bjarvis: (family)
[personal profile] bjarvis
I've finally given up and done what I swore I would never do: rather than selecting & sending a customized birthday present to a niece or nephew, I just sent a card with a $20 (CDN) bill.

Sending money just seems like such a cop-out. I'm officially a failure as an uncle. I feel dirty.

The sad reality though is that I rarely get back to Canada these days. When I first moved to the US, I was returning to the Dominion every three months or so. Now, it's more like every 18 months. The four of them --a niece & nephew by one sister and two nieces by another-- are very young kids yet and growing quickly every day. Seeing them even quarterly wouldn't be enough to keep up with their growth rate and changing interests. I can't even keep track anymore of the presents I sent individually for past birthdays and christmas so I'm running into the possibility of accidentally sending the same item twice. Sure, it's the thought that counts etc., but that requires an adult perspective: I could barely expect that level of maturity from my own peer group let alone kids eight years old & younger.

In defeat, I'm caving in. Where the kiddie in question is too young to understand money, I'll trust their parents to either save it or spend it judiciously on our collective behalf. Daniel is old enough to understand (roughly) how money work so I'm sure his parents will let him exercise his own discretion.

God as my witness though, I will purchase proper gifts at christmas. Every kid deserves proper presents at the holidays. I'll just have to consult extensively with the family before buying. That will have to suffice to redeem my good uncle status.

Date: 2009-07-25 10:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] billeyler.livejournal.com
Grumble, grumble. Remember the flyin I called in Vancouver in November, then the check I deposited when I got back "bounced" because it was foreign then never was returned to sender? Then I finally got a replacement check in January? It literally took three weeks after I deposited it until the money was "collected" into my account. Time in process for the full transaction, 11 weeks. Not fun...I knew there must be a "better way."

You've convinced me. I'm renouncing my US citizenship to move to Canada.

Date: 2009-07-25 10:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bjarvis.livejournal.com
Yeah, American banks are horrid about non-US currency. Canadian banks are pretty damn good with both Canadian & US dollars, although I have no idea how they are with other currencies.

Date: 2009-07-26 12:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trawnapanda.livejournal.com
.
I'm sorry to hear of your previous distress, but not, I'm afraid, surprised.

If you're in this situation again (needing to receive money from a Canajun source), do not accept a cheque, ask for a money order. They will have to go to a bank to get this. It will be denominated in US$, and will be drawn on a United States bank (the US affiliate of whichever bank issues the money order). And it's essentially what you would call a cashier's check/money order, so you shouldn't have a problem with them holding funds to see if it is going to clear or bounce.

as [livejournal.com profile] bjarvis says, American banks are horrid about non-US currency. They're also horrid about non-US banking institutions (voice of experience speaking here); which is why this US$ money-order route is the way to go.

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