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 Melbourne, Australia to Christchurch, New Zealand - February, 2005
Phone/fax (+61 3) 9331 0947
Mobile (+61) 0412 689 849
P.O.Box 167
Moonee Ponds
Vic 3039
Australia.
Shipment: From Bangkok, Thailand to Delhi, India - February, 2005
212 Chalermkhet 1 Rd.
Near car parking Suan Mali
Bangkok 10100
Tel. 02-2257717-8, 2265671
We would recommend this company as we compared quite a lot of quotes and they were the cheapest and are reliable (two other travellers we know shipped their bikes with Sita from BKK to Bangladesh recently and they were happy too).
The quote from Sita was:
48 THB per kg (actual weight or volumetric weight – whichever is more)
4000 THB service charge
That’s it - no dangerous goods surcharge.
We had the necessary crate made by a carpenter who was organized by Sita. In Thailand we paid 3500 THB for the carpenter plus 22048 THB for Sita. It was more than we expectet and there were 2 reasons for that.
First, the carpenter made the crate bigger than we had ordered. It was already done when we came to deliver the bike, only one of the small sidewalls and the lid had to be attached. We had ordered it 75x200x115 cm and it came in 85x218x117. So at the end the volumetric weight (376 kg) was bigger than the actual weight (309 kg).
Second, Joy calculated the volumetric weight different from what she had explained before. The 3 measurements will be multiplicated and then divided by
a factor which supposed to be 6000 and then was around 5800. We asked her why and she said something had changed and we could check with the airline. It was
not a big difference but it felt a bit strange.
Compared to the other quotes we got, Sita was still the cheapest. And we delivered the bike to the airport in time and the boys did all the paperwork
for us within 1 hour. So we shouldn't complain too much.
Maybe it's worth to find a carpenter by yourself and advise and watch him what he is doing while he is making the crate. The carpenters mistake cost us about
3200 THB and we were charged more again in Delhi for the warehouse.
In Delhi it took us only one day to get the bike cleared. We didn’t use an agent and there was not a trace of corruption. We had to pay 11 USD (551 INR) to the airline and 76 USD (3355 INR) (regarding to vol.-weight) to the airport warehouse. We got proper receipts for that.
Shipment: From Lima, Peru to Hamburg, Germany - February, 2005
Jr. Mariano de los Santos 115, Of 301
Lima 27
phone: +51 1 2219176
Shipment: From Port Klang, Malaysia to Sydney, Australia - February, 2005
Amin, Asst Manager, NO. 5215, 3rd floor Persiaran Raja Muda Musa 42000 Port Klang, Selangor Darul Ehsan. tel: (03) 3166 8220, 8221, 8346, 2877
we used this agent in port klang to receive our bikes from india and were so impressed by their service and friendliness we used them again to ship to sydney.
we shipped 2 bikes uncrated as part of an LCL shipment. plus a wooden box of 1 M cubed. total was 4.8 M cubed. the $US 340 was for everything including fumigation. all we had to do was drive the bikes to the wharehouse to a chap called "Balan". both Amin and Balan speak passable english, and both very friendly.
Amin issued us with a Bill of Lading even though the ship had not departed, as we were due to fly to australia. we left our bikes for Balan to roll them into the container and secure them for the crossing.
when received in sydney they were as we had left them. a totally satisfactory service, we would recommend them. if you require crating they have a carpenter for a fee.
Shipment: From Djibouti, Djibouti to Al Makha, Yemen - January, 2005
No company, just ask at the Port Captains Office for a boat going to Yemen
Just to let you know that we have made it across from
Djibouti to Yemen.
We crossed into Djibouti and rode about 10km and then
camped in the Desert. The next morning we went to Djibouti City and went straight to the harbour. At the security check point we explained that we need to speak to the Harbour Master / Port Captain as we needed info on a ferry or cargo boat going to Yemen. They were very helpful and directed us to the second in-charge (Captain Tourki) at the Port Captain's Office. We were told that about 3 or 4 cargo boats leave every day for Yemen to either the port of Aden or Al Mukha. They spoke to one of the cargo boat captains and within 4 hours we were loaded on board and ready to sail (with 2800 sheep) to Port Al Mukha
in Yemen. The trip took 16 hours (over night 15h30 - 07h30) and can cost you anything between US$100 to US$200. We paid US$100 for 2 people and one motorbike.
