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 Vancouver, Canada to London, United Kingdom - April, 2002

Sea
Yes
Locher Evers

Locher Evers

Rajinder Atwal

Bike left Vancouver on Apr 19 by train to Montreal - arrived at Tilbury docks London on May 6 as promised. The only glitch was customs clearance. There seems to be no mechanism to clear the shipment in person - a clearing agent was required. They used our Carnet (not valid in UK) instead of the C104F form. This caused some delays and I ended up contacting customs in person to clear the bike.

Can$700

Shipment: From Perth, Australia to Hamburg, Germany - April, 2002

Sea
Yes
Frank Hodder

In Australia:

Frank Hodder
Unit 3, 18 Norfolk Street
Fremantle WA 6160 Australia
Tel: (08) 9430 6499
emails: fh.a...@ilm.com.au
or meg young my.a...@ilm.com.au

In Germany:

(Gebr. Weiss GmbH,
Vorsetzten 54, D-20459
Hamburg,
www.weisslogistics.com)

fh.aust-asia@ilm.com.au

The fare from Fremantle to Hamburg was 109 AUD per cbm plus document fee 55 AUD. The crates we saved from the trip with Mr. yap from Kuala Lumpur to Fremantle. So we reused them and crated the bikes in the shed of LCL Cargo Services. Chris Wilkinson of LCL stored the crates for us and was very very nice and helpful.

In Hamburg Germany we had no problems to get the bikes but had to pay 65 Euros for each crate port and handling charges. The agent there was very professional and helpful (Gebr. Weiss GmbH, Vorsetzten 54, D-20459 Hamburg, www.weisslogistics.com). We had to pay another 15 Euros eco-tax for 'crate-recycling' (typical green Germans).

303 AUD (US$150)

Shipment: From Kathmandu, Nepal to Bangkok, Thailand - April, 2002

Air
5/5 - Excellent
Yes
New World Link Export

New World Link Export
Arcadia Building (1st Floor), Thamel, Kathmandu
Tel: 01-268539

Mr Ishowar Bhatta
newworldlink@hotmail.com

We recently shipped Kathmandu - Bangkok with a previously unused agent who did an excellent job and was cheaper than the regularly used DAD and Eagle Eyes.

Nepal

The whole process went very smoothly. We gave the go-ahead one week before but probably could have left it later. We drove to the airport on the Monday where we were met by the carpenter and our agent. We dismantled the bikes to make them as small as possible (front wheel off, handlebars loosened, clutch and brake levers removed, handguards removed). We were supposed to empty our fuel tanks but no one checked so we left a couple of litres in - enough to get us to a fuel station at the other end. We also had to disconnect our batteries and let the air out of our tyres.

Ishowar dealt with customs who gave the bikes, but not our panniers, a cursory glance and stamped our carnets. The crating took longer than we thought it would - we were at the airport all day - but by the end the bikes were both in crates, labelled and cleared through customs. Everything went very smoothly and Ishowar did a good job of making everything happen and dealing with all the various people that were involved. The bikes have to sit in customs for 24 hours before you can fly them out, so we flew on the Wednesday - Thai Airways fly daily from Kathmandu to Bangkok. We happened to see our bikes being loaded onto our plane as we were waiting in the departure lounge - an extra element of piece of mind!

Costs - Nepal

Your crated bike is weighed and measured and the volumetric weight calculated (LxWxH/6000) - you are charged whichever is the greater between volumetric and actual weight. Our bikes came in at 585 kilos together.

The following costs are the same whichever agent you go to:-

Thai Freight Charge - $US 1.07 per kilo
(as long as the total consignment is over 500 kilos - if it is under then the cost is 1.37 per kilo)

War Surcharge - $US 0.07 per kilo

Dangerous Goods - $US 20 (per consignment)

Airway Bill - $US 2 (per consignment - make sure the name of each bike's owner appears on the document)

Agent's Fee - $US 80 per bike
(This is the only charge that the agent can vary as all the above are fixed by the airline - it includes crating, customs clearance, transport back from the airport, and various fees to "helpers" at the airport).

