I do have a big collection of postcards, that I keep in a box, that I began collecting when I started travelling at the age of 18.
My postcard box |
5 different countries in 3 continents. Since then, I bought a couple of postcards in every country I visited.
So I joined Postcrossing, filled in my details, and requested 5 addresses to send postcards to.
You get given a code with letters and numbers to be written in each postcard, which identifies the country it comes from and helps identify the sender when the receiver receives it.
I wrote a little note describing the photo in each postcard - all of them from Perth - and posted them. The addresses were all in Europe.
One of the cards I sent |
I wonder if some have taken the sea route instead of crossing the seas by plane? The post shouldn't take that long from Australia to Europe, should it?
I was quite thrilled when one of the addresses I was given was in Braunschweig, Germany - a town where we lived for almost 6 years, and where my kids were born, over 25 years ago. What a coincidence!
Today I received my first two postcards - one from China and one from the United States.
When you receive a postcard you log in, and register the code on the postcard and scan a copy of it if possible, so it's visible to anyone visiting the site. At the moment over 402 thousand people from 216 countries participate in this project with over 16 million postcards exchanged.
My first postcards from Postcrossing - a cat from China, and one from San Antonio in the USA |
Communication is done via the Postcrossing site, so no addresses need to be exchanged unless you decide to do direct swapping or other exchanges, like the stamps in my case.
So if you already collect postcards, or would like a new hobby, why not give Postcrossing a go?
Who knows maybe one day you might be sending me a postcard from your city.
And in this day and age when penmanship is a dying art and most people communicate verbally, by sms or email, it's refreshing to be able to write a few words to someone and actually put a stamp on a postcard or envelope...
Sounds like something both my younger and older sisters would enjoy Sami, I will definitely mention it to them..
ReplyDeleteHi Grace, tell them to give it a try!
ReplyDeleteHow wonderful to have traveled to so many beautiful places! You were smart to collect the postcards and to have kept them all these years.It is great that you are sharing in postcrossing to others.
ReplyDeleteEu também tenho uma grande colecção das minhas primeiras viagens. Depois deixei de comprar.
ReplyDeleteThanks Lynn. Postcards don't take that much space, and now I'm excited about getting postcards from countries I have not visited.
ReplyDeleteJM - se calhar era altura de se juntar ao Postcrossing e recomecar a sua colecao.
What a great idea
ReplyDeleteNa Holanda, há uma grande diversidade de postais para todas as ocasiões e mais algumas. Gosto muito de escrever postais. É tão mais bonito que enviar sms's e email's.
ReplyDeleteVou ver o site do Postcrossing. Obrigada pela dica, Sami.
Thanks for visiting Mo. I'm quite excited with this new hobby.
ReplyDeleteOla Sandra - junte-se ao Postcrossing, quem sabe um dia recebemos um postal uma da outra.
Sami, I just checked in at that site. One more guy from Braunschweig :-) And I don´t even have to go shopping, I have enough Braunschweig-Postcards at home to send away!
ReplyDeleteGreate idea, thanks for the tip (and visiting virtually).
Thanks for visiting Iris. And looking forward to maybe meeting in "postcrossing" too.
ReplyDeleteNever heard of this hobby, but I can imagine it can be fascinating to get the cards from all over the place. Good for learning geography ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks Miss Footloose. Yes, a good way to learn geography too...
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