
 bouraq01 |
Airline belonging to the Indonesian airforce. The eagle logo has only
one wing, so can only fly around in circles. Thanks to Edi Basuno.
(2000) |

bouraq02 |
The Indonesian carrier has gone to a brighter shade of
green plastic. Thanks to Rita Nur Suhaeti. (2001) |


bouraq03 |
Printed slightly higher, with more space between the type on the reverse
and the green block of colour. Thanks to James Mangan. (2004) |


bouraq07 |
The broad green band has shrunk by 2 mm.
Thanks to Janusz Tichoniuk. (2006)
|

bouraq04 |
Like the bags above, but close inspection reveals it is
indeed different: the fold lines are printed in a different place, and the
ink is a subtly different shade of green. Thanks to Winny Sanjaya. (2002) |


bouraq05 |
Come to think of it, the Bouraq eagle
doesn't have any legs either, so it can't land. Thanks to Steffen Heinrich.
(2000) |


bouraq06 |
Slightly darker green than the bag above, and with the airline name on
two lines.
This airline is named after the winged steed that bore the Prophet
Muhammad to heaven. See what valuable snippets you can learn while wasting
your time looking at barfbag websites...? Thanks to Pierre Fabre. (2001) |


bourgasairport01 |
First bag I've come across from a airport rather than an airline. How do
I know it's an airsickness bag, not a snackbag? Because it says so in the
gusset.
From the thoughtful folk at Bourgas Airport in Bulgaria.
Thanks to Walter Brinker (2005) |