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NickF

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Posts posted by NickF

  1. I made 2 trips by soft sleeper slow train. Kunming to Guangzhou (24 hours) and Shenzhen to Yongzhou. ( about 12 hours)

     

    I had ridden passenger trains (Not Amtrak) many times back in the fifties and sixties as a child and teenager, so I wanted to do it for nostalgic reasons.

     

    My wife's friends thought I was being "cheap", but wife understood and It was a great experience .......

     

    Soft sleeper compartments were clean and the rest rooms had western toilet seats and were fairly clean.

     

    Saw the China countryside through a "picture window" while rolling along at 30-50 mph. They are old trains, but heated and air conditioned.

     

    They look like the USA passenger trains of years ago. (Southern Railways, L&N etc)

     

    The dining car served very good "hot" meals. It was a wonderful experience, and I would do it again if time permits.

     

    I think you and I would have a lot in common. Aside from similar experiences on the China trains I've always been a train freak. Rode the Cailfornia Zephyr, the Orange Blossom Special, and many of the other "classic trains" when I was young.

  2. ChunMei and I went the K1 route because I'd been separated from my wife for almost 4 years, and the divorce at that point had taken 2 freakin' years because my now ex- didn't care if we were divorced or not, as long as I wasn't there.

     

    So at the time of my first trip to China I was still married. ChunMei and I had been corresponding for almost a year at that point, and talking daily with webcams, so we had transcripts of all of those conversations. On my first visit I met her entire family (parents, 3 sisters, and a brother, as well as her son) so that happened quickly.

     

    I proposed to her on that trip, and gave her my grandmother's engagement ring, so I had no receipt for it. We also spent an entire afternoon and evening having engagement pictures taken by a professional photographer, and submitted copies with the original K1 application.

     

    My divorce was still not final when I made my second visit. At that time we spent a week traveling together, then spent another week in Nanning with her family for New Year.

     

    Three months later I was finally divorced, and filed the K1 a week later, as soon as I had the final divorce paperwork. Surprisingly everything went extremely smoothy (I was still nervous as can be seen from some of my posts at the time) but from start to finish the entire process only took eleven months from start to finish.

     

    So plan for the worst, hope for the best, and good luck to you both.

  3. I've ridden the train from Guangzhou a number of times. Ridden both "hard sleep" and "spft sleep" and have always enjoyed the trip. If you don't bring your own food (a common Chinese practice) you can either buy if from vendors who pass through the cars, or on the longer trips, use the dining car.

     

    The food in the dining cars is surprisingly good, and prepared fresh to order. The only downside is that everybody ignores the no smoking signs.

     

    I like riding Chinese trains, myself. On the other hand, if you're planning to ride during New Year the stations are total chaos. Like a rugby scrum, with out the care and restraint. :D

  4. Well I went down to the Main Office for the Credit Union. They gave me the same answers. Need a state ID or drivers license.

     

    So I looked up the requirements here in Colorado for a State ID. We have everything but the I-94 has expired so I don't think we will be able to get a state ID.

     

    Guess I will be calling different banks to see if we can't get a Joint checking account.

     

    Thanks for the help everyone.

    David, all 1st Bank asked us for was her SSN and her passport.

     

    We looked into getting a state ID for her, and all they asked for there was her passport and, at minimum, the recipts from Homeland Security for the AOS application. We decided not to get the card because we hadn't received the receipt yet, and she's going to get a drivers l;icence anyway.

  5.  

    As for AOS, commingling of funds is NOT a requirement, this is something required to show later when filing to remove conditions on a two year conditional green-card.

     

    Dave, I question this. When ChunMei and I had our AOS interview the interviewer specifically asked to see a bank statement, then photocopied our ATM cards on the account. He actually said, "I need to see proof that you are actually comingling your assets."

     

     

    Hmmmmm.....well I guess I will go down to their main office and find out what I need to do. Your in Highlands Ranch yes Nick? We are in Aurora. I don't really want to bank somewhere else but if I have to I guess I will try another bank.

    For what it's worth, I've had an account with 1st Bank of Colorado for almost 20 years, and have been very happy with them.

  6.  

    As for AOS, commingling of funds is NOT a requirement, this is something required to show later when filing to remove conditions on a two year conditional green-card.

     

    Dave, I question this. When ChunMei and I had our AOS interview the interviewer specifically asked to see a bank statement, then photocopied our ATM cards on the account. He actually said, "I need to see proof that you are actually comingling your assets."

  7. From just a quick search, it seems easier to get flights from Guangzhou to Nanning than from Hong Kong You could always land in HK, then transit up to Guangzhou then take China Southern to Nanning.

