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Trip Transport Shipping the vehicle and yourself.
Photo by Daniel Rintz, Himba children, Namibia

The only impossible journey
is the one
you never begin

Photo by Daniel Rintz,
Himba children, Namibia



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  #31  
Old 24 Nov 2010
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Originally Posted by Keith1954 View Post
BUT I have a strong suspicion that the supply of international transport - both outbound and inbound from /to Aus - is GST-free.
Yep that's right, we ship machinery in and out of Oz all the time and most of the charges are GST free. However there are some fees that attract GST that come from the shipping agent such as "communications" and some other services that are provided locally.

In any case wether or not Get Routed are discharging their GST responsibilties according to law is a matter for them IMO, it has no impact on me as a customer.

But asside from that, we have also had to alter our plans to suit the vagaries of maratime shipping with Get Routed, the departure date was altered at teh last minute... not a big deal really, but they will be anything up to 8 weeks late coming home because of "shipping issues" with numbers of bikes not being sufficient to justify providing the advertised return shipping date. They are going to store our bikes in CCH for a month before shipping them back, we are not particularly happy with this arrangement, but at this stage of the game have little choice but to stick with it.

I am I must say regretting my decision not to fly the bikes, the common thread in all the shipping discussions is that sea transport is fraught with uncertainty.....
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  #32  
Old 24 Nov 2010
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I've followed this thread with interest (as well). I'm a cheap bastard and have only ever shipped vehicles doing the whole lot myself - booking the shipping slot, customs/wharf clearances, etc etc. Plus if I ever do have to pay an agent I want to know what (if anything) I am paying for.

Its really not a difficult thing to do, you just have to do some basic research about the processes and the terminology used by all the different people involved and the surprise costs at the far end that need to expect.

When I shipped a vehicle from the UK to Aus 2 years ago I just grabbed a copy of the Yellow Pages in the UK and spent a day phoning around for shipping quotes and what was required by the shipping company in terms of paperwork. Most shipping companies are happy to tell you exactly what you need, anyone who stonewalls gets a line through their tel no. and you move onto the next one. A shipping agent will just sit between you and the shipping company and usually just tell you what you need to do anyway and then open your wallet.

Agents or freight grouping companies come in handy when you have less than a full container (LCL) to send, but they also can be the cause of greatest pain when they cant get enough freight to load a container for your destination and your bike sits in their warehouse until they have a full load. A "specialist" bike shipper is probably prone to this more than a general freight groupage company.

The other thing to understand with all freight is that it has terms which often dont make sense - eg...... is not a Common Carrier. "Common Carriers" dates back to the times of horse carts and sailing ships, allowed a carrier to take goods and deliver in their own time but they had unlimited liability for the condition of the goods if they were damaged or perished in transit. So by a single statement "not a common carrier" the shipping company completely absolves itself of all and any liability - but does not say so directly.

A Bremerhaven based company I used about five years ago sent me an email with exactly the steps that I had to do and then what they would do - brilliant service. Rolf Guenther gMbh if anyone is interested.
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  #33  
Old 25 Nov 2010
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Transporting bikes in and out of where you want to ride always seems to be the biggest problem. Even just crossing borders can put a real snag in plans. It has been stated many time in this forum that the best way is air freight if you want to make sure it is there on time. The problem I have found is cost of air freight has gone through the roof, to the point that the only option left is to ship by sea. Anyone traveling should learn to bend with the flow or stay home and that applies to much more than shipping.

I am now riding around Australia (our 20th country) and had Get Routed bring our bikes over. Dave and Maggie did a great job IMHO. Ya Dave can be a little blunt but that may be needed to keep the yuppies who never crossed a border or dealt with customs in line. I would rather be treated like I was back in school than find someone screwed up the whole load because they thought they were above the rules.

Yes you can do most of this yourself if you have the time to muddle through it, me I would rather pay a fair rate to someone who understands the system. Still with sea freight nothing is a sure deal but those that are whining about delays in Portland would probable have waited longer without someone working within the system. Maybe someday when I don't have a date I need to be back home I will do it myself, but for now I will find someone like Dave at Get Routed to help muddle through the bureaucratic BS.



RJT
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  #34  
Old 25 Nov 2010
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for now I will find someone like Dave at Get Routed to help muddle through the bureaucratic BS.
I hope you're getting a cut for the plug. Otherwise you'll be nicknamed the yankee mug.

Still it's kinda nice to see someone believes in Dave Milligan's service (if it can be called that) even if it is a yank!

To be fair to the thread Road Hog, did you ever experience inflation of quoted prices with Dave?
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  #35  
Old 25 Nov 2010
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Price I was quoted did not change, nor did I get a cut. The real shock has been how much the US$ has fallen due to our brilliant economic policy, and that increased my costs but not in AU$

When I shipped from Canada to Chile the price was very volatile and did not lock in till bike was delivered to shipping point and port charges on the other end were just a guess. I see it as take a risk and ship by sea or pay three time as much and go by air.

Have a question though, why if it is so easy and lucrative are there not more people doing it?


