Kongo travels more than 200,000 miles on domestic flights within the USA along with a few passport-stamping expeditions overseas each year. As a very frequent flier, recurrent car renter, and serial hotel guest he has picked up a few useful tips and pet peeves about navigating airports, airplanes, rental car counters, hotel check-ins, and getting around in strange places.
This will be the first of a series of blogs about how to behave in today’s travel jungle that will help you enjoy a happier, healthier, and more rewarding travel experience and contribute to world peace in general.
This first in this series is an airport “how to” because most of us start our journeys at the airport. Here we go.
Check in and boarding passes. Hello everyone, it’s 2012 already! Check in online and print your boarding pass at home or at your hotel (every hotel now has a free computer for printing out boarding passes) and avoid the lines at the ticket counters. Better yet, follow Kongo’s lead and get one of those nifty apps on your smart phone and skip the whole printed pass thing. (Although Kongo does have a paper boarding pass backup in case his iPhone dies, gets lost, the wireless signal goes south, or the scanner at the TSA checkpoint is on the fritz.
Airport security procedures change frequently. It has something to do with keeping the bad guys off guard so if you don’t fly that often check the TSA website for the latest rules about prohibited items, traveling with children, medications, identification, liquids, disabilities, and pat downs. Being clueless is no way to go through life and those standing behind you in the security line will appreciate your savvy.
Speaking of Security Lines. You’re probably going to have to go through a scanner. Get over it. If you don’t want some stranger looking at your “naked body” (as if most of us have a body someone really wants to drool over) you can opt for a pat down which will add about five minutes to your passage through the lines and cause everyone to look at you strangely. Please avoid being a drama queen (or king) and talking about “junk” or the fact that you stormed the beaches in Grenada and should be exempt, or protesting that grandmothers shouldn’t be humiliated like this. Rules are rules are they weren’t thinking of you specifically when they came up with what we have to go through now. Remember that your goal is to get on that airplane not to tilt windmills with the poor TSA agent who is only doing what we pay her to do.
Along those lines, joking about bombs (yes, Kongo has heard these in a security line), deep sighs, eye rolling, mutterings, cursing the system, complaining about the government, and other acts of general rudeness are not only unbecoming and probably contrary to your general nature (Kongo always assumes most travelers are nice people underneath all that bravado and posturing) they can get you into a lot of trouble and could prevent you from getting to where you want to go.
When you get scanned you will have to take off your coats and jackets, shoes, fashion scarves, most jewelry (including watches), belts, and remove EVERYTHING from your pockets. Kongo has read about women who have stripped down to their underwear as some sort of protest against TSA but alas, has never been able to actually see one of these…except for one weird event shortly after 9/11 at the Providence RI airport but that’s another blog entry altogether.
Keep the security line in mind when you consider the fashion statement you’re going to make on your travels. Knee-high lace up boots may be exactly the look you want to give to your boyfriend waiting anxiously at your final destination but it’s really going to annoy those gentle travelers behind you. Slip on shoes is the way to go here. Easy off, easy on, and you keep the line moving. Suspenders (especially those nerdy clip on kind) won’t fly here. Bangles, body jewelry, fancy necklaces, and other fashion accessories should be stowed safely in a little zip up bag you can put in your roll aboard or brief case and don on the OTHER SIDE of the security line. And for men with certain physiques (you know who I’m talking about) be sure that when your belt comes off that your trousers stay where you want them to which is roughly around your waist. And if your pants have a tendency to slip down when you bend over (you know what I’m talking about) take your shoes off BEFORE your belt so that you don’t have to bend over and provide us with a view of your you-know-what at six in the morning!
