dangerous good"
Now on the Qantas website it does indeed list insect sprays but the picture implies to me that it's more aerosol insect sprays (the sort of thing you'd use to kill bugs around the house)
Was this a case of misunderstanding of the Qantas good dangerous goods rule or is this actually the case (if so I'd be guilty of taking the above aerogard product on other flights before and I'm sure many others are as well).
Looking at other airlines like Air New Zealand, American Airlines, Singapore Airlines, Virgin Australia all have dangerous good polices but instead list "insecticides" instead of insect spray.
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