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Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Old Oct 28th 2008, 4:49 pm
  #16  
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Just think how high my post count would be if I hadnt added bits onto existing posts for the last however many years
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 4:49 pm
  #17  
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by dinger24
That doesnt mean your fast at typing
Did I say that I was?

You going to go back and edit "your" to "you're"?
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 4:54 pm
  #18  
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by HairySnotter
Hi all I have been one of those guys that has sat reading this forum from the day me and my family decided Canada was the place we wanted to call home ,that was over four years ago. I never posted or joined as I got most of my answers from previous posts and a few holidays we took to Canada. This forum is an absolute gold mine of information and peoples own experiences bad and good.



We (myself wife and two kids) have now lived just outside of Oshawa for a year now (we rented near Ajax for the first year) and Canada has become every thing and more that we all wanted it to be. I now feel that I can pass on some information to all you guys wanting to move from the UK to start a new life. Because it is a new life you are leaving that street you walk down every day, the neighbors you speak to every day, the family that is always there, the city village or town you lived most of your life all the familiar things that you take for granted every day . So do you still want to move to a new Country? If the answer is yes read on and I hope you do.


We are earning less than we earned in the UK but our quality of life is far superior to that in Glasgow. We could not afford to buy the house we wanted in a good area of Glasgow, we now have a detached house in a very quite subdivision. Our two kids are doing extremely well at school our oldest even has a well paid part time job. We did not bring a substantial amount of money with us (enough to rent for a couple of years if it was necessary) as we where the average lower middle class UK family. We both got full time jobs within the first week of posting our CVs, so that meant our savings could now go to a down payment for a house. So we decided to keep renting for the first year then buy a house the second year.


We used Abrams & Krochak yes I know you can do it yourself but we felt it would be better to let them have any headaches than us and the price was incredible (I had approached an English based specialist and she wanted three times the money and she gave us bad advice).You must come out on Holiday a few times as the place is so vast and you can get a feel for it. You have no credit history when you land in Canada no matter what any one tells you, I guess there will be some on this site that will beg to differ. That also goes for car insurance some insurance companies will ask for a letter from your old insurance company in the UK bring it anyway but it will make virtually no difference to your premium (you are effectively a new driver in the eyes of the insurance companies) .So get yourself store cards and even a preloaded credit card as soon as you open your bank account as this starts to work in your favor providing you pay it of monthly.

There is plenty of work out here as long as you are willing and able to take any thing on at first. Our telephone, internet and TV bill is the same amount we paid to telewest, electricity and gas are slightly cheaper and we have a much bigger house than in the UK. Our weekly grocery bill is cheaper as is our petrol bill. We pay for water in Canada and that works out around sixty five quid a quarter (and we have a swimming pool and three bathrooms) our property tax is the same as we paid in the UK for a two bedroom semi in Glasgow. So when every thing adds up we are not much better of financially but we never moved here to be better of financially we moved mainly for the kids, better weather, more opportunities, cleaner environment, spectacular county side, incredible wild life and a country that seems to know how to treat its tax paying workforce right (you get every opportunity to claim your tax back at the end of each year).Me and the wife still get what we call that Canada moment when you’re sitting in the car, store, work or watching the kids play street hockey and you suddenly think god I am in Canada its a great feeling. It was worth all the hassle and sleepless nights to get here and that’s after being here two years.


So quick recap decide you want to do it, do your home work and read this forum
It mite be for you it mite not, but you are the only one that can make that decision.
There is a huge expat community stretching from Ajax, whitby, Oshawa, Bowmanville and I better not forget Port Hope and the ones that are reading this (you guys know who you are) will help you out especially if you move to this area they all have there own stories to tell and have valuable advice for the new family on the block
We all get together now and again for a drink or a BBQ and new faces are always welcome. One thing I will say if you are coming to Canada and expect to get a huge house and a great job with a wallet busting salary and retire at 50 Canada is probably not the place for you .In our experience the ones that don’t make it are the ones who come over without doing adequate homework, or will not just take any job it has to be that very special $180,000 a year job that gives them 6 weeks paid vacation and the company Ferrari. There are loads of them just ask the next flying pig you see to point you in the direction of the $150,000+ job centre. (Canadian employers love this phrase you will here it a lot Canadian experience) So take that job it will get you the Canadian experience and you can move on from there. Canada does have its bad points but the good ones far out way them.


