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PostPosted: Sun Jul 24, 2011 9:02 pm 
Not a Newbie I just don't post much!

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yes, anybody try to retire to Thailand or similar country?
Pattaya looks exciting, maybe i am mistaken?


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PostPosted: Sun Jul 31, 2011 9:05 pm 
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You have many more property rights in Thailand. So if you are planning to buy a place or invest Thailand is your better bet. Medical services are probably about equal. Far less gringas in particular and Americans specifically in Thailand, always a selling point for me. Pattaya specifically seems a bit overpriced. Jomtien Beach nearby might be an option. One of the best features Thailand has over anywhere in Latin America in things like Air Asia, where someone with a retirees schedule could travel and explore all of Asia quite cheaply. Would take quite a few years to see it all.


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PostPosted: Sun Jul 31, 2011 9:26 pm 
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I have watched several people I personally know leave Costa Rica and move to other places and then return to Costa Rica.

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 11:21 am 
Not a Newbie I just don't post much!

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sure.
people moving back and forth for miriad reasons.
my reason is i hate when chick tells me--I charge by the hour.
plus i love big cities and my favored is Tokyo.


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 12:51 pm 
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Greengo wrote:
had 2 dozen friends or so go to panama to check it out ...they mostly came back to get their stuff...some may have slipped back in :lol: but i see them in different places in s a and europe usa ..must be 95 per cent dont ever go back to cr except to visit friends or take a big derisive shit somewhere.. :lol:some guys take awhile to figure it out or are blasted by tico stupidity arrogance..sticker and (lack of culture) shock ....go back to the u s thinking its like this everywhere..then return after a little recuperative period.. the 4 winter months in the u s are long enough for most ...the overall grunge of tico life and the cumdrunk tico culture of whinning and corruption is hard to scrape off or rationalize once youve lived in another country....even most in south america ....you can live dirt cheap in cr...its not far from the states...your u s med insurance is good for biblica and private clinics...if being propped up in a second hand cumglazed recliner watching cable and jacking off to uporn ..getting ticketed hundreds for drivinggringo,,,watching the ticos being fuckeddeepandhard by the garchs..running around mumbling pura vida..is ones idea of a life ...it aint bad.. :lol: i lived on 450 a month and had lots of fun..once reality closes in..and one realizes whats transpiring here ...you either start fuckingandjerking off your fellow expats with tales of realty and medical miracles ..a government that works ..an oligarchy that giivesashit..or you relate some semblence of realty to those countrymen you have an affinity for and come around the place just for kicks and see friends that are stuck without the bucks or glued to some weird symbiotic relationship with the novia he cant handle marrying or be seen with in the old hometown....or too cheap to get her some teeth and a forklift to take her out for dinner..lifes a mess ..whether youre counting the hours to reload so you can jack it again ..and measuring out your ration of peanut butter for the day...or worried about your couple dozen planes taking people for last wishes...a lot of countries are poorer in s a ..but none poorer in spirit and culture..and being beat down and raped..cringing and blaming the gringos ... in comparison to the huge intake of capital and gratuities... than costa rica.. one can only ignore this sad reality for so long...... :) awfuck ...who gives ashit :lol:


You make a lot of good points!! :D

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 12:56 pm 
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I think CR is the worst country in LA, except for all the others. :D I mean that from a perspective of closeness, health insurance applicability, climate, availability of U.S. product, poontang, It ain't bad. Colombia is probably better, but harder/longer to get to and the civil strife is greater. Heck, if Bangkok was a three hour flight I would be there!! :D

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 12:56 am 
Not a Newbie I just don't post much!

Joined: Wed Mar 28, 2012 9:07 am
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MrLasVegas wrote:
You have many more property rights in Thailand. So if you are planning to buy a place or invest Thailand is your better bet. Medical services are probably about equal. Far less gringas in particular and Americans specifically in Thailand, always a selling point for me. Pattaya specifically seems a bit overpriced. Jomtien Beach nearby might be an option. One of the best features Thailand has over anywhere in Latin America in things like Air Asia, where someone with a retirees schedule could travel and explore all of Asia quite cheaply. Would take quite a few years to see it all.


I know this is an older thread but I wanted to let anyone thinking of going to Thailand to know..

You have NO property rights in thailand as a foreigner. NONE. Even if you marry a thai national you still can't have your name on the deed. Your wife even has to sign a paper stating that none of the funds for the house came from you. Crazy eh?

The only loophole to own property here is to create a sham company and 51 percent of that company has to be owned by thais. If your an American you can get a company via the Amnity agreement between America and thailand and own 100 percent of that company, but that kind of company can't own land!

The only thing you can buy is a condo and that has to have 49 percent or less foreigners living in it. the Thai government is Xenophobic in the extreme. the hurdles for visa keep getting higher and higher. It's one of the reasons i'm moving to CR. I've been here almost 8 years. i've had enough of the anti-foreigner crap in the thai government.

Greg


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 7:58 pm 
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You cannot own property, but you can own a condo in the PI. If you love big cities, Manila is a trip..Some parts are very upscale..

