Is that a typo or is "hes" the qualifier for a shemale ?hopefully hes yacht will be ready
Where do you want to retire?
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just a early morning typo Hislogos wrote:Is that a typo or is "hes" the qualifier for a shemale ?hopefully hes yacht will be ready
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I was given that opportunity once (was offered to join the crew), but let it go in favour of pursuing my fledgling business.tarariverboat wrote:for me it was always about retiring and cruising the world.so its the 7 seas for me,from a very young age i would dream of the day i retired from the daily work and sail the seas on my luxury yacht,with my all female crew,we would only dock every month or so to take on more supplies and a fresh crew if needed:)
its a dream i shared with my long lost school friend so hopefully hes yacht will be ready also and we will meet up somewhere on the oceans.
A visiting yacht's diesel engine (Rose Bay, Sydney) had problems which mechanics failed to fix. As I was delivering a TV rental I offered to look at the situation and resolved it. Dirty solenoids.
Crew: Husband, wife and pretty daughter... damn. (From South Africa, Durban. Of course, just one daughter wouldn't suffice tarariverboat... )
- greatwhitenorth
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Sisaket, Thailand
I have just completed my house 12 km out of Sisaket, Thailand. Sisaket has one of the lowest costs of living in Thailand, is a provincial capital with 2 universities and 2 large hospitals, a Thai Premier League football team and is an hour to Ubon airport. The village is in rice farm water buffalo country, is about a 5 hour drive north of Siem Reap and a link to the youtube video of the build is below. The house is 100m2 and cost less than a two car garage does in Canada.
This is my first post, I have enjoyed reading the forum posts over the past couple of months. I am not a NJH apologist and don t have facebook to give to hookers.
I have just completed my house 12 km out of Sisaket, Thailand. Sisaket has one of the lowest costs of living in Thailand, is a provincial capital with 2 universities and 2 large hospitals, a Thai Premier League football team and is an hour to Ubon airport. The village is in rice farm water buffalo country, is about a 5 hour drive north of Siem Reap and a link to the youtube video of the build is below. The house is 100m2 and cost less than a two car garage does in Canada.
This is my first post, I have enjoyed reading the forum posts over the past couple of months. I am not a NJH apologist and don t have facebook to give to hookers.
As you know I am a big fan of the Phils. I wold love to get back there and yes....retirement could be quite good there. Not sure about all the visa hoo haa but as a place it must be up there. Baguio is nice. Used to go up there a bit as I had a site there.scobienz wrote:A double retirement for me. A small house in Yorkshire to enjoy a few months a year in the UK and enjoy the cold weather and the rest of the time in Asia, most likely Flipland. Bagiuo or close by. Maybe somewhere near the beaches of Sison.
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In the Philippines on Palawan Island, San Vicente and Port Barton, although Barton could be dicey if you need emergency care as the road is still under repair/construction, great rainforest's and very clean beaches. In Viet Nam, Hoi An and An Bang beach area, enjoyed Danang but the coast is going off with large scale resorts. Very easy to get a yearly visa now in Nam and some expats in Palawan Is. have been there many years without long term visa restrictions.
I think having less regulated visa controls are my main considerations here, otherwise I'd most likely be in Rawai or Nai Harn now.
I think having less regulated visa controls are my main considerations here, otherwise I'd most likely be in Rawai or Nai Harn now.
Never mind
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I lived in Cape Town over a decade ago and it wasn't particularly expensive then. Lots of crime in the townships but the place was safe enough in the non-blick areas. Southern Italy for retirement.
Would you believe this is Vietnam ?
Sapa
Just got back from 4 days up there with the family.
Truly spectacular.
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- Piston Broke
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Missed out on Sapa, 'they' stuffed up my booking and no rooms left except shitty dives, was going to take the train there. Dam nice.
Never mind
We took a 7 seat Limousine Ford Transit van with leather recliners, wi fi and a starlight roof/ Bloody unreal !Piston Broke wrote:Missed out on Sapa, 'they' stuffed up my booking and no rooms left except shitty dives, was going to take the train there. Dam nice.
The scenery outside Sapa and away from the tourist traps ( waterfalls, fish farms etc ) is honestly some of the best I have ever seen. The terraced rice farms that climb hundreds of meters up precarious hillsides before disappearing into clouds are just gob smacking feats of engineering. Everywhere you go there are village people in traditional garb farming the hills. We daytripped out to Nam Cang River lodge and Topas Eco Lodge in the Red Zhou hmong valley and.....well.........wow is all i can say. The drive is epic and the lodges are very very nice.
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- Piston Broke
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The road to Barton Port over a year ago, worth the hassle then on bikes but lucky it didn't rain. This place may become another packers haven once the road is concreted, San Vicente has a good airport and is gaining popularity, El Nido is spectactular but full of packers, would be great in the low season though.
Never mind
- Hanno
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Yes, Sa Pa is nice when the weather plays along. It can be the most miserable place during winter though. Cue fog for 2+ weeks with visibility around 2 Inches, cold, wet, and no central heating anywhere. I worked up there and that is why the GB comments along the line "it is freezing" every time the temperatures in the KoW drop below 25 Centigrade make me laugh.Piston Broke wrote:Missed out on Sapa, 'they' stuffed up my booking and no rooms left except shitty dives, was going to take the train there. Dam nice.
Last edited by Hanno on Wed Apr 05, 2017 11:57 am, edited 1 time in total.
"I realized that If I had to choose, I would rather have birds than airplanes."
Charles Lindbergh
Charles Lindbergh
I am in my mid fifties and have been a self employed workaholic all my life. Almost a year ago I retired. I do have business interests, but don't have to turn up at work at all.
It is boring. There is nothing much to do at all once you take work out as a factor. I am still adjusting.
I am still formulating my long term plan which will probably be keep a base here, and travel within SE Asia to different places for a couple of months, then returning to base.
Hope this way it will keep life interesting and keep boredom at bay.
It is boring. There is nothing much to do at all once you take work out as a factor. I am still adjusting.
I am still formulating my long term plan which will probably be keep a base here, and travel within SE Asia to different places for a couple of months, then returning to base.
Hope this way it will keep life interesting and keep boredom at bay.