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Everything posted by Polar Bear
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I am very much pro-vax, but yearly boosters for rabies are ridiculously excessive. Many countries have switched to a 3 year booster schedule instead of yearly (for the same vaccine). It's common for dogs that have had multiple yearly boosters to test at 30+ IU/ml. The required level is >0.5. But I still have to get my dog vaccinated yearly to keep his international papers valid.
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I don't remember what I paid most recently at a pet shop. But I still have the receipt for the previous one from a vet, and I paid 700 THB for it (10-20kg). I stopped buying meds off Lazada after getting multiple fake Seresto collars and a box of fake Nexgard Spectra, and they were just the ones I could tell were fake. If I couldn't afford to buy Bravecto from a vet, I'd switch to ivermectin.
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I buy the Bravecto tablets from a couple of different vets and a local pet store (in Bangkok), depending on where is most convenient when I need it. I've not had any trouble finding it, and I last bought one about 2 weeks ago.
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I lived in Hino, Japan for a while. The recycling system there was insane. Everything was colour-coded, and there was a corresponding calendar showing what was to be put out each day, but the calendar was black and white and the print was tiny, so it was near impossible to know what everything was. There were collections 4 or 5 days a week. Garbage was once a week. All the others were recycling. One day would be one type of paper. the following week a different type of paper, light cardboard, heavy cardboard, different types of plastic, different types of glass, different types of metal, different types of lightbulbs. They all got collected on different days, and they had to go out on the right day in the right coloured bag (which had to be bought specifically, and they were priced according to size.) The block manager would go through everything that was put out, garbage, recycling, everything. If you got something wrong, he would dump everything back on your doorstep. If he couldn't tell whose it was, he emptied it into a box, and left it out with a note. If you didn't claim it in 24 hours he checked the CCTV and tracked you down that way instead. After a few months of getting it wrong most of the time, it got so that I would only leave out garbage and plastic bottles. Everything else I took out with me and left in the bins outside 7-11 or Watson.
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In my soi in Bangkok, we have blue bins for garbage and yellow for recycling. No one puts recycling in the yellow bins. They are filled with garbage like the others. Some people do separate out stuff that's potentially recyclable (including me), and leave it in bags next to the bins. It's usually gone before the truck comes, but if it's still there, the workers tie the recycling bag to the side of the truck.
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How early can you change to a 5 year license?
Polar Bear replied to ThLT's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
Yes, that's what I was told. As it turns out, you can use a Thai license in the UK without an IDP, so I didn't need one. -
How early can you change to a 5 year license?
Polar Bear replied to ThLT's topic in Thailand Motor Discussion
About this time last year, I was told at Bang Chak that I could request changing from 2 to 5 after 1 year if I could show that I needed an international driving permit, but that it would only be a request and they would decide whether to allow it. I didn't bother in the end, so I don't know what the chances are of them agreeing. -
I would not apply until the current industrial action is over. HMPO is disorganised at the best of times. When they have a backlog of documents, stuff just gets lost, and they are completely indifferent about it. Better to wait until things are working smoothly, albeit slowly. Alternatively, go back and renew in person. That's what I ended up doing. I paid extra for the priority service and picked up my new passport on the same day. It was expensive and inconvenient to go back to the UK to deal with it, but it would have been a much bigger problem for me if it had got lost in their system for months.
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Thursday 6th was also a holiday. Very little gets done on a Friday anyway, and even less when it's squashed between a holiday and a weekend. These two weeks are largely a write-off for getting any kind of official admin done quickly.
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Unless it's flipped back again recently, they aren't sending import permits in advance any more, you get it on arrival, but they should still be replying to you. Are you emailing the Bangkok office ( [email protected] )? Phuket is notoriously difficult to work with. This is the info from their email signature Office : Suvarnabhumi Airport Animal Quarantine ,Free Zone Area, Customs Export Building, 1 st Flr,Suvarnabhumi Airport, Samutprakan Province. Tel : 02-134-0731 / Fax. 02-134-3640 Web : www.aqs-suvarn-dld.go.th/wp Email : [email protected] Open Monday-Friday 08:30-12:00 am and 13:00-15:30 pm Edit: if you need an import permit in advance because the export country requires one, you'll have to explicitly tell them that and send them some evidence that you need it.
