TravelTalkOnline

Traveling with cooler of meats

Posted By: Cratti

Traveling with cooler of meats - 04/02/2016 12:45 AM

We are heading to St. Vincent via Barbados January 2017. This is our second Grenadines charter. Would like to take our own Polar Bear cooler this trip. Has anyone had the experience of checking in with frozen meats/prepared foods from the US? Any issues?
Posted By: Fletch

Re: Traveling with cooler of meats - 04/02/2016 12:16 PM

No real issues on checking a cooler filled with frozen meats. We do it once or twice a year. Only concern is if you decide to pack dry ice in the cooler - if so you can only pack 5 pounds of dry ice.

FYI - If the cooler is full you can expect your meats to stay frozen for up to 24 hours - so no real need for dry ice unless your trip will be longer.
Posted By: Cratti

Re: Traveling with cooler of meats - 04/02/2016 12:31 PM

Good to know, thanks!
Posted By: Jccarr

Re: Traveling with cooler of meats - 07/07/2016 11:48 PM

Same question for carrying meat into St Lucia. Thanks
Posted By: Sunset_Sammy

Re: Traveling with cooler of meats - 07/08/2016 11:03 AM

You can bring meat to St. Lucia, but you will have to have it checked by the meat inspector. He is usually at UVF on weekdays.
I've never had a problem bringing any in, but I always tell him I'm joining one of the ARC yachts to sail to SVG (which is true) and that seems to help get it cleared.
Posted By: Roaruba

Re: Traveling with cooler of meats - 07/25/2016 05:21 PM

We have travelled with frozen meats. Someone years back told us to use boxes of frozen spinach as ice packs. We also vacuum pack the meat. It has always stayed frozen.
Posted By: Catdancer

Re: Traveling with cooler of meats - 09/15/2016 02:39 PM

We always plan our on-board meals and prepare several apps and entrees ahead, and freeze or refrigerate everything in zip-locs (or the original containers). The day before flying out, we pack everything into 3 or 4 heavy-duty styrofoam coolers (to be left behind) similar to those thick Omaha Meat coolers. 24 hours later, many items (especially steaks) are still frozen, and everything is crisp and very cold. No need for dry ice or cold packs, as the frozen items perform very well.
© 2024 TravelTalkOnline