
07-26-2013 11:36 PM
Does anybody have any experience with or ideas of how I should handle a sale to China. The buyer has paid for the item, and has not answered my emails about an address.
The address provided on both the eBay and papal sight is:
黃勁
沙市區沿江大道汽渡宿舍2門401號
荊州市
湖北省, 434000
China
Can I address label as above, and assume that Canada Post can get it out of the country to China, where postal workers there will know how to deliver it?
I used Google translate, but not sure I can trust that!!
Solved! Go to Solution.
07-28-2013 04:08 PM
Chinese is one of the languages/ writing systems accepted by members of the Universal Postal Union.
http://www.upu.int/en/the-upu/languages.html
Interesting that although the UPU was an American idea, back in the 1860s, the official language of the organization is French.
You learn something new every day, whether you want to or not.
07-27-2013 01:08 AM
According to the Canada Post Website, the country should be written as "PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA" and not simply "CHINA" (I guess to distinguish it from "Taiwan") but apart from that, I think what you have should be fine.
You may wish to familiarize yourself with the conditions involving invoicing as well.
07-27-2013 01:31 AM
"conditions involving invoicing"
?? Invoicing with Canada post? EBay? Papal?
07-27-2013 02:57 AM
I think they mean sending a commercial invoice with the parcel. Check Canada Post for requirements for enclosing invoices, how many and where they have to be put.
Use a printout of the ebay invoice for your invoice and sign it at the bottom. Doesn't hurt to also put "I certify that this invoice is true" above your signature.
07-28-2013 04:08 PM
Chinese is one of the languages/ writing systems accepted by members of the Universal Postal Union.
http://www.upu.int/en/the-upu/languages.html
Interesting that although the UPU was an American idea, back in the 1860s, the official language of the organization is French.
You learn something new every day, whether you want to or not.
07-28-2013 11:51 PM
@femmefan1946 wrote:Chinese is one of the languages/ writing systems accepted by members of the Universal Postal Union.
http://www.upu.int/en/the-upu/languages.html
Interesting that although the UPU was an American idea, back in the 1860s, the official language of the organization is French.
You learn something new every day, whether you want to or not.
Actually, if I'm reading that page correctly, Chinese is a language in which UPU documents are produced, but it's not a "working language" for the UPU the way English is.
As far as French being the official language of the UPU, haven't you wondered why all your air mail correspondence bears the instruction Par Avion, no matter what the country of origin is?