What did you bring when you moved to Thailand that you wish you didn't (significant others don't count)??
What didn't you bring that you wish you did??

When I was working for an airline in SE Asia we used to get people to bring out aircraft documentation in golf bags. British Airways were charging £40 a kilo for excess baggage and only £15 for a golf bag in which you could get about 30 kilos of files.hhfarang wrote:
The golf bag idea is a good one. I didn't know this but I was just told recently that on most airlines (check yours) sports items don't cost extra, so I have a friend who brings a golf bag each time with one club or a broom in it with a soft travel cover just so he can cheat and fill up the bag with other (non golf) items. Check with your airline though.
I think that between the replies you've been given most of the best advice, with number one being whether your wife is Thai and eligible to bring in the shipment tax free, if not then you might not want to bring very much at all.migrant wrote:Well we are getting to the one year countdown and in my never ending planning I was curious
What did you bring when you moved to Thailand that you wish you didn't (significant others don't count)??
What didn't you bring that you wish you did??
She is Thai so tax free. Only bigger items I can think of is a favored recliner and BBQ/smoker. Good advice all, thanks! Power tools, like HHF said, may be different power supply, will have to check my chargers to see if both currents acceptedDannie Boy wrote:I think that between the replies you've been given most of the best advice, with number one being whether your wife is Thai and eligible to bring in the shipment tax free, if not then you might not want to bring very much at all.migrant wrote:Well we are getting to the one year countdown and in my never ending planning I was curious
What did you bring when you moved to Thailand that you wish you didn't (significant others don't count)??
What didn't you bring that you wish you did??
I brought 5 (4 for home theater seating and one just for being a lazy boy) of those with me because they weren't available back when I came, even in Bangkok, but now there are Laz-y-boy stores and Laz-y-boy items in furniture stores all over Thailand. The only problem is they all seem to be leather (or faux leather) here and in this climate I prefer microfiber....a favored recliner...