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Author moving
kay7777@post to group

2006-04-04, 4:21 pm

I am moving soon and I am now starting to pack...can anyone give me some
good ideas about how to protect my things? Thank you, k


Jim Tiberio

2006-04-04, 5:21 pm


"kay7777@post to group" <kay7777@microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:RJ6dna25PNHpWK_ZnZ2dnUVZ_vidnZ2d@comcast.com...
> I am moving soon and I am now starting to pack...can anyone give me some
> good ideas about how to protect my things? Thank you, k
>

Moving companies, truck rental places, storage rental facilities and even
office supply stores have lot's of great products for safely packing and
shipping your stuff. Mostly they are just fancy cardboard box inserts,
bubble wrap and styrofoam peanuts, they work but I don't know how much
better they are than a regular box and wadded up newspaper. I mostly just
bought the boxes themselves and items for protectiong
pictures/paintings/mirrors while moving.


delphiprog@hotmail.com

2006-04-04, 6:21 pm


Jim Tiberio wrote:
> "kay7777@post to group" <kay7777@microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:RJ6dna25PNHpWK_ZnZ2dnUVZ_vidnZ2d@comcast.com...
> Moving companies, truck rental places, storage rental facilities and even
> office supply stores have lot's of great products for safely packing and
> shipping your stuff. Mostly they are just fancy cardboard box inserts,
> bubble wrap and styrofoam peanuts, they work but I don't know how much
> better they are than a regular box and wadded up newspaper. I mostly just
> bought the boxes themselves and items for protectiong
> pictures/paintings/mirrors while moving.


I agree with the above, with one caveat: Don't ever use newspaper to
pack fine china. It could bleed off the newsprint onto the china and
you'll never be able to get it off the china. I bought large sheets of
unprinted paper from a local shipper to use instead of newspaper. Real
cheap.

Also, I'd recommend making sure you buy property insurance from the
movers or make sure your Homeowners/Renters policy covers your stuff.
Finally, if you're using a moving company do your homework on them. A
friend of mine moved from Ohio to L.A. His stuff arrived two months
after he did, although it was intact.

Doug

PipeDown

2006-04-04, 6:21 pm


<delphiprog@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1144182912.874303.57100@t31g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
>
> Jim Tiberio wrote:
>
> I agree with the above, with one caveat: Don't ever use newspaper to
> pack fine china. It could bleed off the newsprint onto the china and
> you'll never be able to get it off the china. I bought large sheets of
> unprinted paper from a local shipper to use instead of newspaper. Real
> cheap.
>
> Also, I'd recommend making sure you buy property insurance from the
> movers or make sure your Homeowners/Renters policy covers your stuff.
> Finally, if you're using a moving company do your homework on them. A
> friend of mine moved from Ohio to L.A. His stuff arrived two months
> after he did, although it was intact.
>
> Doug
>


All that packing material can add up to big $ fast. Using your clothing,
blankets and quilts as packing material can save lots of money, you just
need to pack some clothes seperately so you have something to wear when you
get there.

The other biggie is do not overload the boxes. Its no fun to pick up a
medium sized box only to find out it is the heaviest box on the truck. Lots
of smaller boxes are better than one heavy big one especially if you are
doing most of the lifting.


hillacc@yahoo.com

2006-04-04, 7:21 pm

Personally, I have found the glassware boxes and inserts from U-Haul to
be wonderful! (Note that I would NOT say the same about U-Haul,
itself.)

They are a nice size box with corrugated inserts (sort of turns the box
into an egg-carton type of arrangement) and foam "sleeves" for
inserting glassware into before placing it in the box. The boxes and
sleeves work for a variety of different sizes of things (think crystal
pieces, porcelain collectibles, etc.) You can pack a LOT of glassware
FAST using these, and I have never had a glass break while using these
(have moved about 50 times, including cross-country twice, with and
without professional movers).

Also, mirror boxes for, obviously, mirrors and large pictures are, IMO,
well worth the money in terms of their ability to protect their
contents. These also work great for mirrors in frames or uprights
(such as on antique dressers) and can be cut and combined to fit just
about any size.

Wardrobe boxes are expensive but really nice to use, can be re-used as
a small spare closet if you have storage space, and you can pack large,
odd-sized items (e.g., lamps, lamp shades, snow boots) in the bottom of
them.

