Wednesday, June 29, 2011

International Moving with HDI

International moving is a very tricky move with all the details that go into it. Trust the Hartford International Movers to complete your international move with ease and as little stress as possible. With move than 600 international moves annually, we provide you with the experience to make you confident in your mover. Some of our specialties and services include:

- Professional packing or crating and bar-coded inventory
- Carrier selection with preferential rates - land, sea, or air
- Customs clearance assistance and optimization
- Licensed freight forwarding (FMC No. 3394)
- Single-policy risk coverage underwritten by Lloyd's of London
- Worldwide network of moving and customs specialties
- Unpacking and settle in services at destination
- U.S. Customs-bonded warehousing - weekly clearing at our facility
- Total supervision at origin and en-route, and unpacking at your destination

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Connecticut Moving Company

As a Connecticut moving company for more than 100 years, Hartford Despatch is the choice provider of relocation and storage services. We pride ourselves on the quality moves we coordinate for local, interstate and international relocations, whether you are moving your family, business or employees. Trust in the superior services and exceptional customer services provided by Hartford Despatch for every relocation need, anywhere in the world.

We are a the Connecticut movers proud to serve many communities in north central Connecticut with unparalleled moving and storage services. Call 1-866-502-8427 for more information.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Driver Billed After Being Hit By Train

The Hartford Courant reported that a driver of a car that was stuck by a Metro-North train on Sunday, May 29 was billed for the damages the car caused to the train. Yes you read that correctly. A Metro-North spokesperson said, "the train was where it was supposed to be, and the car was not." Thus putting the blame of the accident on the diver of the car, a 40 year old woman who was driving with her 7 year old daughter. The family was enjoying a picnic near what is designated as a private crossing (crossings that do not have a gate or flashing lights, but trains are still required to blow their horn when crossing). A family that lives near the crossing said that they did not hear a horn before the crash, and they had complained about the trains horn not sounding before. Metro-North said that the horn had sounded. The 40 year old woman and her daughter were injured but nothing life threatening. The 100 passengers about the train were not injured but arrived late to their destination. Be safe, always look both ways when crossing a rail road so that accidents like this don't happen again.