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Posted
15 minutes ago, save the frogs said:

 

Exactly. Continue working as long as you possibly can because retirement can be dreadfully boring.

 

I stopped working recently and I'm going nuts. The bars do not fill the void for me.

 

Go for a 5000km drive 

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Posted
39 minutes ago, simon43 said:

I thought that I had this sorted.  Move to the Philippines so that I get my UK state index-linked pension (due to start payments in 6 weeks from now).  But the lack of annual increases won't be a financial problem for me just now, and I've never been to the PI anyway...

 

I was teaching in Mandalay.  I came back to Thailand for a couple of weeks to sort out a 'base' condo at Jomtien Beach. 7,000 baht a month for a modern studio condo that's 300 metres from the beach 🙂

 

During my absence, Mother Nature decided to 'throw' an earthquake in Mandalay!  Thousands are dead, many buildings destroyed.  

 

So I flew up to Luang Prabang in north Laos, the UNESCO city where I have lived off and on for many years between my teaching contracts in Burma. A beautiful place (NOT NOW!).

 

Big shock on this visit!  Gone was the sleepy Lao town by the Mekong river.  Now, as a result of the new train from China, the town is bursting with Chinese tourists AND Chinese businesses.  The central peninsula area is jammed with white tourist vans.  The outskirt hills of the town are being scraped away and huge Chinese hotels being built. The Mekong river will become a non-flowing lake when the next Chinese dam just north of the town is in operation, (The Xayaburi dam south of the town already stops natural river flow).

 

I'm so disappointed with Luang Prabang now.... 'paradise' destroyed by the 'locusts'.

 

What to do?  The local international school in Luang Prabang asked me to teach at the school.

 

Then I got an email from Mandalay begging me to return to teach again.

 

What I don't want to do in my retirement is simply do nothing, get fat, drink beer and catch STDs from 'professional' woman.

 

What would you do?

Retire in Pattaya and spend my time travelling round NE Thailand.

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Posted
7 minutes ago, sidjameson said:

Another place bites the dust.

South east Asia is not what it used to be.

I first arrived in 95 when the population was half what it is today. Average age was twenty years younger. Temps were two degrees cooler.Tourism was a trickle not a flood. No burning season that I remember. Most places were without traffic jams. Get away from the main spots and locals hadn't spoken to a foreigner before.

 

Sorry it's off topic, the OP just made me sad.

Temps were the same. But yes it was better.

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Posted
1 hour ago, simon43 said:

I thought that I had this sorted.  Move to the Philippines so that I get my UK state index-linked pension (due to start payments in 6 weeks from now).  But the lack of annual increases won't be a financial problem for me just now, and I've never been to the PI anyway...

 

I was teaching in Mandalay.  I came back to Thailand for a couple of weeks to sort out a 'base' condo at Jomtien Beach. 7,000 baht a month for a modern studio condo that's 300 metres from the beach 🙂

 

During my absence, Mother Nature decided to 'throw' an earthquake in Mandalay!  Thousands are dead, many buildings destroyed.  

 

So I flew up to Luang Prabang in north Laos, the UNESCO city where I have lived off and on for many years between my teaching contracts in Burma. A beautiful place (NOT NOW!).

 

Big shock on this visit!  Gone was the sleepy Lao town by the Mekong river.  Now, as a result of the new train from China, the town is bursting with Chinese tourists AND Chinese businesses.  The central peninsula area is jammed with white tourist vans.  The outskirt hills of the town are being scraped away and huge Chinese hotels being built. The Mekong river will become a non-flowing lake when the next Chinese dam just north of the town is in operation, (The Xayaburi dam south of the town already stops natural river flow).

 

I'm so disappointed with Luang Prabang now.... 'paradise' destroyed by the 'locusts'.

 

What to do?  The local international school in Luang Prabang asked me to teach at the school.

 

Then I got an email from Mandalay begging me to return to teach again.

 

What I don't want to do in my retirement is simply do nothing, get fat, drink beer and catch STDs from 'professional' woman.

 

What would you do?

You have tried everything, including Cyprus.

 

At least you have several options left. As many other elderly Farangs have no options left. Consider yourself as "fortunate".