Be fussy about the tape you buy to seal the boxes. Crappy tape adds a
lot of frustration to what should be a simple procedure. I've found
that the kind sold at the post office is probably the best and easiest
to use, although the most expensive. Staples brand is also pretty
good. Avoid True Value Hardware brand; it's a sticky, easily shredded,
skimpy mess.

If you are moving a large amount, I would recommend packing a bag with
2-3 changes of clothes, grooming supplies, medications, etc., and also
a "basic kitchen" box to take with you in the car (pan with lid, coffee
maker with filters and coffee, cup, bowl, plate, fork, sharp knife, can
opener, spoon, paper towels, dish soap, dish cloth and towels, some
cleaning rags, a few garbage bags, pen and notebook, and so on). These
will help make things a lot more pleasant in the new place while you
sort through all your boxes. Also, if moving pets, make a pet supply
box with bowls, litter (disposable litter pans are great!), couple
days' worth of food, toys, towels, and take it in the car.

Jo Ann, currently in Michigan :-)

hallerb@aol.com

2006-04-04, 8:21 pm

DEFINETELY PACK A SURVIVAL KIT! Enough clothes and essentials like
toilet paper soap etc in a well marked box you carry personally. That
way if you get seperated from your belongings, thru miss directed truck
etc or even cant find my clothes.

All non disasters for the well prepared

nr

2006-04-04, 9:21 pm

Pack pictures good side in (away from the outside). One of my boxes
was punctured and I didn't catch this until weeks after the move when I
finally got around to that box. Also, try to have one person check
each box as it comes off the truck for holes or other signs of
potential trouble.

Ann Hodgson

2006-04-04, 9:21 pm

When we moved a few yrs ago I used our towels to pack and protect the dishes
and breakables. I also used paper towels to wrap the glasses in. When I
unpacked the paper towels came in very handy to clean the kitchen - I did
not have to by more for cleaning ( the kitchen and most of the house was
very dirty).
"kay7777@post to group" <kay7777@microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:RJ6dna25PNHpWK_ZnZ2dnUVZ_vidnZ2d@comcast.com...
>I am moving soon and I am now starting to pack...can anyone give me some
>good ideas about how to protect my things? Thank you, k
>



--
NewsGuy.Com 30Gb $9.95 Carry Forward and On Demand Bandwidth
mm

2006-04-05, 1:21 am

On Tue, 4 Apr 2006 12:13:56 -0700, "kay7777@post to group"
<kay7777@microsoft.com> wrote:

>I am moving soon and I am now starting to pack...can anyone give me some
>good ideas about how to protect my things? Thank you, k


Don't pack your aerosol cans, I guess.

I didn't plan to hire a mover, but he called me and gave me a good
price, sight unseen, because I lived 150 miles away from where he was
and where I was moving to. He gave me a few instructions on the
phone, maybe, but I'm sure he didn't say anythign about aerosol cans.

When he got there, he brought the subject up and said he couldn't take
any. Thank goodness I had the presence of mind to lie, because they
were spread out throughout the boxes and it would have taken hours and
hours to find them all.

He wanted me to take them all in my car, but that was full already
with the gasoline can and my plants and my jewelry and valuables and a
friend.

OTOH, I believe him that it is a violation of FTC? rules, and if it
were hot summer time, and the truck sat in the sun for an afternoon, I
guess they might explode. It was the end of May.

Also don't pack your 12 inch tvs. I had a lot and I packed each in a
liquor box or something. He intended to wrap them in moving blankets,
and what I did just used up space.


IIRC, you don't have to pack what is in your chests and dressers.
They just take the drawers out, put the dresser in the truck, and put
the drawers back in. Even if you are doing the moving, that makes
sense.

A mover should have a pamphlet. Even if you aren't hiring them,
they'll give you one.

I didn't have one because I did everything over the phone, and I was
still in college mode, where we just stuffed it in the trailer.
Corinne

2006-04-05, 4:21 am

The liquor stores give away smaller boxes, with dividers in them. If
you don't need the dividers, they are easy to remove. These work great,
and are not so heavy you cannot carry them.

