Our carriers including fedex and ups typically bag packages here when it's raining.It isn't just USPS that has problems. Amazon delivered a package to my house last Sunday. Driver put it on the porch after it had rained, with more rain in the forecast, while I was at church. I had to go to moms straight from church, 90 minute drive one way, to take her grocery shopping. Got home around 6pm, after it had rained on that package all day. Outside box fell apart when I picked it up. Just lucky that the contents were not damaged, because they were in their own cardboard boxes inside the shipping box. Which were damp, but intact.
That is what I expected. Either that, or put it under my metal carport on the truck bed cover or on the dry gravel underneath it.Our carriers including fedex and ups typically bag packages here when it's raining.
They didn't. About like sending a scam email that says "did you breathe air today". Everyone suckles at the Bezos tweet so an easy phishing hookGenerally speaking, I haven't had any issues with USPS. I did receive one of those scam emails when I had placed an Amazon order. How did the scammers know I had placed aer?
Some time back, we'd had a bit of snow and my driveway could look a bit sketchy. A UPS driver left a sticky note inside my mailbox with detailed instructions on where they had left my package. "100 feet down your driveway, by the big log on the right, underneath the briar bushes". Yep, there it was. Now, UPS drivers leave most of my packages out by the road next to a power pole for the whole world to see (and thieve).
Fed Ex always brings my packages to the back porch, sketchy drive or not and no one can see them.