Here are some typical scenarios:
Sure, you can ask your sister take care of your mail for you. You arrive
in Nassau, and since you are only planning to stay there for two
days, you ask her to Fed Ex your 4 lbs. of mail (it adds up quickly) to
you. The next day after work she runs down to the corner Mail Boxes Etc.
and unknowingly pays a marked up price of $125.90 (the actual cost charged
by Fed Ex is $63.20).
You are in George Town, Exumas and your heat exchanger decides to die. After
six static filled (very expensive) phone calls, you find a company that will
ship you a new one. Unfortunately they don't know that they should ask you
to fax them a copy of your cruising permit. If it does not accompany the
package, you will probably be paying some high duty charges when it arrives.
Another $100 down the drain! I hope they also understand the ins and outs
of international shipping so you will actually get it. They will also charge
whatever mark up they want to on the shipping. Contact us via e-mail,
phone or fax to have started your part on its way to you with the
proper documentation attached.
You've learned your lesson and tell your sister to send the next 4 lbs. of
mail to the Turks & Caicos as cheaply as possible. She dutifully
stands in line for 20 minutes at the local post office and they tell her
that cheapest rate is only $9.97. You have about a 50/50 chance of
ever seeing that package again, and make plans to sit tight for about 2 months!
Even if she had sent it airmail, you would probably still be waiting for
the package over a month later. As a result, you miss making your credit
card payment and it stays on your record for seven years. You become sooooo
bored waiting for your mail that you'll probably rent a car to tour the island
for $55.00 a day.
We speak from experience (I recall sending an airmail letter
to the CSY boat owners association in the US from Provodenciales.
They later published that the letter was dated in April, postmarked in May,
and received in June).
Your sister sends your next batch of mail, including that raw water pump
you so desperately need for your engine, to you at Spice Island Marine in
Grenada. Unfortunately, she doesn't know that, while the boat is entitled
to duty free status for these types of goodies, you the person have
to pay import duty. She addressed the package to you, instead of the
boat, and now you are probably going to have to grease somebody's palm (pay
duty) before you ever see that water pump. Don't expect that package to be
delivered either. It's time to rent a taxi and spend the day tracking it
down at the customs office in St. Georges, or at the airport, or....
God help you if she didn't declare the pump at the correct value and attach
the proper paperwork (or worse yet, didn't declare it at all and just tried
to sneak it through).
A full year has now passed under your keel and the mail problems seem to
be finally under control. You receive your mail in Trinidad and enclosed
is a two week old letter from your sister. She writes: "Dear Jack
& Jill, I'm going to be moving next week
". Bummer! You'll be
changing your address anyway, why not consider hiring a professional? You'll
probably save more money than our annual fees cost, not to mention the
frustrations. :-)