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#1
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Poker Abroad
I believe the time is drawing near for the actualization of my little poker fantasy that I've had for the past few years. I've now been playing online poker fulltime long enough that I have developed an adequate notion of security (as far as poker being sustainable income). It has dawned on me that my current source of income is not entirely location dependant and I'm free to wander wherever decent internet connections are prevalent. Unfortunately, I am by no means getting rich off this now delitefully tedious game, but I am managing to aggressively pay off debt I've accumlated through the years, as well as cover bills, rent, taxes, and still have enough left over to support my expensive dining and drinking habits (Sushi has become a "top ten" expense as of recent).
Anyhow, I've been looking at different foreign locations that I might like to travel and reside for a time. Thailand was an immediate consideration because of its striking afordablility. However, I have a fondness for Latin America and would very much like to become proficient in Spanish. Currently I'm almost entirely settled on heading to Buenos Aires, Argentina in late August/early September. My apartment lease expires on July 31st at which time I will drive to S. California from my current home in Knoxville TN, visit with family for a month or so and prepare for the trip leaving, I imagine, from LAX airport. There is no Visa requirement for Americans staying 90 days or less in Argentina and the Visa is easy enough to renew for a longer stay. The Spanish dialect there is slow enough and interpretable for someone as daft as myself to potentially pick up over time. The city seems quite amazing and is a good central location to venture out to other places for weekend trips. I've scouted out several temporary apartment brokerages with reasonable offers. I'm sure they are a bit more costly than if I were to arrange accomodations from within the country, but for convenience sake I can get a 2-3 bedroom fully furnished apartment in a nice district with high speed internet connection, laundry service, and all utilities included (some even with a pc supplied!) for between $400-$600/m. The only downfall is that there is of course a deposit (typically one month's rent) and whatever term you decide to stay you must pay for up front upon signing of the contract. So, I figure I'll pay for a two month term and sign a new contract if I wish to prolong my stay at said apartment or I can just find a new place at the end of the two months once I'm reasonably oriented. There are some computer considerations. If I rent one of the places with a pc supplied, I'm going to have to inquire about detailed system specs and likely bring my 2001FP along. I don't have a laptop so I imagine that it would be cumbersome and perhaps expensive to bring my entire pc. I've considered investing in a reasonable laptop for the trip, which I'd like to have anyways. I'll have to contact Neteller and all the sites that I play at to inform them that I'll be operating from an Argentinian IP address. All these considerations seem easy enough to tackle, so hopefully all shall go well. I've always been a solo, bare necessity sort of traveler...but this will surely be a different beast. I'm considering finding a like-minded person or two to bring along for aid in rent, beer consumption, and well...motivation. I don't imagine any of my close friends will be willing or capable of making the venture with me. I've posted a similar thread in a few travel forums minus some of the poker jargon. But hey, really, if there are any of you out there that would potentially consider a little adventure of this sort, feel free to send me a PM. Also, any advice that you knowledgeable zoosters might have for me is much appreciated. Cheers all, just thought I'd share with ya. Soon I hope to meet some beautiful Argentinian girls and tango til' I'm sore (pun intended). Ryan - 23 yr' old restless poker player |
#2
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Re: Poker Abroad
Good for you. Not enough poker players take advantage of the mobility of their profession. I'd take you up on your offer, but I'm off to France myself--not as cheap as Argentina, unfortunately, but it's where I want to live. Good luck to you, sir. Give us an update someday.
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#3
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Re: Poker Abroad
[ QUOTE ]
I believe the time is drawing near for the actualization of my little poker fantasy that I've had for the past few years. I've now been playing online poker fulltime long enough that I have developed an adequate notion of security (as far as poker being sustainable income). It has dawned on me that my current source of income is not entirely location dependant and I'm free to wander wherever decent internet connections are prevalent. Unfortunately, I am by no means getting rich off this now delitefully tedious game, but I am managing to aggressively pay off debt I've accumlated through the years, as well as cover bills, rent, taxes, and still have enough left over to support my expensive dining and drinking habits (Sushi has become a "top ten" expense as of recent). Anyhow, I've been looking at different foreign locations that I might like to travel and reside for a time. Thailand was an immediate consideration because of its striking afordablility. However, I have a fondness for Latin America and would very much like to become proficient in Spanish. Currently I'm almost entirely settled on heading to Buenos Aires, Argentina in late August/early September. My apartment lease expires on July 31st at which time I will drive to S. California from my current home in Knoxville TN, visit with family for a month or so and prepare for the trip leaving, I imagine, from LAX airport. There is no Visa requirement for Americans staying 90 days or less in Argentina and the Visa is easy enough to renew for a longer stay. The Spanish dialect there is slow enough and interpretable for someone as daft as myself to potentially pick up over time. The city seems quite amazing and is a good central location to venture out to other places for weekend trips. I've scouted out several temporary