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The family must have been truly devastated and the cat, so frightened.
The shipping container/crates for cats and dogs come with top and bottom halves that easily come apart. A friend recently shipped a new cat to me and the more I thought about it, the more I panicked. I could just imagine the container coming apart and the cat lost on the airfield.
I purchased the shipping crate myself, fastened the top and bottom halves together with nuts and bolts with mil spec lock washers, such that it was not possible to separate the two halves of the container without a special socket wrench. No way it could come apart, but I went on to put nylon releasable cable ties around the whole thing. I sent the crate to her along with more nylon cable ties and asked her to fasten the door with the ties, if they would allow it. (You need a scissor to remove these ties.)
The airline allowed the cable ties on the door but removed the ties around the outside of the container, guess they thought that was a little much, not to mention my friend still thinks I'm nuts. Needless to say, the cat arrived safely.
FAA guidelines require that live animals are taken off the plane before any other cargo or passengers, they are also taken on to the plane after all other cargo and passengers are loaded, to minimize their time onboard. The cargo bays are of course pressurized, FAA guidelines require certain weather temperature range at each end of the flight, food and water dish with food and water for the animal, health certificate and a bunch of stuff.
Picking the cat up at the airport was fun, the staff at the Priority Shipping Desk loves it when a cat ships in. One of their ground crew hand-carriers the container up to the desk. I could see him walking across the terminal with my cat carrier with this enormous smile on his face. He set it on the shipping counter while about ten airline employees materialized out of nowhere to ooo and aaah my cat and hear all about him, (you need to allow time for that, 'cause it's gonna happen!)
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