Those are examples of things one gives up to live in a less developed nation. Some complain about it.Calguy wrote:So far most of what I read is complaints, complaints about the bad, unreliable water, unreliable internet and electric power, awful traffic, theft of packages in the slow postal system, the corrupt bureaucracy and cops, blocked internet sites, rising prices,
Fortunately it's not a representative sample of expats in HH.Calguy wrote:This forum has generally been a very negative experience.
I'm an early retired Ameican. Thailand may not be where I settle but it has met my expectations in the 2 years I've been here. The following are generalities. Thailand is safe. Most of the infrastructure works most of the time. Getting a long term visa for retirement is a pain but then it's easy to renew. The food is good, the country is attractive, the people are friendly enough. Living in or near a tourist destination means there will be plentiful choices of goods and services and you won't have to learn Thai. As for Hua HIn in specific. The air is clean. It's close enough to Bangkok for the airport, shopping or entertainment as a day trip, but better as an overnight trip. It has a tourist industry infrastructure but it's not a tourist disneyland. The quality of expat one meets here is higher than in the towns where most of the men are either indulging in bar girls & alcohol or resting up until they can start again.
Cost of living? My last year was the most expensive of my retirement. Contributing was an uninsured hospital stay, buying medical insurance for the rest of '11 and all of '12, new electronics (laptop, smart phone and DSLR), and 45 days traveling in Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore. Monthly average was 60k THB.