monochaser Posted October 19, 2004 Share Posted October 19, 2004 kind of strange though. I stood in front of immi man who looked like he was ready to give me a 30 day stamp so I stopped him and said I had a 60 day. He looked at my paper and saw I wrote in a visa # and then searched my loaded passport for the visa. He finally found it amidst prior 60 day visas and 30 day in and out stamps along with 50 full pages of stamps and visas of world countries prior to my moving to thailand. He looked a little at my full pages before stamping me with a 59 day expiration. I was entering thailand on oct 15 and expiry stamp was dec 13. this was strange. also on the white paper stapled to passport, the stamp has no expiry. also strange. The final thing was what he wrote on the stamp inside the passport. he wrote V.P.P. under the stamp. anyone know what that stands for? any opinions on the overall events occurring here? seemed a tad unusual Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lopburi3 Posted October 19, 2004 Share Posted October 19, 2004 My last TM.6 admitted until was also not filled out so don't believe that is too unusual. Day of entry is day one so Dec 13 is day 60. Normal. Don't know what the VPP is. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ovenman Posted October 19, 2004 Share Posted October 19, 2004 The final thing was what he wrote on the stamp inside the passport. he wrote V.P.P. under the stamp. anyone know what that stands for? Visa Page P (of the passport)? Some immigrations officers will make such a notation if your entry stamp is not on the same page as your visa. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaiflyer1 Posted October 19, 2004 Share Posted October 19, 2004 Visa Page P (of the passport)? Some immigrations officers will make such a notation if your entry stamp is not on the same page as your visa. British passports are page numbered rather then alphabetically so i cant see it being "page p"........i would say the poster is a Brit since he used the term "tad" in the last sentence of his post. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
monochaser Posted October 20, 2004 Author Share Posted October 20, 2004 Visa Page P (of the passport)? Some immigrations officers will make such a notation if your entry stamp is not on the same page as your visa. British passports are page numbered rather then alphabetically so i cant see it being "page p"........i would say the poster is a Brit since he used the term "tad" in the last sentence of his post. I am US citizen so oven is right Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaiflyer1 Posted October 20, 2004 Share Posted October 20, 2004 Well there you go..........and "tad" is such an english expression. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sriracha john Posted October 20, 2004 Share Posted October 20, 2004 The final thing was what he wrote on the stamp inside the passport. he wrote V.P.P. under the stamp. anyone know what that stands for? Visa Page P (of the passport)? Some immigrations officers will make such a notation if your entry stamp is not on the same page as your visa. Well Visa Page P is a lot better than what I was randomly guessing. I was somehow imagining that with Thailand's focus on obtaining the "right" kind of ultra-rich visitor, that perhaps it meant Very Poor Prospect. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaiflyer1 Posted October 20, 2004 Share Posted October 20, 2004 Well Visa Page P is a lot better than what I was randomly guessing. I was somehow imagining that with Thailand's focus on obtaining the "right" kind of ultra-rich visitor, that perhaps it meant Very Poor Prospect. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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