12 February 2014

Worth the wait



The crocus are blooming about a month or more too soon this year.  

The weather here is always a subject of conversation - mostly in the way of complaining.  Admittedly, I wasn't sure just how much I could take of it either.  I was certain that grey was the national color of Belgium . . . until this year.

This year has, by far, been the best weather year since our arrival.  I haven't seen this much sun in nearly five years! The summer was outstanding and the winter (so far) has been more like spring. Now, don't get me wrong . . . it's not tropical by far, but February temperatures of lows at 4C and highs of 7C (that's 40F and 45F for us Americans :) is unusual.  Plus the added bonus of sun nearly every day.  
  
Apparently it really is unusual.  I read in our local paper that this winter is headed toward setting a record for the warmest winter ever!  I'm just glad we are here to witness it.

What will these Belgians (and me) bitch about now?

08 February 2014

Snelmail not

Ironically, snel is Dutch for "fast, quick, rapid, speedy . . ."

Mailing letters and packages back and forth from U.S. to Belgium and vice versa has been, at the very least, intriguing.

Not long after moving here, we learned that Randi's friend Corey liked to collect postcards so we started sending one to him each time we traveled to a new place.  We also always purchased a postcard for ourselves.  One day it dawned on me that we could mail ourselves a postcard too.

That's when I started writing and mailing a postcard to us describing where we were and how much fun we were having.  I wish I'd thought of it sooner!


This week we received this postcard from Randi, mailed while we were on our trip to Orange Beach at Christmas.  It took 6 weeks to arrive in our mailbox.  It's a postcard - not a shipping crate.

Once I sent a package to the States that took exactly 30 days to arrive.  I paid the premium fee to keep it off the slow boat, but if it ends up on there anyway, as Randi said . . . guess it takes long time to row a dinghy full of mail across the ocean in winter :-)

When something is shipped from the U.S., it remains in Customs for . . . as long as it takes.  If it's something "new",  taxes are 25% of its value.  Belgium's mail tax is basically extortion.

If you mail something to me and write on the shipping form that it's worth $100, I get to pay a tax of $25 for the post office to give it to me.  If it's something not "new", then Customs decides if it is in fact, new or not, if it has taxable value, and then you may or may not pay taxes on it.

Not a bad system, huh?

Even a regular first class stamp here will cost you over a dollar compared to the U.S. at 49 cents and if you want to mail that letter to another "state" (aka country), it'll cost you about $1.50.  

Don't even ask what it will cost you to send that same letter to the States!  Okay, it'll cost you almost $2.  Is that why the Belgian P.O. was a billion plus in the black while the U.S.P.S. was a few billion in the red?  Perhaps.

Ok, so the post office will cost you an arm and a leg, but what about FedEx?  No surprise, send me a letter FedEx from the U.S. and pay $59.00 and I'll get it in 2 days.  I send you a letter FedEx, and it'll cost me $116.00 and the "delivery date is unavailable".  

It is still the same distance both ways, right?  When it absolutely, positively has to be there one of these days?

What got me thinking about all this is when we received one of our own postcards last week.  From Switzerland.  Mailed October 8.  


That may be a record . . . 4 months to go 400 miles.  The pony express resurrected.


In addition to postcards, I've enjoyed collecting sand (or rocks in some cases) from every beach we've visited.  I really love the display and all the fun memories it brings to mind.  Randi was nice enough to make these snazzy tags for each one . . . Nice, France - Barcelona, Spain - Cancun, Mexico, - Livorno, Italy . . . and so many more wonderful places!