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alphonse

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Posts posted by alphonse

  1. 17 hours ago, ThailandRyan said:

    Well then we were not the vast majority, of course we did not need to be hospitalized, but it was a miserable 2 weeks........3 months later the GF is still loosing hair in bunches, and its hard for her to run without having deep lung issues.

    Are you sure the hair issue is covid related? Get it checked out?

    • Like 1
  2. Didn't the soldiers ban them a few years back?

     

    They had been marvellous fun for some, including myself.

     

    Mostly slightly p-ssed, but never really drunk  .... and I don't think I speak for just myself.

     

    The drug peddlers spoilt it somewhat in the latter years.

  3. 4 hours ago, Caldera said:

    Compared with other figures (10+ million) I've seen that were pure fantasy, this guesstimate looks refreshingly achievable. But with so many factors in play, who knows!

    True. In the grand scheme of things it's small-fry.

     

    Canterbury, near my UK home, was getting this amount per annum pre-pandemic.

     

    London alone 30m.

     

    An admission of defeat and the nonsense of Thai-pass.

    • Like 2
  4. 11 hours ago, ChC1 said:

    Pre-flight test is £20 for anti-gen and £50 for PCR. Slightly more expensive for same day result but less than £80 can be found. You can check the price from Express Test by Cignpost, they are based in Heathrow airport terminal so supposed to be expensive ones. Their price is very reasonable, and there are discount code available online to further reduce the cost.

    Useful that. I was quoted £110 by the nearest "chemist" to me who did them, which is 5 miles away.

     

    I assume the Heathrow ones are carried out before departure and give quick results.

  5. 2 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

    Last week the Airport was the busiest I’ve seen it in two years....  at departures (on the 5 occasions I’ve exited)....  So.. does that mean every one is suddenly leaving ????

     

    Of course - its a normal increase in activity as Covid restrictions ease world wide, as the fear of covid drops and as company travel increases, as tourism increases - general activity. 

     

     

    The pre-flight PCR thing... that may have made some delay their flight by a week or so and re-book, otherwise I do not see how the removal of a pre-flight PCR test has or will make any difference. 

     

    Once the very thin veneer of these announcements is scratched the only real improvement in ’tourist’ arrivals will only be noticed once any Thailand Pass requirements are totally abolished. 

     

     

    Precisely, getting a pre-flight test is not difficult in the UK (although costly @ £100+) and is hardly the deterrent that is presented by the remaining demands for Thai Pass.

    • Confused 1
  6. I get the fact that a person testing positive upon arrival becomes a cash cow for the hospital he is sent too, but I don't get why the current measures constitute a money-making 'scam' for the country.

     

    Surely, and in the bigger picture, the loss of potential medical tourism income alone, and caused by the current measures, to say nothing of losses to the general economy, far outweigh the revenue collected from PCR testing or a few hundred or so visitors forced to pay hospital bills for their Covid related stay.

  7. A tourist is a tourist, they all bring much needed foreign currency into a country (any country.)

     

    Backpackers, families, sex tourists, wealthy. Thailand currently needs all they can get.

     

    Inflation means there is less disposable income. It will get worse not better. By the time Thailand opens up without hurdles there will be even less money around.

     

     

    Europe, possibly most open despite high levels of omicron, is the best bet for now, but nor for long.

  8. 1 minute ago, alphonse said:

    Apparently it was because there were not enough First/Business class travellers to make it viable.

     

    The income from Economy class passengers for long haul flights just covers expenses. Profit is from the amount collected from those turning left.

     

    The 'pay more' passengers on BA to Bkk flights are notoriously thin on the ground.

     

  9. 17 hours ago, baboon said:

    In other news, British Airways will not be serving Bangkok until at least October 2022, basically on the grounds that they can't be ar$ed with the ever-changing regulations. Can you blame them?

    Apparently it was because there were not enough First/Business class travellers to make it viable.

     

    The income from Economy class passengers for long haul flights just cover expenses. Profit is from the amount collected from those turning left.

     

    The 'pay more' passengers on BA to Bkk flights are notoriously thin on the ground.

