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dick turpin
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Just now, mokwit said:
We will see, I have been dealing with Thai visas for 30 years and watched as they closed off all long stay options/strategies including Non Imm multiple entries. The fact is that the Thai authorities seem very uncomfortable with people, especially young people with no obvious source of income staying here long term - yes we have the Govt recognising people legitimately earn money remotely now, but look how stringent the requirements are for that BOI visa (and all the others for that matter). I reiterate, the devil/disqualifier for many will be the "registered company" requirement plus maybe some others. My guess is that legitimate freelance remote workers may not qualify. Company employee or owner of company of a certain size.
If it is just 180 + 180 extension and that is it then I am sure all the budding cooks and Muay Thai fighters will be able too use it, but I am sure you will not be able to just put that in the application and get the visa without further proofs.
If you are so sure I will be eating my words then tell us what YOUR interpretation of this is. If you think Elephant Pants in Chaing Mai will be able to use this visa to hang out in Bob Marly themed bars in Chiang Mai for 5 years with extensions and border runs just by posting vids to youtube then I think you are wrong.
Again tell us what YOUR interpretation is and thus why I will "eat mu words". if you think I am wrong you must have an idea of what is "right".
All the much anticipated longer stay visas announced have turned out to be implemented with onerous terms.
Thanks for your extended response which seems to wonder in various directions.
Simply see what it says on the tin 180+180 days over five years.
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2 hours ago, mokwit said:
My take. It will be 180 days in any calendar year other than the one year you can extend in country for.
I think it is really unlikely that they will give a near continuous stay for 5 years by doing back to back border runs. That has not been the trend. Look at the requirements for other 5 years such as Privilege/elite and OX
The "registered company" will be the devil in the detail. I think certain revenue requirements and/or size will be required as per BOI remote worker visa, but likely less stringent. Forget about off the shelf companies. IMO this is not aimed at the Chiang Mai elephant pants digital nomad, but at bona fide company remote workers.
That said, a more generous interpretation might be that you can stay 180 days, then extend for another 180 and then leave and come back and extend in the new calendar year and repeat the process for 5 years i.e. extension every 180 days & a Border Bounce every 360 days... as per Siam Legal interpretation.
Let you eat your words later
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Just now, TigerandDog said:
I also do online 90 reports and after my new passport was issued my online 90 day report was rejected. Went in person, as per the reason for rejection, and was told that the first 90 day report after transferring the stamps to my new passport must be in person. After that online is ok again.
How many times have folks been told this.
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12 hours ago, David B in Thailand said:
I hired Ruben of H2O water to drill a 6" well about 120 meters deep on our Buriram farm, and it was successful. He also installed a nice water filter system and two large storage tanks in a "pump room". You can see many photo son his website and facebook page.
Thankfully, we are now back on tap... until the next drought.
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11 hours ago, nauseus said:
Had much rain there yet?
Thanks for your concern and if you are in the Isaan
neck of the woods you will know it has gone to the
other extreme with regular deluge and plenty of
standing water in the nearby fields.
As that well-known Isaan scribe. once said......
Alls well that ends well.
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Don't for one minute buy this 180 days a year spiel.
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Just now, george said:
180 days/year is how I see it.
Six months a year for five years....that's one hell
of a long cooking class.
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Just now, PJ71 said:
But tanks ( or vats ) and collect rainwater.
Sorry, where do we collect rainwater from... only joking.
Have since been deluged with some mega storms and
every butt is over-flowing.
The good news is we seem to have resolved the issue
with the well, which has backfilled with ground water.
Also, had the village water guru, at his suggestion,
fit a wider diameter pipe with a bigger "flute" on the
end to improve water flow, that's 800 baht am not
going to see again.
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Just now, PAWNEESE said:
Thanks for your suggestion. I am told you only have to do your first ever ever ever 90 day in person .. changing address will not halt the online eligibility .. so to speak. Well as long as a change of address form been done, I guess.
And that is how it turned out.
Glad it turned out OK.... the things that are sent to try us here
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Just now, PAWNEESE said:
I am having a problem reporting online today. This will be my 3rd online report and it was very smooth first 2 times.
(I have just moved and my new address has been notified by the agent).
It is asking for my address (I think it remembers such details after the first report from an address).
Whatever .. my problem is it will not accept PATTAYA as my city of residence. On first line (I thjnk it was asking for District .. it accepts Chonburi .. next line it wants the city .. it wont take Pattaya or Na Klua. Just clears my typing on me pressing enter.
My cunning plan is to try again tomorrow. Maybe the system needs a reboot.
But meanwhile .. anyone else had/having this problem ?. Going to Jomtien will be a pain.
