My SO and I are planning to close the distance this year and we're figuring out the nitty gritty of all that we'll need and the total approximate cost. The one thing I haven't been able to find good information online about is shipping your belongings overseas. He's in Australia and coming to me in Canada so shipping via regular post would hurt the wallet a lot...
We're trying to avoid furniture but he has an entertainment stand and shelving units that can be disassembled and I think he might want to take with him (might have to leave them though, but it would be nice to take), but he has a couple largish instruments that are the biggest concern -- electronic keyboards -- though otherwise it's just many video games and consoles/smaller possessions that add up to being a box of heavy stuff that neither of us want him to sell if at all possible (it would be expensive and potentially impossible to re-buy everything back considering price values and ages of things; he's a collector). Thankfully his wardrobe is pretty small. He'll need to bulk it up for the Canadian winter after he gets here though. Poor boy won't know what hit him when he sees snow for the first time.
So, does anyone have experience with this? I know bringing some things on the plane is an option, but what would be the best course of action? Piling his things in suitcases as luggage or boxing them up and waiting for them to be delivered by boat? Is there a particular service we could use, or just straight to the post office? Would it be dangerous for his instruments on the plane, would they be safer shipped? It doesn't help that the very first time he ever came to visit the flight lost his luggage and he was without clothes for 2 days so I think he's a little worried.
Again, we'd like as cheap as possible. Who doesn't?
ETA: Computers! He also has computers. I don't even know how to pack those and they weigh a lot. But those are something he won't want to leave. I think he'd rather wait an extra month at his job to save the money for shipping them, haha.
We're trying to avoid furniture but he has an entertainment stand and shelving units that can be disassembled and I think he might want to take with him (might have to leave them though, but it would be nice to take), but he has a couple largish instruments that are the biggest concern -- electronic keyboards -- though otherwise it's just many video games and consoles/smaller possessions that add up to being a box of heavy stuff that neither of us want him to sell if at all possible (it would be expensive and potentially impossible to re-buy everything back considering price values and ages of things; he's a collector). Thankfully his wardrobe is pretty small. He'll need to bulk it up for the Canadian winter after he gets here though. Poor boy won't know what hit him when he sees snow for the first time.
So, does anyone have experience with this? I know bringing some things on the plane is an option, but what would be the best course of action? Piling his things in suitcases as luggage or boxing them up and waiting for them to be delivered by boat? Is there a particular service we could use, or just straight to the post office? Would it be dangerous for his instruments on the plane, would they be safer shipped? It doesn't help that the very first time he ever came to visit the flight lost his luggage and he was without clothes for 2 days so I think he's a little worried.
Again, we'd like as cheap as possible. Who doesn't?
ETA: Computers! He also has computers. I don't even know how to pack those and they weigh a lot. But those are something he won't want to leave. I think he'd rather wait an extra month at his job to save the money for shipping them, haha.
Comment