Thai Airlines flights $US 218 per person one-way
(As of 1st April this has gone up to $US 233 per person)

Thailand

We arrived in Bangkok in the evening so went to collect the bikes the next morning. We didn't use a clearing agent or any touts as the process is pretty straightforward - although again it takes a long time. Go straight to the Thai Air Cargo people (to the right of the Customs Service Centre) who are very helpful and will start you on your way. Make sure that when you collect your delivery documentation there is one document per bike (even if you put all the bikes on the one airway bill). Then when you go to pay for the documentation and Thai Airways handling charge, you need a receipt per bike - so don't pay all together! Customs wanted to see our carnets but didn't actually stamp them - instead they wrote in our passports all the horrible things they would do to us if we didn't re-export them by the expiry date of our visas. We also had to sign a document guaranteeing that we would pay 500,000 Baht ($US 11,500) each if we failed to re-export them.

The warehouse people were lovely - again go straight to the Thai Airways people who are very helpful. They gave us loads of space to put the bikes back together which took a couple of hours (there is no air compressor there so you'll need a hand pump). There was talk of a customs inspection of the bikes but none ever materialised. Lots of people helped us in various ways and not one of them held out their hand for money - a refreshing change.

The whole process was relatively painless - it just took a long time.

Costs - Thailand

As long as you collect your bike within three days of it arriving in Bangkok, Thai Airlines will not charge you storage.

Thai Handling Charge - 1 Baht per kilo (the exchange rate is currently $US 1 = 45 Baht)

Document Charge - 200 Baht per bike (you need one receipt per bike or you will be sent back to have it split)

$842 (65,640 NR) in Kathmandu $25 (1,156 Baht) in Bangkok for two bikes. $436 for two flights Kathmandu to Bangkok.

Shipment: From Auckland, New Zealand to Sydney, Australia - March, 2002

Sea
Yes

Carmen Watts
FCI (fast cargo international)
38-46 Stanley Street, Parnell
Auckland, New Zealand
tel: 64-9-3777995
fax: 64-9-3777987
email: carm...@fci.co.nz
Fast Cargo International website - http://www.fcigroup.com/

"We saved our crate (3 cubic metre) from the last shipping so we didn't have to buy or make a new crate.

Shipping fee: 83 NZ$ (US$ 36.5) / cubic metre
Documentation: 87 NZ$ (US$ 38)

In Sydney we paid 143.5 AUS$ (US$ 75) for port charges, delivery order and documentation at the freight company office.

At the custom office (blue building near airport on Link Road) we had to make an appointment for customs clearence.

At the quarantine inspection (same building) you make also an appointment to inspect the motorbike. the application cost 72 AUS$ (US$ 37) and 55 AUS$ (US$ 28) for the inspection itself.

Make sure that the bike is very clean because the quarantine inspectors are very thorough."

US$ 288 for 2 motorbikes

Shipment: From Southampton, United Kingdom to Galveston, United States - March, 2002

Ro-Ro
Yes
Wallenius Wilhelmson

Wallenius Wilhelmson

We came with a company called Wallenius Wilhelmson. They are a Swedish company which specialises in shipping vehicles, usually from vehicle manufacturers to various parts of the world, in particular, they have many destinations in Europe and both the west and east coast of north America.

They use roll on roll off style of ship, so saving the expense of crating.

We came from Southampton to Galveston, Texas, for a cost of 450 English pounds, plus port fees at each end, and insurance, total about 600 pounds per bike. Total time was 21 days from the ship leaving to us getting the bikes. There was no hassle at either end, other than convincing the customs people in the states that we were not importing the bikes (the Carnet de Passage came in useful here).

We arranged all our shipping thru a travel agent in the UK, who is well known for arranging bike shipping and bike trips outside of the UK. His name is David Grist of HC travel. www.hctravel.com email dav...@hctravel.com

To be honest I would try and contact Wallenius Wilhelmson direct and save the travel agents fees in future.

GBP 600 per bike for two bikes


 

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