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Posted
8 minutes ago, rough diamond said:

Please find another word that will relieve you of your paranoid behaviour that makes you think that there is anyone on the planet who would wish to stalk you!

Stop stalking me weirdo

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Posted
2 minutes ago, simon43 said:

Jomtien is indeed full of Russians.  My condo building is full of them - some Germans and me when I'm in town.  But it's not a retirement destination for me.  Also, my condo building stinks of cannabis 24/7, which is not nice...

 

I was in Chiang Mai last week.  Too much smoke pollution, and that's also the problem in Laos and Myanmar.

Hua Hin or Prachuap Khiri Khan

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Posted
2 hours ago, simon43 said:

I thought that I had this sorted.  Move to the Philippines so that I get my UK state index-linked pension (due to start payments in 6 weeks from now).  But the lack of annual increases won't be a financial problem for me just now, and I've never been to the PI anyway...

 

I was teaching in Mandalay.  I came back to Thailand for a couple of weeks to sort out a 'base' condo at Jomtien Beach. 7,000 baht a month for a modern studio condo that's 300 metres from the beach 🙂

 

During my absence, Mother Nature decided to 'throw' an earthquake in Mandalay!  Thousands are dead, many buildings destroyed.  

 

So I flew up to Luang Prabang in north Laos, the UNESCO city where I have lived off and on for many years between my teaching contracts in Burma. A beautiful place (NOT NOW!).

 

Big shock on this visit!  Gone was the sleepy Lao town by the Mekong river.  Now, as a result of the new train from China, the town is bursting with Chinese tourists AND Chinese businesses.  The central peninsula area is jammed with white tourist vans.  The outskirt hills of the town are being scraped away and huge Chinese hotels being built. The Mekong river will become a non-flowing lake when the next Chinese dam just north of the town is in operation, (The Xayaburi dam south of the town already stops natural river flow).

 

I'm so disappointed with Luang Prabang now.... 'paradise' destroyed by the 'locusts'.

 

What to do?  The local international school in Luang Prabang asked me to teach at the school.

 

Then I got an email from Mandalay begging me to return to teach again.

 

What I don't want to do in my retirement is simply do nothing, get fat, drink beer and catch STDs from 'professional' woman.

 

What would you do?

You mention that you have never been to the PI before yet you had a plan to retire there? Maybe go and have a look around. I've been there many times and to mdifferent locations but mainly working on projects. I found most visits to be enjoyable and liked the people but I would have to do a bit more research if considering living there full time.

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Posted
1 hour ago, sidjameson said:

Another place bites the dust.

South east Asia is not what it used to be.

I first arrived in 95 when the population was half what it is today. Average age was twenty years younger. Temps were two degrees cooler.Tourism was a trickle not a flood. No burning season that I remember. Most places were without traffic jams. Get away from the main spots and locals hadn't spoken to a foreigner before.

 

Sorry it's off topic, the OP just made me sad.

 

1 hour ago, sidjameson said:

Another place bites the dust.

South east Asia is not what it used to be.

I first arrived in 95 when the population was half what it is today. Average age was twenty years younger. Temps were two degrees cooler.Tourism was a trickle not a flood. No burning season that I remember. Most places were without traffic jams. Get away from the main spots and locals hadn't spoken to a foreigner before.

 

Sorry it's off topic, the OP just made me sad.

Think your memory is challenged.  The burning seasons were worse most years in the 1990's. I remember not being able to see high rises a block away in Chiang Mai in 1999 I think.  The population was about the same and the temp hasn't changed in the last 50 years.  Google might help 🙂

 

Agree with the rest of your post.  I also miss those days and have great memories.

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Posted
5 minutes ago, simon43 said:

Jomtien is indeed full of Russians.  My condo building is full of them - some Germans and me when I'm in town.  But it's not a retirement destination for me.  Also, my condo building stinks of cannabis 24/7, which is not nice...

 

I was in Chiang Mai last week.  Too much smoke pollution, and that's also the problem in Laos and Myanmar.

Come over to the Eastern Seaboard, as they call it. Pala beach, near Ban Chang. We own a nice condo right on the beach and hardly a tourist to be seen. Our condo building has a few people, I would say mostly older Scandi folks, having had a few chats with some of them, come in for 3 or 4 months during their home country's winter but that is as close to tourists that we get. 

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