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Tips on moving?

8Line

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Jan 26, 2023
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64
Location
South Side of Houston
Hey all, we are packing up today, and moving tomorrow (movers are hired, i'm not about that...haha).

Was wondering if there is any tips/pointers out there for general consideration while moving? not specific to the garage I suppose, I have plans there, but need the rest of the house sorted first. Interested to read what yall have to say!

thanks in advance!
-8line
 
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jeep63

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Feb 8, 2006
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Location
Maryland, USA
We moved December of 21. My only suggestion is to pack with a plan and label every box with not only contents, but destination room at the new house. This way you only need someone to direct the movers to the room based on the box labels. After a while, they learn the rooms and become self sufficient. At least this was our experience. Also be prepared for them to break some stuff.

Try to put stuff where it will go, so you are not moving boxes twice, three times, etc... Don't fill the garage with boxes and then pull from there big mistake in my opinion.
 

dougf

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Feb 22, 2013
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402
Location
Missouri
Ive moved about 8 times in the last 20 years. If you are having people pack, designate a bathroom or small bedroom as a place they don't go into and pack anything, this will give you the opportunity to move things in there that you want to personally take in your vehicle such as family photos, things of value, what you need clothing wise until they deliver, etc...

Other than that just watch and help them where you can. I like to seperate all liquids because they typically dont pack those either. It's a pain regardless because a remote for the living room will end up in a back bedroom box, etc... its inevitabe. When they offload they should have an inventory that you check off as the boxes come off the truck, be diligent and make sure you properly account for your stuff.
 

Shiftless

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Mar 9, 2014
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East Bay SFO
The last time I moved was 39 years ago. My wife and I packed and had pro movers take it all to our next house. I still remember labeling one of the medium sized boxes “loose diamonds” and another one “cash” and another one “nuclear waste” just to mess with the movers. 😁
 

luvtheheat

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Tucson AZ
Last time I got moved by a company (35 years ago) I was told to not plug my TV in until it acclimated 12 hours in the new place. I read that as "we don't want to be blamed for breaking your TV".
 

sjvicker

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Aug 9, 2014
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604
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SW Washington
  1. Throw away, donate or get rid of as much as possible on a local Facebook buy-nothing group. That junky piece of furniture that you dont like is still going to be junky in the new place
  2. pack and transport your own valuables
  3. Tip the moving crew. Order them some pizza's if they're interested.
  4. Throw away as much as possible
  5. I've heard lately that TV's are getting left with the house during sales. They're so cheap now and tough to package up so they just stay.
  6. If you ever wanted to standardize your plastic bin storage, now's the time to go out and buy 20 or 30 of the same kind (check costco)
 

Mike65

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Horse Pasture, Va.
My wife & I have moved 7 times in the almost 36 years we have been married, the last time being 1 1/2 years ago. The best tip is start packing early so it is not a mad rush at the last moment. List on the outside of each box with a marker what room it goes to so like stated above you do not have to move the box 2 & 3 times. Hire a moving company early especially if you are moving in the summer time, try to be as organized as possible. Go through the stuff while packing & get rid of the stuff you do not think you will ever need or as far as clothes stuff you have not worn in the last year or so.
 

CoogarXR

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Ohio
I'm OCD, so I not only label the boxes with their room designation, I label what they contain (like "Office- Bookshelf, top shelf"). What the heck, it's only a couple more letters on a box, and it helps me get set back up faster.
 

pcmeiners

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Aug 13, 2009
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In the only town in Pennsylvania, Bloomsburg.
Agree with jeep63, I numbered every box and the weight on the outside of the boxes, documented the contents and made a spread sheet..save as lot of aggravation, and will be needed if something disappears. I moved my self a year ago and I am still referring to the spreadsheet to find things. With mover, only number/weigh (if needed), seal every box, as things disappear often. Never let the movers have an idea what is in the boxes. As mention get insurance and see if the mover is bonded, verify the bonding agent and any insurance the mover has. I only weighed the boxes as I had (3) 28 ft truck loads. packed to the weight limit.

Have only dealt with movers in NYC, primarily business moves, I could not believe how much stuff was "lost".... strangely all the expensive stuff.

Agree with other, throw out never used items...if in doubt, throw it out.
 
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Whitworth

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Dec 26, 2011
Messages
2,095
When you arrive, start working on getting all the utilities up and operational.

