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down home wrote:
2005 crossing into Canada from the UP. Lady was nice and asked where we were going and how long we expected to stay or something. At one point she asked our names and read back to us our address here in the states. They had sophisticated data access then. Asked m for my Pick up plate number said I don't know, I;; get it. Got out and no way to get under the Fifth Wheel to read it.
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garyhaupt wrote:
Camper93..obvioulsy you are new to all of this, including border crossing. Rule of thumb? Take no perishables with you. No meat, no veggies, no fruit. Even pet food can be a problem. No onions..no garlic, no bananas...leave it all behind and purchse when you get across. The rules change almost daily and the border people are very stringent.
โJun-30-2015 06:22 PM
Jim Shoe wrote:
Google "Crossing the border into the US". Lots of reading, but you'll save time in the long run. You may be asked a question or two at the border. Whatever you do, don't lie. They most likely already know the answer. When I was crossing northbound at Sweetwater MT. headed for Alaska, I handed my passport to the attendant. He asked me if I'd ever been fingerprinted. I said, "Maybe when I joined the Navy but I don't remember." DUH. My fingerprints were on the passport he was looking at.
There was a Canadian heading southbound at the same time and place. He was busy putting everything from his RV that wasn't permanently attached on a blanket on the ground. I don't know for sure, but I'm guessing that he lied.