Yesterday Robinsons department store lost a sale (shock horror) how can this be you may ask, the story is that when i found something i wanted to buy the serving girl took me to the cash register queue of around 10 people and when i asked if there was another cash register in use she said no, i told her ok i will just come back later (which really meant i am off and will probably never buy that now)
I would like to suggest that Robinsons take some of the multitude of servers who stand beside you when looking at stuff and say socks sir when you are looking at socks or t shirt sir if you are looking at t shirts and train them up to take money at cash registers.
I have never run a business so maybe my suggestion is way out of line but i think like most businesses here unless Mr Robinson is actually there the servers don't care if they sell things or not because their crappy salary is the same whatever the outcome.
Every cloud has a silver lining though as i did not waste money on something i could obviously live without![]()
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Page 228 of 231
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- Thread: Hello. Ready, Set and Go!
Hello,
Been lurking for some time but decided to come "out off the closet" and say hello.
I married my lovely Cebuana almost 30 years ago and we have lived most of that time near Augusta Georgia where I worked as an engineer at a Federal nuclear site. We have two grown children: a son who lives with his wife near Nashville, TN and a daughter who lives with her husband in Wellington, New Zealand.
After over 27 years working for the Federal government I retired with my last day on the rolls was April 30, 2016. About one week earlier, I got the 13(a) visa from the Philippine Embassy in Washington DC; they got the application from FedEx on a Monday afternoon and by that Friday it was done and at our house - wow!
Our plan is to do a "living in the Philippines" trial for about two years to verify we can adapt to the heat and humidity (living in the Southern USA should be a help), and weigh the good and bad living in the Philippines to see if this is something we want to do more permanently and, if not, return to our house in Georgia. My wife was born and raised in Cebu but after nearly 30 years living in the USA she has gotten used to the cooler weather!
Now for the ready, set and go ....
Ready: Just retired, got the 13(a) visa and our passports.
Set: Getting the house ready to rent and selling stuff we are not planning to store. Get some Balikbayan boxes readied to ship when we get a more permanent apartment or home rental.
Go! Got the tickets, a hotel to stay near the BOI, a ride to take us to Dumagute and a short-term rental in Dumaguete to find something more permanent.
Gary and Jackie Borba-
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- Thread: Banana Peel compost
Dave & Imp DI Forum Patron Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer
Here is some information on composting Banana peels.
Using Banana Peel In Compost – The Effect Of Bananas On Soil Compost-
Informative x 6
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- Thread: PNP checkpoint (joke)
Yesterday evening around 6pm there was a checkpoint on the south highway between Bacong and Dumaguete, they call it a checkpoint but it really was only a place where all the illegal motorbikes parked before it (north & south) and partially blocked the road.
I have no police training but i could deduce the reason they did not want to go through was that the the bike was somehow illegal, the PNP did not appear to have seen this or the traffic chaos it was causing as they did not walk the few meters it would have taken to arrest or move on these people.
Why do they bother, next time just stay in the police station and stop f$%king up the traffic for no good reason.-
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- Thread: Japanese man drowned
Neil Domaille shared Hulagway ug Kasikas sa Dumaguete's post.
Just now ·
Hulagway ug Kasikas sa Dumaguete added 2 new photos.
5 mins ·
#HukadScoop
A Japanese man has drowned after trying to rescue his student drowning yesterday at Masaplod Norte, Dauin at around 4pm.
Search and rescue team searched since yesterday and found the missing victim dead this morning at around 9am.
Thank you to Mr. Alex Salboro from Maayongtubig who found the body and to those who helped in searching, Dumaguete Coastguard rescue team, Mr. Roland Tuble (Masaplod Bantay Dagat), Mr. Alon Banlaygas and team and Deutsch divers for helping in search and rescue operation.-
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- Thread: Holy Week Holidays
Jack Peterson DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Air Force
- Messages:
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- 451
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- Northern Junob, Dumaguete City
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Just a heads up here Guys and Gals, THURSDAY & FRIDAY are Holidays so many Government Departments and Others will be closed as will the BI and Banks, so if you need to do stuff Tomorrow is the day. Have a Good Weekend all.
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DavyL200 DI Forum Luminary ★ Global Mod ★ ★ Moderator ★ Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer
Tropical cyclones in the Philippines are becoming more extreme and causing greater amounts of devastation, a new study has shown.
Geographers from the University of Sheffield have analysed annual data over the period from 1951 to 2013 and saw a slightly decreasing trend in the number of smaller cyclones (above 118 kilometres per hour) that hit land in the Philippines, particularly in the last two decades.
More hazardous tropical cyclones (above 150 kilometres per hour) were shown to be on the increase in recent years, with the northern island of Luzon frequently affected by these weather events and associated rainfall.
Previous research has suggested that the increase in the number of intense tropical cyclones could be due to rising sea-surface temperatures since the 1970s as a result of climate change. However it is too early to draw conclusions that will influence tropical cyclone projections, so this remains an active part of research on extreme climate events.
Monica Ortiz from the Department of Geography and Scholar in the Grantham Centre for Sustainable Futures said: "Growing up in the Philippines myself, I understand the catastrophic loss of life and damage to property that extreme weather can cause. By analysing this data from the past up to the present, we can better adapt to further climate change and prepare for future disasters."
Read more at: Philippines affected by more extreme tropical cyclones-
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DavyL200 DI Forum Luminary ★ Global Mod ★ ★ Moderator ★ Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer
PARIS, France - France has drawn up a blacklist of 17 countries, including the Philippines, that do not help investigate foreign aid fraud, banning the use of their banks to help distribute development funds, officials said Monday, May 27 (Tuesday in Manila).
Aides to development minister Pascal Canfin were unable to say how much French foreign aid currently transits via banks in the countries featured on the new blacklist.
The blacklist expands on an already-established register of 8 "non-cooperative states and territories" that already includes Botswana, Brunei, Nauru, Guatemala and the Philippines.
It adds Switzerland, Lebanon, Panama, Costa Rica, the United Arab Emirates, Dominica, Liberia, Trinidad and Tobago, and Vanuatu. PH included in French aid blacklist-
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