If changing address don't you have to do first report in person.
Why not ask your agent.
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Just now, stubuzz said:
Any idea how far in advance i can book my submission appointment?
If I recall they do it on a month by month basis, so maybe have not
opened up June bookings yet. Good if you can get it fixed before
you arrive.
Its coming up to the holiday season in the UK, which is when the
great unwashed suddenly realise their passport have expired, so
HMPO busier than usual.
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Clarty Boots is correct.
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Just now, DrJack54 said:
Which immigration office
Certainly the case at Korat.
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Tell them you are a sovereign citizen,
always seems to go well over there.
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Just now, daveAustin said:No, they do not take your old passport, you can still travel on it in the interim (since it is still valid) and it is only cancelled when the new one comes in and the old one is 'eared' in front of you. Don't sweat it. Perfectly valid, albeit if under 6 months careful when travelling overseas.
Get it right. Yes, you retain your old passport for ID purposes in Thailand,
but it is no longer valid for international travel.
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Hurrah......heavy rain in Isaan last night.
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Just now, Gweiloman said:
To add on to what @Mike Lister said, the pipe needs to be supported. If you send it down a few metres without support, I imagine that it would vibrate violently when the pump is sucking up the water.
Have since decided to leave the existing well intact as a useful
back-up when water returns and instead look at other means of
digging/drilling deeper.
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Just now, brianthainess said:
Where I live to have a proper bore, first you need permission from the Amphur, they charge between 100k-130k guaranteed water. They go about 25 meters deep. A huge very noisy truck mounted rig is used.
A self dug well does not need permission, and each concrete ring costs about 1k plus labour.
Think officially you need permission from the Ampur, but most private dwellings,
don't bother(including us) as it is difficult to check, but larger hotels and resorts
around us do have to go the formal route.
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Just now, Dante99 said:
Hand‑dug wells can range in depth
from about five metres deep, to deep
wells over 20 metres deep. Wells
with depths of over 30 metres are
sometimes constructed to exploit
a known aquifer
Will get my spade out and go for the 20 metres.
Another thought comes to mind, if going the borehole
route could it be put down the existing well hole and
thus save a few metres of initial drilling.
Otherwise, might send up the cloud-seeding drone.
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2 hours ago, Gweiloman said:
From what I know, there are primarily 2 kinds of wells. The first, more basic type is hand dug to about 8-10 metres or so. The sides are reinforced with concrete hoops. The way it works is that groundwater will seep in to fill the well. Mind you, the surface of the water will still be a good few metres below the surface of the land. The approximate cost for this is typically around Thb 10-15,000.
The 2nd better option is a bore well. This requires digging with a mechanical drill at the back of a truck and can go as far down as 100m or more. There isn’t a big hole dug. Instead lengths of pvc pipes are being pushed into the ground. This doesn’t depend on ground water but instead hits the actual water table. At the end of the pipe is, not sure what it’s called, well feed or something like that. It has slits cut into it for the water to flow in and then up, using a pump of course. This can cost anything from Thb 100k - 200k, depending how deep needs to go, whether rocks encountered on the way down, difficulty of terrain etc.
Got me thinking, there must be a physical limit as to how deep you can go with
a basic hand dug well, before you are forced to go the bore hole route.
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Just now, Gweiloman said:From what I know, there are primarily 2 kinds of wells. The first, more basic type is hand dug to about 8-10 metres or so. The sides are reinforced with concrete hoops. The way it works is that groundwater will seep in to fill the well. Mind you, the surface of the water will still be a good few metres below the surface of the land. The approximate cost for this is typically around Thb 10-15,000.
The 2nd better option is a bore well. This requires digging with a mechanical drill at the back of a truck and can go as far down as 100m or more. There isn’t a big hole dug. Instead lengths of pvc pipes are being pushed into the ground. This doesn’t depend on ground water but instead hits the actual water table. At the end of the pipe is, not sure what it’s called, well feed or something like that. It has slits cut into it for the water to flow in and then up, using a pump of course. This can cost anything from Thb 100k - 200k, depending how deep needs to go, whether rocks encountered on the way down, difficulty of terrain etc.
Well explained.
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Just now, NorthernRyland said:
Oh so "Issan-style" is a thing? In other words it's a really crap well that only poor people would make.
Why are you asking the question then if you know what a proper well is? Of course you need to get rid of your well and make something better. If you're living in a bamboo house with metal roof you should replace that too.
Calm down
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5 year multiple entry DTV visa (Destination Thailand) from 2024-xx-xx
in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Posted · Edited by dick turpin
360 days total over five years, cut it how you want with multi-entry visa.
Let's end the converation there.