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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Originally Posted by Expatrick
(Post 13009874)
Talking of passports. I remember my Father showing me his alternate British passports for Israel and the rest of the ME. Think that is fairly commonplace however.
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Fascinating stuff, Grenada. Your posts are always good value. I'm very glad you've joined the thread - although I have to ask: are you really old enough to qualify?
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
63?
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Originally Posted by uk_grenada
(Post 13010088)
63?
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Originally Posted by uk_grenada
(Post 13010088)
63?
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Originally Posted by Expatrick
(Post 13009710)
... Meanwhile my Father carried on his foreign "career", behind the Iron Curtain, then in the middle East, later in the far East.
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Originally Posted by Expatrick
(Post 13006187)
... Sleeping on the deck of a ferry out of Piraeus because the heat & smell below decks was just too bad , Baklava & Ouzo in Athens, sitting by the Parthenon in the evening listening to an open air concert from below, the Corinth canal, a group of Israelis singing & dancing to Hava Nagila on the boat from Patras to Ancona...
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Originally Posted by Gordon Barlow
(Post 13010389)
Any idea where behind the Iron Curtain, and what years? And where, too, in the Middle and Far East? That's quite a chunk of territory. I think in the spirit of this thread you should dredge your memory a bit more vigorously! I have fond memories of the lifestyle in Russia during my ten-day visit in 1965, but as a tourist I only scratched the surface of it. We (my travel companion and I) drove in my Beetle from Finland to Moscow, and thence through Minsk to Poland and East Germany; and before that drove north from Turkey to CZ, behind that same Iron Curtain. As tourists we posed no danger to the security of the USSR or its satrapies, but as a spy your father would have had minimal or no protection. (The travel companion was an Australian girl I picked up at a Youth Hostel in Greece and later married; but that's another story.)
Don't forget I only spent a few weeks each year with my Father so wasn't always aware of his activities! |
Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Originally Posted by Gordon Barlow
(Post 13010540)
I had to Google-Maps for Ancona and Patras. I've never stopped at either place - and I don't think I've ever been to Ancona. I see it's a big ferry-port these days. We (wife and one-year-old son) spent a month in Vasto, which is down the coast from Ancona, in a flat owned by my wife's brother-in-law. Quite close to the beach, although the map says Vasto isn't actually on the beach. When we left Italy, we took the ferry from Bari to Corfu. This was in 1976, in a Kombi van. We lived in the van for three months in a camping ground in Corfu, and a lovely time was had by all. I got a few games of cricket in Corfu Town, just off the town square - playing for The British Casuals against all-Greek teams. The British occupied Corfu for fifty years or so after the Napoleonic Wars; that's where the cricket came from.)
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Flower moon rising over the ruins at Corinth last night
https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/british...6df40280e1.jpg |
Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Originally Posted by uk_grenada
(Post 13002458)
My career is in IT. There is only one constant in IT, and thats change. I was hugely lucky in my career [or made that luck?] so i have mostly been at the bleeding edge and have reinvented/relearned new tech many many times.
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
As a friend here says occasionally, he is a good man but has an enduring liking for saltfish. This is an intimate and not negative term for part of a womans body..
In my case i love island girls, they are the friendliest sexiest and most uninhibited women i have ever come across. I wouldnt put details here, but lets just say i enjoy a varied life in their company. I was brought here by one decades ago, and we enjoy an open relationship. |
Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
Ah, mine was much less exciting, and more mundane! I came to Cayman through an employment agency in London. When things went south for my hopes of a lazy retirement in the caves of Crete, and after a year's cogitation in England (Bath), I registered for a job in the tax-haven field and landed one here. Our usual stint was three years, but at this time we had a young son, and Cayman was just too wonderful a life for a boy of his age (six, at moving-on time). So I gave up my job and became a house-father for the next seven years, before finding another job locally. That brought me some grief and I had to battle the entire political establishment to be allowed to stay here. When my wife died I had to choose between staying in the place I had made my home, and moving to where my son and his children were - Norway. And that's it. Here I am, still.
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Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
And i think your decision is valid!
Should you ever wish to visit here, do say so - post covid here might be fun for a visit? |
Re: The old codgers' thread - Caribbean
NB I have visited Norway a number of times in my IT career. Mainly for the mericans who inhabit your north - listening to your neighbours to the east.Cant really recommend a norwegian winter, but i have a Norwegian girlfriend too! Brit is a lovely woman - bisexual, i am one of a few guys she likes and actually visits me here.
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