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-   -   Do you have a Passport? (https://thetfp.com/tfp/general-discussion/142050-do-you-have-passport.html)

KellyC 10-30-2008 07:44 AM

Interesting, I was under the assumption everybody has one, kinda like driver license. Anyhoo, I got mine back in 2003 or 2004, not sure when. My dad had recently become a citizen and my brother and I were naturalized under him. He figured the family will visit Vietnam someday so it's a good idea to get one in advanced what with the waiting period being so long post 9/11. The only times I used it were when I went to Canada, which was only a 2-hour drive, and to Vietnam back in late 2004/early 2005. I'm planning to travel across Asia when I graduate so lots more a-coming.

skizziks 10-30-2008 07:49 AM

I´m on my third one, first one was all used up, second one expired.

snowy 10-30-2008 07:49 AM

I got mine when I was 17. It's due for renewal in 2010. It has a stamp from Schiphol and from the UK; I fondly remember the hot passport agent who gave me the former when I entered the Netherlands. He looked like a model. All of the passport agents looked like models, and the customs guys too. It was a great welcome to the country.

I've used it to travel to Canada since then; it makes getting over the border a lot easier, and since they've decided they're going to require passports to travel to Canada, it's very nice to have. Admittedly, I expect that next time I go to visit Canada that I will have a harder time getting back into the United States than I did getting into Canada; this seems to be the case every time I visit.

dlish 10-30-2008 10:47 AM

i cant NOT post in this thread...

i have lost count the number of stamps ive got in my passport.

ive had mine since i was 19 when i visited the 'motherland' Lebanon 11 years ago now. i got my 2nd passport 2 years ago and im about half way through mine right now. ill be racking up a few more stamps before years end most likely.

im thinking about applying for my lebanese one just for ease of travelling through the middle east (and to get into touristy places for a fraction of the price), but notto use through borders. thats where the aussie passport is 2nd to none.

Eweser 10-30-2008 11:38 AM

I'm an American and 30 and I don't have a passport. I don't know that I'll ever leave the country. Not that I wouldn't love to travel, just that I don't see that I'll have the opportunity. There's a lot more of the US I'd love to see as well.

Daniel_ 10-30-2008 12:09 PM

I was on my parents' passports from a couple of months after birth.

I first went abroad from England to France at six months old - the longest I have ever gone without crossing an international border is around 10 months.

To date, I've visited:

France
Germany
Belgium
The Netherlands
Italy
Spain (including the Balearics and the Canaries - which are technically in Africa).
Switzerland
Ireland

all of the UK (including Isle of Man and the Chanel Islands)
Israel
USA
Canada
Malaysia

The ones in bold in the past six months.

Early next year I am expecting to go to Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore and maybe Indonesia on business.

I like travelling abroad.

spindles 10-30-2008 02:30 PM

I'm almost due to renew mine - expires in 2010. Funnily enough, my first one had lots of stamps (only country I've been in without a stamp was Canada - we drove up from the US and have nothing to show for it), but my current one does not have any stamps at all :(

Gotta change that.
-----Added 30/10/2008 at 06 : 30 : 49-----
Quote:

Originally Posted by Cynthetiq (Post 2552705)
I feel nekkid without it.

Do you wear it, cod piece style?

roachboy 10-30-2008 02:48 PM

i have one. i dont remember when i got it.
i like having it in case it comes time to get outta dodge.
plus i like to travel, but i do it in slow motion. 4 years in france and i don't really know much of the country except paris, around paris and brittany. it's almost like when i get to france i immediately loose a contact and spend the next year creeping around the rug looking for it.

ktspktsp 10-30-2008 03:39 PM

To me a passport is as important as an ID. I don't know when I got my first one but I must've been 9 at the latest (if not younger). Growing up in a small unstable country, I certainly needed to have a way to get out if I wanted. And since I moved away from Lebanon, I've been an expat for a while in separate countries, and I often need to go back home to visit my family or to just go travel...

So yeah, considering my background, it's essential. And I am waiting until I get a better passport, one that allows me to travel without pre-applying for visas, and whatnot... Hopefully in 3 years. All passports are not equal, for sure.

Lucifer 10-30-2008 03:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onesnowyowl (Post 2552946)
I got mine when I was 17. It's due for renewal in 2010. It has a stamp from Schiphol and from the UK; I fondly remember the hot passport agent who gave me the former when I entered the Netherlands. He looked like a model. All of the passport agents looked like models, and the customs guys too. It was a great welcome to the country.

I've used it to travel to Canada since then; it makes getting over the border a lot easier, and since they've decided they're going to require passports to travel to Canada, it's very nice to have. Admittedly, I expect that next time I go to visit Canada that I will have a harder time getting back into the United States than I did getting into Canada; this seems to be the case every time I visit.

kind of funny you should say that, cause on ships we have a harder time getting back into Canada then we did entering the States.

