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Greetings from a newcomer

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Heady

Dear forum-ers:

I am new in Riyadh and wanted to say hello to you.
I understand it is a sort of tradition for newcomers to ask for tips and advice about living in SA, but I won't ask for anything. I will try and figure out everything by myself...it is much funnier.

Hope to see you often on this forum.

shahab.ali

Welcome Heady...ya, its not only funny, it is easy too

Alliecat

Hey Heady, welcome aboard!! 

A tip for you already:  SA = South Africa.  KSA = Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

I won't ask for anything


But if you need to, please feel free.  We only get cranky when a topic has already been discussed 3X in a week and somebody asks the same question yet again.

You'll probably be able to help out with things you've learned here (you've been here longer than me!) so please, join in!

Ioanna

Welcome aboard Heady

Like your pic..join in the fun!

Salman Omrani

Good to have you with us Heady, love the pic XD

Salman

r-m

very big welcome from a lovely saudi woman.

Alliecat

from a lovely saudi woman


This surprises me.  It seems not to be in keeping with the modesty/low profile expected of Saudi women, or am I wrong?  Please explain.

musicman

how lovely is lovely?

MadMaz

Hi Heady,

You're most welcome, I'm new here as well, you're the first one I welcome to the site since I joined... enjoy being the first! ;)

MisterStretch

Welcome Heady...

Wow, you really don't have to hold back the questions, but please share the funniest things you encounter when you encounter them.

"It's Hedley, damn you!"
- Harvey Korman as Hedley Lamar in "Blazing Saddles"

mnd

welcome & have fun:)

c'est moi

Welcome if you need any info msg me :)

Heady

Thank you all for your warm welcome... I mean ... not "warm" as in "it is 40 degrees Celsius outside and we swelter"... but "warm" as "cool". Euh... What I write makes no sense. I must be tired!

@alliecat:
How could I have possibly been here for longer than you ?... I just arrived in Riyadh 3 days ago! :blink::unsure
Oh! I found it! :top: you actually arrived yesterday in Riyadh then you got caught in a time warping wormhole; now you are trapped in the past, giving us the illusion that you have been here for about a year. Am I right ?

Fidgety Soul

Welcome Dear,I just hope u would love the place....all u need to be really active in our forum and i promise u will have fun :cool:

Alliecat

Oh! I found it!  you actually arrived yesterday in Riyadh then you got caught in a time warping wormhole; now you are trapped in the past, giving us the illusion that you have been here for about a year. Am I right ?


EXACTLY right !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


(erm, seriously .. I thought I'd read that you'd been here since May 2009?)

Ioanna

MisterStretch wrote:

"It's Hedley, damn you!"
- Harvey Korman as Hedley Lamar in "Blazing Saddles"


I LOOOOOOOOOVVVVVVVEEEE this scene!!:lol:
Now I want to blank out Riyadh for 90 minutes and watch this crazy movie

Thanks for the memories MisterStretch

jillndave

Watched it last month, from our DVD library.
If we play parts from the Blazing Saddles movie can I play the Wako Kid. Just love his shooting hand. :lol::lol::lol:

Alliecat

can I play the Wako Kid


Why is it that I can easily picture you in the bean scene around the campfire?

:lol:

MisterStretch

A classic movie, for sure, and one in my collection, as well.

Thanks Heady for joining the forum and giving us all a smile, though not at your expense.

Carry on, people.

shahab.ali

musicman wrote:

how lovely is lovely?


he he he...ya even i wanna know that ;)

CAF

Welcome Heady AND C'est Moi!   We look forward to your input, conversation and involvement here on the forum.  Hope to meet you both when I get back!

Heady - I can see that you already fit right in!  And I love the Pic!:lol::lol:

mirfarali

Welcome to Riyadh. I am sure you will have lots of experiences and lots of opportunities to learn from.

The first time my wife came over to Riyadh, I picked her up at the airport and stopped on the way for pizza at Pizza inn. We went in and ordered pizza at the counter then went to sit at the tables. After a while, the guy brought over pizza all packed and ready for take out. I told the guy that we wanted to dine-in. To which he replied that it was a singles only seating joint. In all our stay here, no one had come into their outlet, which I pointed to him. He said, well if you do not go then you will get into trouble with the Mutawwa.

On our way out with the pizza, my wife asked what the hell happened. To which I replied, "Welcome to Saudi Arabia. Have a nice stay."

Welcome to Saudi Arabia.

Alethe

My first week in Riyadh my my husband suddenly discovered that most of the eateries he generally visited were men only.  He'd never noticed before.