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They do, except you get given the ticket by a person sat at a desk, not a machine.
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Was this an official taxi allocated through their system? I.e., you went through the waiting area, got a ticket, and got assigned a driver by the desk? I've used the airport taxis at Don Mueang many times, and they've always used the meter. I'd have gone back to the desk and asked for another taxi in this case. (When they assign you a taxi, they are always very clear that the fare will be the meter + 50 THB airport fee + any tolls. They have a card with it printed out in multiple languages.)
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I am not claiming to be an expert on Thai visa regulations, but all I can say is that in practice they appear to take a very broad view of what qualifies. Perhaps it is based on the institution rather than the individual qualification, I don't know. But people are teaching at Chula on Smart T visas with PhDs in subjects that would not appear to fall under T criteria.
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It would seem that you are confused. Smart visas, at least Smart-T, are initially issued overseas, and you have to have health insurance when it is issued. As you aren't living/working in Thailand at the point, you have to make other arrangements. Once the visa has been issued, you come to Thailand and start working. The original visa then gets extended on a yearly basis, but there is no further requirement for health insurance.
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I use https://www.tommytaxibangkok.com/airporttransfer Definitely not the cheapest, but they are very reliable. I've had them collect visitors from the airport for me multiple times without a problem.
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The foreigners I know at Chula are mostly earning around 35-45k THB. That's in a different major, and it's taught in English, but it's typically 6 hours a week teaching, with additional pay for extra classes. I know a couple of people earning 80k+ but they have a strong research background and high publication requirements. They are discouraged from taking on additional classes, etc. because they are supposed to be doing research. Those figures include small allowances for housing and health insurance, so small that they wouldn't cover either. There are a couple of foreigners on local contracts because they are married to Thais or some such. They get paid less and have a lot of additional admin duties, but they have job security I guess, and maybe they are enrolled in state health or pension schemes or something, I don't know. I teach occasional classes for them when it fits around my other work, but I wouldn't go full time for those wages.
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The life expectancy for pet dogs in the UK & US is typically 10-14 years, but it varies by breed and size. For a mutt, size/weight is a bigger factor. For an otherwise healthy mutt that weighs 20-25kg, I'd expect a lifespan of around 11 or 12 years, but obviously that's only going to be a very general figure and there will be considerable variation between individuals. However, I would consider most medium/large dogs to be seniors at 9 or 10. For very small/toy breeds, if they don't die young because of congenital defects, then I'd consider them to be seniors at about 11 or 12. For giant breeds, most are senior by 5 or 6.
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Natwest closed my UK account when they realised I was overseas. I asked Co-op what would happen if I moved abroad, and they said they would have to close my account, so I didn't tell them. This was all about 10 years ago. I'd suggest the person from the OP opens an account with Starling as soon as possible. It's easier to do while you still have another UK account. If you don't request an overdraft/credit, the checks are minimal, and if you don't order a debit card, they don't send anything out in the post.
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Why should anyone be concerned about 'losing face' because they do something slightly differently to you? I'd rather press one button in settings and switch the data to the SIM I want to use. I don't have to change anything else. I don't have to alter any other settings, and in over 10 years of doing this, it hasn't gone wrong. For me, it's a lot easier than fiddling round with USSD codes, especially as I have multiple SIM cards for multiple different countries, so I'd have to track down the codes for each (if it even has one), and be sure I was using the correct one for each SIM. There are many more opportunities to get it wrong there, and as you say, accidents do happen. If someone doesn't have that setting option, or if they do but they don't know how to use their own phone, then maybe that's not the best solution for them. But for me, learning how to use a simple setting on my handset is a much better option. But if you prefer to play around with USSD codes, go for it. Neither of us is right or wrong. It's just two different ways of achieving exactly the same outcome. Don't take it so personally.