Ever hear of the phrase "stranger things have happened"? Well, what happened at a local Scotiabank branch I wasn't planning to visit yesterday put real meaning to that particular phrase.
You see, I received my cheque yesterday, and the opportunity arose and I cashed it. I asked the teller for the best quality $10s and, surprisingly enough, I received some crisp BTJ's over the counter! And that particular Scotiabank branch doesn't usually receive shipments of crisp $10s to the extent of that of a busy shopping mall! Especially since it's the middle of February.
Now, I just figured out something here...
The only denominations of crisp bills that banks usually receive shipments of during the "dry spell" are primarily the infrequently used kinds ($10s, $50s, and $100s). There may be some crisp $20s in some select ATMs. You see, in order for a bank to receive bricks of 1,000 $10 bills, they would most likely have to accumulate 1,000 tattered notes that are deemed unfit for circulation that are deposited by commercial or regular customers. It would take a smaller branch a bit longer to accumulate 1,000 tattered $10s before they can exchange them for crisp bills, as they are very infrequently used. I believe, mainly due to the weather (just my guess), that there wasn't much activity in crisp $10s in 2006 until April that year.
Some branches, large or small, do not usually receive their first shipment of crisp $5s until sometime in March or early April, as there are so many of them in circulation, thus not requiring the need for crisp $5s during what we all know as the "winter doldrums" for shoppers - thus explaining why we saw only a handful of reportings for APF and APK thus far in 2008, and many more of them yet to come.
But to put the thread back to the topic at hand, the moral of the story is you never know what you can expect if you play the game of chance in hopes of getting your hands on crisp infrequently-used bills. Try your luck, and you may end up hitting the jackpot. And I sure did Friday, at a time when I least expected it to happen.