This time of year, bring a CO detector, just to sleep worry free.

Clean out one car as soon as you can, you will need to run errands, many of them, the first day.

And have a small toolbox available just in case you need a screwdriver or something.
 

Ole Slewfoot

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Feb 22, 2016
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Freedom, CA
I have a friend who works for a service that unpacks movees into their new home.
It's an option I never tried, but she has fun playing decorator and gets paid.
 

vavet

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Mar 6, 2012
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Location
Ashland, VA
Make sure the utilities are set up at the new place.
Just because the lights are on when you arrive doesn't mean they are set up.
I moved into half a duplex. The lights were still on from the previous resident's account. I'd forgotten to submit the credit letter from my previous PoCo, so they never set up my account. I went out to eat and came back to no power. The PoCo came out, didn't have a new service order, so they just shut it off per the previous resident's cancellation order.
That sucked.

Take care of your movers. Have water, gatorade, snacks, lunch, etc ready for them. Be clear about how you want things done. They'll do whatever you want, but you have to communicate. If you want them to rearrange things 18 times, they will be happy to do that. They get paid until the clock stops. If you want to sit by the door and tell them which room each box goes into, they'll do that. If you want all boxes staged in the garage to reduce your costs, they'll do that. Full disclosure: I worked as a mover for a couple months one summer when I was in college. You have muscle right then and there. If you change your mind about how you want things arranged in the house, I wouldn't sweat paying them a little extra to have them switch furniture between two bedrooms. It's a whole lot easier than you doing it later.
 

smackey05

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Oct 21, 2009
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792
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Massachusetts
As others mentioned, write the box the room it is going into not the contents of the box. Unpack everything as soon as you arrive at the new place. Better to see if something got left behind or missing early rather than finding out years later.

Also, it is easier to get rid of things at the old house rather than the new house.
 

3baygarage

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SW Florida/from Buffalo,NY
Wrap/tie/tape things closed if needed. Keyboard stand slid out of desk and got destroyed. Never thought of it but it happened. Things will fall, get scraped. Trailers are dirty, even when clean. Cover stuff if needed, like furniture/mattress.
 

mrb1

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Aug 20, 2021
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Miami County, Ohio
@8Line...You don't mention if this is a local move...two guys and a straight truck for a few hours, or a full 53foot moving van going interstate with a shipping crate chained to the back and 5 or 6 different guys at each end? Big difference in the two. Worked several years outta high school at North American Van Lines. Yes, a good pack job is most important. Everything labeled and taped up well. NO trash bags full of whatever, or laundry baskets full of books :LOL: Like others stated..treat em good, they'll take care of it. Was really a fun job. The good far outweighed the bad. A good crew can get in a rhythm and kick ***. Ask what kind of music they like and have it going inside. If possible...no kids or pets around.
If you can, take as much apart yourself as possible...beds, table legs off, shelving. But the rule was/is if you took it apart, you put it back together at the other end. Again, a lot depends on local vs. cross country. Cross country they have to cram something into every available inch on the trailer, local not so much.
Only a couple things mentioned above I kinda disagree with. If you have room, and are able...have the boxes just set in the garage. Goes wayyy faster and you can unpack as needed. And folks trying to unpack while moving big stuff in never really worked well. Just seemed to always get in the way. The company should come back in a week or so and pick up the emty(broken down) boxes. They just resell them as used. Sure there are occasional thieves, drunks, pot heads working at some places (whole 'nother thread there :LOL:) And they give a bad rap for the industry in general. But usually just some decent hard working guys. Treat 'em with respect and they will do likewise. I always took pride in getting a family setup in their new place, very rewarding. Good luck(y)

edit...if you have any particle board furniture that's not taken apart, don't expect it to make it, no matter how careful the guys are.
 
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ludakris04

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Maryland
is this a close or far move?

Not much advice, but you reminded me I need to do another clean out this summer.. it's been a few years.
 
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dcg9381

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Jun 20, 2018
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Austin, TX
It depends on how much stuff you have, how far you have to move it, and the situation on the final location.
Last time I had to move, I was a bit stuck. 1000 sqft shop, 2000+ sqft home. No real place to land it. I basically built a 40x60 shop and bought a Conex container, slowly moved everything in (took about a year) - and that's just moving an hour away. Once "moved" I lived at the shop... We could then proceed on building a new home taking our time.
 