Any liquids you bring through the security line (and this includes things like deodorant gels, hair products, toothpaste, etc.) have to fit in 1-quart plastic Ziploc bag and each product has to be less than 3.4 ounces (100 ml). You can only have a single quart bag. Larger liquids like medications or breast milk can go through security but you have to declare these to the TSA agents and they may examine them more closely. There are few things more frustrating than watching someone in front of you in the security line pull individual items out of their suitcase and dump them into the bin that goes through the x-ray machine knowing that the agent is going to make them do it all over again and put the stuff in a bag. It just slows everything down. Some TSA stations actually provide plastic bags but don’t count on it. Bring a bag from home already! (Kongo carries an extra Ziploc bag or two just in case a bag tears or the Ziploc feature breaks mid-journey) An important clue here—the liquids must be in a container that is 100 ml or less so you can’t have what you think is 75 ml of whatever in a 500 ml container. TSA is not going to measure your liquid. If it’s not in the right sized container it’s going in the trash.
Laptops have to come out and go in a separate bin all by itself. Interestingly, cell phones, iPods, iPads, Blackberrys, DVD players, cameras, chargers, plugs, connecting wires, and other electronic devices can stay in your briefcase or carry-on. I know, I know, I don’t understand that either but that’s the rule so be prepared.
You are going to have to put your wallet in the bin. Kongo tried carrying his through the scanner one time and held it up over his head like a good little monkey but the agents then went through the wallet and counted credit cards. Now Kongo just sticks his wallet along with his watch in a shoe and places his sport coat or outer garment on top of it.
When you’re standing in line and inching your way up to the tables where you have to put the bins and your other luggage and shove them into the x-ray machine you can speed the line up by pulling your computer out of your briefcase, grabbing your liquid bag out of wherever you store it, have your jewelry off, and your pockets emptied.
It really, really helps if you think about what you’re going to have to take off before you come to the airport so that you can organize your stuff to speed up getting through that line.
Before you even get to the scanners and x-ray machines you have to show your documents to an agent. You must have a valid boarding pass and a current government issued identification with your picture on it such as a valid driver’s license, a military ID card, passport, or state issued identity card. AARP membership cards, library cards, Costco membership cards, or a gift card from your local car wash isn’t going to hack it. It doesn’t matter that you just showed your ID to get a boarding pass or to check your bags; you still have to present this ID to the agent. There is nothing more likely to start a chain reaction of eye rolling and deep sighs among those behind you than presenting yourself to the agent and start fumbling around in your purse or luggage for your ID. I mean, come one, what have you been doing while you were standing in line? Now, as a fashion statement, those dorky pouches worn around your neck with your ID and boarding pass visible through plastic covers and heavily favored by travelers over 70 just screams “I have no idea what I am doing here” to everyone around you. If you have a chance, avoid these people at all costs, particularly when they start moving toward the x-ray machines.
There’s a great scene in “Up and Away” when George Clooney advises his younger colleague to avoid families and senior travelers when passing through security lines. If you’re a frequent traveler you know too well how sage that advice is. All of us will eventually be senior travelers and hopefully we all get to travel with our families on occasion but if you’re heading out for a routine business trip certain types of travelers must be avoided at all costs. A savvy monkey scans the lines ahead of time to see who is going through (and who is holding things up), which TSA agents seem to be getting qualified in reading the x-ray machines, which lines are broadcasting that dreaded phrase “bag check!” which lines have a group of middle school children going on a field trip, and where the babies are congregating.
Speaking of babies and security lines, there is nothing sadder (in Kongo’s opinion) than a mother traveling alone with an infant and who must juggle strollers, car seats, baby bottles, diaper bags, and carry on luggage all at the same time. It’s no wonder with all these distractions that you sometimes read about a baby getting a ride through the x-ray machine. This poor soul will need more time going through the line and there is nothing, absolutely nothing, that anyone can do about it. If you end up behind such a traveler, despite your best planning techniques, just go with the flow and do what you can to help out. Kongo has had strange babies spit up on him while holding infants as mommy juggles all the stuff and the world didn’t come to an end. Just be nice about it and you’ll feel better on the other side.