  10. In some way or another it might give them an excuse for dropping the Thai Pass altogether without losing face. They are probably looking for such now after the widespread critcism and generally low-intake of genuine tourists that has resulted.

     

    Whether it be a concentration on just more testing or the adoption of a less messy/precarious way of presenting documentation or whether they revert back to stricter measures, who knows with this lot?

     

    They exist detached from reality, instead they are more content to pursue their own little agenda based upon all things Thai, their own well-being and their own prejudices.

  11. Why is it only ugly people who say that it is vain to look after your appearance?

     

    Hair dye for men is very advanced these days. I'll bet the majority of p-isstakers wouldn't recognise a dyed bonce on a fifty years old sat next to him in a bar if they saw one.

     

    Those ancient, black and far too obvious concoctions (like Anutin's now) were ridiculous. 

     

    Do you reckon Old Joe Biden has had a facelift then? So few sags and wrinkles for his age, imo.

     

     

  12. The anti-alcohol lobby within this government of the inadequate seem relentless in their pursuit of prohibition within the shores of the Land of Smiles.

     

    Like the famed King Canute himself, they seem intent on fighting the great tide of this evil. They ignore the taxation of the product and their need for the proceeds, they ignore the thousands of jobs in the industry that they will be unable to replace, they ignore the role the evil brew pays in encouraging the tourism their country needs. 

     

    They dream of a Shagri-La of sobriety, whilst being unable to grasp the consequences of prohibition, the black market, the crime, the Mafia.

     

    Massive exaggeration of course, but even the tip-toing towards restriction, their current approach, will result in some of the consequences mentioned above.

     

    Also, Canute sat on that beach to disprove those who considered he had control of the tide.

     

    Did that Old Potato Face once receive a hefty punch from a drunken taxi driver after he insisted that the meter be turned on? One has to ponder the source of such ingrained prejudices, after all.

     

    Oh! I do still miss an occasional late night of sippery besides one of those caravan bars.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  13. 59 minutes ago, Chiang Mai Will said:

    Right at the time when the extremely virulent B.1.1.529 variant has been discovered (much more virulent than the Delta variant!)  and is currently being analysed due to suspicions that no current vaccine will be effective against it! 

    Let's not exaggerate. News feeds in the UK (Beeb, Guniard, Sky etc.) state only that it could be 40% less effective against vaccines.

     

    The last South African variant was heralded in the same scary manner.

     

    It turned out that it was unable to compete with the Delta as it was weaker and has subsequently disappeared.

     

    Too early for such doomsday predictions.

     

    The most doomsday factor about SARS 2 Covid 19 is that it seems slower than many other viruses (eg. SARS 1) at burning its self out.

    • Like 1
  14. 1 hour ago, erkho said:

    I had no problems whatsoever getting a Thai pass, took ONE DAY…..after that everything just needed to be in order. I was off the plane Nov.4th and at my hotel with NO holdup except briefly having to find my hotel driver which took 5 minutes. Mountains out of molehills fellas. It’s not tough and should slow no one down who wants to come. 
    I don’t want to be toasted on here but those are the facts. It was simple amd they were extremely well organized on arrival.

    Hope this helps those being scared away. 

    Good to hear that you had no problems. Like the Canadian chap, I am holding back until later in December when snagging should be complete at least. Perhaps the whole <deleted> show will have even been dropped as I cannot see many casual  tourists bothering to come to grips with the requirements.

     

    I don't think that it's 'mountains out of molehills' though.

     

    Anything that requires digital application, timing, ongoing expense and officialdom is bound to incur a degree of stress.

     

    Things should fall into place, but we all get slightly anxious, should they not.

     

    Thai officialdom is renowned for its clumsy, fussy and unclear online application processes. They seem oblivious to this though, so pile on the pettiness.

     

    I've still to discover if you still need your passport number on the vaccination certificate, and if so how I can overcome this, as it is not included on  the official (very) UK document. 

     

    One further example of the 'fussy' mentioned above. There is sufficient personal information on the document as to not make such cross-referencing necessary.

     

     

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