Don't mark the package TOO accurately. DO NOT use the words "gun", "firearm", "rifle", "military", or any other red-flag word on your customs declaration form. Just put something vague like "flintlock", "reproduction antique", "machined goods" or the reliable, inscrutable catch-all "gift". "Merchandise" is a great word that accurately reflects the nature of your shipment without giving a clue as to what is actually inside the box. You could pack a baby seal full of cocaine and send it airmail and nobody would bat an eye as long as you labelled it "merchandise". "Used goods" is another great bit of deliberate obfuscation that will not get you in any trouble if they open the box (as long as the goods are actually second-hand). I ordered a Traditions Pennsylavania .50 cal flinter from a guy in Minnesota and he put "antique firearm" on the label and it didn't get through, but I have ordered all sorts of stuff from TOTW and it gets up to me no prob because they know how to fill out the forms. I ordered a pistol barrel from them and they declared it as "steel tube", bullets were "castings", etc. I forget how they declared the fully assembled rifle they sent me (complete with flint in cock) but the phrase they used was accurate enough that the threshold of verisimilitude was met, but not so accurate that any busy-bodies at customs or the post office were so aroused as to deny shipment :blah: .