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Posts Tagged ‘United States’

Someone said in Facebook that we should post this if we have a wonderful son. So here I am, posting it, because I have a son that is so WONDERFUL!!!!

Now my problem is, I think I am being unfair with Rey, I think I should find something equivalent for him as well.

Too bad, I can’t find anything in the internet. Or am I just really lazy to look for one. I just hope that giving him equestrian helmets will be OK for the mean time. Hope he will like it.

And when he likes it, our son will like it too and I will have another problem of looking for another one for him. Oh, I think this is going to be never ending…..but because I love them both. I won’t stop here.

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We celebrate father’s day every year, yet we always check its date every  year so we know the exact date to celebrate it. This year, Father’s Day will be celebrated on June 17. Since 1966 this celebration has been celebrated every 3rd Sunday of June and it is being celebrated mainly in USA, UK and Canada.

Wondering for any gifts you can give to your dad or husbands if you’re already married. I gave my husband a titanium cufflinks last year. You might wanna check some guides here.

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Came across this interesting post from here.

Visa Free for Pinoys

If you’re a Filipino and a holder of Philippine passport who likes traveling and exploring the beauty of the world, but hates the visa requirement to some countries, frown no more for you can still go to wonderful places without hassle-visa-appointments.

The list of countries below doesn’t require a visa for Filipinos prior to arrival. All you need are passport, plane tickets / itinerary, and some money for your tour.

 
 

No Visa Required for Filipinos in the Following Countries…

Asia

 

ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations)

 

  • Brunei Darussalam – 14 days
  • Cambodia – 21 days
  • Indonesia – 30 days
  • Laos – 30 days
  • Malaysia – 30 days
  • Singapore – 30 days
  • Thailand – 30 days
  • Vietnam – 21 days

 

 

Non- ASEAN

 

  • Azerbaijan – 30 days visa issued upon arrival for US$100
  • Bangladesh – 90-days visa issued upon arrival for US$50
  • Republic of China (Taiwan) – 30 days if holding a vaild visa for Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Schengen countries, United Kingdom or United States
  • Georgia – 90 days visa issued on arrival for US$10 ~ US$200
  • Hong Kong – 14 days
  • Iran – 15 days visa issued upon arrival for US$50
  • Israel – 90 days
  • South Korea (Jeju Island only) – 30 days
  • Macau – 30 days
  • Maldives – 30 days visa issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Mongolia – 21 days
  • Nepal – 15/30/90 days visa issued upon arrival for US$25/40/100
  • Sri Lanka – 30 days
  • Timor-Leste – 30 days visa issued upon arrival for US$30

 

 

Europe

 

  • Kosovo – 90 days

 

 

 

Oceania

  • Cook Islands – 31 days
  • Fiji – 120 days Visitor’s Permit issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Marshall Islands – 30 days visa issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Federated States of Micronesia – 30 days
  • Niue – 30 days
  • Palau – 30 days visa issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Samoa – 60 days Visitor’s Permit issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Tuvalu – 30 days visa issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Vanuatu – 30 days

 

North America

  • Bermuda – 31 days before but since May, they now require visas for Philippine passport holders
  • Costa Rica – 120 days Visitor’s Permit issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Dominica – 30 days visa issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Haiti – 30 days
  • Nicaragua – 30 days
  • Saint Kitts and Nevis – 30 days visa issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Saint Lucia – 60 days Visitor’s Permit issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines – 30 days visa issued upon arrival (free of charge)
  • Turks and Caicos Islands – 30 days

 

South America

  • Bolivia – 59 days
  • Brazil – 90 days
  • Colombia – 90 days
  • Ecuador – 90 days
  • Peru – 90 days
  • Suriname – 120 days

 

Africa

  • Burundi – visa issued upon arrival
  • Cape Verde – visa issued upon arrival
  • Comoros – A free 24 hour transit visa issued upon arrival at the airport. Within 24 hours this must be converted into a full visa at the immigration office in Moroni (fee payable)
  • Djibouti – 10 days visa issued upon arrival for DJF3,000; 30 days visa issued upon arrival for DJF5,000
  • Gambia – At port of entry passport 24-72 hour transit pass is issued. This must be converted into a full visa valid up to 1 month at the immigration department in Banjul (fee payable)
  • Kenya – 90 days visa issued upon arrival for US$50
  • Madagascar – 90 days visa issued upon arrival for MGA140,000
  • Morocco – 90 days
  • Mozambique – 30 days visa issued upon arrival for US$25
  • Saint Helena – visa issued upon arrival
  • Seychelles – 30 days
  • Tanzania – visa issued upon arrival for US$50
  • Togo – 7 days visa issued upon arrival
  • Uganda – 180 days visa issued upon arrival for US$50
  • Zambia – 90 days visa issued upon arrival for US$50

 

**Details may change due to new law updates so double-check the immigration rules of the country you’re planning to visit

**Transit visa may be required when you’re not on a direct flight

**The List is from Wiki but hard to find so I thought of posting it here for easy search result :)

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Yours truly, previouly works for Wendy’s Hamburger  and would love to share this new, coming from 10tv.com.

NEW YORK – When Wendy’s decided to remake its 42-year-old hamburger, the chain agonized over every detail. A pickle chemist was consulted. Customers were quizzed on their lettuce knowledge. And executives went on a cross-country burger-eating tour.

The result? Dave’s Hot `N Juicy, named after late Wendy’s founder Dave Thomas. The burger – with extra cheese, a thicker beef patty, a buttered bun, and hold the mustard, among other changes – will be served in restaurants starting Monday.

“Our food was already good,” said Denny Lynch, a Wendy’s spokesman. “We wanted it to be better. Isn’t that what long-term brands do? They reinvent themselves.”

For Wendy’s Co., based in Dublin, Ohio, reinvention is critical. That’s why executives at the 6,600-restaurant chain spent the past two and a half years going over burger minutiae during an undertaking they call Project Gold Hamburger. That included deciding whether to switch from white onions on its burgers to red (they did), to change the fat/lean ratio of the meat (they didn’t), or to go with plain or crinkled pickles (they picked crinkled.)

Wendy’s is trying to boost lackluster sales and fight growing competition from much bigger rival McDonald’s on one end and expanding fast-casual chains like Five Guys on the other. Part of the problem is that Americans in the economic downturn are being pickier about how they spend their dining-out dollars.

But the biggest issue is that Wendy’s, which hadn’t changed its burger since the chain began in 1969, let its food offerings get stale while competitors updated their menus.

Still, it can be risky to tweak an old favorite. The past is littered with examples of this, including New Coke and Clear Pepsi, which were pulled from store shelves because customers didn’t like them. Wendy’s itself stumbled a few years ago when it rolled out breakfast foods. The company now says its mistake was offering omelets and pancakes, which aren’t conducive to eating on the go.

“We have a lot of catching up to do in some areas,” said Gerard Lewis, Wendy’s head of new product development. “But after we launch this hamburger there will be folks who need to catch up to us.”

 

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