Yankee Mug
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  #36  
Old 25 Nov 2010
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Originally Posted by Road Hog View Post
Price I was quoted did not change, nor did I get a cut. The real shock has been how much the US$ has fallen due to our brilliant economic policy, and that increased my costs but not in AU$

When I shipped from Canada to Chile the price was very volatile and did not lock in till bike was delivered to shipping point and port charges on the other end were just a guess. I see it as take a risk and ship by sea or pay three time as much and go by air.

Have a question though, why if it is so easy and lucrative are there not more people doing it?


Yankee Mug
There are 1000s of people doing it - they call themselves international freight forwarders.
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  #37  
Old 26 Nov 2010
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Crappybiker, you're not helping your case by attacking another member. I don't know Road Hog personally, but I know he's been around here for a while and has often offered hospitality and support. The fact that his perspective is different from yours merely means that his perspective is different from yours. Nothing more.

Safe journeys!

Mark
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  #38  
Old 26 Nov 2010
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Yankee Mug

AND Road Hog (Yankee Mug) also has a sense of humour (or should that be humor??)

But not to discredit Crappybiker in anyway or put Road Hog on a pedistol but it is true that when you get ripped off it hurts not just the hip pocket because money usually is the first thing we forget but mostly the pride.

I've been ripped off countless times and well now I see them as lessons in what not to do. At the time I was hurt, angry (read furious) mostly at myself for being conned but also because the reality bites hardest when you are honest and put your trust in someone just to have them spit in your face.

In time I've learnt to cut my losses and swallow my pride but it doesn't make the unprofessionalism or dishonesty of certain individuals any less acceptable. Think what you will but knowing this, if you want something done well then you have to do it yourself. I am much more likely to organise all freight forwarding and logistics as much as possible by myself to take out the likelihood of having a middle-man sting me for his/her fees when they add little or no value.

When money is concerned we're all at fault, just some more than others.
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  #39  
Old 26 Nov 2010
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Im going riding....
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  #40  
Old 26 Nov 2010
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Originally Posted by Crappybiker View Post
Im going riding....
Best thing to do.
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  #41  
Old 4 Dec 2010
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Cost

Anyone have a price to ship from Brisbane Australia to UK or Holland, Air or sea. We have two bikes it may be worth finding some others and putting together our own container. Locky.
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  #42  
Old 11 Dec 2010
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Originally Posted by Quandary View Post
I recently asked Qantas about freighting my 2005 1200GS from Aus to NZ. When talking to them on the phone all they said was that I needed to go through a freight forwarder.
I received the same answer from Qantas. No mention of bike age at all.

When I spoke with the freight forwarder he said the bike could go in a wide bodied or narrow bodied aircraft, depending on the destination. If in a narrow bodied aircraft, the bike will have to lie down and therefore must be emptied of fuel and oil. Just fuel should be emptied for wide bodied.

As I was enquiring about freighting to Indonesia, the wide bodied flight go from the major capital cities, narrow bodied from Darwin. Now I need to decide departure point and which bike I take...:confused1:
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  #43  
Old 11 Dec 2010
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On the 10th of November I flew my bike from Sydney to Auckland with Qantas, the process was easy, the guy's on the counter put me in touch with a dangerous goods firm who worked with me, as I wanted to get the bike down there on a dry day, as it has to be clean, they charged Au$125, I took the bike down on the day, disconnected the battery, had a quarter of a tank of petrol.
The Qantas staff, weighed the bike 320kg, then I left the bike in there warehouse. Went back and did the paperwork, paid Au$1100 and walked away!
The bike flew in the day after me, I went down to New Zealand freight after completing the carnet in the customs office in the centre of Auckland, the quarantine guy took five minutes to look at the bike, NZ$25.50, NZ freight charged NZ$30 for paperwork and the bike was brought out! Qantas did a fantastic job strapping my bike into one of their containers, Simple easy service!
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  #44  
Old 21 Dec 2010
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The perfect forum response

Hey Ham46, that is near enough to the most perfect HUB response I have ever read. All the cost data and details in one quick and concise post. Now I just need to find someone who has the same info re Perth to Guatemala and Costa Rice to Perth.

This topic turned seems to have turned into a Dave Milligan warning bulletin. Thanks everyone, I feel appropriately warned about Dave and had a good chuckle at the website.
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  #45  
Old 21 Dec 2010
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Get Routed

We sent our bike to Portland with Dave this year. He was recommended to us by friends who sent their bike with him to Portland in 2009.To those whingers, you can't make government departments jump when you want them to,especially in the USA on their fourth of July long weekend. It was dissappointing that the bikes were held up for a week,we do sympathise with the BMW guys who missed their rally.

We have no problems with Dave Milligan and will be using Get Routed in the future.Friends who used another company to send their bike to the States this year are still waiting for it to return, we got ours back on the 8-11-2010.

We have shipped our bike ourselves previously (privately) and know the pitfalls of shipping companies and government departments stuffing you around.

We have told our friends of our good experience with Dave. We are going back again in 2013 for the fifth time. Dave does not deserve this slagging.
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