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RE: Military wives support - 6/13/2008 3:15:14 PM
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peculiar_lady2
Posts: 10657
Joined: 2/11/2007
From: Between Hither and Yon
Status: offline
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quote:
What do you ladies send your hubbies in care packages? I've got some ideas but would like more. Have any of you tried to use a vacuum sealer thingy to be able to send homemade treats? Did it work? here is a repost of something I typed up before in a post...about what can and can't ship over there.... on sending packages over to someone in the war here are some tips that people may not know...... *you will need their name. You can no longer send to just any soldier...there were logistical problems with that so a few years ago they changed that. *The shipping is the same as you sending it anywhere in the US...so it's not that bad. Esp now that they have certain preset boxes for a certain price. *If you choose to send things like food, please remember a few tips... 1...don't send chocolate...esp in the summer...it will go rancid very quickly and sometimes it takes those packages a few weeks to get there. I think the quickest one of my packages got to hubby was about 2 weeks. 2...don't send something that will melt easily. The temps there in Iraq get to about 130-140 F every day...the shade about 110-120. Things melt very quickly in that kind of heat 3. Do not try to ship pork products. I know several people that had it sent back to them because they were sending their soldier Vienna Sausages without realizing it's a pork. It's against their religion to have those kinds of products shipped into their country. Vienna sausages now come in chicken and that can be shipped, but the pork can not. Watch on beef jerky too...sometimes that contains pork products. 4. try to keep the individual packages as small as possible...soldier do not always have a lot of room to store things. 5. put anything that could leak into a sealed baggie...you don't want them to receive cookies that taste like soap...uugghhh 6. use a very sturdy box...they go through the wringer to get there and are thrown, tossed, stacked, etc. So pack as sturdy as you can. It is best to wrap the box with brown packing paper...then tape up all the seams well so that it doesn't catch on something and rip open. Covering it is important because of customs...you can't have logo's on the outside of the box when you ship it. You could choose to mark through them, but I have found it easier to just wrap the box in the brown paper. We were also told to address the box inside too just in case the packaging got ripped off. 7. food is always a good thing to send...they share it. Usually they have a tent or building set up for the guys (and gals) to congregate in...and they typically put out their food stashes for everyone to share in their bounty. So send more then you think one soldier could eat. Some places have PX's but not all do. Sme the nearest PX is a days drive away...so they can't get to things easily or safely. 8. when sending homemade cookies, place a piece of bread in the box along with it. It will absorb any moisture and the cookies will stay fresh longer. 9. You can not send certain things through customs (besides pork that I already mentioned)...some others are... no currency, no precious metals, no pornographic material, no firearms, no explosives, no fruits (that includes fruit cake), no living plants, no animals, no alcohol, and no pork. 10. Middle East countries also do not allow nutmeg or allspice into their borders...they consider it an aphrodisiac...so do not send items containing those ingredients
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Proud to be... "To punish the child is to take revenge because you're irritated or whatever...to discipline is to teach the child."~~OneOfHisJewels
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RE: Military wives support - 6/14/2008 2:25:19 PM
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Harvie
Posts: 1242
Joined: 4/18/2005
From: california
Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: IAMJulie What do you ladies send your hubbies in care packages? I've got some ideas but would like more. Have any of you tried to use a vacuum sealer thingy to be able to send homemade treats? Did it work? I don't send anything homemade ... even if sealed well -- it's stale, dry, squooshed and crumbled once it arrives (according to my DH). Besides, he assures me that sweets (cookies, candy, PopTarts) are in great supply over there, whereas protein-based snacks (jerky) and salty (nuts, chips, Cheez Its) are not. Spicy flavors are especially appreciated. The Pringles cans fit really well into the flat rate boxes, as do bags of nuts, trail mix, beef jerky, healthy granola bars, etc. As gum is pretty popular, too. I've even sent individual serving packets of noodle soups, Easy Mac, tuna salad/crackers, and those little cheese-n-cracker things. I also send my wonderful DH magazines, plus we save the Sunday comics to send him, too. What's been really popular has been rubber bouncy balls, fake plastic bugs (they are such boys!) and rubber duckies.... my DH leaves them around for others to find/play with .... he reports that they are all over the base now! (I found patriotic ones at www.Orientaltradingcompany.com) ... I've probably sent him 5 dozen mini rubber duckies. Water guns, water squoosh balls, etc .... also popular. As are small, inexpensive hand-held games.
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PLEASE PRAY FOR MY DEPLOYED (AGAIN) HUSBAND ... THIS IS HIS FIFTH TIME
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RE: Military wives support - 6/20/2008 8:07:43 AM
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Mrs.Wifey
Posts: 5021
Joined: 4/12/2005
From: The Gorgeous plains of Colorado
Status: offline
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Praying Harvie, at least then you could head to Florida with him... or maybe the pets would pose a problem. Either way, it would be nice to have him in sovereign territory.
