Should you use your real name when ordering seeds?

frasta420

Member
I plan on ordering a few seeds from Attitude seed bank for my first grow but I heard some people have to sign for the package from Attitude. I'm a little paranoid about ordering seeds online, so I didn't really want my real name involved. (I was going to use a gift card to purchase the seeds instead of my personal debit card) I feel signing would become an issue if I used a fake name.
 

Hipster2U

Well-Known Member
You should use the real name of someone who lives at that address. If you don't the post office may hold the mail and you have to go get it. It's a hassle and a lot of extra attention when you don't want it and it was your screw up in the first place not using a real name. Mail is checked against records for that route and if it don't match up the piece gets kicked out.
 

frasta420

Member
You should use the real name of someone who lives at that address. If you don't the post office may hold the mail and you have to go get it. It's a hassle and a lot of extra attention when you don't want it and it was your screw up in the first place not using a real name. Mail is checked against records for that route and if it don't match up the piece gets kicked out.
Thanks, I'll be safe and use my real name. Peace and Pot :leaf:

P.S. Should I choose "no return address" or would that be suspicious?
 

Ravener

Member
Ya, having mail carriers in the family, I'll tell you use the right last name, switch up initials if you like. If there's a house where the carrier knows the Smiths's have lived for 15 years, then suddenly they get a letter for Hugh G. Rection or Brad Pitt, the carrier will either get the joke and deliver it, or be a dick and mark it Addressee Not Known or UA Unknown Addressee and it gets sent back. It would happen less with parcels and the gold attitude envelopes, carriers assume that people generally don't send parcels to their old addresses, or a wrong address, etc., but ya don't risk it.

If you use the correct name, 'no return address' is fine. With a fake name it looks even more shady to the carrier.
 

frasta420

Member
Ya, having mail carriers in the family, I'll tell you use the right last name, switch up initials if you like. If there's a house where the carrier knows the Smiths's have lived for 15 years, then suddenly they get a letter for Hugh G. Rection or Brad Pitt, the carrier will either get the joke and deliver it, or be a dick and mark it Addressee Not Known or UA Unknown Addressee and it gets sent back. It would happen less with parcels and the gold attitude envelopes, carriers assume that people generally don't send parcels to their old addresses, or a wrong address, etc., but ya don't risk it.

If you use the correct name, 'no return address' is fine. With a fake name it looks even more shady to the carrier.
Thanks for the help! :D Peace and Pot :leaf:
 

new2420grow

Active Member
I've used a fake name, had no problems, not just with seeds. Also, I've had things that I've ordered and wanted delivered to someone else's house and put my name on it, never had a problem. Not trying to argue with anyone saying that, but I've never had a delivery not arrive because the mail carrier didn't recognize the name. I think these days, it's more of an automated thought process, that just matches address to address.
 

Bugeye

Well-Known Member
I'm not even aware of seeds being illegal to mail under drug laws as they have no THC. Seems like whatever trouble I've had with things like mushroom spores came from the department of agriculture. So how far behind the times am I?
 
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