Anna2834 wrote: » Thanks I have contacted Levis. We shall see. More than likely old trusted UPS lost the package.
CeilingFly wrote: » A little ott? Left Friday 22nd Dec Sat 23rd Sun 24th Christmas Day Stephens day Possibly started being transported 27th, but more likely Thursday 28th. Road service, probably got to uk Friday 29th. Then sat 30th, sun 31st, New Year's Day 1st. Next movement 2nd Jan and probably scheduled for delivery today. Not lost, probably not even ðelayed. Totally ott reaction esp the "I took day off work" comment - for a pair of Jeans??????
Homer wrote: » Its another example of pure laziness from couriers who couldnt be arsed delivering to residential addresses. I have this regularly as my address is not in a housing estate and the couriers think that it might be out in the countryside and take them ages to get there. Its actually 60 seconds of the M1 motorway and incredibly easy to find. Christmas week I was expecting a delivery from cork being delivered by GLS (I can screenshot the tracking info if anyone would like a laugh) and knew it was being delivered on a specific day so made sure i was in. That evening no delivery and tracking showed insufficient address/could not locate. I phoned straight away and made sure they had the exact address including post code although I was sure this was printed on the parcel already. Next day a driver rang in sick apparently?! Following day couldnt find the address again!! I was told that it would be easier to collect from the depot. Paid €12.50 to have the bloody thing delivered so told them to deliver it. Parcel arrived with a huge label on the front from the sender with my address, phone number and post code :mad:
Miles Beautiful Semicolon wrote: » Nobody mentioned expecting delivery by a date. The OP was told they were delivering or had tried to deliver and that they could no longer locate the item. Read the OP. Some of us have to be home to accept deliveries or the courier leaves with the item.
Del2005 wrote: » It's not laziness its that the courier gets feck all of the €12.50 you paid for delivery. There are at least 2 companies making a profit on the delivery before its given to the courier to deliver. You might be a few minutes from the M1 but that could be a 20 minute journey each way for the driver, so even if they got the full €12.50 they wouldn't be making minimum wage after paying for the van, diesel and insurance and I can guarantee that the amount paid to the courier to deliver your parcel is way less than €9.55 and they have to pay for the van, diesel, insurance and income tax from that.
blastman wrote: » This might be OT for this thread, but it is about UPS, so.... Yesterday, UPS managed to deliver a package to me while demanding an additional fee of ~€26 that was apparently payable on it. I have no idea what this fee is for. The value of the goods shipped was $20 (~€16.30) so I can't imagine it was import duty/VAT as this would be below the permissible level of €22. I did pay a shipping charge as well to the seller which was around $16. Unfortunately I wasn't able to meet package myself so I didn't get to query the delivery driver what this charge actually was. Is there any point trying to contact UPS and querying this, or is it too late having already handed the money over?
blastman wrote: » So as near as dammit, I paid the same again as what the item cost originally essentially for the sake of being €6 or so over the miniscule allowance. What a great system that is. No more UPS shipments for me, that's for sure.
Miles Beautiful Semicolon wrote: » You knew you were purchasing outside the EU. Don't blame UPS, they don't make the rules,
blastman wrote: » They charge ridiculous fees, I'm blaming them for that if that's all right with you
buzzing147 wrote: » Waiting on a packsge today I see on my tracking it says something about remote are don't go there daily??? Ughhh
vandriver wrote: » Do you live somewhere remote?
buzzing147 wrote: » In donegal, slightly remote!