Mary loves to travel Posted May 5 #1 Share Posted May 5 We're looking at a Princess land first then cruise Alaska tour. In reading the luggage details, each person is allowed ONE handheld item onto the tour bus with them. Is the CPAP machine that one item? What have other CPAP users done? Thanks, Mary Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VikingRob Posted May 5 #2 Share Posted May 5 I do not believe that they are included in your one carry on and can be carried on separately. I know I read this somewhere but cannot find it. I will keep looking. Kim 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mary loves to travel Posted May 5 Author #3 Share Posted May 5 13 minutes ago, VikingRob said: I do not believe that they are included in your one carry on and can be carried on separately. I know I read this somewhere but cannot find it. I will keep looking. Kim I am hoping this is the case. I had no luck searching, but maybe didn't look hard enough on the Princess website. Otherwise, we're trying to figure out how to make this work. Thanks! Mary Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare cr8tiv1 Posted May 5 #4 Share Posted May 5 A CPAP is considered a medical device and can be carried on a bus. The problem will be…where to store it. Some busses will have overhead compartments. Others may not. I purchased a chamber block so that I could use my CPAP without the water chamber/water. If you are coming off a cruise, you could bring the left over distilled water with you. I would transfer it to a water tight container. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare azbirdmom Posted May 5 #5 Share Posted May 5 No problem taking the CPAP in addition to the one published item. We keep our CPAPs in rolling backpacks. If we carry them on the bus we can always find an empty seat for them. But in our experience the bus drivers typically offer to open the chamber on the bottom of the bus for those and other larger bags that folks carry on. Your luggage travels separately so there is always a lot of room on the buses. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mary loves to travel Posted May 5 Author #6 Share Posted May 5 3 minutes ago, azbirdmom said: No problem taking the CPAP in addition to the one published item. We keep our CPAPs in rolling backpacks. If we carry them on the bus we can always find an empty seat for them. But in our experience the bus drivers typically offer to open the chamber on the bottom of the bus for those and other larger bags that folks carry on. Your luggage travels separately so there is always a lot of room on the buses. oh, perfect!! Thanks very much 🙂 Mary 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark_K Posted May 5 #7 Share Posted May 5 2 hours ago, cr8tiv1 said: A CPAP is considered a medical device and can be carried on a bus. The problem will be…where to store it. Some busses will have overhead compartments. Others may not. I purchased a chamber block so that I could use my CPAP without the water chamber/water. If you are coming off a cruise, you could bring the left over distilled water with you. I would transfer it to a water tight container. We were able to get distilled water at all of the Princess Lodges we stayed at. If I remember right it came in glasses with Saran Wrap over the top. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare cr8tiv1 Posted May 5 #8 Share Posted May 5 7 minutes ago, Mark_K said: We were able to get distilled water at all of the Princess Lodges we stayed at. If I remember right it came in glasses with Saran Wrap over the top. That's interesting. I didn't have a CPAP when I did the land tour many years ago. I have "researched" options. Found out that Reverse Osmosis is the closest to distilled water. Then bottled water. I would not venture to use tap water for my machine. I am sure @JF - retired RRT would chime in on this. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare azbirdmom Posted May 5 #9 Share Posted May 5 1 hour ago, Mark_K said: We were able to get distilled water at all of the Princess Lodges we stayed at. If I remember right it came in glasses with Saran Wrap over the top. Yes, that's what we got too. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
con3 Posted May 6 #10 Share Posted May 6 We are leaving in 2 weeks for an Alaska cruise tour. My husband has a cpap and likes to bring it in a small rolling suitcase. I was wondering the same thing. Especially wondering about the train portion. Hope it won't be a problem! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mary loves to travel Posted May 6 Author #11 Share Posted May 6 19 minutes ago, con3 said: We are leaving in 2 weeks for an Alaska cruise tour. My husband has a cpap and likes to bring it in a small rolling suitcase. I was wondering the same thing. Especially wondering about the train portion. Hope it won't be a problem! Would really appreciate your feedback after your trip. enjoy! Mary Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
con3 Posted May 6 #12 Share Posted May 6 10 minutes ago, Mary loves to travel said: Would really appreciate your feedback after your trip. enjoy! Mary Will try and remember to come back and let you know!! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JF - retired RRT Posted May 6 #13 Share Posted May 6 23 hours ago, cr8tiv1 said: That's interesting. I didn't have a CPAP when I did the land tour many years ago. I have "researched" options. Found out that Reverse Osmosis is the closest to distilled water. Then bottled water. I would not venture to use tap water for my machine. I am sure @JF - retired RRT would chime in on this. Sure...tap water is OK for short periods of time (like a cruise). The problem with tap water is the minerals (and some bottled water may have this issue). If you use tap water (BTW: the tap water on the ship is perfectly fine), when you get home, just do a thorough clean/soak with 1 part water to 3 or 4 parts white vinegar. Years ago, I had a patient who went on a cruise and didn't know water was available for his CPAP. He went without and got REALLY dry mucous membranes as a result...don't do that. If you need humidification, you need it. DH uses CPAP without water and does better than with. BTW: he bought a Z2 Auto from Breas for travel. It's really, really small (maybe weighs 2 pounds). It would fit in a purse or backpack easily. It comes with a "French nose" for those who need humidification. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Retired-N-Happy Posted May 6 #14 Share Posted May 6 On 5/5/2024 at 3:05 PM, cr8tiv1 said: I would not venture to use tap water for my machine. @JF - retired RRT Have used a CPAP for over 20 years and the overwhelming majority of the time have used tap water in my water chamber with no problems. Occasionally need to scrub out the chamber with an old toothbrush. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rbtan Posted May 6 #15 Share Posted May 6 On 5/5/2024 at 11:39 AM, Mary loves to travel said: We're looking at a Princess land first then cruise Alaska tour. In reading the luggage details, each person is allowed ONE handheld item onto the tour bus with them. Is the CPAP machine that one item? What have other CPAP users done? Thanks, Mary CPAP is considered medical equipment & not included in the hand held item category. Hopefully you have a battery back up not all transports have sockets. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mary loves to travel Posted May 6 Author #16 Share Posted May 6 42 minutes ago, rbtan said: CPAP is considered medical equipment & not included in the hand held item category. Hopefully you have a battery back up not all transports have sockets. thanks. DH only uses it at night; so should be able to just plug it in while at the lodges. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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