โAug-25-2014 02:57 PM
โSep-14-2014 03:57 PM
โAug-31-2014 03:26 PM
โAug-31-2014 02:44 PM
โAug-31-2014 10:08 AM
โAug-30-2014 05:22 PM
โAug-30-2014 02:46 PM
pappcam wrote:
Which part of the gene pool do your guys' tellers come from down there.:h
Myth busted
โAug-30-2014 01:04 PM
FreeLanceing wrote:
I bought canadian money in canada last month. the rate was 110/100 so I should have recieved 110 can for each 100 am. Not so every bank I went to wanted a 7% cut out of the exchange. They gave me 103. I went in Alberta and again in Whitehorse same deal. I actually got a better exchange at wallmart in Whitehorse. That was like 105. I found the best exchange was just using my credit card. They gave the full 110 with a small like 50 cent surcharge. ANy of the canucks would gladly take am money at a 50/50 rate. Live and lern I guess. When I tried to pass the can money in Alaska they would only give me 90 cents per dollar. When I bought the money at the bank in canada the teller told me not to leave it on the dash or in a hot location as it could melt the bills together. She claimed to have witnessed this.
โAug-29-2014 06:50 PM
โAug-29-2014 09:40 AM
joe b. wrote:
I have heard the old saying that money just burns a hole in the pocket of some people. Probably true. But never had any problem with Canadian currency melting. LOL But I have had some issues with it cracking. Most of the time I don't carry a wallet, just fold my money, stuff my driver's license, a credit card and a debit card inside, all secured with a money clip. I suspect it is the lower/lesser rag content of the Canadian bills that will cause them to crack at the fold, at times. Then when I go to pull one out of the money clip, at times I only get half of the bill and have to tape it back together. Wouldn't be a problem, I guess if I carried them in a wallet and not folded with the fold pressed tight.
Anyway with that slight difference, the main problem I have with Canadian money, even before the switch over to the new bills, is that it tends to disappear on me, too quickly. Just gone in a few days. Wonder how long a person will have to save their Canadian pennies, before they become rare and valuable? Or perhaps the US could buy all the unused Canadian pennies from the Canadian mint at face value. I understand it now costs more to make a penny than the face value of it. May be time for the US to drop the penny as well.
โAug-29-2014 09:29 AM
pappcam wrote:bsinmich wrote:
The toonie is also known as the Queen with a bear behind. While Queen Elizabeth is on the front there is a bear on the backside.
Never heard of it. I'm Canadian.
โAug-29-2014 08:58 AM
pappcam wrote:bsinmich wrote:
The toonie is also known as the Queen with a bear behind. While Queen Elizabeth is on the front there is a bear on the backside.
Never heard of it. I'm Canadian.
โAug-29-2014 07:11 AM
bsinmich wrote:
The toonie is also known as the Queen with a bear behind. While Queen Elizabeth is on the front there is a bear on the backside.
โAug-29-2014 05:47 AM
โAug-28-2014 05:00 AM
kcmoedoe wrote:RobertRyan wrote:There is no doubt, however, that plastic money was first created in America. It is commonly referred to as the Credit Card. But don't worry, you still corner the market on Kangaroos, platypuses and Animal experts who get killed by sting rays.wilber1 wrote:
These notes have been used in Europe and Australia for years. They aren't new.
Technology developed in Australia, then sold to other countries