apartment brokerages with reasonable offers. I'm sure they are a bit more costly than if I were to arrange accomodations from within the country, but for convenience sake I can get a 2-3 bedroom fully furnished apartment in a nice district with high speed internet connection, laundry service, and all utilities included (some even with a pc supplied!) for between $400-$600/m. The only downfall is that there is of course a deposit (typically one month's rent) and whatever term you decide to stay you must pay for up front upon signing of the contract. So, I figure I'll pay for a two month term and sign a new contract if I wish to prolong my stay at said apartment or I can just find a new place at the end of the two months once I'm reasonably oriented. There are some computer considerations. If I rent one of the places with a pc supplied, I'm going to have to inquire about detailed system specs and likely bring my 2001FP along. I don't have a laptop so I imagine that it would be cumbersome and perhaps expensive to bring my entire pc. I've considered investing in a reasonable laptop for the trip, which I'd like to have anyways. I'll have to contact Neteller and all the sites that I play at to inform them that I'll be operating from an Argentinian IP address. All these considerations seem easy enough to tackle, so hopefully all shall go well. I've always been a solo, bare necessity sort of traveler...but this will surely be a different beast. I'm considering finding a like-minded person or two to bring along for aid in rent, beer consumption, and well...motivation. I don't imagine any of my close friends will be willing or capable of making the venture with me. I've posted a similar thread in a few travel forums minus some of the poker jargon. But hey, really, if there are any of you out there that would potentially consider a little adventure of this sort, feel free to send me a PM. Also, any advice that you knowledgeable zoosters might have for me is much appreciated. Cheers all, just thought I'd share with ya. Soon I hope to meet some beautiful Argentinian girls and tango til' I'm sore (pun intended). Ryan - 23 yr' old restless poker player [/ QUOTE ] i did this. im in thailand. pm me if u want. |
#4
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Re: Poker Abroad
Kane where in Thailand, I am going for a holiday down from China in August, I'm not sure exactly where, 2hrs north of Bangkok, I have a friend with a thai wife they are from this area.
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#5
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Re: Poker Abroad
[ QUOTE ]
Kane where in Thailand, I am going for a holiday down from China in August, I'm not sure exactly where, 2hrs north of Bangkok, I have a friend with a thai wife they are from this area. [/ QUOTE ] im in bangkok but move around alot. 2 hours north by plane or car? im guessing car... if this is the case, id imagine youre going to be in the middle of nowhere - which isnt a bad thing. |
#6
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Re: Poker Abroad
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im in thailand. [/ QUOTE ] really? some time ago i heard that access to online gambling sites were blocked by the government in thailand. Is that true? |
#7
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Re: Poker Abroad
I'm playing in Thailand too. A lot of sites are blocked, but it's simply a matter of using a proxy server to get around it, imagine the same is true for China.
Been here 7 months now, and the timezone is a problem, I play all night and sleep all day, so don't get much time to take advantage of the sun, the timezones in South America are far more convenient than Asia. Another problem is that I play a lot less hours than if I was at home, too easy to party too much whilst in a foreign country, especially when the best time for that clashes with the best time to play poker. Be prepared for lots of faxes/e-mails to confirm your identity too, as a previous poster pointed out. Just started using this forum, and was surprised to see others playing from Asia, so decided to sign up and make this post. |
#8
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Re: Poker Abroad
[ QUOTE ]
the timezone is a problem, I play all night and sleep all day [/ QUOTE ] how does that work? the peak times should correspond to between 6am to 1pm in thailand. sure you will have to have early nights, but after a good 7 hour working day you've got the afternoon to catch the sun. |
#9
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Re: Poker Abroad
I play Ladbrokes (European) and Prima (European and US). Peak time is about 8pm, Europe is 5 hours behind, so to start at 7pm European time equates to midnight start here. Ladbrokes dies earlier than Prima, as they don't allow US players. Prima starts to get quieter here about 7am as the Europeans go to bed, by the time it gets to about 10 am there are very few 5/10 or 2/4 longhanded NL tables open, which is what I play multiple tables of.
I'm sure that if I played sites with mainly US players I could play hours that are a little more friendly, but I'm happy playing the sites I play at, and payout from US sites is far more awkward than European sites. Seven hours? Part-timer ..... [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] But admittedly I'm lucky to get 4 shifts/week in sometimes, recently getting a lot better and putting the hours in. Can be difficult when you have friends coming to visit all the time. Now's the low season, so have some peace and quiet to get on with making some $. [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] Btw, atm Mainland Europe is -5, UK -6, and East Coast US -11, in the winter they're all a further hour back. Edit- Forgot to mention, we're near the equator, it gets dark around 6pm. |
#10
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Re: Poker Abroad
Good luck, I would love to do something like this myself, but who knows if I ever will. I've considered moving to a place like argentina a few times but just don't think I could go through with it. I am partially fluent in spanish, but I am not the most outgoing person and just can't see moving away from all my friends/family for an extended period of time. Good luck, keep us updated.
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