Shipments done by Travellers
The HU Shipping Database!
From THIS page, you can find details of shipments ALREADY MADE by travellers, both air and sea, so you can plan your own shipment.
For each shipment, the details include Shipping Date, Cost, Shipper Contact details and a Description of the experience, often including very detailed and extremely useful information about the requirements for crating or the paperwork involved at the destination location.
If you are aware of any more up-to-date information, or you know of any shipping details for locations which aren't listed below:
Please let us know here for minor details, or
Submit information on a shipment YOU HAVE ALREADY MADE here.
Thanks to all who have contributed this information, keep it coming!
NOTE: This is not our normal view, but Google's API has somehow broken the view with a map and everything nicely laid out. We will fix it as soon as possible, but it's a very big job for us. Any Google API experts feel free to contact us! For now this will have to do, sorry.
Usage: Enter one or more of the fields, as you wish. Blank field means "all". Be sure to use correct country names, e.g. "United Kingdom" not UK or England. Unfortunately "united states" (united states of america doesn't work) gets United Kingdom as well, just work down to the bottom or last page. Not case-sensitive. Results sorted by newest first.
Shipment: From Auckland, New Zealand to London, United Kingdom - June, 2001
Alpha Customs Services Ltd.,
Manager Clayton Imbs,
63B Richard Pearse Drive, Airport Oaks,
P.O. Box 53-007, Auckland International Airport,
Phone: (09) 275 - 5598,
Fax (09) 255 - 0992
Shipment: From Beirut, Lebanon to Limassol, Cyprus - June, 2001
IN LEBANON:
Lina Kazan
Morco Travel & Tourism
Beirut, Lebanon
TEL: +961-9- 914 113
PRINCESA CYPRIA LEAVES EVERY SATURDAY STARTING 26/5/01 - from Lebanon.
Per Charlie Money (coming from Cyprus to Lebanon):"The ferry, the Princesa Cypria sails weekly for Beirut leaving every Friday at 8 pm. It is a 12 hour journey with arrival at 8 am on the Saturday morning. ... It was a good if pricey ferry, about $150 US for passenger and motorcycle. Customs at Beirut was a long frustrating process, 5 hours and all in all about $100 US, most of which I am sure was bribes.
Shipment: From Toyama, Japan to Vladivostok, Russian Federation - June, 2001
FKK Air Service in Toyama near Fushiki port
Phone:0766-22-2212,
fax:0766-22-7456,
OR
United Orient Shipping & Agency (agent for FESCO)
03 (3249) 4412 in Tokyo
See Chris Lockwood's site for details of shipping to/from Japan:
http://www2.gol.com/users/chrisl/japan/information.html
The ship departs every Friday from Fushiki port at about 6 PM, to arrive in Vlad about 36 hours later. Departure from Vlad to Fushiki is on Mondays.
You are expected in the port before 2 PM for loading, which is done very professionally. Your bike will be on one of the decks and you can reach it any time during the pasage. (The ship hauls over 100 cars and a good amount of scooters, bicycles, tyres, washing machines etc). FKK visited us on the ship to hand over our tickets for the crossing. We never mentioned to FKK that we have a sidecar attached to our motorcycle and paid for one motorcycle only. Nobody had a problem with it. We were never asked to pay the loading fee in Fushiki.
The crossing is more like a mini cruise. Food is quite good, the cheapest cabin has a desk and a chair, an electricity point for European style plugs. The shower is small but hot and good. These cabins are for 4 persons, but when there are not so many passengers on board you will get your own room.
We arrived in Vlad at about 9 in the morning on Sunday. Unloading did not start untill about 2 PM, after the ship was cleared by customs. It is good to keep a survival pack with all necessary things with you, because our bikes were put in a warehouse (restricted area) after they were unloaded and it was not easy to get to them once the door was locked. First you have to go through customs with your hand-luggage. (Be sure that the declaration form that was issued on the ship is stamped on both sides). You can leave stuff in your cabin and you can even spend another night onboard the ship (US$ 10), but you have to turn in your key at the info desk for customs reasons and from the time you go through customs and the time the ship is cleared (about 2 PM) you cannot return to your cabin.
The ship docks right in front of the customs building, in which also a good internet cafe is situated. To clear our bikes we needed to go to room 110 with our passports, the declaration forms which we had to fill in onboard the ship and the bill of lading, which was given to us by the captain.
We were warmly welcomed by Sergei and Dimitri from the Iron Tigers, but found out that it is better not to use their translating services when dealing with customs. Reason for this is that if there is a problem, it is better if they cannot explain it to you for the simple reason that they will solve the problem themselves, instead of making you solve it. One of the customs came to the warehouse to check the numbers on the bike and stamped the declaration form. After that everything else was delt with in room 110. You get a pink and green paper and you have to pay something around 50 roebels tax.