Grasshopper Green 10-30-2008 04:19 PM

I have a passport, I've had it for nearly 10 years. It's set to expire in May. It only has one stamp in it, but it has come in useful on several ocassions. I've had expired/out of state driver licenses be denied and the passport worked as a photo ID. I also had a problem at the university I attended because my records were in my maiden name and the person "helping" me was a dumbass and insisted on seeing ID with my maiden name, despite having been married several years. My passport had my maiden name and my amended married name.

Jadast 10-30-2008 04:53 PM

I'm a 39 year old American who has never had a passport. I very seldom leave the southeast. Been west of the Mississippi twice. Mostly I do not like to fly.

Charlatan 10-30-2008 05:03 PM

Wow... great responses from everyone.

Some mentioned having to renew their passports. I am on my third passport, I just renewed my latest and, as I now live abroad, I had to do it at the local consulate. So now the place of issue on my passport no longer says, Toronto. It felt kind of odd to see that.


Hey Daniel... if you make the trip here next year, let me know. I'd be happy to buy you an over-priced Beer. ;)

Lucifer 10-30-2008 05:31 PM

I remember when I was living in Portugal, having to renew my passport and being on the phone with the Canadian Consulate in Lisbon. They told me that I needed to prove I was a Canadian and when I said that I had a Canadian Passport, they told me that wasn't proof!!! So I had to go to the local British Consulate and pay some Portuguese national consular officer $50 to sign and stamp a certificate "in lieu of guaranteer" which the Canadian Consulate took as proof that I was, in fact, Canadian. What a scam!

ASU2003 10-30-2008 05:46 PM

I got one 3 years ago. I had traveled to Canada and Mexico by car without one previously.

laudanum 10-30-2008 07:42 PM

I'm American and have had one since 3. My parents were always traveling in their younger years and even met when they were both away from their home countries!

Years ago when I first started in film/tv/news production, a friend of mine told me he got sent on tons of emergency trips and plane rides just to bring stuff in an emergency to overseas productions. The only reason he was sent is because he was the only production assistant with a passport.

healer 10-31-2008 04:57 AM

I'm South African, and I've never had a passport. I'd like to get one, if only to make jumping on a plane to who-knows-where that much more realistic.

I'm also one of the 'explore your own country first' kinda people, even though I haven't done nearly enough of that. I wish I had a job that allowed me to travel more, see more, but also let Mandy come with me. It really isn't the same if you don't have someone there to share it with.

So no international travels for me just yet, but hopefully in the years to come. Luckily, international travelers are coming to S.A. for the FIFA World Cup in 2010 .Then I can be a tourist in my own country. :)

Leto 10-31-2008 05:19 AM

Mine is due to be renewed in January. I got my first one when I was 18 so that I could go on a high school band trip to Holland (1978) so they still stamped them back then. Come to think of it, a few years later, I had stamps and actual postage stamp style visas stuck in my passport for Korea and Sri Lanka. Lately though, I have never had the customs officers give stamps, They just look at it and hand it back.

BadNick 10-31-2008 05:46 AM

Hey all you folks talking about getting no stamps etc....have you found that if you directly ask "please stamp my passport" ...especially if you're able to ask even in broken native language, have you found that you can still get it stamped?

dlish 10-31-2008 05:50 AM

i got a 'postage stamp' in yemen for my visa if i recall correctly..or was that jordan. one of them im sure.

the only place i dont get a stamp is in australia and UAE now. everywhere else ive got a stamp.

abaya 10-31-2008 05:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlish (Post 2553369)
i got a 'postage stamp' in yemen for my visa if i recall correctly..or was that jordan. one of them im sure.

the only place i dont get a stamp is in australia and UAE now. everywhere else ive got a stamp.

Betcha didn't know that they give postage stamps in Lebanon, too. ;)

Leto 10-31-2008 09:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BadNick (Post 2553364)
Hey all you folks talking about getting no stamps etc....have you found that if you directly ask "please stamp my passport" ...especially if you're able to ask even in broken native language, have you found that you can still get it stamped?


My cousin (Wolfgang) was visiting me from Germany, and had me take him to the USA (across the Thousand Islands Bridge) so that he could get a stamp in his passport. They never stamped it, so we asked, and they still refused. Told us to move along.

Merlocke 11-03-2008 05:29 AM

Yes.

Why? I'm actually the world's worst travel agent. My test was: "what's your VISA number?". Apparently I passed.
Anyway, as a travel agent - you get certain perks.
- Cheaper flights
- Cheaper hotel bookings
- Cheaper car rentals
- Better Service (sometimes)
- Commissions when you book your spouse's travel arrangements. (yes, my wife is also a travel agent, and she books my travel)
- Every trip is a business trip

Now my 4 month old is getting a passport!
Only problem is he keeps smiling and apparently you're not allowed to smile on those darn passport pictures.