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Ryanne
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RE: Military wives support - 6/20/2008 8:17:47 AM
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MissGizmo
Posts: 7585
Joined: 8/12/2006
From: Roanoke, Virginia
Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: peculiar_lady2 quote:
(I think I'd have a heart attack if I saw one of those spiders.) LOL...me too from the way Paul describes them. My nephew sent a picture of one. I'm glad it was a picture only & not the real spider.
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Ruth Let us know if you need anything. We won't send what you need, but we will pray for it. Thank you Lord for bring my nephew home from Iraq safely, Please take care of the ones that remain there.
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RE: Military wives support - 6/20/2008 10:36:47 AM
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doinkdom
Posts: 4130
Joined: 4/12/2005
From: The higher lowcountry
Status: offline
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got curious about the camel spider, so I looked it up online and let me just say
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RE: Military wives support - 6/29/2008 2:34:20 PM
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Mrs.Wifey
Posts: 5021
Joined: 4/12/2005
From: The Gorgeous plains of Colorado
Status: offline
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quote:
NOW some cretin has stolen his clothes right out of the laundry, leaving him with practically no underwear, socks, tank tops, t-shirts, etc.... and there is "nothing that can be done about it" when he reported the theft. Grrrrrrrrrrrrr. Micah had that happen also and we solved the problem by drawing useless designs on his socks and boxers and coloring the very bottom band on his undershirts. You can use Sharpie markers and they survive the wash pretty well.
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Ryanne
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RE: Military wives support - 7/6/2008 6:57:39 PM
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OneOfHisJewels
Posts: 2567
Joined: 8/9/2007
From: California
Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: peculiar_lady2 quote:
What do you ladies send your hubbies in care packages? I've got some ideas but would like more. Have any of you tried to use a vacuum sealer thingy to be able to send homemade treats? Did it work? here is a repost of something I typed up before in a post...about what can and can't ship over there.... on sending packages over to someone in the war here are some tips that people may not know...... *you will need their name. You can no longer send to just any soldier...there were logistical problems with that so a few years ago they changed that. *The shipping is the same as you sending it anywhere in the US...so it's not that bad. Esp now that they have certain preset boxes for a certain price. *If you choose to send things like food, please remember a few tips... 1...don't send chocolate...esp in the summer...it will go rancid very quickly and sometimes it takes those packages a few weeks to get there. I think the quickest one of my packages got to hubby was about 2 weeks. 2...don't send something that will melt easily. The temps there in Iraq get to about 130-140 F every day...the shade about 110-120. Things melt very quickly in that kind of heat 3. Do not try to ship pork products. I know several people that had it sent back to them because they were sending their soldier Vienna Sausages without realizing it's a pork. It's against their religion to have those kinds of products shipped into their country. Vienna sausages now come in chicken and that can be shipped, but the pork can not. Watch on beef jerky too...sometimes that contains pork products. 4. try to keep the individual packages as small as possible...soldier do not always have a lot of room to store things. 5. put anything that could leak into a sealed baggie...you don't want them to receive cookies that taste like soap...uugghhh 6. use a very sturdy box...they go through the wringer to get there and are thrown, tossed, stacked, etc. So pack as sturdy as you can. It is best to wrap the box with brown packing paper...then tape up all the seams well so that it doesn't catch on something and rip open. Covering it is important because of customs...you can't have logo's on the outside of the box when you ship it. You could choose to mark through them, but I have found it easier to just wrap the box in the brown paper. We were also told to address the box inside too just in case the packaging got ripped off. 7. food is always a good thing to send...they share it. Usually they have a tent or building set up for the guys (and gals) to congregate in...and they typically put out their food stashes for everyone to share in their bounty. So send more then you think one soldier could eat. Some places have PX's but not all do. Sme the nearest PX is a days drive away...so they can't get to things easily or safely. 8. when sending homemade cookies, place a piece of bread in the box along with it. It will absorb any moisture and the cookies will stay fresh longer. 9. You can not send certain things through customs (besides pork that I already mentioned)...some others are... no currency, no precious metals, no pornographic material, no firearms, no explosives, no fruits (that includes fruit cake), no living plants, no animals, no alcohol, and no pork. 10. Middle East countries also do not allow nutmeg or allspice into their borders...they consider it an aphrodisiac...so do not send items containing those ingredients Believe it or not, marshmallows also have pork product in them. They wouldn't travel well anyway, but just thought I'd say. I learned that the hard way when I worked at a preschool. We had a muslim boy that we never gave pork to, but we gave him marshmallows once and his.mom.was.not.too. happy.about. it. That's how I learned marshmallows have pork product in them.
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"We basically use what I have seen referred to as "get off your butt" parenting. It employs more interaction, more redirection, more prevention, and usually less spanking." -Mrs. Wifey
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