When you make it past security you have to get to your gate but if you’ve done your research in advance and planned well, you have some time to kill. If you are a very frequent traveler you probably have a pass to one of the airline lounges and this is where Kongo spends a lot of his time between security and boarding. If you have a long time before your flight, consider purchasing a day pass. It might seem pricy but remember that you get free drinks and snacks, a Wi-Fi connection, desk space, television, cleaner restrooms, and comfortable chairs to park yourself at. Most airports have art or cultural exhibits (see Kongo’s post about a long layover at ATL), shopping (MSP and LHR are great shopping airports), and other activities to while away your time particularly if you find your flight delayed.
A special pet peeve of Kongo’s is certain types of young people traveling in groups. There is an undeniable psychological phenomena associated with these herds that seems to drive them to behave badly and as a group they tend to sink to the level of their most immature member despite the best intentions of the chaperones (God bless them). Anyone who has travelled during Spring Break or field trip season to Washington DC knows what I’m talking about. While many aspects of this group behavior is often annoying a particularly irksome habit of these young travelers is a tendency to plop down (with their ever-present pillows) on the floor and sprawl in large bunches in front of
Boarding. The packing, the trip to the airport, the checking of bags, the navigation of security lines, and the passage through the airport culminates in actually boarding the airplane. Airlines have yet to figure out how to efficiently board the hundred or so passengers that are usually queued up for every flight so stand by for other opportunities to lose your cool and take a deep breath as you approach the gate. You either end up in a cattle call scenario imposed by airlines like Southwest or you end up in a rugby scrum with everyone trying get close to the departure door at the same time despite the zone number they have been assigned.
Most airlines are going to board the limp, lame, and lazy first. While many of these travelers do indeed need a little extra time to get on the plane and get settled, Kongo almost always observes perfectly mobile and spry travelers crowding forward to be one of the first on the plane. Why you would want to get on the plane first and then sit in a cramped seat for another 30-40 minutes before pushback is another issue altogether but it seems to Kongo that it goes to an unwarranted sense of entitlement and general cluelessness. Kongo has noticed that often these pushy travelers speak different languages than most people in America so perhaps it’s a cultural or language
Part of this behavior flows from the very plausible fear (entirely the result of greedy airline policies) that there won’t be overhead bin space at your seat and you will end up with your bag several rows behind you or that you will have to check your carry on. Since the airlines began charging for checked luggage the amount of travelers bringing carry on baggage aboard the plane has skyrocketed. Since almost ALL of the planes now are completely full there will never be enough room for all the carry on baggage and those with the least favorable boarding rights (cheapest tickets) will often not be able to stuff their bag in the overhead and end up slowing the departure while the bag removed stowed in the cargo compartment. Kongo feels that if anyone ever actually solves the boarding problem that they should get a round-trip first class ticket to Oslo and be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize!
Airports are great places to people watch, a favorite Kongo pastime. Logos on t-shirts, spiky hair, body piercings, general deportment, arrogance, cluelessness, frustration,
Favorite airports: DCA (Reagan National), IAD (Dulles), ATL (Atlanta), MSP (Minneapolis-St. Paul), LHR (London Heathrow), SNN (Shannon, Ireland) (for the Irish Coffee), and Kongo’s home airport in San Diego (SAN). (Please hurry and fix the parking at Terminal 2!)
Future blogs will look at Kongo’s Jungle Rules for being on airplanes, getting rental cars, and hotels.
Travel safe! Be nice.
Related articles
- Jungle Rules: Everything About Luggage (travel-monkey.me)
- Sen. Rand Paul stopped by Tenn. airport security (cbsnews.com)
- Jungle Rules: How To Score An Upgrade (travel-monkey.me)
- Prison Planet.com ” TSA Forces Woman To Use Naked Body Scanner Three Times Because of “Cute” Figure (gunnyg.wordpress.com)
- TSA Agents Singling Out Sexy Women For Multiple Body Scans [Planelopnik] (jalopnik.com)