This is our experience and I don’t wish to get into any he said you said garbage that inevitably follows some ones opinion in forums. So be four you decide well I gave my letter to the insurance company and it made a huge impact to my premium, my grocery bill has tripled, my kids hate school, the weather was garbage this summer (ok I will give you that), Canadians cant drive, I never get my tax money back, they don’t recognize my qualifications, I cant get bisto, the washing powder is crap, I am getting withdrawals from eastenders. Like I said this is our experience not yours and yes like I also said we all have different stories to tell. Hope this helps some one, and if you want to know anything and I can help just ask. And for the argumentative ones out there think be four you start to rip people to shreds or shoot there post down in flames ok
A great, positive post. Keep smiling. Enjoy life. Best of luck.
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 4:56 pm
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

HairySnotter
You dont mention what employment you are in and what employment you were in, in Sunny Glasgow? Or your wifes employment?
Just curious as you mention taking employment
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 4:58 pm
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by iaink
Did I say that I was?

You going to go back and edit "your" to "you're"?
No you didnt.
So am I to assume that your brain is slow?

Last edited by dinger24; Oct 28th 2008 at 4:59 pm. Reason: No
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:01 pm
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by dinger24
No you didnt.
So am I to assume that your brain is slow?
Others are better placed to judge that from the content I hope...

I know that I don't get things like there, their & they're right first time, the smell chequer misses them, and then I have to go back to fix it, or else I go back and add an afterthought, or change the way something is phrased so it reads better.

Last edited by iaink; Oct 28th 2008 at 5:03 pm.
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:03 pm
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by iaink
Others are better placed to judge that from the content I hope...

I know that I don't get things like there, their & they're right first time, the smell chequer misses them, and then I have to go back to fix it, or else I go back and add an afterthought, or change the way something is phrased so it reads better.
waits for next edit..........
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:03 pm
  #23  
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by iaink
Yes, that's how you know its me and not an impostor

And I type faster than my brain can keep up. Sometimes they are edited so soon after posting that the system doesnt catch it and flag it as edited.
So this one was the impostor then???


Great thread - very useful and good to know that it is working for someone.
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:06 pm
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by iaink
Others are better placed to judge that from the content I hope...

I know that I don't get things like there, their & they're right first time, the smell chequer misses them, and then I have to go back to fix it, or else I go back and add an afterthought, or change the way something is phrased so it reads better.
still waiting....
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:41 pm
  #25  
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by The_Bax
So this one was the impostor then???


Great thread - very useful and good to know that it is working for someone.
The original unaltered reply was "No"...
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:41 pm
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by Souvenir
still waiting....
I'm not going to give you the satisfaction
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:46 pm
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Originally Posted by iaink
I'm not going to give you the satisfaction
I've heard that before, somewhere........
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:47 pm
  #28  
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Hi Guys
We arrived the skilled worker route and it took us nearly two years to get here well worth the wait. Yes there are plenty of jobs but I did not say in Oshawa did I?
Thanks you guys for making my first post quite painless. And a huge thanks for giving us hope when we sat reading your posts a few years back in Glasgow.

Many a sleepless night we spent back in Glasgow looking over this forum hoping and praying we would find more positive views than negative ones. Some times it felt like it was all bad news then others it was nothing but good news .So I posted this for all those hopeful people that are in the same boat that many of us were in not so many years ago.

Its not easy to just upsticks and move to a new Country and it’s not a decision to take lightly. We spent two years reading this forum gleaning every piece of information we could from all your postings, it helped us become more successful when we arrived,
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:49 pm
  #29  
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Good post Harrysnotter.

It has taken us almost 4 years to feel "kind of settled" - it takes time and I'm glad we didn't book a flight back to London 3 months after we arrived...

I had to start my own business, and DH works in a warehouse, very different jobs than the British Government jobs we left behind, but you take what you can get and work forward.

And as for Eastenders, you can get it on BBC Canada, we watch it every week.
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Old Oct 28th 2008, 5:57 pm
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Default Re: Some advice after 2 years in Canada

Hi Indi glad to here you stuck it out we decided that we would give it a year no matter how it went. But it only took us a month to get every thing in place (kids in school, jobs, house, car).We did not have loads of cash just loads of enthusiasm and drive after all it took two years to get here nothing was going to stop us once we landed
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