Fidgety Soul

The only thing bother me when i see loads of people enjoying their coffee at road side when i pass by Tahlia Street.I love those cafe but i can't be there. :/

Alethe

I agree nonz most of the cafe's for women in Riyadh have all the charm & appeal of broom cupboards.

Nelson17

women can't go in the cafe in Tahlia Street? thats rubbish!! cant say I noticed. I will probably notice a lot more when my wife turns up.

I remember reading somewhere that having a wife was an enabler here??

Maybee it is the plan of the wifes so the men all have to go and collect the take out?

Alethe

We can't sit outside.  There are a limited set of western chain cafes that have family sections which women can go into.  (Most of them serve really bad coffee.)

My favorite coffee shop is Caribou had Marina Mall.  The coffee is nice and they have outdoor seating for families tucked behind a high fence.

musicman

The Food Courts in all malls allow for mixed seating and there areb plenty of good coffee shops and fast food in there.

r-m

Alliecat wrote:

from a lovely saudi woman


This surprises me.  It seems not to be in keeping with the modesty/low profile expected of Saudi women, or am I wrong?  Please explain.


??????????????
why u r surprised

debgoodfellow

enjoy Riyadh, hot hot hot, bit dry, breath deeply when you feel its all to much, always have a back up plan for everything lol.........enjoy it................ not forever D x

egyduck

Heady wellcome to saudi arabia and debgoodfellow wellcome back to Egypt

marypoppins07

Hi
I am so glad I found this forum.:)  I would so appreciate it if anyone could please give me some guidance.  I place people (nannies& Exec house managers) with families in Saudi Arabia and though most of the people are happy in their jobs they find the isolation very very hard and battle to stay out their contracts.  Is there a group or get together place for expats i.e. South Africans in Riyadh & Jeddah that is safe and recommended for for these women to go on their off days? 

I look forward to hear from you all.
Regards
Mary Poppins

Alethe

It is very difficult for people who live with local families, as life in Riyadh is very based around connections, rather than there being open events or venues that you can go to.  Most western expats build their social networks around contacts from their residential compounds & their workplaces.

To my knowledge the South African embassy in Riyadh does not run regular social events.

marypoppins07

Dear Alethe

Thank you so much for the feedback.  So it would be advisable for these candidates to live in compounds away from the families and just go into their work place everyday?
Regards
Ilse

Alethe

It would give them other people to interact with other than the families they interact with which I think would be really easier.  It also means they are only supervised by the families they work for during their working hours not their free time.  I have a friend who is a nanny here and she has found the constant supervision by her employers makes her feel like she is a child living at home again, accept her parents were never that strict.

marypoppins07

Hi

Yes my people feel like they are locked up in jail and feel like they are smothering.

I will recommend that to them - whether the families will be happy with that is quite another thing - we will have to wait and see.

Thank you for your time in answering the post
Regards

Fidgety Soul

marypoppins07 wrote:

Hi

Yes my people feel like they are locked up in jail and feel like they are smothering.

I will recommend that to them - whether the families will be happy with that is quite another thing - we will have to wait and see.

Thank you for your time in answering the post
Regards


(My People) :o:o:o:o:o:o:o

Stevie334

Hi Heady,

Can you elaborate on your interest in Aviation? The company I work for had a presence at the Saudi Aviation Club a couple of months back.

Heady

Stevie334 wrote:

Hi Heady,

Can you elaborate on your interest in Aviation? The company I work for had a presence at the Saudi Aviation Club a couple of months back.


Hi Stevie334,
Funny that you mention the Saudi Aviation Club as I was doing some research on it 2-3 days ago.
Actually, I have theoretical knowledge in flying fixed-wing aircrafts and practiced professional flight simulators quite a bit, but never really stayed long enough in one country to really fly in an aviation club.
I understood the Saudi Aviation Club is located at Thumama airport about 30 kms north Riyadh Int'l Airport is that correct ?

WTENGEL

I am not sure if you are interested in taking fixed wing pilot lessons, but I looked into it a few weeks ago, and it is prohibitively expensive here.

Apparently they have to import the Avgas from the UK, and the cost per hour for the aircraft with fuel and instructor is around $400.00 USD per flight hour. You read that right, and no I am not confusing SAR and USD...my jaw was on the ground!

The Saudi Aviation Club had a booth at Janadriyah this year and I visited with them for a little bit. They are doing a lot of PPG stuff lately, and I asked about skydiving. The guy basically said they do not do that anymore...

Anyway, PPG in the desert sounds rather fun...depending on what you are looking for...

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