It took us 3 days to get our bikes, the main reason being that we arrived during independence day and although everything was open, not a lot was done."
From Chris Lockwood:
"If you are going to Vladivostok get your tickets from FKK Air Service in Toyama near Fushiki port (phone:0766-22-2212, fax:0766-22-7456, E-mail: fkk-...@toyama-net.com) or United Orient Shipping & Agency 03 (3249) 4412 in Tokyo.
FKK http://fkk-air.toyama-net.com/ (home page in Japanese only) seems to be the better way from experience of travelers visiting in 2001 and Japanese riders going to Russia. United Orient wouldn't give a straight answer on the schedule. One-way fare in yen for 2001 was 27,300 yen + 11,000 yen motorcycle fee. You may or may not have to pay the $10 loading and unloading fee.
In Vladivostok, you will go through customs for yourself (person only), then go get the papers for the motorcycle (pink and green form). You go back to customs and do the formalities for the bike. Natasha is the lady to talk to in customs (she speaks English). One rider was given an extra night on the ship for free because his bike had not been unloaded by the end of the work day.
Also, tell customs you will want to stay longer than your visa. They may make vehicle papers for such. It is a real pain to extend the length of stay for a vehicle. Visa extensions are very difficult. Vehicle extensions are just about impossible. Leaving the country and coming back again would be a lot easier.
When leaving Russia again., tell them a low price if they ask how much the value is. There may be a charge of point-something percent of the value of the vehicle. Mika was charged in Vladivostok. Peter wasn't when he left to Estonia.
The link to Chris Lockwood's site http://www2.gol.com/users/chrisl/japan/information.html
Shipment: From Delhi, India to Bangkok, Thailand - June, 2001
Air India
Air India Cargo
Import Bloc
Room Nr. 1
Cargo Complex
International Airport New Delhi
Phone: Delhi 5652050
The procedure was very easy (except of the custom game). We didn't need a crate, only a palette! Our bikes were in the same plane. When we arrived Bankok we paid 3000 Baht (70$) without help of any agents to get our bikes out of the custom area.
Attention: The cheap Aeroflot-Connection (Ken&Carol) doesn't exist anymore!
Shipment: From Auckland, New Zealand to Santiago (Valparaiso), Chile - May, 2001
Antony
Seatrans - Auckland
Seatrans House, 71-79 Customs Street East
PO Box 4038
Auckland, New Zealand
Phone 64 9 300 5820
Fax 64 9 309 1439
"Dimensions: 2.25m x 1.15m x 0.96m = 2.472 cbm
Weight: 420kg
The freight insurance was on top of the sea fright - 100NZ$.
There is only one vessel leaving New Zealand directly to Chile. The vessel is run by Seatrans. There might be other agents out there, which offer space in one of their containers, but Seatrans is the company running this connection. Shipping time: approx. 3 weeks.
All other shipping companies send the container though one of their distribution centres in Asia or US. The shipping takes ages then."
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Around June 16th, 2001 we asked you about shipping companies in Auckland. Prompt as usual you sent us a mail the following day. We contacted as proposed P&O Nedlloyd, but we were not really successful because they ship only container loads.
So we were searching for other alternatives and indeed found some really nice, interesting and inexpensive people.
We finally airfreighted our bikes from Auckland to London without crating. It was the least complicated, quickest and cheapest way! We paid only NZ$2900 for the whole package, which included DGM, Customs, Paperwork, Storage for 2 weeks and Transport to the Airport.
At the arrival in London Heathrow it took us 3 hours to do customs and get them out of the warehouse - everything went smooth, no problems at all and the bikes looked the way we left back them in Auckland.
By now, we are back in Switzerland. Everything went perfect until the End. Unfortunately do we have to work now, but we are still following the happenings on your great site.
We thought the addresses might be interesting for other overlanders, who like to ship and/or crate in Auckland.
Excellent crating with prices suitable for every budget is:
Pope Packaging Ltd,
Manager is Ken Pope, 32 B Maich Road, P.O. Box 157, Manurewa, Phone: (09) 266 - 5636, Fax: (09) 266 - 5855,
Email: k...@popepackaging.co.nz,
web: www.popepackaging.co.nz
Easy and cheap air rates for NZ-Airways, as well as DGM and storing is:
Alpha Customs Services Ltd.,
Manager Clayton Imbs,
63B Richard Pearse Drive, Airport Oaks,
P.O. Box 53-007, Auckland International Airport,
Phone: (09) 275 - 5598, Fax (09) 255 - 0992,
email: clay...@alphacustoms.co.nz