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Hey Hawkeye Been following this thread for some time now and I just want to chime in on the postal thing.
My wife is a rural route carrier in Smithville, Mo. and has been delivering for about 14 years now. I've been to her post office (and even helped her deliver mail) and it's air conditioned, although her Jeep is not. Her pervious Jeep had AC, but really didn't do much good having it on because she had the window down all the time to deliver mail. It mostly keep a cool breeze blowing in her face and legs during the really hot days and it's really tough on the vehicle's engine during extreme conditions. Her old Jeep just wore out and we had to buy another used one. She places packages in the back and uses a marker placed in her bundled mail so she can keep track who gets what package.
I feel so bad for her out there during this hot weather. She comes home just exhausted from the heat sitting inside that Jeep. She puts more than 150 miles on that thing a day. I'm always replacing tires and slapping breaks on it along with fixing other minor things. It's a constant battle to keep it going.
She has told me about her post office receiving chicks all the time. They take great care to place them in the optimal spot and if they come in over the weekend, they call the customer so they can come in and pick them up. The biggest detriment to shipping live chicks are the central processing hubs and semi-trailer trucks. Those environments can get very extreme. Your Post Master's suggestion to oder your chicks in October is very wise. I wish the USPS would put some AC in that building, but with all the cutbacks in the postal system right now, I doubt he'll see it anytime soon. My wife has a mail count coming up in September. Of all the mail counts she's had, all but one yielded in lower pay. I swear they hold mail back during this time just to screw her out of more compensation.
Hi there! Where ya been? Hope all is well. Did your girls enjoy the fair? How are the chicks doing?
As far as postal service goes, I've had mixed results, but mostly good. Our local post office does all they can to get eggs and chicks to you ASAP. They also call me from the hub in Topeka to let me know they are on their way to Hiawatha, and they do their best to not let them sit in Topeka overnight. I sure can't complain. My local post office calls me as soon as they are in, even if it is 5:00 in the morning.
I had one shipment of chicks in March where there were a lot of losses. It looked to me like they had gotten cold and had crowded and trampled each other. The breeder that sent them to me said he had TERRIBLE luck that week with all of his shipments with a lot of losses, so I have to think the problem started early in the trip from where they were shipped. Subsequent shipments had no losses.
I don't know about the air conditioning, but I know most breeders will not ship this time of year, either chicks or adult birds due to the heat.
It rained off an on all night. We have now had 5 1/2" of rain in the past week, with more predicted. If I could, I'd send some of it to some of you who are having dry dry weather.