RaisedByWolves

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Feb 4, 2023
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SE PA.
Last time we moved (Last time we will ever move) I had an entire single car garage stuffed with machinery to move, Drill press, band saw, 13"lathe, milling machine, belt sander, bench grinder, 30gal compressor, tables, welder, tool boxes you name it.

We rented and filled two storage spaces, one expensive ground level for the big stuff and one indoor for the ephemera. Took two months to fill them both up and one month to clear them out and get everything into the new 2+ car garage Im in now.
 

engineer2

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Dec 13, 2009
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Chicago burbs
Only thing I heard is if you are moving cross-country, you might want to follow the moving truck just to make sure your stuff is safe. Of course nowadays an Apple Air Tag can be useful.
 

Two Speed

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Sep 20, 2014
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Ontario Canada
While the place is empty, if you still have that oppertunity, Kill all the breakers/pull the fuses and map out the breaker panel with a plug in light or outlet tester if you have one. Turn on one breaker, go around flip every light switch on/off, and plug into each and every outlet. Repeat for every breaker you have. Don't forget outdoor receptacles and lights.
Even if you have logged a receptacle include it in your round of check because you never know if somebody did something stupid.
 

Sumboodie

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Mar 20, 2021
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AK
I packed and moved a 3 bed, 2 bath, 2+ car garage and 1+ car shed, plus another shed, and stuff outside, in 5 days. Lived there about 12 years, so accumulated some stuff.
Got home from 3 weeks of work on a Tuesday night and was packing the next morning.

On the hotest week we had, 85+ (that's hot when im used to -40*!).

Still working on the unpacking 6+ months later.

Moved into a 30x42 shop on 4.5 acres with a 16x25ish apartment... so not exactly room for a lot of the house stuff.

House to be built when I have $$.

In a way regret doing it, was happy at the old place other than wanted more room. Was 1/2 acre in a neighborhood. But another of blood, sweat and $$ in the place over the years.

Sold it the morning of listing it for $20k more than the realtor thought i should ask, plus they paid all costs and a 5 or 10k bonus (i forget now) for taking their offer and pulling the listing.

Feel like I'm restarting now and running on borrowed time... by the time I get to have what I want, I may be well past retirement (40 now). Bought 1st house at 26 yr old.
 
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CoogarXR

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Ohio
In line with what others have said about the utilities, also make sure the utilities at your old place are out of your name. One time, when I moved, I moved out a day early before my landline was turned off, and wouldn't you know the new people ran up $200+ in long distance on that single day that I left the phone in my name! I realize nobody probably has a landline anymore, but they could still milk your electric or turn the gas furnace up to 99 or whatever.

Also, another time I moved, I cancelled the cable and moved it to my new place. But the cable company never actually shut it off at the old place. I sold the house to my sister-in-law, and she had free cable for over 2 years before they noticed and turned it off.
 

Bucko

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Aug 23, 2021
Messages
679
With only 1 day out there's not too much you can do now.

The few things that come to mind are to take pictures of all of your stuff, close ups of tables, any problem areas that walls might get damaged as they drag everything out.
Make sure they put down runners and pad the front door jam or main exit point.
Place a box on the kitchen counter labeled "last box". Put all the remotes, furniture hardware, tv/video cables, etc in this box. Either take the box with you personally or make it the last box on the truck so you have it first thing at your new house. Taping hardware to bedframes, tv mounts etc will make them either go missing or scratch the hell out of the stuff that's put against it.
Have a basic tool kit at the ready because if its all in a box it will be a pain.
Have a ice chest with some water, Gatorade, and some sodas for the crew. It will show them you care about them.

My last move they charged by the hour per guy. The guy figured 3 guys would be needed so I requested 4 because I had alot of heavy furniture that needed to come down a very tricky staircase. When they arrived and did the walkthru I told them I wanted all 4 guys together with the furniture even if one had to stand there but be ready to jump in. The wall had some previous damage and got damaged when we had a sleep number bed delivered and the 2 guys couldn't get the frames up without hitting the wall. No damage happened with the move with the extra help.
 

RPH

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Dec 17, 2006
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Michigan Thumb
Make a couple of boxes marked critical items. Put the things in you might need on arrival. Toilet paper, towels, and such for immediate access.
 