And this? Well this just kicks ass:
http://www.youtube.com/v/5mA3voZUZrk&hl=en&fs=1

abaya 11-03-2008 06:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Merlocke (Post 2554428)
Anyway, as a travel agent - you get certain perks.
- Cheaper flights
- Cheaper hotel bookings
- Cheaper car rentals
- Better Service (sometimes)
- Commissions when you book your spouse's travel arrangements. (yes, my wife is also a travel agent, and she books my travel)
- Every trip is a business trip

Okay, I seriously need to look into becoming a travel agent. Screw this academic crap--that's my calling!!! I just thought that travel agents had gone completely out of style in this day and age.

dlish 11-03-2008 06:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by abaya (Post 2553371)
Betcha didn't know that they give postage stamps in Lebanon, too. ;)

i didnt actually. im planning a trip to the homeland in the next 12 months at some point. not sure when i will squeeze it in, but i know i will.

as for becoming a travel agent..im not sure id want to become one.

the way i see it, if you love something, then you dont take it as a job.

abaya 11-03-2008 06:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlish (Post 2554456)
i didnt actually. im planning a trip to the homeland in the next 12 months at some point. not sure when i will squeeze it in, but i know i will.

We might be there at the end of Jan... let us know. :)

Quote:

Originally Posted by dlish
as for becoming a travel agent..im not sure id want to become one.

the way i see it, if you love something, then you dont take it as a job.

Yeah, that's a lesson that I've never learned... I've always studied subjects that I loved, and it's ended up kicking me in the ass every time I've tried to make it into a job. Will be the same when I finish the PhD, which is why I should become a travel agent (no studying needed, just working!). :D I need a job doing something that I just like, not love... hmm.

Charlatan 11-03-2008 04:08 PM

My last passport has stamps from all over the place: Korea, Hong Kong, Slovenia, Czech Rep., Hungary, Poland (full page Visa), USA, UK, Germany, France, S'pore, Indonesia, etc.

My current one has stamps from The Netherlands, Malaysia, S'pore, Indonesia (full page Visa for every visit)... but then I just got it in March 2008. Give it a few more years.

abaya 11-03-2008 04:36 PM

Charlatan, I also need your job. Either that or a travel agent. Anthropologist is not cutting it in terms of passport stamps at the moment. :)

AEI 11-03-2008 06:55 PM

Not yet...

Speed_Gibson 11-03-2008 09:22 PM

no passport so far in my life
I have visited:
Ireland
England
Bahrain
Greece
Israel
St. Maarten - Visited twice, second time during the filming of Speed 2
Canary Islands
France, Cannes & Marseilles
New York City once - big, vibrant, and expensive. The sign advertising rates of $400/month just to park your SUV in a lot near Times Square stuck in my head.

might be forgetting somewhere, it has been several years.

Baraka_Guru 11-04-2008 07:29 AM

I want to elaborate a bit on my response: I don't have a passport and I want to see my own country first.

I lived a quarter of a century before I even left a 500 mile radius of my hometown. My first ever flight placed me well outside of that--I flew from Toronto to Vancouver. I did this on my own to visit Baraka_Gurl, as we had been dating long-distance. It was an astounding experience for this small-town boy who had only recently started living in the big city.

Since that time, I have flown to Vancouver a few times, plus a couple of times to Calgary. Baraka_Gurl and I drove from Vancouver to Toronto when she moved here. I've taken a few road trips to Ottawa, Montreal, and Quebec City. I visited Watertown and Syracuse, NY, as a kid but don't remember it much. A few years ago, however, a couple of friends and I decided on a whim to drive to Pennsylvania--just because none of us had been to Pennsylvania. We ended up in Fort Erie. Exciting.

This, in a nutshell, describes the extent of my travelling experience. It would further explain why I don't have a passport: I haven't needed one.

There is much of Canada for me yet to see. I want to see the Maritimes and the Great White North. This is a huge place. I suppose if I want to go to New York State in the future, I'll need a passport; I don't know the current rules.

We have actually considered getting passports recently for other travel to the U.S., but it didn't pan out. I imagine it's just a matter of time. I think we'd like to go to the Caribbean. Maybe Cuba. I think we'd like Cuba. We might one day even seek out a destination wedding. I don't know.

Leto 11-05-2008 03:50 AM

Cuba has great wedding packages. Cheap too. So does Dominican Republic and Mexico, but I would tend to avoid Mexico myself.

Ulf5 11-05-2008 05:30 AM

I'm in my mid thirtys, and finally got a Passport in the summer of 2007. I think the only reason I got one when I did was b/c work required me to travel to foreign countries.


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