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buzzy--bee

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Posts posted by buzzy--bee

  1. Sorry, I forgot, don't worry folks, just pick any suburb, no crime anywhere in Melbourne, you can leave your doors unlocked, that's if you are moving to the cloud cuckoo land some people live on.

     

    Well I managed to leave my front door wide open all day today accidentally and everything was still in the same place when I came home.

     

    BB

  2. That does make sense. Prahran has one of the hospitals I like to work in in it, but whether I can afford to live there on one fairly small wage I don't know.

     

    The Alfred would be a great location to work in - right opposite a lovely park, within walking distance of the city and also the nightlife of St Kilda, Chapel St, Commercial St etc.

     

    You wouldn't need a car and could probably even get away without public transport if you lived in Prahran or Windsor or even St Kilda.

     

    BB

  3. I am looking at potentially emigrating to Melbourne early next year on my own.

     

    Good choice. Melbourne is a big "singles" city, of all ages.

     

    As someone who is constantly cold in the uk, despite living in a brand new, well insulated, centrally heated flat am I just going to be freezing and miserable for large parts of the year living in Melbourne? (Being cold is literally my worse thing ever!)

     

    As others have said, many Australian houses aren't built to cope with the cold, so try and find one that is. Melbourne is a lot warmer than the UK all year round (for instance where we live by the bay we never get frost and can grow tropical plants).

     

    Is finding somewhere nice to live as hard as I'm reading? Despite only being 27 I'm not a party animal so don't need a trendy place to live but I have some requirements to create my comfort zone.

     

    Not sure what you are reading, but there are plenty of nice places to live here.

     

    Is it easy to meet people? My last city living experience was very isolating and lonely and triggered my depression so I'm terrified a move down under could do the same. I also wouldn't have any kind of support network like I do here.

     

    This is totally up to you. You have to get out there and make the effort. For instance, volunteering or joining a club with like-minded people will help.

     

    Can anyone reassure me that my dream isnt just making a massive leap into misery?!

     

    I do hope not. It's really up to you to make it work. Some people may be miserable in Melbourne. I haven't met any of them personally and I've been here 9 years!

     

    BB

  4. The weather in Melbourne is much-maligned.

     

    However it's not that bad. Here by the bay we never get frosts, it never snows or sleets. The coldest daytime max is about 10 degrees, most of the winter it is in the mid-teens.

     

    The spring and autumn are normally in the 20s and even low thirties. Summer is very pleasant. You get the odd 40+ degree day, but there normally is only one at a time, and as has been mentioned, it is a very dry heat, so 40 here feels like 30 in Brisbane, you don't sweat at all.

     

    I quite like the weather in Melbourne, it is certainly better than London where I came from.

     

    BB

  5. Hey Everyone

     

    Just wondering if anyone has lived in both states and prefer's one over the other, what's your reason for this??

     

    Cheers and have a great day :)

     

    Depends what you want from life! Could you give us some clues on what you are looking for from your move to Australia that you currently don't have in New Zealand?

     

    I've lived in NZ and find that Melbourne offers the best of NZ lifestyle and UK economy, but I can't compare with QLD as I haven't lived there, just visited.

     

    BB

  6. Melbourne is great but you wont get the weather you get here. You will see a lot more rain as well. .

     

    Actually we are desperate for rain in Melbourne. The reservoirs are well down and the desalination plant is about to be brought on line for the first time.

     

    Melbourne gets less rainfall than any other city in Australia except Adelaide.

     

    BB

  7. I quite like Gippsland as a rural area. Parts of it resemble what Americans think England looks like - gentle rolling green hills, Mr Darcy riding on his white horse to see Lady Jane, that sort of thing.

     

    Warragul seems to be an area where people like to live. Probably best to avoid Morwell.

     

    BB

  8. Yes that's true. Do you think we could find rental n get in before the 10 days?

     

    Yes, but it might not be a very nice rental, because it would be one that everybody else had rejected and was vacant as a result.

     

    People who stay in our short-term accommodation normally allow 4 weeks to find a place.

     

    BB

  9. Are you able to spend more time outdoors than you would in the UK?

     

    Yes. The only days when we really can't go out are when it exceeds 40 degrees - 1 or 2 days a year, and then in the evening we walk down to the beach and watch the sun set while lying in the sea.

