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JGon

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Posts posted by JGon

  1. 6 minutes ago, hydraides said:

    There are many airports in India though he could have landed

     

    According to ChatGPT:

     

    Quote

    While India has many major airports, not all of them may be practical or optimal for diversion in every situation. For instance, airports in the eastern part of India, like Kolkata, are much closer to Dhaka and might be preferred for diversions due to proximity. Airports further away, like those in Mumbai or Delhi, while fully capable of handling a Boeing 787, might not be the first choice for diversion unless specific circumstances, such as the nature of the emergency, airline operations, or airspace restrictions, dictate otherwise.

     

    So it gave me those 5 choices earlier. Maybe is wrong... or maybe is just not feasible to fly to any of this airports in India:

     

    Indira Gandhi International Airport (Delhi)

    Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport (Mumbai)

    Kempegowda International Airport (Bengaluru)

    Chennai International Airport (Chennai)

    Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport (Kolkata)

    Rajiv Gandhi International Airport (Hyderabad)

    Cochin International Airport (Kochi)

    Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport (Ahmedabad)

    Goa International Airport (Goa)

    Pune International Airport (Pune)

    Thiruvananthapuram International Airport (Thiruvananthapuram)

    Jaipur International Airport (Jaipur)

    Chaudhary Charan Singh International Airport (Lucknow)

    Calicut International Airport (Kozhikode)

    Mangalore International Airport (Mangalore)

    Coimbatore International Airport (Coimbatore)

    Visakhapatnam Airport (Visakhapatnam)

    Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar International Airport (Nagpur)

    Biju Patnaik International Airport (Bhubaneswar)

    Lokpriya Gopinath Bordoloi International Airport (Guwahati)

    Chandigarh International Airport (Chandigarh)

    Vadodara Airport (Vadodara)

    Sri Guru Ram Dass Jee International Airport (Amritsar)

    Surat International Airport (Surat)

    Bagdogra International Airport (Siliguri)

    Lal Bahadur Shastri International Airport (Varanasi)

    Devi Ahilya Bai Holkar Airport (Indore)

    Gaya Airport (Gaya)

    Dabolim Airport (Vasco da Gama)

    Madurai Airport (Madurai)

     

    Crazy! a 1,500 km divert is a better option. :blink:

  2. 13 minutes ago, bamnutsak said:

    GF flight ops, in Bahrain and the Captain were messaging options. The Captain chose the BKK diversion.

     

    Cloud deck was at or below the carrier's minimums (500 feet?). 

     

    BKK was probably the closest, best option given GF has a presence, and could handle passengers.

     

    Probably... let see:

     

    1. Kolkata, India: Approximately 239.14 kilometers away. (Weather was probably similar being so close)

    2. Kathmandu, Nepal: Approximately 661.44 kilometers away. (Yeah... no way to try that on a 787)

    3. Yangon, Myanmar: Approximately 973.40 kilometers away. (Ha I'm not going to a country with a civil war)

    4. Bangkok, Thailand: Approximately 1565.25 kilometers away. (ding ding ding we have a winner)

    5. Colombo, Sri Lanka: Approximately 2158.95 kilometers away (Bangkok is closer and better)

     

    After researching, I now see why they choose Bangkok. There are not that many options in this part of the World.

  3. A 1,500+ Km divert?! :blink: This made me search for the longest divert in history and it happened in 2011 when a Qantas 747 (Flight 8) flying from Dallas, Texas to Brisbane, Australia had to divert to Auckland, New Zealand (Almost 2,300km away) due to severe thunderstorms over Brisbane. So this is not far from the record. To me it's absurd you have to divert so far away, unnecessary risks. 

  4. Reduce or eliminate carbs and sugars from your Diet. That's pretty much it. Sound easy, but almost everything has carbs or sugar. It pretty hard to do this in Thailand because they LOVE sugar. 

     

    I usually eat (Steak/Pork/Chicken) some Broccoli/Lettuce/ and 3 or 4 Eggs. Sounds boring but if you eat like this for 1 or 2 months you will see drastic changes.

     

    If you had to eat rice, you can refrigerate the rice within 1 hour of you cooking it. When you cook rice the complex carbs break down into simpler sugars. Refrigerating the rice allows the simpler sugars to revert back into more complex form transforming the structure of the rice. This process forms "resistant starch" which is a type of starch that isn't easily digested in the small intestine. Instead, it travels to the large intestine where it acts like dietary fiber.

     

    However, there's a catch. If you reheat the rice after refrigerating it, some of the resistant starch will break down again, and the rice will become softer and more digestible, although not entirely to its original state. So try not to reheat it too much. You can also do this hack with Potatoes, Pasta, Wheat and so on. Again the key is not reheating it too much, and also not all starches will develop a lot of "resistant starch".

    • Like 1
  5. 4 hours ago, Tod Daniels said:

    You SURE you applied for a year long, multi-entry Non-O based on MARRIAGE to a thai? I ask because your VISA has the thai phrase อุปการะบุตรไทย and they write that when you get raising thai child Non-O visas NOT married to a thai Non-O's
    I ask because Savannakhet has NEVER issued year-long, multi-entry Non-O visas based on having a thai child

    Could contain:

    Yes you're correct, this is for a child... not marriage. I applied for a 1 year ME Non O Visa (5,000 Baht). I guess I should've mentioned that before.  

