Shannon,


Common practice following rising postal rates.



Cards started out as real post cards, then got fancy with color photography+. 
In order to keep them pristine, mailing in an envelope became customary, 
drawing even more postage.



When in Indonesia, it was common for me to receive their QSL card with a self 
addressed envelope enclosed with a dollar, real stamps or a “green stamp” (that 
was killed years ago) – an international postal unit of value about two thirds 
of the time. Motivated me to respond in stellar fashion. Started a significant 
stamp collection.



With large numbers, gets to be a real job, often farmed out to QSL Managers, 
hence the drive toward different e-QSL verifications of contacts “chasing 
paper”.



73 & GL in contest



KB5F

Orin Snook

Ex YC0ARO, YC8ABV

________________________________
From: BVARC <[email protected]> on behalf of Shannon Tassin via BVARC 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, May 18, 2023 5:37 AM
To: Roy Storey via BVARC <[email protected]>
Cc: Shannon Tassin <[email protected]>
Subject: [BVARC] Charging for QSL?


All,



As I am working to connect with more countries via FT8, I am more routinely 
coming across folks who want me to pay them money for a QSL. At first it was 
folks who were working from a remote country or island (e.g., Rwanda), but now 
I am seeing that from a guy in Israel.



Is this accepted and expected behavior? Why would I do that?



Thanks,

Shannon Tassin

K4SCT


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