I'm going to Whistler-Blackcombe to get some skiing in next week. Is there any benefit to shipping back home anything I purchase while there or bring it back in my luggage?
markcharltonOld enough to know better and still young enough not to care. My '71 Pantera
Not sure if you intended this to be answered north of the border, but it will likely be cheaper to carry stuff home. US border officials don't seem as tax-and-Duty-obsessed as Canadian ones are, and shipping will probably cost more than the "extra bag" fee unless you're talking about car doors or something.
I'm not sure there's all that much to buy in Whistler except ski-wear and drinks for ski-bunnies. Have fun and don't break a leg!
markcharltonOld enough to know better and still young enough not to care. My '71 Pantera
quote:
Originally posted by 5835: If what you buy will fit in a briefcase you are ok
...or in your checked baggage.
Are they still preventing anyone form reading a book or using the lav for the last hour? These rules are so pointless. All because somebody didn't bother to check the "no-fly" list.
Mark, Don't know about the "Final Hour" restrictions. I'll find out tomorrow. As one commentator said "If he had been whistling "Yankee Doodle" at the time, they'd probably prohibit that also". Typical knee-jerk reaction. I wonder how big a fortune I'm going to have to pay to check all my ski equipment? Looks like air travel may be going back to the old days where only the wealthy could afford it.
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