Going to work overseas, where would you go?
- BigSlideHimself
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Going to work overseas, where would you go?
I can choose between: Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, or the UK. Anyone have any experience in any of these places? I'm having a hard time deciding where to go. I've been reading books on each, but books aren't as insightful as personal experiences.
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I live in Texas. I'm graduating in May, and would just like to see a different part of the world for awhile. I would prefer a place with alot of people my own age, which I'm sure you'll find everywhere, but also would like a place with a great nightlife, and alot of things nearby to keep things interesting. I like the UK or Ireland because I will hopefully have a chance to travel and has easy access to Europe. I also like Australia/New Zealand for the gorgeous scenery, Great Barrier Reef, and it just seems like the Aussies konw how to have a helluva time.
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My thesis is that you can only do so much traveling in your lifetime. New Zealand and Australia should be done while you're young, since what they offer is outdoor adventure. Europe you can do when you're older, maybe with a wife, because it's more about culture there.
BTW I've been to NZ, Oz, and England. I'm going to Ireland in May. My favorite place so far has been New Zealand.
BTW I've been to NZ, Oz, and England. I'm going to Ireland in May. My favorite place so far has been New Zealand.
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yea, but did you ever ride around on a stinky a$$ elephant in the jungle eating grub worms? I think not!Genghis wrote:My thesis is that you can only do so much traveling in your lifetime. New Zealand and Australia should be done while you're young, since what they offer is outdoor adventure. Europe you can do when you're older, maybe with a wife, because it's more about culture there.
BTW I've been to NZ, Oz, and England. I'm going to Ireland in May. My favorite place so far has been New Zealand.
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I'm in Christchurch, NZ - and it's a very nice place to live. However, NZ is one of the most boring places in the world, it must be said. The "Adventure" thing is limited to Queenstown (Where I lived for 12 years teaching skiing and paragliding!) and a few isolated places.
NZ and Canada featured heavily in the book "Journeys to all the safe places". We have no dangerous animals, only two poisonous spiders, but plenty of pretty birdies found nowhere else.
As to Aussie "for lots of different things to see" - well you couldn't be more wrong. Aussie *does* have different places, but you have to drive for 4 days to get between them. Aussie is mostly old, flat and boring, except for maybe that big rock of theirs, and the barrier reef. Nothing against aussie - it's just that it's so friking big - like the USA.
NZ is the only place in the world where in the space of less than 200 km you can got from subtropical rain forest, to one of the worlds largest and least roaded mountain ranges, to a desert, to farm land to alluvial plain, to sea.
Everything in NZ is the proverbial stone's throw.
We have a tiny population, just 4 million in the same land area as California, and over 3 million of them live in the North Island.
Just a couple of factoids for ya: NZ has more microprocessors per head of population than any other country in the world, and we eat more bananas than anyone else too - and by a considerable margin! Weird huh?
The economy is very bouyant here now, and we have the highest interest rates in the developed world. Employment is at record high levels. You won't have trouble finding a job here! You might however, have trouble getting a work visa unless you have a job to come to.
Good luck wherever you decide to go - and if you come to NZ then you must come visit!
NZ and Canada featured heavily in the book "Journeys to all the safe places". We have no dangerous animals, only two poisonous spiders, but plenty of pretty birdies found nowhere else.
As to Aussie "for lots of different things to see" - well you couldn't be more wrong. Aussie *does* have different places, but you have to drive for 4 days to get between them. Aussie is mostly old, flat and boring, except for maybe that big rock of theirs, and the barrier reef. Nothing against aussie - it's just that it's so friking big - like the USA.
NZ is the only place in the world where in the space of less than 200 km you can got from subtropical rain forest, to one of the worlds largest and least roaded mountain ranges, to a desert, to farm land to alluvial plain, to sea.
Everything in NZ is the proverbial stone's throw.
We have a tiny population, just 4 million in the same land area as California, and over 3 million of them live in the North Island.
Just a couple of factoids for ya: NZ has more microprocessors per head of population than any other country in the world, and we eat more bananas than anyone else too - and by a considerable margin! Weird huh?
The economy is very bouyant here now, and we have the highest interest rates in the developed world. Employment is at record high levels. You won't have trouble finding a job here! You might however, have trouble getting a work visa unless you have a job to come to.
Good luck wherever you decide to go - and if you come to NZ then you must come visit!
mobi's advice about australia is true. it's an island, but also a continent - it's really big.
i live in Brisbane, it's the subtropics so everything's green and rainforrests are everywhere. but travel west and you'll find inner australia is like what you see on mad max , personally i have a spiritual love for that kindof landscape.
AU and NZ people are prettymuch the same, but the landscapes are incredibly different. so we visit eachother's countrys to try to kill ourselves in ways we can't at home .
personally, if i had the choice YOU had there (but Australia was replaced with USA, since i already live in australia) i'd choose Ireland for the craik, but UK for it's slight-more-nearyness-to-the-greater-Europe. bah, Ireland isn't that far off UK, i'd personally go Ireland. but this is of course me, i'm sure you see all these places with a different light of novelty.
i live in Brisbane, it's the subtropics so everything's green and rainforrests are everywhere. but travel west and you'll find inner australia is like what you see on mad max , personally i have a spiritual love for that kindof landscape.
AU and NZ people are prettymuch the same, but the landscapes are incredibly different. so we visit eachother's countrys to try to kill ourselves in ways we can't at home .
personally, if i had the choice YOU had there (but Australia was replaced with USA, since i already live in australia) i'd choose Ireland for the craik, but UK for it's slight-more-nearyness-to-the-greater-Europe. bah, Ireland isn't that far off UK, i'd personally go Ireland. but this is of course me, i'm sure you see all these places with a different light of novelty.
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A couple of years ago, I would have said the same thing (home for me right now is a medium-sized city in the central U.S.), but my wife and I are starting to "itch" for someplace different. For family's sake, we're not planning on going to another country, but we definitely need a change of scenery.Top Gun wrote:This is one homebody who votes to stay home.
BigSlide, I've never visited any of those countries, but my younger brother has been to New Zealand, and his experience was pretty positive.