Sumboodie

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AK
In line with what others have said about the utilities, also make sure the utilities at your old place are out of your name. One time, when I moved, I moved out a day early before my landline was turned off, and wouldn't you know the new people ran up $200+ in long distance on that single day that I left the phone in my name! I realize nobody probably has a landline anymore, but they could still milk your electric or turn the gas furnace up to 99 or whatever.

Also, another time I moved, I cancelled the cable and moved it to my new place. But the cable company never actually shut it off at the old place. I sold the house to my sister-in-law, and she had free cable for over 2 years before they noticed and turned it off.

I had that happen when I lived in the dorms on base.

Got a call from a bill collector claiming I owed the cable company some crazy $$.

They had cancelled my internet (all I had) and when the new inhabitant called for a whole cable, internet, sports shows, etc, they signed it up under my name.

Took a letter from a lawyer for them to fix THEIR screw-up.
 

ZRX61

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Aug 15, 2006
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Solar Blight Valley, SoCal
Many years ago we had *professional* movers do the job. About a week later we opened a "Kitchen" box that contained the full trash can from the kitchen... It smelled wonderful.
 

mogandave

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Nov 4, 2021
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Bangkok
Many years ago we had *professional* movers do the job. About a week later we opened a "Kitchen" box that contained the full trash can from the kitchen... It smelled wonderful.
I had a guy got locked in a sea-container for a few days, bet it smelled worse...
 

ScottsGT

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Jan 1, 2014
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Lake Wateree, SC
One day to pack? That’s funny!
March 13th, 2021 we put an offer in on a home. It was accepted and it all started for us after 25 years in the same house. Purge is an understatement. 2 garage sales, gave away half my shop tools to my son (I was downsizing to a single car garage and no room) and started hauling **** to the dump no one wanted. We haven’t even put our home on the market yet.
We moved on April 31st with the first few big loads with the biggest Uhaul truck they have. I had the help of my son and 4 of his friends. They were pissed at first because we hired a moving crew to get the big stuff. After two days of moving my hobby stuff, gun safe, garage benches, display case, etc…They we’re grateful we hired the movers.
Movers showed up with two trucks the same size and asked why we requested two trucks. Once they started loading them up, they realized why.
I was still carrying my packed up built models for weeks. I would swing by the old place on the way home from work and load a couple boxes in the Mustang and do it all over again the next day. This way I had time in the evening to unpack the two boxes without having a huge pile of packed boxes in my way.
We started packing as soon as the offer was accepted. Took us weeks to pack, and probably two months to get the old place cleaned out all the way. Of course we were still working full time except the week off we took starting move in day.
 

rayra

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Dec 1, 2014
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Escaped from Los Angeles
We moved ourselves and later my parents out of CA. Using a grab bag of rental trucks and trailers and storage lockers at both ends for various reasons.
Not wanting to parade around with boxes labeled 'my valuable stuff is in here' and knowingly violating the storage companies' rules on ammunition, we used a simple letter code that wound up looking like Element symbols. Big letter for the room / space, subtext letter for what it was. 'GA' 'Garage-Arsenal'
And since we were packing and moving ourselves, we put most of the heavy stuff in the smallest boxes it would fit in, and odd-shaped things were buffered and the unused space filled with lightweight items.

In this way we were able to keep like items together without much thinking about it and as mentioned above, where there's helpers it's easy to tell them 'all the 'K' boxes by the kitchen'

Last, an 'essentials' box or three, stuff you must have the first night in the new place. That's bathing, clothes, even foodstuffs and whatever it takes to make you effective the next day.

Above all, get rid of as much stuff as you can BEFORE you move. Not after you've tried to stuff everything into a smaller house.

One of our first trailer trips to our new city was a lot of boxes of books, ammo, a full gun safe. The safe went right into my friend's garage and basically stayed there for almost 6mos, hidden in a false facade of a large garment box with a medium box on top, labeled 'grandma's clothes' and 'bedding'.
We decluttered and 'safed' our house before putting it on the market, moved a lot of stuff out. We started this in July. Various misadventures in real estate, we finalyl cleared out of our old house and into our new house right before Christmas. This meant most of our winter clothing was buried in the deep back of a large storage locker. And would be there the rest of winter as we started major cleanup and renovation of our 'new' house - and promptly both came down with early covid (25mos ago). I was hospitalized with it but never intubated.