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 8:17 pm 
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This is a great thread. I have a few more years to work unfortunately but plan to do some serious exploring now that I am single again. I agree Colombia is a great place to retire but to do so you must have a decent command of Spanish and many of their phrases are different from anywhere else. I'm gonna make my return trip to Costa Rica in June, probably do Medellin in August September, then the next breaks might be Asia. Thanks for the insight.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 11:16 pm 
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Colombia is pretty square with its foreign residents. A resident is treated pretty much like a Colombian citizen with most of the rights and privileges of one. There is a fair amount of red tape that applies to both citizens and residents, but with a little bit of patience and perseverance, it all comes out in the wash. :wink: Regardless of what your credit score was in your motherland, obtaining unsecured credit, like a credit card, is difficult at first in Colombia. But once you establish a track record, or own property, it becomes easier. IMHO, obtaining credit in Colombia is an academic issue anyway. Credit card interest is very high, so it makes sense to use cash whenever possible. The only advantage I can see to using credit cards in Colombia is the great discounts offered by the large chain stores. As long as the bill is payed off in 30 days, you can keep the discount, and not worry about interest.

Colombia is a retired man's paradise. :D


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 11:28 pm 
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BlueDevil wrote:
Colombia is pretty square with its foreign residents. A resident is treated pretty much like a Colombian citizen with most of the rights and privileges of one. There is a fair amount of red tape that applies to both citizens and residents, but with a little bit of patience and perseverance, it all comes out in the wash. :wink: Regardless of what your credit score was in your motherland, obtaining unsecured credit, like a credit card, is difficult at first in Colombia. But once you establish a track record, or own property, it becomes easier. IMHO, obtaining credit in Colombia is an academic issue anyway. Credit card interest is very high, so it makes sense to use cash whenever possible. The only advantage I can see to using credit cards in Colombia is the great discounts offered by the large chain stores. As long as the bill is payed off in 30 days, you can keep the discount, and not worry about interest.

Colombia is a retired man's paradise. :D


Other then the discounts offered by chain stores you just described Costa Rica. One other exception is that other then voting a resident has all off the rights and privileges of a citizen not most of them. :lol:

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:27 am 
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Quote:
One other exception is that other then voting a resident has all off the rights and privileges of a citizen not most of them. :lol:


Yep, same in Colombia. No vote until you become a citizen. Other than voting, a resident has all the other rights and privileges.


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 12:40 pm 
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Greengo wrote:
sadly...its now... anywhere "but" costa rica..if youre short on jack..and long in the tooth...you can still do a lot of wistful thinking about it being something other than a fetid shithole full of greedy mentally defective politicos judges lawyers and realtors... a leering army of "last stop texaco" cops only interested in one anothers bungholes peckers and a few designer duds...beaches and rivers strewn with sewage and trash,,,a water table containing everything even remotely lethal... :lol: cheap overpriced by local standards worn out slatterns for the most part..i know its still fun if youre escaping a week of sex prison..but living here is now just taking a camparatively costly dreary hypnogogic dump in a morphine tinged pharmacy full of lethargic old geesers waiting for their last turn on the porcelin bus...if youre nuts got off on the last stop ...might as well wait for the nicas to swarm the place ...going anywhere else might involve growing a pair.... :lol:

The article in the Tico Times today about Puerto Viejo is a prime example of what Greengo is talking about. I don't know how many of you have been to this area on the Caribean but the beaches go for 30 miles and they are some of the most beautiful in the country and many have very gentile surf ideal for aquatic recreation. The government wants to bulldoze all the buildings in the 50 meter tide mark including many businesses. If you know the story behind the marina proposal you can read between the lines and see that the only way the developers are getting their claws into this area is if they drive the people of the land. The southern Caribe of Costa Rica is really the most overlooked destination in the country. Where can you go on a horseback ride all on the beach for 20 miles then snorkel or dive a pristine reef rifght off the beach. Bounce down to Panamas Boca Del Toro . If you haven't been you should go as this area surely will not be around much longer. In a few years there will be a Marina , Muyak Beach Resort, Dipshit by the Sea Condo Delevopment and a McDonalds. 8)


Last edited by Mugsy2010 on Sat Apr 21, 2012 12:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 12:41 pm 
PHD From Del Rey University!
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Location: Sabana Oeste , Costa Rica
Greengo wrote:
...going anywhere else might involve growing a pair.... :lol:


Finally after years of rants of how bad a place Costa Rica and your constant ducking of the question why do you stay here we have the answer. :P :lol:

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 12:55 pm 
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I have loved the weather in San Jose over the last 8 months living here. I like CR, but from everything I hear about Colombia, I imagine I would choose Medellin if I were in the States choosing between the two. From descriptions and photos, Medellin seems like a very charming city. My opinion has nothing to do with p4p. Don't ever see moving somewhere just for that aspect. Colombia seems a little more European like, which is a plus for me, as I love the cities there. Food would definitely be an advantage as I really like Colombian food. I do enjoy San Jose though, just think it would be a fuller life in Colombia.


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