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  6. Before 9:00 AM they march you to the front of the line. Once they open they take you to the gate, where the Thai gate guard lets people in 1 at a time when people come out.

     

    Sometimes the Thai guard refuses to let people in. At 11:00-11:15 they open the gates and let everyone in if there not that many people left. ????

  7. Tks. ????

     

    1 more note... Internet in Laos is not like Thailand. At least in the place I was staying (Maybe it was too crowded) but during peak hours it was atrocious. By far the slowest in SE asia (Maybe Myanmar is worse). 

     

    I did get enough cell phone signal across from Mukdahan to suffice my needs.  But if you're planning research or downloading forms... do it in Thailand. 

  8. 19 hours ago, bignok said:

    Pork and noodles won't make you fat without added sugar.

    Noodles are carbs and once digested it's basically the same as eating sugar... they spike blood sugar... then the body will release insulin to control the blood sugar... and 2 hours later you will feel that "crash" when your blood sugar lowers causing you to feel hungry and the cycle repeats... (eat, release insulin, crash, eat...)

     

    Basically the constant consumption of carbs/sugars every couple of hours... over time causes the body to become insulin resistant and insulin basically stops the fat burning process and the body just keep on storing all those carbs as fat.

     

    That's why people that adhere to a low carb lifestyle lose so much weight. They control the release of insulin, feel less hungry and most importantly they burn fat (Ketosis).

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  9. Just an update in case it benefits anyone. After arriving in Thailand in October Visa Exempt, I did my first 30day extension early in December. No issues there, 1900 baht. The expiration date set for January 1. So on Tuesday, I decided to head to Mukdahan for a border run into Savannakhet. The drive from my location was around 2 hours. Which is not bad (if you are used to driving internationally). 

     

    I get there park the car, go to the gate, buy a bus ticket (I can't remember if it was 45-50 baht). Get stamp out of Thailand. Wait for the bus (maybe 20 minutes) then cross the Mekong into Laos. There a Visa exemption cost 1,900 baht or $40 US dollars + 200 baht. After... you get immediately approached by local drivers but my plan was to go right back. Which I did, no questions asked. Got stamp out and bought a 55 baht bus ticket back to Thailand (waited 30 minutes for it). At Thailand Immigration fill out the TM6, and then got a new Visa exemption for 45 days, no questions asked.

     

    Still I know is not guaranteed, that it will go this smoothly every time. Especially going in and out in less than 1 hour. I will probably do a Tourist Visa in Savannakhet, in March. That will give me enough time until my Son is born and a can then do Non O Visa.

     

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  10. I looked into the METV from my consulate; I had to provide an itinerary showing round trips from Thailand to my home country (US), for both 60-day periods. This on top of all the other financial documents and picture requirements (Passport size, me actually holding the passport). It's too much of a hassle.

     

    On that note, can I get a regular tourist Visa to Thailand at Savannakhet?

     

    Does anyone know where the Immigration office is in Roi-Et, Or the closest Province to Roi-Et?

     

    Thank you all for your help.

  11. Hello, I'm trying to get some advice from more experienced travelers to see the viability of this plan. 

     
    I'm expecting a baby with my Thai girlfriend of 3 years around April. On my previous trips to Thailand I did a Tourist Visa... but with the recent changes allowing for 45 days Visa exemptions, I've decided to go that route. 
     
    Since I'm now retired (but Under 50) I can't find a Visa option that allows me to stay in Thailand until the baby is born and help her out with anything she needs. So here the best I can come up with:
     
    1) Enter Thailand Visa exempt + extend 30 days.
     
    2) Go to Laos before the end of the year (1st land border crossing of 2022) and return with another Visa Exemption and then an  Extension (If that goes well it will keep me here until early-mid march).
     
    3) At this point I'm starting to get paranoid if Thailand immigration would continue to allow this (More Questions). So maybe the next one I would use Air travel or an actual Tourist Visa. 
     
    4) If I go through with line 3 without issues, my Son/Daughter would be born and I will switch to a Non-Immigrant O from there.
     
    I was planning on marrying her but looks like it will happen after the baby is born so that option is not on the table.
     
    Is this viable or is there a better way? Is obvious that in Thai immigration eyes I could be seen as "not a tourist".
     
    Also for extensions do they have to be at the main office in Bangkok? Can they be done elsewhere? What is the closest office to Roi-Et?
     
    I appreciate anyone's help and suggestions.
     
  12. Hi everyone, I'm sure this question has been asked before. But immigration policies change all the time, so here goes...

     

    I will travel to Thailand this summer (In July).  Thailand currently allows my country (USA) to have a 30 day visa waiver... but that's not what I want because you need a round trip ticket and I don't know any other restriction...

     

    My plan is to permanently move there and marry my girlfriend of 3 years as soon as I'm able to do it.  I'm basically retiring in July (I'm 43), so I don't need to be back to the USA for a while.

     

    Which of the Thailand visa offers is best suited to my case? I am not 50 years old so retirement visa is out... can I just do a tourist visa and then change it at the Thailand immigration center to an O non-immigrant visa? (after I get married)

     

    I thought the non- immigrant OA, long stay visa would work, but unless I'm missing something... the age requirement is 50.

     

    I appreciate any help. ????

     

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