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phuketsub

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Posts posted by phuketsub

  1. 1 hour ago, KhunLA said:

    You don't have an int'l CC/Debit card ?

     

    "Qualifying adult passport renewal applicants may pay the $130 passport renewal fee online via U.S. or international credit or debit card, electronic funds transfer from a U.S.-based bank account, Amazon Pay, or Pay Pal."

     

    Can you open a Pay Pal account & fund it with your local bank, then pay embassy in USD?

    I have accounts in the US, but none with an int'l CC/Debit card, nor have I ever used PayPal. I just don't know if my Bangkok Bank debit card qualifies as an international debit card or not, but I have used it while travelling abroad and at ATMs in the states. I have been over here 30+ years. I guess I am falling behind technology-wise...I don't even know how to use QR codes properly. 

  2. I am trying to apply for a new passport by mail to the US Embassy and I meet all of the criteria listed on their website, but I have a simple question that is holding up the process: How to pay them the required $USD 130 for the process. 

     

    I would like to get a bank draft issued though my account with Bangkok Bank, but the website says it has to be paid in US dollars....I just need to confirm if such payment is acceptable and, if so, what exchange rate I should use. 

     

    Unlike in the past, when you could simply call the US Embassy's Citizens Services Desk and get a straight answer from a real human being, such services are no longer available. I did write them an email explaining the situation, but I simply no longer have any trust that it will be read and answered by a real human being. 

     

    I am very frustrated that they can neither make it crystal clear what to do on their website, nor can they provide any real human assistance. hence, any help anyone can provide will be much appreciated. 

     

     

    image.png.1273822d778ee47f3dc1639ddcd4a03c.png

  3. On 9/14/2023 at 5:53 AM, carlyai said:

    AUA in Bangkok used to have (not sure now) a structure learning approach and a natural learning approach.

    I did both a long time ago.

    Check it out.

    Takes lots of time and exposure.

    It also helps to do the reading and writing program. 

    Hard work. 

    Learning a language is not easy. :)

    I started out in Thai at AUA as well, mostly with the natural (listening-based) approach but some of the structural as well. I did it for about six months, but to be honest I was hung over most mornings and didn't get as much out of it as I could have...then I started to run out of money and I got a chance to work teaching kids English. It was everything the 'natural approach' focused on, but with way more context and energy. It was like the natural approach on steroids.  Not only that, but you got paid to do it....Learning Thai isn't easy, but in my opinion it's really fun and there's no end to it. It helped me out a lot professionally. So to the OP, I would say the best way to learn Thai is from Thai kids. 

  4. 4 hours ago, Stocky said:

    Note that it's monsoon season in the south from October through December. Switching to the west coast after Surat will save you some of the rain, you also avoid Thung Song near NST which is notorious flooding hot spot.

     

    But monsoon rain reduces driver visibility and the ability to stop, so I'd be extra cautious, and make sure your health insurance covers cycling! 

    Totally agree with Stocky. November is statistically the rainiest month along the Gulf Coast. You have been warned.

    • Thanks 1
  5. You can't apply for a visa at Immigration. You have to apply at an embassy or consulate. 

     

    Once you get it, Immigration can extend it for you if you meet their criteria.

     

    FYI I think the old Immigration office in Songkhla Town closed over a decade ago. 

  6. I have six or seven trees here in Songkhla (Ranot district). The core group were grafts gifted to me. Then I grew a few from seed. All of the plants are healthy and doing well, but at about 6 years so far they have yet to produce any fruit....

  7. 20 hours ago, scubascuba3 said:

    I use an Alum stick, they are cheap and last 6-12 months+

     

    Check out Deodorant stick (Alum)!฿150.00 only!Get it on Lazada now! | https://s.lazada.co.th/s.9GiIJ

     

    Probably will be able to find cheaper options

    Totally agree, though 150 baht is about 3 times what I pay at the local pharmacy....My inlaws used to just buy checks of potassium alum and use that....much better than all the chemical crap. 

  8. I was stranded in Hat Yai a few days ago while my car was getting fixed and, just walking around,  I tried to find the old roti place I used to go to near the roundabout on Petchkasem Road. It was gone. Any ideas on where to get the best roti in HY these days?

  9. Just a heads up to those needing to renew a work permit. The Songkhla Labor Office has moved yet again, this time into a small shophouse near the Greenworld Hotel. 

     

    For a long time it was located at Samila Beach, right near the roundabout near the Mermaid Statue. Then about two years ago they pulled up stakes and moved further up the beach, into a largely windowless venue also near the beach -- just across from the OrBorJor Ferry port, on the Songkhla Town side. 

     

    Well we went there today in a hurry, but it had moved again into a temporary office near the Greenworld Hotel. (see photo, if I can get it to load). 

     

    It  is a small place and the ground floor is packed with bureaucrats, who usually get more breathing room. There isn't even a sign in either location, at least not one that I could spot. Once elderly and entrepreneurial motorbike taxi drive has stationed himself in front offering to guide confused foreigners to the new location, but we didn't need it since Greenway is relatively easy to find. 

     

    The staff there told us it is just a temporary office while the office near the ferry gets another makeover. They expect to move back in September, she said. 

     

    To be fair, the staff there are always helpful and friendly...once you track them down. 

     

    For me, the delay and all the traffic meant I couldn't get back in time to teach my evening classes. 

    labor office.jpg

    • Like 1
  10. 37 minutes ago, marin said:

    A bit of research might have helped. Was on KP and both beaches 30 years ago. People knew then before the internet. 

    Yeah, understood. Still, it is really frustrating. Where I live in Songkhla they built a huge seawall, making an otherwise nice beach unswimmable...it really drives me crazy. I would trade all the wifi, roadwork and 7-Elevens to go back to what these places were like 30+ years ago. 

    • Like 1
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