PipeDown wrote:
> <delphiprog@hotmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1144182912.874303.57100@t31g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> All that packing material can add up to big $ fast. Using your clothing,
> blankets and quilts as packing material can save lots of money, you just
> need to pack some clothes seperately so you have something to wear when you
> get there.
>
> The other biggie is do not overload the boxes. Its no fun to pick up a
> medium sized box only to find out it is the heaviest box on the truck. Lots
> of smaller boxes are better than one heavy big one especially if you are
> doing most of the lifting.
>
>

nj_dilettante

2006-04-05, 9:21 am

kay7777@post to group wrote:
> I am moving soon and I am now starting to pack...can anyone give me
> some good ideas about how to protect my things? Thank you, k


Don't overpay for packing material! Buy directly from a box wholesaler.
www.uline.com is great, they have just about everything you'd ever need, and
they ship same/next day. If you've got questions, don't hesitate to call
them - they treat small customers wonderfully! The only drawback is that
you've got to buy in bulk - 25 of each box size - but the cost is a fraction
of what you'll find elsewhere. Bubble wrap is 1/10th the cost of the
cheapest I've found near home - cheap enough to make it reasonable to use
for packing.

--
nj_dilettante
in the words of the immortal Sgt Schultz:
~~ I know NOTH-THING ~~


Keith Williams

2006-04-05, 1:21 pm

In article <GaJYf.152$Ij.68676@news.sisna.com>, basinnospam@nwi.com
says...
> The liquor stores give away smaller boxes, with dividers in them. If
> you don't need the dividers, they are easy to remove. These work great,
> and are not so heavy you cannot carry them.


I've found that liquor boxes are all different sizes making packing
the truck a major PITA. They usually don't have tops either. I've
found that the best, cheap, moving boxes are "copier" paper boxes.
They're sturdy, about the right size, all the same size, and stack
well. When I've had to move I grab bunches from work over a few
months prior (sometimes even pack them ahead ;). I suppose one
could make friends with the local Staples manager too.

--
Keith
hillacc@yahoo.com

2006-04-05, 3:21 pm

Oh yeah, the paper boxes are *definitely* the best freebie box. If you
don't work where much paper is used, ask everyone you know who does to
keep an eye out for you (don't forget teachers and people who don't
work in offices but who make lots of copies). The fact that they are
all the same shape/size and have good lids also helps before the move,
when you are building the wall o' boxes as you pack.

Open liquor boxes and so forth may be handy for large cooking utensils
(my big wok and roasting pan come to mind) and other large, odd-shaped
items if you are moving yourself. If you are using pro movers, they
may not accept any open boxes.

Jo Ann

Edwin Pawlowski

2006-04-30, 12:21 am


"kay7777@post to group" <kay7777@microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:RJ6dna25PNHpWK_ZnZ2dnUVZ_vidnZ2d@comcast.com...
>I am moving soon and I am now starting to pack...can anyone give me some
>good ideas about how to protect my things? Thank you, k


There are probably tips at the web sites of moving companies.
http://www.uhaul.com/tips/packing.html

Good boxes, lots of packing materials, a little knowledge. When our dishes
were packed, each piece was wrapped in un printed newsprint. You can buy it
from a paper supply house and some janitorial and paper good distributors.
Dishes were packed standing on end as they are less prone to break than the
stress on a flat dish.

Mark each box with the contents and what room it should be placed in when
unloading.


mm

2006-04-30, 3:21 am


I'm not at all complaining, Edwin, but do you (or anyone) have any
idea why I got 10 posts, in 10 threads, from you just now, all of
which were replies by you to someone else. And yet I don't seem to
show the posts you were replying to. How come I don't show the
original posts, that you are replying to?

I get one or two of these every couple months, not especially from you
that I've noticed, but this is the first time I got 10 of them, or
even 3 of them in one day.

I'm using Agent to read news, if that helps anyone.

TIA

On Sun, 30 Apr 2006 02:50:31 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" <esp@snet.net>
wrote:

>
>"kay7777@post to group" <kay7777@microsoft.com> wrote in message
>news:RJ6dna25PNHpWK_ZnZ2dnUVZ_vidnZ2d@comcast.com...
>
>There are probably tips at the web sites of moving companies.
>http://www.uhaul.com/tips/packing.html
>
>Good boxes, lots of packing materials, a little knowledge. When our dishes
>were packed, each piece was wrapped in un printed newsprint. You can buy it
>from a paper supply house and some janitorial and paper good distributors.
>Dishes were packed standing on end as they are less prone to break than the
>stress on a flat dish.
>
>Mark each box with the contents and what room it should be placed in when
>unloading.
>


LinkBot





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