Perlu Network score measures the extent of a member’s network on Perlu based on their connections, Packs, and Collab activity.
How to get there: You can fly or take the bus; I’d recommend the former unless you’re balling on a serious budget. How long to stay: This is definitely a day trip – but leave early in the morning! How to get there: The four-hour bus trip to Mui Ne only costs 350,000 return (£11.50/$15), making it one of the cheapest Saigon weekend trips available. How to get there: You can take the bus from Mien Dong bus station for đ85,000 (£2.75/$3.60), or turn it into a road trip!
So, in the spirit of cynicism, I’ve compiled a list of all the travel quotes I wish were banned from the internet. it’s definitely part of it, but people enjoyed relaying their tales to anyone and who’d listen long before the ‘Gram came along. Quitting your job on a whim just isn’t realistic for many people, but the main reason I hate this quote is OF US CAN’T TAN. It’s not in the Quran and just started appearing on the internet in the late 90s (damn right, I did my research).
Thao Dien is one of the most expensive areas of Ho Chi Minh City to live in, although it’s still very affordable for most westerners. It’s more expensive to rent a place here than in Phu Nhuan or Binh Thanh, but not dramatically so, and it’s cheaper to live in Thao Dien than in District 1. : It’s easy to get sucked into the Thao Dien bubble and realise that you haven’t left the area for days. It’s Westernised: If you really want to immerse yourself in Vietnamese culture, Thao Dien isn’t the best place to do it.
* Have over six hours of supervised teaching practice to real ESL students Even though my teaching course was a CELTA equivalent, there was nowhere near as much work involved as the actual CELTA, so I feel like this was a pretty sweet deal. A ‘good’ course should have 100-150 hours of in-class time (on my course, a lot of this was just planning lessons whilst sat in a classroom) and at least six hours of observed teaching in a real-life classroom. This is the course I took – read my full review Completing your TEFL or TESOL online is a pretty good way to save some pennies (or a few hundred dollars, in many cases). It’s probably what I’d have done had I known then what I know now.