Yemen is very beautiful and the people are very friendly.
Member login
Announcements
Thinking about traveling? Not sure about the whole thing? Watch the HU Achievable Dream Video Trailers and then get ALL the information you need to get inspired and learn how to travel anywhere in the world!
Have YOU ever wondered who has ridden around the world? We did too - and now here's the list of Circumnavigators!
Check it out now, and add your information if we didn't find you.
Are you an Overland Adventure Traveller?
Does the smell of spices wafting through the air make you think of Zanzibar, a cacophony of honking horns is Cairo, or a swirl of brilliantly patterned clothing Guatemala? Then this is the site for you!
Hosted by Grant and Susan Johnson, RTW 1987-1998
Next HU Events
ALL Dates subject to change.2025 Confirmed Events:
- Virginia: April 24-27 2025
- Queensland is back! May 2-4 2025
- Germany Summer: May 29-June 1 2025
- CanWest: July 10-13 2025
- Switzerland: Date TBC
- Ecuador: Date TBC
- Romania: Date TBC
- Austria: Sept. 11-14
- California: September 18-21
- France: September 19-21 2025
- Germany Autumn: Oct 30-Nov 2 2025
Add yourself to the Updates List for each event!
Questions about an event? Ask here
HU Achievable Dream is Online
and available now to stream on Vimeo!
ALL 15 chapters of the HU Achievable Dream Guide are available to download on Vimeo!
Binge watch over 18 hours of inspiring, informative and entertaining stories and tips from 150 travellers!
"a cross between entertaining stories, tech tips, and reference guide"
"A timeless introduction to Motorcycle Adventure Travel!"
Originally launched as a 7 DVD set, The Achievable Dream series can now be downloaded anywhere. OVER 18 hours of solid info take up zero space in your panniers. How convenient!
Books
All the best travel books and videos listed and often reviewed on HU's famous Books page. Check it out and get great travel books from all over the world.
NOTE: As an Amazon Affiliate we earn from qualifying purchases - thanks for your help supporting HU when you start from an HU Amazon link!
I paid Dave in _cash_ with a "no receipt needed" for a one way trip from Melbourne to Christchurch. It included the NZ temporary registration, Warrant of Fitness (WOF), and a refundable AU$250 since it was cheaper than getting a carnet.
My bike is a 1965 Ducati 250cc, so it's light and small. Round trip for a normal sized bike is AU$1,350. So my one-way, minus the carnet fee, was AU$1,080 instead of the quoted AU$960. I should've done this myself and learned about bike shipping in 2 countries that both speak English and also saved some cash.
As he says on his site, "These prices include container lease, loading and unloading, sea freight both ways, transport from ship to storage area at each end, transport from storage area to ship at each end, the use of bike specific cradles and tiedowns, Customs and Quarantine clearance at both ends, secure storage of all bikes prior to your arrival, (it is simply not possible to have the container arrive the same day you arrive in New Zealand), agency fees, storage handling fees and wharf handling fees. Also included is your bikes NZ Temporary (Tourist) Registration and Warrant of Fitness".
The WOF shop was ran by a jerk who rode bikes even though he didn't have to. He just wanted to ride bikes he can't afford. I was there with several new(er) Ducatis. He almost dropped a Ducati ST2 and stalled it twice -- just in the parking lot. He quit riding the new bikes after that, but insisted on riding my bike. He couldn't start it, kept stalling it (I'd have to restart it for him), and couldn't change gears. I don't mind people riding my bike, but there's no way I would've willingly let this guy do it. Dave Milligan said it was the first and last time he'd use this WOF shop.
I'd say Get Routed would be a good way of shipping your bike if you're a part of the winery touring crowd which the other bikes shipped over were. Spending money isn't so bad on a regular vacation but when you're on a tiny budget it hurts -- especially when Dave tells you he's shipping race bikes to Isle of Man for free.
He let me bring in my bike on the last day since there were problems keeping it running which was nice.