Tags: cork exchange

12/15/08

Permalink 09:15:38 pm, by Sean Burke, 401 words
Categories: General

The Cork Saga, Pt. I

Now, over three months into my stay in Ireland, I realize that I haven't blogged once. And certain fellows of mine are probably awaiting some sort of electronic news. So I think it's time to amend that. So, where to start? Three months and I've seen so much. I suppose the only thing for it is to do my best to chronicle things in the order that they happened. I guess this is going to take more than one post.

My last two posts were written in my mother's house in Atlanta, a sort of waypoint and launchpad for the rest of the journey. The evening of the 10th of September, said mother schlepped me down to the airport. I suppose in a way that things got strange as soon as I hit the international flights concourse. I'd been to Dublin once before but either we'd flown from a different concourse, I was too knackered to remember anything or things had changed. The duty-free shops were bright and somewhat fancy and there were periodic displays of confiscated contraband which I stared at until I got on the plane.

Some eight hours later, we touched down in Heathrow. I caught a bus from one terminal to another, where I was stamped into the UK and given a scannable biometric sticker with my picture on it. After wandering through a mall of more duty-free shops, my biometric sticker was checked (I guess the passport photo isn't quite enough) and went through security, then followed a series of increasingly-isolated corrugated metal tubes to a very small boarding area with a very expensive coffee shop and vending machines with awful-looking books inside them.

A bit of a wait and an hour hop later, I landed in my new city. I managed to be lost enough that I completely forgot to change my money and realize this as the taxi was pulling away from the airport. Fortunately, I was able to correct that mistake and get to my apartment building without (further) trouble. I had a bit of a wait before I was able to get my key, so I dropped my bags at the office and went next door (literally) for my first pint of Murphy's. I later met a friend of mine living in Cork for dinner, got my internet connection working (of the utmost importance) and thus ended my first night in Cork.

08/22/08

Permalink 02:32:03 am, by Sean Burke, 856 words
Categories: General

Tricks of the Travel Trade

Going on exchange has proven to be a learning experience even before I've left the country. As mentioned in my last post, I'll be spending nine months in Cork City, Ireland attending University College Cork. For those who don't know me, I'm from Missoula, Montana, a small town in the western United States. Proper preparation to leave the country has required a great deal of care and research. I figure someone else might benefit from my efforts.

I take a prescription medication. It is a controlled substance in both the United States and under a United Nations treaty. However, finding information on the legal status of the drug in Ireland has been very difficult. A great deal of googling turned up nothing on Irish schedules. A call to the Irish consulate in San Francisco yielded a recommendation that I check http://agriculture.ie/, but said department appears to have nothing to do with drugs. A call to the Embassy of Ireland in Washington, D.C. yielded a phone message telling me to email what appears to the email address of a single person working in Customs. I've emailed them and I'm awaiting a response. I suppose the lesson here is to keep calling around and researching until you can get some information. Additionally, I've acquired a letter (on official letterhead) from the prescriber of my medication. I would really rather not run into hassle in Customs.

Dealing with electronics and other electrical appliances has been an experience. In the US, current comes in at 120V with a frequency of 60Hz. In Ireland, it's 230V with a frequency of 50Hz. My research has indicated that it's possible to buy a converter that will deal with the voltage difference but that there's no way to convert frequency. I'm fortunate: all four of the electrical devices I plan on taking with me (a laptop, a cell phone, a digital camera and an electric razor) can accept a range of inputs. All are 100-240V and can accept either 50Hz or 60Hz. This makes my task much easier. I only need an adapter to change the shape of the plugs that I have.

I must admit some laziness. After researching what I would need, I simply went down to my local department store and poked around until I found an adapter set. I purchased the Targus World Power Travel Adapters set. Admittedly, it's compact and looks well-suited to travel. However, the plugs are ungrounded (the earth pin on the UK/Ireland plug is plastic) and thus unsuitable for more sensitive electronics. To my credit, I read the package but it said nothing about this on the outside of the plastic and the plastic earth pin was not visible without opening the package. I'll need to return this and hope the department store is forgiving. Fed up, I hopped online and searched around. I need a grounded plug but not a converter. I eventually settled on the Samsonite grounded United Kingdom plug. It's specific to my purpose and is cheap enough that I can buy a few to plug in more than one of my devices at the same time. Hopefully this will serve me well.

As with most ventures, money is an issue. At one point, I had to wire money to Ireland to pay for housing. The financial institution I've been a member of for some time is very small and local and couldn't deal in foreign currency so I had to start calling the banks. Wells Fargo, despite its size, was unable to do anything in another currency. A smaller regional bank was able to do it just fine, though. The wire transfer went through the Bank of New York and, because it was in another currency, they charged no fee. (The regional bank still charged me, though it was significantly less.) There were two snags with the transfer. The first was that the bank required an address for the beneficiary and none had been provided. Google to the rescue. If you have to do a wire transfer, find this address before you go in. The second was that it was after 2PM and the bank wouldn't send out the transfer until the next day so an exact amount couldn't be fixed on the currency exchange. I didn't leave enough leeway in the amount I put in my account. I had checked the exchange rate online before going in but due to the (relatively) small size of my transfer I wasn't able to get an ideal rate. The transfer was about $100 more expensive than I'd anticipated, with only a couple of dollars attributable to change in rate. Provide a fair bit of wiggle room here so that there are no delays.

Finally, a smaller tip: I briefly had a scare where I couldn't find my passport. In the US, you can show up in person to a passport facility and ask for an expedited passport. It takes two weeks (as opposed to the usual four) but costs a bit extra. If you lose your passport a couple weeks before you're set to go, this may be a lifesaver.

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Issues of concern to me: politics, internationalization and localization, programming, language, what I had for breakfast.

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