Anyway, it took a long time to go thru those boxes and unpack and I wish we got rid of more stuff before we moved.

My folks elected to also move just a few months into our own place, so that summer we were renovating their newly purchased house before ours was even finished. And they got rid of absolutely nothing. Practically hoarders, albeit minus the trash. Lifetimes of goods and valuables and decor and crystal and artwork. And that too was a moving nightmare.

here we are, mostly done, still have a volkswagen-sized pile of boxes in our garage, but we bought a 3car. Mostly books, heirloom furniture, business records that need to be culled. Nothing in storage lockers.
My folks, over a year later, still up to their ears in boxes, two storage lockers here in town. Still refusing to get rid of anything as my mother fumbles around with four fewer rooms and 40% of the closet space she used to have.
It's hard to have any more patience or tolerance for it. I wrecked my health and came damned close to shoulder-rolling a 16' cab-over box van on the highway when the front left tire blew up at 65mph. Ill-fitting boots tore my feet up during their packout and after their move-in I wound up having to have a toe amputated. So congrats, folks, you saved a little money not hiring movers, broke OUR backs, and now I can only count to 20!
 

zeke67

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Jun 11, 2010
Messages
272
Location
Houston
The driver is the main guy in charge. Everyone works for him and he's responsible for any claims for damage. If stuff happens you can work with him and he will potentially cover stuff on his own to prevent a claim, assuming it's not a huge claim. He may very well be the only guy on the packing and moving crew that is there for the delivery.

As already mentioned, the "Last Box" with remotes, cables, shelf pins for moveable shelves, etc. You would be surprised at how far HDMI cables can stray from an xBox. Any furniture hardware can go in this box if you don't want them to tape it to the furniture it came from.

They WILL pack your garbage, toss out anything you don't want moved. The will pack dirty laundry.

Snacks and pizza or burgers for lunch each day, gatorade and water goes a long way, beer on the last the day.

I'm surprised no one said it yet, but don't tell them how to do their job and don't tell them how valuable your stuff is. A better strategy is to tell stories. Instead of "this is an valuable antique desk" try something like "do you like the old desk my grandfather left me"?.

Designate a drawer or counter top for that says "STAY" for things like garage door openers, cabinet keys, appliance manuals, spare appliance parts or other stuff that stays with the house. Some of these, like door openers, may be required to be part of the sale and while easily replaceable are a huge pain to try to track down, purchase and get to the seller while you are in the middle of a move.

Probably too late for the OP, but I do all the touch up on door jambs, casings, wall corners and such before the movers get there. You should anyway to get the house ready for sale. Then after they pack up you require them to fix any nicks or chips -- my last house the movers managed to ding up door casings within 6-to-12 inches of the top of the door with couch feet, dressers and anything else they put vertically on a dolly. The main guy was like "these nicks were there" and I was like "No. And if they were, then why are there no nicks on base boards, cabinets, doors or door frames at normal human levels". He asked what the paint color and brand was and bought a quart and some brushes and fixed stuff -- easier for him than to get a claim filed.

I disagree with the advice to stage everything in the garage on the move-in. Have them take things to as close to the final spot as you think.

Keep a small socket set, a pair of dikes and box cutter in the last box or with your personal stuff in case it's needed when you unpack.

Small story: My last move the outbound guys under estimated the load and ran out of space. They had stuff in the sleeper and took apart lot of things you normally wouldn't, like wheel barrows, garage shelves, a fire wood rack and so on to fit things into the belly storage on the trailer. At the unmoving end they hired five or six guys to unload that were not technically skilled in putting things together like bed frames, hooking up washer and drier, etc. Day labor for cash types, but nice guys none the less. There were these two high school kids that took about an hour to put together a wheel barrow, still had left over parts when done and the barrow was backward. It would have take them longer but I loaned them my socket set fro the "last box" to speed things up.
 

jimy

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Joined
Mar 25, 2015
Messages
157
Years ago a friend moved away and put most of her stuff in a storage facility. Several months later I and several others were tasked to load a moving truck and drive it to her new apartment.

She hired one moving guy to help us. I decided he was the smartest man I ever met. He just pointed to the box or item he wanted and everything fit perfectly. Things like mattresses were like gold to him and were used to protect furniture etc.
 
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