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Sat, 2 Apr 2005 11:20:08 -0700 |
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She should call the airline and ask about dry ice. They have their
own limits (there is a maximum amount of dry ice, total, that can be
on a plane).
How long will she be traveling on her way home? If less than 12
hours total then regular ice packs or frozen water bottles ought to
work sufficiently well. Crumpled newspaper stuffed into all spaces
will help to keep everything cold.
Margaret
Longmont, CO
>Dear Lactnets;
>I have a client that will be traveling to Canada from Us for 4-5 days
>without baby. Plans to save EBM to bring back. Has access to a friends
>freezer while she is there. Can you transport dry ice on an airplane to
>keep the milk frozen. I'm not sure how long the flight is. She is
>planning on packing milk in with luggage in a cooler. I thought frozen
>water bottles may keep better then packed regular ice if dry ice not
>allowed. Let me know your thoughts, and wisdom.
>Yours in lactation,
>Terri Klein, RN, CLE, CLC
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