Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Question about Mailing

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

I have never mailed KT culture before, but I'm thinking if I did, I would

pour it into one of our old seal-a-meal unit bags and leave a little

airspace and then seal the bag...maybe even double bag it. Has anyone

ever done this before? and did it work for you? and, if so, about how

much is mailing cost in the U.S. to do it this way? My starting culture

that I received from a relative did not do well in shipping. It had been

sealed tightly in a glass jar and then jar was in a ziplock bag...with

packing chips around the bag. When it got here, the natural cornstarch

packing chips were soggy where the liquid surrounding the scoby had

leaked out of the jar (lid was still screwed on!) and ziplock bag. What

little liquid that remained in the ziplock bag was black and very

unappetizing. The scoby proved to be successful in the long run, but

obviously the mailing method was lacking!

Any comments and suggestions would be appreciated! Thanks

a

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi a, My first culture was sent 3000 miles in the mail in two ziplock

bags. I use the " freezer " ziplocks because they are much stronger than the

other types like " sandwich " ziplocks. One gallon ziplock should hold all

the SCOBY and liquid starter, and the whole thing goes in the second ziplock

just for added protection against leakage. I've sent several this way and

didn't know of any problem. We have a seal meal, but the ziplocks are much

easier for both the sender and receiver. Of course some type of padding

needs to be in the package. Crumpled up newspaper works for me.

I don't like my KT touching the softer plastics in general, but the

infrequent and short duration contact between KT and ziplock bags while

shipping shouldn't give us cancer in the big scheme of things. The KT

rebounds quickly, and the shipping with the change of water/climate/tea/etc.

seems to be harder on the KT than the plastic. It may take a few batches to

get your KT turning out real well, but that is normal. It needs to settle

into its new home.

Mailing cost is by weight, and it's only a few dollars. In the spring or

summer I don't use overnight shipping. In the winter or summer I consider

shipping overnight and paying more. I'd rather pay the extra for the added

insurance. I'd rather not have the KT freeze or heat up in the

trucks/terminals too much. That minimizes the stress of shipping on the KT.

Best Regards,

Vince

Question about Mailing

I have never mailed KT culture before, but I'm thinking if I did, I would

pour it into one of our old seal-a-meal unit bags and leave a little

airspace and then seal the bag...maybe even double bag it. Has anyone

ever done this before? and did it work for you? and, if so, about how

much is mailing cost in the U.S. to do it this way? My starting culture

that I received from a relative did not do well in shipping. It had been

sealed tightly in a glass jar and then jar was in a ziplock bag...with

packing chips around the bag. When it got here, the natural cornstarch

packing chips were soggy where the liquid surrounding the scoby had

leaked out of the jar (lid was still screwed on!) and ziplock bag. What

little liquid that remained in the ziplock bag was black and very

unappetizing. The scoby proved to be successful in the long run, but

obviously the mailing method was lacking!

Any comments and suggestions would be appreciated! Thanks

a

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...