So I order a pound of coffee from an established company on the Fourth of July, hoping to see it within a week.
While I have yet to receive it, I have been following it via Fed-Ex tracking and apparently it is on a hell of a journey:
Fort Meyers, FL
Davenport, FL
Lake City, FL
Ellenwood, GA
Indianapolis, IN
Town Of Cassville, WI
Glenfield, ND
Kremlin, MT
Naples, ID
Leavenworth, WA
It doesn’t seem to be going back and forth as if it was mislabeled or misplaced. It just seems to be taking the scenic route.
heh you should see the tracking from something in china … seems every 100 miles or so it gets stopped and searched by customs, it takes about a week for something to go from Wuhan(!) to hong kong
At least it seems to be minimal backtracking (generally north and then west). Hopefully you do not live in Maine. Cassville is pretty small (Village is 777, surrounding town is 487)
I have had packages be within 5 miles of me only to head to Minneapolis (100+ miles) before returning to the area (I understand hub and spoke, but it is still weird)
Many companies who don’t have delivery capabilities use one of the big shippers like UPS, FedEx, USPS, or all 3, whichever is cheapest. I’m guessing the company used an independent freight handler who uses planes, trains, and buses to get a package from Point A to Point B, depending on what it is and how soon it’s supposed to get there.
Did the company promise a delivery date or time frame? I think you are due a refund if it’s a week later than they promised. Especially if there was a shipping charge (it wasn’t free shipping).
$7.99 for shipping. The company didn’t promise a delivery date, but Fed-Ex tracking initially gave me a date of 7/19, then 7/20, then 7/22, and finally “Pending-No Delivery Date”.
Looking at the track of one package went all over the place. But also noticed it went back in time at one point. A week. I emailed the company just for fun to point it out. The reply contained no explanation, but agreed it was funny.
Last week I had a package coming via FedEx that was supposed to come Sunday. I checked Monday morning when it hadn’t arrived, and there was this big red dot on the the travel arrow saying something about client not being able to be recognized. And the package was shown in San Diego instead of Los Angeles.
I looked at the address, and it looked o.k. so I called FedEx. While I was on the phone with the agent, I finally noticed that the shipper had transposed the second and third digits of the zip code – 92xxx must be San Diego. I told the agent, and she made sure I got the package within about 12 hours. But it was a good reminder that our eyes see what they expect to see.
My own UPS saga from last year. 2 days from California to the destination city of Ottawa, Canada was pretty good - but then things went wrong.
11/03/2021 - Visalia, CA, United States
11/04/2021 - West Sacramento, CA, United States
11/04/2021 - Mather, CA, United States
11/05/2021 - Louisville, KY, United States
11/05/2021 - Cleared Import Customs Your package has cleared customs and is on the way.
11/05/2021 - Mount Hope, ON, Canada
11/05/2021 - Ottawa, ON, Canada 11/06/2021 to 11/15/2021 - No information available
11/16/2021 - Your delivery will be rescheduled. Melbourne, Australia
11/19/2021 - We’re sorry this package has experienced a sortation delay. The package has been rerouted to the correct destination. Melbourne, Australia
11/20/2021 - Botany, Australia
11/22/2021 - Incheon, Korea, Republic of
11/24/2021 - Anchorage, AK, United States
11/25/2021 - Louisville, KY, United States
11/25/2021 - Mount Hope, ON, Canada
11/25/2021 - Ottawa, ON, Canada
11/25/2021 - Delivered OTTAWA, CA
I have questions about the supposed trip my package is taking. For instance, Kremlin, MT which has a total population of 126 people. Why would my package spend a day there?
Waypoint beacons. Used for tracking trucks and the contents. The list of them on your package’s journey would likely be a couple hundred locations, they only tag one for your tracking every 4 to 12 hours if there are no service centers on the route. Truck drivers hate them, especially if they get behind schedule.