Congratulations to you both!Mrs WW is from Thailand and came to the UK under what's known as the five year route. This involves a "Spouse Visa," two Further Leave to Remains and an Indefinite Leave to Remain after which she is free to remain here permanently. It's an expensive process to go though and quite stressful too as an immigrant needs to reach a certain level of English and pass exams including a Life in The UK test and can be refused leave to stay at any stage.
Previous Visas have been either fully hard copy or partially digital but the ILR we've just completed was fully digital and despite a few "oh er..." moments it went smoothly and this is the first time we haven't been asked for more documentation. For example when we did the second FLR I supplied my bank details as requited and then was asked for them a further twice. Where the documents were going I just don't know and can't guess, they must have been going missing as everything was in the same signed for box as documents they appeared to have. Anyway. It went relatively smoothly this time with the only issues being some garbled/ambiguous language which seem to be endemic in these things and when getting to the end only then being told that all electronic copies of documents had to be in B&W and this afternoon we received her Biometric Residence Card stating Indefinite Leave to RemainI assume we'll get the official letter or email soon
So that's it. We seem to have hopefully come to the end of an expensive and at times almost incomprehensible process. She now wants citizenship but I think she should take a rest first and destress, Maybe go for it next year. I usually get her a present when we've hit a milestone and I know she wants a new Samsung tablet so that'll probably be it
For anyone else going through this... It can be done. We've done it all ourselves but I know some people who've engaged a solicitor but we've saved quite a bit with the DIY approach![]()
Congratulations to you both!
Mrs WW is from Thailand and came to the UK under what's known as the five year route. This involves a "Spouse Visa," two Further Leave to Remains and an Indefinite Leave to Remain after which she is free to remain here permanently. It's an expensive process to go though and quite stressful too as an immigrant needs to reach a certain level of English and pass exams including a Life in The UK test and can be refused leave to stay at any stage.
Previous Visas have been either fully hard copy or partially digital but the ILR we've just completed was fully digital and despite a few "oh er..." moments it went smoothly and this is the first time we haven't been asked for more documentation. For example when we did the second FLR I supplied my bank details as requited and then was asked for them a further twice. Where the documents were going I just don't know and can't guess, they must have been going missing as everything was in the same signed for box as documents they appeared to have. Anyway. It went relatively smoothly this time with the only issues being some garbled/ambiguous language which seem to be endemic in these things and when getting to the end only then being told that all electronic copies of documents had to be in B&W and this afternoon we received her Biometric Residence Card stating Indefinite Leave to RemainI assume we'll get the official letter or email soon
So that's it. We seem to have hopefully come to the end of an expensive and at times almost incomprehensible process. She now wants citizenship but I think she should take a rest first and destress, Maybe go for it next year. I usually get her a present when we've hit a milestone and I know she wants a new Samsung tablet so that'll probably be it
For anyone else going through this... It can be done. We've done it all ourselves but I know some people who've engaged a solicitor but we've saved quite a bit with the DIY approach![]()
Congrats. Must be a relief!
No mow may by any chanceSometimes, just a word does the trick.
On Friday morning at 7.45 am I heard the council grass-cutting machine nearby and looked out of the window to see the driver was going along the grass verges outside each house along the road. These verges are about 1.5m x 3m and are separated by the concrete drive-ins for the house driveways with the pavement between them and the driveways..The driver cut the grass on our neighbour's front to our left.,drove onto the road around our verge, back onto our neighbour's verge to the right and also did the next one. Why miss ours ?
The verges are only done five times a year which is why we..the neighbours..do our own in-between cuts. Then I thought that if he did that along the full length road to the end he'd save about 15 minutes, so, a short while later I went for a walk along the road and he'd missed 14 verges and I was just in time to see this driver and two others cutting nearby on their machines, on a grassed area opposite near the end of the road, driving off after what was obviously a break. Infact, I posted a photo of them on March 24th in "Men or Women at work" in the General photos thread of them doing exactly that in a different location near our house...ie... having a break. I don't begrudge them a break, it's a noisy, monotonous job, and they have to wear ear-protectors. So, I carried on to the end of the road and made a note of the numbers of the houses that had been missed and contacted the council and spoke to a very empathetic lady who asked if I wanted to make an official complaint. Not really..I just wanted someone in the Highways dept (they cover grass cutting) to have a word. The lady asked if I knew which verges had been missed (ie house numbers) so I gave them to her and she remarked that it was a lot.
