I've heard you can retire to a cruise ship for about the same money as a high end retirement community. Anyone check that out? Originally Posted by mtabswI heard the same thing , when I was on my last cruise last year
Originally Posted by mtabsw View PostBeen in happening many coastal and expensive cities such as Hongkong, Tokyo, Toronto. People living in boats and commune to downtown is 10 mins or so.
I've heard you can retire to a cruise ship for about the same money as a high end retirement community. Anyone check that out?
Gina needs to just down size lol Originally Posted by LustyBustyGina38FFNot the mammaries though.
I'm leaning heavily towards either Colombia (Barranquilla or Cartagena to be specific) or perhaps Portugal or Greece. Favorable weather. Reasonable cost of living. Favorable programs for retirement Visa. Colombia has a higher ranked medical system than the US.Check out Medellin, Colombia. I go there all the time, It is known as the city of eternal spring. Normal temps 75 day and low 60's at night year round.
Biggest draw to Colombia over Greece or Portugal is the cost to come back to the states to visit would be far cheaper from Colombia. I can catch a flight from Cartagena to DFW, round trip, for under 500. Flights from Lisbon or Mykonos are more than triple the cost. Originally Posted by Grace Preston
Grace, Follow @cheapdfw on twitter, if you are patient, you can snag some affordable tickets back-and-forth from most of the major European cities to Dallas. It just won’t be peak season. Originally Posted by HelicoolThat's actually fine by me-- going to Europe during non peak suits my plans just fine. Though-- I'm learning with some of the changes in the EU and the Schengen Visa-- that its not as simple as it used to be to "backpack across Europe" so to speak... looks like I'll have to be 90 days in and 90 days out of the zone.
That's actually fine by me-- going to Europe during non peak suits my plans just fine. Though-- I'm learning with some of the changes in the EU and the Schengen Visa-- that its not as simple as it used to be to "backpack across Europe" so to speak... looks like I'll have to be 90 days in and 90 days out of the zone. Originally Posted by Grace PrestonYes, unless you get a residence visa in some country, it’s pretty much 90 days in/90 days out. Sadly.
Yes, unless you get a residence visa in some country, it’s pretty much 90 days in/90 days out. Sadly.Eh-- looks like I can jump in the zone for 90-- then spend 90 in the UK... then 90 in the zone... then 90 in Georgia (the country, lol)....
https://travel.state.gov/content/tra...ngen_Area.html Originally Posted by TexTushHog