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[pct-l] Alcohol or Tobacco - cannot be shipped in resupply packages
- Subject: [pct-l] Alcohol or Tobacco - cannot be shipped in resupply packages
- From: yogihikes at sbcglobal.net (yogi)
- Date: Fri Mar 31 13:36:03 2006
- In-reply-to: <000701c654f7$42e02940$02013b0a@RENTAL2>
I'm *pretty sure* the original question was about
alcohol as fuel for stoves --- denatured alcohol or
HEET. These items can be shipped, but there are
restrictions. Ken & Marcia Powers have outlined the
shipping specifics here:
http://www.gottawalk.com/shipping_fuel.htm
yogi
www.pcthandbook.com
--- Andrew Witham <awitham@copyship.net> wrote:
> I can solve your conscience problem easily - you
> will have to buy your
> alcohol as you go.
>
> There are significant restrictions on the shipping
> of alcohol (I assume you
> are thinking of the beverage kind for consumption
> and won't be rubbing it on
> sore feet!). Basically, you must be a licensed as a
> commercial wine and
> beer shipper AND have a contract with the carrier.
> If you are not - you
> cannot ship alcoholic beverages as gifts or for
> personal consumption.
>
> Here are the UPS conditions;
>
> "The only alcoholic beverages that UPS accepts for
> transportation are wine
> and beer. Packages containing wine and beer are
> accepted for transportation
> only from shippers who are licensed and authorized
> under applicable laws to
> ship alcohol and only on a contractual basis. To
> receive service for
> packages containing wine or beer, the shipper must
> sign a contract and agree
> to the provisions set forth in the approved UPS
> agreement for the
> transportation of wine or beer. All packages
> containing wine or beer must
> have a UPS label requesting an adult signature upon
> delivery. It is the
> responsibility of the shipper to ensure that a
> shipment tendered to UPS does
> not violate any federal, state, provincial or local
> laws or regulations
> applicable to the shipment. All shipments, including
> shipments containing
> wine or beer, will be accepted for transportation
> only according to the
> terms and conditions contained in the UPS Tariff."
>
> Similar terms also apply to FedEx and DHL - the
> reason has nothing to do
> with safety, it is that alcoholic beverages are a
> dutiable item and the
> government doesn't want to miss out on it's cut.
>
> Note that similar rules also apply to cigarettes and
> other tobacco products,
> too. You cannot ship these any more unless the
> recipient is a licensed
> tobacco dealer.
>
> Drew
> CopyShip.Net
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pct-l-bounces@mailman.backcountry.net
> [mailto:pct-l-bounces@mailman.backcountry.net] On
> Behalf Of PCT Reader
> Sent: Friday, March 31, 2006 10:18 AM
> To: pct-l@mailman.backcountry.net
> Subject: [pct-l] Alcohol
>
> PCT -
>
> I'm having a crisis of conscience : I want to use
> alcohol on the trail, I
> want it to be easy to get with my resupply parcels,
> and I want not to have
> to mail something that the post office says is
> illegal (even if it's safe).
>
> UPS will mail alcohol, but I doubt that they'll
> deliver General Delivery to
> a post office.
>
> I'd rather not spend resupply days on HEET patrol :
> any thoughts on how this
> is usually handled? I must be making this more
> complicated for myself than
> it really has to be...
>
> Thanks.
>
> Yours,
>
> Wil Van Cleve
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