Fast forward to this morning (yesterday being a bank holiday) and a grass-cutter went along the verges and cut the grass on every one that hadn't been done. I call that a result...![]()
Yesterday rather than today. Spent an hour plus watching a white tailed eagle on the shore of Gruinard Bay. It sat for ages on a rock then flew off and harried an otter for its catch.. A great sight.
Dave
Any chance of a repeat performance when I'm there?
We pulled in once and there was a bunch of guys obviously on a birding tour. We saw them a few years. We pointed our scope where they were looking (as you do) and there was a WTE sitting on Gruinard Island. This was in the early days when it was quite rare to see one. More recently a bit north of there we watched an otter swim to a rock with a fish and settle down to eat it. It didn't finish it (it was a big fish). It went to go back into the water, saw the black back gull sitting on top of the rock, went back for the fish and dropped it in the water.
I'm a bit biased in favour of the golden eagle, but I'll stand and watch either variety
WTE3A by Dave Marley, on Flickr
WTE2A by Dave Marley, on FlickrThanks, Alan. As always lots of luck involved, we only stopped in the layby because we know it overlooks a place where seals haul out, and then along comes the WTE.
Dave
Off to the cardio rehab gym later as have to do a walking test, so I hope that they then offer me a time to start my rehab.
Reference my post of April 14 re collecting a courtesy car that...a reminder... had a fair bit of damage to the rear bumper not shown on the inspection sheet and was dirty inside, empty, take-away box, empty juice bottle, sachet of salad dressing under the front seats, dried mud on the pedals,muddy interior sills and signed off on inspection sheet as "cleaned", we've now had a response but not from the hire company. We haven't had a response from them either by Email or phone from a manager, as promised by a staff member, despite sending an Email complaint with six photos attached . So, we forwarded it to our insurance company with whom the hire company has a contract and wouldn't want it knowing about this, I'm sure. Shows how stupid they can be not realising we might inform our insurance company should they not respond.
Here's the response from the insurance company. I see in the opening sentence the representative of the hire company said they don't note damage that can't be seen from more than 2 metres away. If anyone reading this has had experience of an inspection upon return of a hire vehicle they go round it with a magnifying glass.The damage to the bumper could be seen from 10m and more, away. They just can't hold their hands up, can they. I wasn't sure if I should write the name of the hire company, so I haven't but it's a national one.
Response from our insurance company:
I've upheld your complaint in full and will explain why below.
1.Concerning your hire vehicle having damage on its bumper upon delivery, without the damage being noted in your documentation.
I've reviewed what's happened and the communication between **** and yourself. Although *** have stated they didn't need to mention damage not visible from 2 meters away on the delivery sheet, I'm upholding this concern. It's reasonable for any existing damage to be mentioned on the delivery sheet to avoid charging the wrong person for repairs. The onerous isn’t on you, the customer, to verify any pre-existing damage, so I’m sincerely sorry this has happened.
2. Concerning the cleanliness of the vehicle that was delivered to you.
From my investigation, I’m glad to see an **** manager has acknowledged you are absolutely correct in this regard. **** has accepted your photographs as evidence of poor work and I’ve been given reassurances the matter has been discussed with the team who cleaned the vehicle and that additional training is being provided where needed.
3. Regarding the manager call back, which wasn’t done.
When a service staff member arranges a manager call back, it's fair and reasonable for that call back to go ahead as planned. I'm sincerely sorry **** have let you down in this regard as failure to follow through on a promise made is completely unacceptable.
Feedback has been made to **** in regard to these concerns already and they have also confirmed you won’t be held liable for the damage.
To say sorry for the inconvenience and frustration you’ve experienced, I've sent you a cheque for £150. Please allow up to 10 working days for the cheque to arrive in the post and please accept it with my best wishes..............End
I hope it's the hire company that pay this and not our insurance company.
House sparrows are reincarnated Jack Russels. I'm certain of it.
Brave little souls indeed.We have a couple of Robins that I'm sure would take on anything.
Just done ours.![]()
Blue sky? so you have it, I wondered where it went!Just done ours.![]()