Luckily I live in Raleigh, NC and am only 20 minutes from RDU, so that should be ok. As for hitchhikers, I've got a couple years experience but will definitely brush up on the goods, the bads, and the uglies. Lord knows I haven't seen even close to everything.Having said that few things to note:
(1) it was a pain having to go to airport freight area for pickup mainly bc I'm in NJ and had to go to Newark airport. It was a nightmare, had to wait very long time. U can choose any airline for freight delivery, I'd select a smaller airline so it's not too busy at their freight terminal. I made the mistake of using United and it was awful.
(2) there are/will be hitchhikers that u have to remove and if u don't have experience doing this like I did, then u're constantly going to have to remove them even months later. I'd even found one gorilla crab a year later!
I love mine, only consideration I'd recommend is if you go with The Package, and you should, you may want less rock than recommended for your size tank, of course completely depending on what look you're going for.
It is pretty solid, IMO. However, I won't use it. It is heavy, dense and does not do as good of a job of denitrification as pacific live rock.
It is mined from a quarry and placed in the ocean for a while to get critters on the outside. Some will live - some that you want and some that you won't. Some will die. The good thing is that since it was in the ocean, the low nutrient environment will nearly guarantee that the rock is phosphate free. After a few years, about all that you will have alive on it is coralline and some sponges, but that will happen regardless of what kind of rock you use.
I like pacific rock better because it was in the ocean the whole time and is more porous and ready for anxoic zones and bacterias. It needs to be cured, which kills all of the nasty stuff. This rock is also phosphate free. It is lighter.
I would use TBS rock with no problem if there was no longer pacific rock. It is still way beyond dead/dry rock.
I wish that they would put the pukani into the ocean for a while. It would be awesome once the organics and phosphates were out of it and it got loaded with life.
They man-made rock is not good. It is so thick that it has nearly no denitrifying capability. Folks with real-reef have found this out.
The pacific stuff is interesting.