Ok, I have to ask some questions about shipping. I have looked at several folks advice on other forums which seemed excellent but my shipment Monday ended up with a cold little dude!
The senerio, I waited until the temperature was going to be 40 F at the the recipients airport. We only ship Delta-Dash. I packeged in a styro for perishable goods within a card-board box matched to the styro. The box was marked "Live Harmless Reptiles" on all four sides. I taped a 48 hour heat pack, wrapped in a single sheet of newspaper to the center of the styro bottom. I also taped the same to the center top of the lid. I shook the Cr#p out of both packs and waited till I felt them warm up before proceeding with the shipment (30 minutes). I put crumbled up news paper in the styro and placed the snake bag in the middle above the bottom heat pack. As the snake would only travel from 8:45 AM ( flight was at 9:15 AM) to 12:05 PM ( picked up at 1:08 PM) I didn't put any holes in the box and styro. The ambient temp when it was dropped off at Delta was 57F and rising and the temp at the destination would be at 40F upon arrival. My customer told me both heat packs were dead and the little guy was cold. He is doing fine and after some "human body" warming showed his appreciation by biting the guy. He has since curled up on a perch and seems fine. I generally give a one week satisfaction guarantee and don't expect a problem, but I am concerned that I screwed up with the shipment?
To give better service in the future, I was hoping you folks who ship a lot could answer my questions:
1. What is the lowest temp at the destination that you will consider shipping an neo-tropical animal?
2. Does the size or age of the animal come into play?
3. What can you do to insure that 48 hour heat packs are viable and have you noticed if they stop functioning at lower ambient temps?
4. What do you use as a measuring stick to determine how many heat packs to use?
5. Was my general shipping regiment sound or did I bite the big one?
Thanks in advance!
Dogboa
The senerio, I waited until the temperature was going to be 40 F at the the recipients airport. We only ship Delta-Dash. I packeged in a styro for perishable goods within a card-board box matched to the styro. The box was marked "Live Harmless Reptiles" on all four sides. I taped a 48 hour heat pack, wrapped in a single sheet of newspaper to the center of the styro bottom. I also taped the same to the center top of the lid. I shook the Cr#p out of both packs and waited till I felt them warm up before proceeding with the shipment (30 minutes). I put crumbled up news paper in the styro and placed the snake bag in the middle above the bottom heat pack. As the snake would only travel from 8:45 AM ( flight was at 9:15 AM) to 12:05 PM ( picked up at 1:08 PM) I didn't put any holes in the box and styro. The ambient temp when it was dropped off at Delta was 57F and rising and the temp at the destination would be at 40F upon arrival. My customer told me both heat packs were dead and the little guy was cold. He is doing fine and after some "human body" warming showed his appreciation by biting the guy. He has since curled up on a perch and seems fine. I generally give a one week satisfaction guarantee and don't expect a problem, but I am concerned that I screwed up with the shipment?
To give better service in the future, I was hoping you folks who ship a lot could answer my questions:
1. What is the lowest temp at the destination that you will consider shipping an neo-tropical animal?
2. Does the size or age of the animal come into play?
3. What can you do to insure that 48 hour heat packs are viable and have you noticed if they stop functioning at lower ambient temps?
4. What do you use as a measuring stick to determine how many heat packs to use?
5. Was my general shipping regiment sound or did I bite the big one?
Thanks in advance!
Dogboa