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ONeill Travelnow

Click on each picture of each "GROUP TOUR"
to learn more about each upcoming tour
and the flyer!

March 23, 2024
"BROADWAY ACROSS AMERICA"
"The Lion King" 

SOLD OUT!

APRIL 20, 2024
"BROADWAY ACROSS AMERICA"
Presents: Pretty Woman

SOLD OUT!


 

Spring Mystery Tour
May 16-18 2024 
CALL NOW TO SIGN UP!!

 

Sumertime Fun in BRANSON!
"Music, Comedy, Soaring to name a few"
June 2-7, 2024

10 Spots Available!

Greece Cruise

Cruise the Greek Islands August 2024
8 Cabins Available!

New England Oct 2023

Autumn in New England! ALL 6 STATES!
 October 3-11, 2024

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Travel Insurance
Avoid or Survive Lost Luggage
10 Ways to Avoid or Survive Lost Luggage
 
Do You Know Where Your PJs Are?
10 Ways to Avoid (or Survive) Lost Luggage
 
More luggage was lost this year than in any year since 1990 - 30 million bags failed to arrive on time, about 10,000 bags per day. Among the reasons: airline budget cuts, greater airport congestion, tight connection times, increased transfers among airlines and stricter security. In defense of the airlines, most bags are delayed - not lost forever - and on average are returned to their owners in 1.3 days or 31 hours after being reported missing. But even 1.3 days without your luggage is enough to cause enormous stress: imagine your delayed luggage missing the sailing of your cruise ship.
 
 
1. Use a sturdy ID tag with a durable strap on each bag. The best tags have a cover hiding your name to protect your privacy; use your business information if possible. Use your cell phone number and/or email address so you can be contacted immediately.
 
2. Include your identification information inside the bag. This is especially important if the outside tag is lost en route. Place a travel itinerary in an outside pocket or inside on the top so airlines can track you in transit if your bag is delayed or misrouted.
 
Magellan's Travel Supplies (http://www.magellans.com/) offers a handy product called Retriever Luggage Tags -- these sturdy vinyl tags invite baggage agents (in eight languages) to remove the itinerary you've placed inside and forward your bag to you while you're traveling, instead of returning the bag to your home address.
 
3. Mark your luggage in distinctive ways to distinguish your black bag in a sea of black bags. Tie bright ribbons onto the handles, apply stickers or your initials in large, colored stick-on letters on all sides, paint a design or a large X on the top and bottom - then take a digital photo of the bags. Should a bag be misplaced, show the photo to the baggage agent to illustrate the brand, shape, color and distinctive markings so your bag will be easier to identify and recover.
 
4. Remove any old baggage claim tags from your luggage as they cause confusion.
 
5. Check your bags as early as possible. Airlines suggest at least 90 minutes in advance (two hours for international travel) but at daily high-traffic times and with seasonal crowding you should add 30 minutes to this time. Last-minute checked bags simply may not make it through security screening and onto your plane.
 
6. Make sure that your bags have been ticketed to the correct destination and on the correct flight numbers before you leave the luggage check-in area or ticket counter.
 
If you do find yourself separated from your checked luggage, Foster has more tips for minimizing the inconvenience. Successfully surviving lost luggage is skill that most travelers learn the hard way once, and then create contingency plans for every future trip. When Pati's luggage found it's way to Japan for a month while she was traveling to six US cities for speaking engagements, she discovered that she could live quite well with the few things she had in her carry-on. It changed her personal travel packing forever.
 
7. Always carry medicines and anything that is valuable or not easily replaceable (including your keys) on your person or in a small "never check" carry-on bag. If it would break your heart to lose it, either keep it with you or leave it at home.
 
8. Travel in clothing you can wear for a day or two in case your bags are delayed, including appropriate shoes. Tuck a change of underwear into your carry-on bag plus a clean shirt so you have an item to wear and one to wash. Pack a swimsuit and/or shorts in your carry-on if headed to a sunny locale.
 
Ann wore comfortable black pants, a blue tee-shirt, and a blue/black/white-striped shirt with her comfortable walking shoes to fly to Europe for an Adriatic cruise. She arrived on schedule but her luggage did not. At the end of her weeklong, casual cruise she was finally reunited with her luggage as she prepared to fly home. Ann survived by being creative with her few pieces and through the generosity of other cruise passengers. She sums up her new way to travel light - "Borrow clothes! I received many compliments on the cruise for my ingenuity in the face of bad luck."
 
Traveling with someone else? Ann recommends cross packing some of your clothing in their bag and some of theirs in your bag. "Rather than have a separate suitcase for each of us, if one bag is delayed at least we'd each have SOME clothes," Ann suggested.
 
9. Complete lost-luggage reports at the airport and don't leave without a claim number and contact information so you can check the status of missing bags if one is missing in action. Keep baggage claim tags, tickets and receipts for your purchases, so the airline will be able to research your claim and reimburse you more quickly.
 
10. Always create a packing list that includes every item in each packed bag and leave a copy at home to retain an accurate record. Most travelers undervalue the contents of a lost bag because they can't remember everything that was inside. Take a second copy of the packing list with you to check each time you unpack and repack to prevent forgetting items in the rush of departure.
 
Most importantly, remember it is not the end of the world or the ruin of a trip; it only feels like it at the moment when you are the last person waiting at the luggage carrousel. Pati and Ann were part of the lost luggage statistics but learned valuable travel lessons and became great survivors.
 

TSA Recognized Baggage Locks

Two locks

TSA screens every passenger's baggage before it is placed on an airplane. While our technology allows us to electronically screen bags, there are times when we need to physically inspect a piece of luggage. TSA has worked with several companies to develop locks that can be opened by security officers using universal "master" keys so that the locks may not have to be cut. These locks are available at airports and travel stores nationwide. The packaging on the locks indicates whether they can be opened by TSA.

Not sure where to get a compatible lock? Try these Web sites:

Safe Skies luggage lock logo

Travel Sentry luggage lock logo

Safe Skies Luggage Locks

Travel Sentry

Any references in this web site to any specific commercial company, product, process, or service, or the use of any trade, firm, or corporation name, is provided for the information and convenience of the public. It does not constitute an endorsement, recommendation, or favorable treatment by TSA. The TSA makes no claims, promises, guarantees, or warranties of any kind, expressed or implied, as to the goods or services provided by any commercial entity, including those companies referenced in this website.

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ONeill Travelnow

  116 W. Douglas St.  O'Neill, NE  68763

Hours:  Mon.-Thurs. 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Friday 9:00 am - 2:00 pm

PH:  402.336.2455       FX: 402.336.3757

Email: office@oneilltravelnow.com
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