The answer is completely dependent upon the method of shipping.
16 miles per day.
The speed of travel depended much on the terrain and the number in the caravan. They averaged eight miles per day but could travel as fast as twelve miles in a day or be stalled a day without motion. The speed of travel depended much on the terrain and the number in the caravan. They averaged eight miles per day but could travel as fast as twelve miles in a day or be stalled a day without motion.
The speed of travel depended much on the terrain and the number in the caravan. They averaged eight miles per day but could travel as fast as twelve miles in a day or be stalled a day without motion. The speed of travel depended much on the terrain and the number in the caravan. They averaged eight miles per day but could travel as fast as twelve miles in a day or be stalled a day without motion.
No, it is not. While there may a small skeleton crew in the back sorting, mail is unable to move from the branches to the main office by truck on that day... so no mail would move anyways. Any mail dropped into a New Orleans mail box does not get into the transit system until the following day.
They travel about 4-5 miles a day and they are Bio
go on with the fast......moving things...move as fast as the day and time is running on.........
I would say that you shouldn't move too fast in a 4 day relationship.
It depends how fast you are travelling and what you are riding.
Actually it is very fast If you think about it it travels thousands of miles a day.
In good conditions, the Pony Express could carry mail up to 200 miles in a day.
The USPS delivers approximately 554 million pieces of mail each day. Letter carriers drive about 1.2 billion miles each year delivering all of that mail.
A person on horseback can travel about 30 miles a day. The Pony Express did not ride 2000 miles when it was active. That is the length of the country.