Hawaii Shipping Container Prices To And From The Mainland. Once your shipment is booked with a carrier, your moving process will probably look something like this: <br /> <br />All your household belongings are packed into moving boxes or crates. Larger items such as furniture are wrapped to protect them from dirt and scratches. <br />A shipping container is hauled by a big-rig truck to your old home, where it is unhitched from the truck and left on its trailer (approximately 4 feet off the ground). <br />Your moving boxes, crates, and wrapped furniture are wheeled/carried up a ramp and loaded inside the container. NOTE: Shipping containers don’t usually come with a ramp, lift-gate, tie-downs, or packing materials, so make sure the movers you hire have all the necessary supplies and equipment. A 12-foot ladder is also very handy for loading items all the way to the top of the container. <br />The big-rig truck comes back, hitches onto the trailer, and hauls the loaded container to the shipping port. <br />At the port, your shipping carrier processes and loads your container onto the ship. <br />The ship sails to Oahu. <br />If necessary, your container is unloaded from the ship at the port in Oahu and transferred to an inter-island barge to sail to a neighbor island. <br />Upon arriving at its final destination, your container is unloaded from the ship and processed by your shipping carrier. <br />The container is loaded onto a trailer and hauled by a big-rig truck to your new home, where it is unhitched and left on its trailer. <br />Your belongings are unloaded from the container, down a ramp, and into your new home. NOTE: Once again, you’ll need to get a ramp, and a 12-foot ladder will make unloading easier. <br />All your moving boxes and crates are unpacked, and your furniture is unwrapped and moved into place. <br />The big-rig truck returns to pick up the empty container and hauls it back to the shipyard.