     

    I love Melbourne weather because of the seasons, we don't get frost (down by the bay) so I can grow tropical plants, summer, autumn and spring are well into the 20s - 30s and winter is a pleasant change and much shorter than UK winter. Often in winter we get sunny days into the high teens or even 20.

     

    One thing that is very different about Melbourne from the UK is the hottest time of day. In the UK this was always around lunchtime, whereas in Melbourne it tends to be late afternoon or early evening.

     

    BB

  10. The technicalities of this emigration path are as follows -

     

    A PR of NZ can apply for citizenship of NZ after 5 years (so 5.5 years probably to actually get the passport). As a NZ citizen you can then live and work in Australia indefinitely temporarily. You can never become PR in Australia, never get Citizenship, be ineligible for many benefits and a "grey area" for lots of other things, including mortgages and insurance.

     

    The recent changes grandfathered NZ citizens who had been here for 5 years + and earned over $53k each of those 5 years. They do not apply to anyone arriving from now on.

     

    BB

  11. Do you have children yourself and if so what have your experiences been about schooling and education in Melbourne?

     

    Yes we have twin girls aged almost 11, they were 2 when we emigrated so we have no personal experience of them being educated in England.

     

    I love the fact that children are encouraged to grow in so many different ways. Every child at school here does public speaking from a very early age, first in front of their class and then the whole school and parents and teachers. Every child is encouraged to set a good example to others from day 1 in various ways. Team sports are very important. Art and music classes happen more than once a week. Discipline seems to be constructive, bullying is dealt with by a "think" sheet, where the bully has to take a sheet home which reflects on how the person being bullied felt, and also how the bully felt, and has to be signed by the bully's parents and then returned to school. When my daughter was bullied by another girl on one occasion, this action was taken and it hasn't reoccurred.

     

    The main area where schools here do not excel are foreign languages and RE. RE is still not taught at all in our girls state school, and foreign languages used to not be , however Japanese is now taught and they love it. We also pay for them to learn French outside school to "top up" their language skills.

     

    Now the next challenge for us is which Secondary School!

     

    Hope that helps

     

    BB

  12. I was wondering if anyone could let me know how the education system in Melbourne compares or differs to that in the UK which is where we currently live.

     

    At a high level - it is much more focussed around developing the whole child as a rounded, confident individual, rather than on passing tests and scoring points.

     

    I am worried/concerned about disrupting my eldest daughters education as she is currently in Year 10 and would be sitting her GCSE's in the summer of 2017, if we make this move then we will be arriving in Melbourne in about six months time so where would she be within the system there.

     

    Depends when her birthday is in relation to April 30th. Children start school in the year when they are 5 after April 30th, so a child with a birthday on May 1st would start when they were 4 3/4 (although most Australians would hold that child back 1 year), a child with a birthday on April 29th would start school when they were 5 3/4. Sing out if that doesn't make sense. You'll have to extrapolate the years to her current age.

     

    Also I would be on a partner visa as would my eldest daughter as my husband isn't her biological father but has parental responsibility in the UK (my husband is Australian and therefore my two youngest children hold Australian passports). Would we therefore have to pay for my eldest daughters education in the same way as other visas or would she be treated with having the same access to education as an Australian due to my husbands citizenship.

     

    No. You will not have to pay any more than an Australian for your children's education .

     

    Many thank for any comments or advice or thoughts that you can share with us.

     

    Good luck with it all, We moved to Melbourne 9 years ago and have never looked back.

     

    BB

  13. My mum's neighbour commutes from Toukley to Sydney every day; she's in publishing so is able to do a fair bit of work on the train. A while back there was an article in the local rag about a bloke who commuted from Gosford to Sydney on a jetski as it was quicker than the train...

     

    I reckon Toukley and the surrounding suburbs are set to rocket in status and value - bit of a well-kept secret IMO.

     

    BB

  14. Hi Nasacar ,

    YOu must have just arrived In Victoria and hope you are settling down. Can you please share your research for short term rentals some websites or email ids, We are a couple in our mid 30s planning to take the plunge down under and have Victoria on our radar for our first stop of exploration.

     

    Would appreciate the help!!

     

    Hi Dazken Amac, I have PMd you.

     

    BB

  15. Hi Matthew, I recommend you consider Mordialloc and Parkdale - they are by the beach, lovely suburbs, 1 hour by train from the city or 40 mins drive and also close to the freeways for the Mornington Peninsula etc. They are big family areas - kids everywhere, also becoming trendy cafe areas too.

     

    Have a look and see what you think.

     

    BB

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