    That would also be my recommendation. Take the HK light rail train to Shenzhen, then take the high-speed train to Guangzhou. Then take a cab or airport bus to the airport. Should take about 3 hours, depending on connections.

     

    where is the Customs for entry into China when you take the rail out of HK?

    what about return, where is customs for HK?

    We cross at Lo Wu. Basically you get off the HK light rail train, go through the customs station there, then walk out right into to the Shenzhen transportatio center. There you can catch a bus,, a standard rail train, or the high speed train to the Guangzhou train station. I recommend the hish speed train. It's about one hour to Guangzhou at about 110 mph.

  8. From just a quick search, it seems easier to get flights from Guangzhou to Nanning than from Hong Kong You could always land in HK, then transit up to Guangzhou then take China Southern to Nanning.

    That would also be my recommendation. Take the HK light rail train to Shenzhen, then take the high-speed train to Guangzhou. Then take a cab or airport bus to the airport. Should take about 3 hours, depending on connections.

  9. Success!!!

     

    The interview asked a few simple questions like whether she was a terrorist or a member of the CCP, asked her what kind of things we did together (visited my brother in Dallas, bicycling, traveling to the mountains,) and so forth. He was very pationt with her English.

     

    He asked for some proof we were combining our lives. We each showed him our respective ATM cards for our joint bank account.

     

    He said, "Congratulations, you get your two yweaqr card. You can do this again in another twelve years."

     

    What a relief! :D

     

    Considering we filed the original K-1 application on June 16, 2010, it didn't take nearly as long as we thought it would.

  10. Well, in 3 hours ChunMei have our AOS interview. Nermous much? I've been through all the stuff we're supposed to have, but hope I haven't missed some Mickey Mouse thing and we get denied because of that.

     

    I sent the medical forms in to the Chicago dropbox, but ChunMei wants me to stop at the doctor's office and get another sealed copy, "just in case." Don't think I'll have time.

  11. ChunMei and my daughter and I were there 2 weeks ago to visit my brother. We spent a day at the Texas State Fair (I think that's over) but one evening we had dinner at Medieval Times. That's sort of a hoot. ChunMei loved it. They have a 2 hour indoor show that includes jousting, sword fights, and some amazing horsemanship, all in an arena in the middle of the restaurant. and the food was passible.

     

    A trip to Ft Worth is worthwhile, but the part that the ladies enjoyed was the shopping, even if they didn't buy much. It's just a hoot to go to Neiman-Marcus and read the pricetags.

  12.  

    You know, I was surprised that my wife liked their doughnuts. I've always been a big fan of them, but figured they'd be too sweet for her. Nope, they gave Jing2 a free one while waiting in line, and she bought three more when she got up to the cashier. Atta girl.

     

    That is one big difference between my wife and I. She does not have the sweet tooth we have as Americans. I bought some Cinnamon Buns to eat for breakfast which is one of my favorite foods. She took one bite, said it was too sweet and wouldn't touch it.

     

    ChunMei has a serious sweet tooth. She specifically asked me to teach her how to use the oven and show her how to make a cake from mix. Now she bakes about 2 cakes a week. In a year we'll probably both weigh about 700 pounds. :D

  13. ChunMei's adjusted reasonably well. Some things she likes; some she doesn't.

     

    She loves western chocolate, and thinks Krispy Kreme is the food of the gods. she's trying to figure out how to take some home to her father on her next visit home.

     

    She thinks American salad is a wonderful invention, and now puts ranch salad dressing on everything.

  14. For what it's worth, in the current job market a BA in Psychology from a US university is also useless. She should definitely change majors in any case. A psych degree these days will jet you a job at Starbucks, Maybe. Trust me; I've got an MA, and have spent the past 20 years working in the iT industry.

  15. Got a letter from DHS yesterday saying I hadn't submitted an I-864 with our post-marriage AOS application! Fortunately I'd made a complete copy of the original packet I'd submitted, and yes, the I-864 was in it. So I printed off another copy, printed a fresh signature page and signed it (wasn't taking the chance they wouldn't accept the photocopied signature) and mailed it off this morning.

     

    I didn't send another copy of the past three years 1040 tax forms with it because they were also included in the original submission. I included a cover letter to that effect. Hope they didn't lose the damn tax forms, too. Maybe I should have sent them, but I don't like the idea of sending copies of sensitive data like that through the mail uinless absolutely necessary.

     

    ChunMei has her biometrics taken this coming Thursday, and now she worries that they won't do it because of the "missing" paperwork.

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