dragoneggs
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2013
- Messages
- 13,627
- Location
- Seabeck, Washington
- Tractor
- Kubota BX-25D, Kubota Z122RKW-42
Just answering the OP's question.No ... what ?
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Just answering the OP's question.No ... what ?
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Isn't he the one that just posts links other people's thoughts? :confused3:I would have assumed as SMART as he is he should have been able to figure that out on his own.......
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Just answering the OP's question.
I've been getting my chicks that way for years, but this year was my last. I get a phone call at 3:00 PM on the day they are supposed to arrive, telling me that I can go pick them up at the distribution center 120 miles away. At that point I had worked all day and didn't feel like driving 5 hours, so they arrived the following day, cold. I fed them warm sugar water but lost 8 out of the 26 I had ordered.I've often wondered whether the chicks were still being sent via USPS. It USED TO BE that if chicks arrived at a Post Office and could not be delivered or picked up within a certain amount of time, the local postmaster could sell them for almost nothing. In my pre-teen years, my Dad bought our baby chicks that way every year from the Ardmore, OK, Post Office. As a result, some years we had white chickens, some year red, some years speckled, etc.:laughing:
I saw that in the news. I checked tracking on one of my orders that has been late for a while. The shipper did the shipping label on August 6, and the projected delivery date is August 24. The PO picked it up in LA, then for some reason the PO sent it to Sparks, NV, then back to LA, then back to Sparks, NV before shipping it to Medford, OR and Eugene, OR. It's not alive, so the only damage is that I have been waiting for 2-1/2 weeks for a package to get 1100 miles up I-5, which should have taken 2 days.
If it were a box of baby chicks, they would be long dead. I feel for the farmers. Apparently priority mail doesn't mean anything any more.