doogs wrote:You could always use a freight forwarding company in the US, it usually works out a little more expensive with postage and handling but you get your gear. Usually you have free postage within the US to a forwarding company, and they, for a fee and postage send it on to you.
findbuddha wrote:My brief experience with Campsaver is that they are happy to ignore the exclusions on discounts but definitely not the shipping restrictions. I've shopped with them via Shipito twice now and found it a good experience, though Shipito's fee+shipping always 'feels' a bit too expensive.
cooee wrote:And we wonder why retail in Australia is in trouble.
Just about everything l buy is from another continent.
findbuddha wrote:My friend and I recently both purchased backpacks. We tried to order through a local retailer. About a week after paying, the two I was considering both ended up being not available in Australia. The one my friend ordered wasn't going to get here till March next year!!!
Ordered through Campsaver and Amazon instead and about two weeks later the packs we wanted had been delivered from the US.
perfectlydark wrote:Part of the problem is retailers actually make buying from them difficult here. I agree gps that maintaining stock would be harder with a smaller market but there is still a market, and no real reason that stock shouldnt be at least somewhere in the country (for a chain store). Online inventory check is all thats needed followed up by a phone call. If its needed to be imported why is it more difficult for them that it is for us to just buy direct from overseas? The game needs to be picked up, there is a complete reliance on a passive market here that is slowly waking up to the nonsense thats been pulled for years but hey, what options did we have? Then, none. Now, many.
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