Bye bye SEAsia....
- horace
- I can not turn my computer off ...
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- Location: different planet
Sounds like a visa to me, have to complete a form online, pay online and not asked about it again. Exactly the same as Australia where it is called an electronic visa.
k440, something to do when you're pissed.
You were told, you silly boy.horace wrote:Sounds like a visa to me, have to complete a form online, pay online and not asked about it again. Exactly the same as Australia where it is called an electronic visa.
How's Bogota grabbing you so far then?
- Miguelito
- Ordinary Schmo
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"Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) is an automated system used to determine the eligibility of visitors to travel to the United States under the Visa Waiver Program (VWP) and whether such travel poses any law enforcement or security risk. ... ESTA is not a visa" (ESTA)horace wrote:Sounds like a visa to me, have to complete a form online, pay online and not asked about it again. Exactly the same as Australia where it is called an electronic visa.
He's probably a bit cold. I recommend a Juan Valdez coffee and bottle of Aguardiente.Lol Nol wrote: You were told, you silly boy.
How's Bogota grabbing you so far then?
No idea of your itinerary through Colombia, but this looks really interesting
A decade ago, death stalked my drive to Parque Arqueológico Nacional de Tierradentro. The road from the town of Popayán over Colombia’s Cordillera Central mountain range was infamous for ambush and kidnap. Lonesome military posts hinted ominously at the presence of Farc guerrillas. I gripped the wheel tightly as I negotiated the unpaved road through a bleak, windswept Andean landscape, and cold fog swirled around me like a funeral shroud.
Thankfully, I arrived at one of the world’s largest necropolises alive. Unsurprisingly, I had the vast pre-Columbian hypogea of Tierradentro to myself....
http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/2018120 ... ter-island
A decade ago, death stalked my drive to Parque Arqueológico Nacional de Tierradentro. The road from the town of Popayán over Colombia’s Cordillera Central mountain range was infamous for ambush and kidnap. Lonesome military posts hinted ominously at the presence of Farc guerrillas. I gripped the wheel tightly as I negotiated the unpaved road through a bleak, windswept Andean landscape, and cold fog swirled around me like a funeral shroud.
Thankfully, I arrived at one of the world’s largest necropolises alive. Unsurprisingly, I had the vast pre-Columbian hypogea of Tierradentro to myself....
http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/2018120 ... ter-island
"Not my circus, not my monkeys" - KiR
- spitthedog
- Is the World Outside still there ?
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- Joined: Mon Feb 17, 2014 10:19 pm
We'll be travelling through Bihar, NE India soon heading towards Kathmandu. A google search on the place reveals things like : "The most corrupt place on earth", bandits, robberies, and drinking alcohol and imprisonment.kinard wrote:No idea of your itinerary through Colombia, but this looks really interesting
A decade ago, death stalked my drive to Parque Arqueológico Nacional de Tierradentro. The road from the town of Popayán over Colombia’s Cordillera Central mountain range was infamous for ambush and kidnap. Lonesome military posts hinted ominously at the presence of Farc guerrillas. I gripped the wheel tightly as I negotiated the unpaved road through a bleak, windswept Andean landscape, and cold fog swirled around me like a funeral shroud.
Thankfully, I arrived at one of the world’s largest necropolises alive. Unsurprisingly, I had the vast pre-Columbian hypogea of Tierradentro to myself....
http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/2018120 ... ter-island
But everyone from Bihar i've met says itd fine.
So is Horace planning to cycle across the U.S them. Is abit big innit? How longs the visa?
I had plans to cycle around the coast of India, then i changed those plans to cycle across it. After travelling on the mad highways and taking hours to get into cities i decided to just do a little bit of it (probably 2500 kms) and chill for a few months or more , after re-newing the girlfriends visa.
6 months isnt that long for India. Loved India though, and the cycling has been exciting here.
Spitthedog, 41,478 kms and counting.
Venezuela might be interesting??
"I don't care what the people are thinking, i ain't drunk i'm just drinking"