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Story #6: Story from a New St. Croix
Resident!
(Submitted in 2003)
August 13, 2003, 2:54 p.m. the plane touched down. We had arrived
at our new home of St. Croix. All the planning was over. We were
here. What the heck had we done?
My wife (her opinions are in Story #9) and I decided several years ago we wanted to retire to the
Caribbean. Being realists, we knew we would want to work some, so
we knew we had to go to a U.S. territory. Our Spanish is poor at
best, so Puerto Rico was out. That left the Virgin Islands. It was
time to begin the research.
Our son lived on St. Thomas for over a year. We visited him a
couple of times and decided St. Thomas was way too busy for us. We
went to St. John twice. Ah, paradise. St. John is probably the
best vacation spot on the planet. As a home, it wouldn’t work.
Life there was way too slow for us city folks. Not to mention I’d
have to print money to be able to afford to live there. We are,
after all, just average folks. That left one option, St. Croix. We
had not been there and were beginning to get a little discouraged.
We were beginning to think that our idea of the perfect retirement
wasn’t going to come off. So last fall, we came to St. Croix. It
took us two days of exploring to decide the big Virgin was perfect
for us. It had the necessities that St. Thomas provided. It also
had the serenity that St. John had. As important as those things
were, an important consideration was that it was less expensive
than the other two. The decision was made. St. Croix would be our
choice.
After we got back home (Louisville, KY) we read all we could find
about moving to the Virgin Islands.
VINow.com had
tons of information. (VINow.com is geared to folks visiting the
Virgin Islands but has lots of great information. Its sister site
is VIMovingCenter.com
geared to living and relocating to the islands.) We got hold of two copies of the
Settler’s
Handbook. We studied them like we were studying for final exams.
We wanted to be as prepared as possible. Having moved a few times
to different states, we were certain this was going to be like
moving to a different state. It sort of is and it sort of isn’t.
Step one was to sort all our stuff. Everything we owned was put
into one of three categories. Get rid of, store for now, and
finally take with us. Next was the decision about the vehicles. We
decided immediately to bring the van. That way we would have a way
to transport our stuff that we thought we would need immediately.
After a couple of trips to the internet, we decided to use
Tropical Shipping for the van. My sports car was another story. My
wife thought I should sell it and maybe purchase another car down
here. I changed my mind about ten times a day. Finally I decided
to pull it behind the van and ship it too. I contacted Tropical
and they sent me a check list of the requirements for shipping the
vehicles.
We began to pack the stuff we wanted to bring with us. In short
order, we had one whole room of our apartment full of boxes of
stuff. Time to sort again. With much effort, we got our selection
down to the thirty cubic feet that we could take in the van and
the little bit of stuff that would fit in the Triumph. We were
ready to go.
Then the discussion began about how much money to bring. My
wife was uncomfortable with carrying large amounts of cash on the
trip. I was equally uncomfortable with the idea of getting to St.
Croix and then finding we didn’t have enough ready cash to do all
we needed to do. The final decision was to clean off both credit
cards and bring $5000 in cash. Another hurdle down.
The night before we were to leave, I picked up the tow-dolly to
pull the Triumph with. I hooked it up to the van, pulled the
Triumph up on it and disaster. Not only was the rear of the
Triumph dragging the ground, but it was obvious the van was
overloaded. After much cursing, we decided to drive both vehicles
to Florida and take some of the boxes of stuff in the van to the
post office. While Customs will allow thirty cubic feet carried in
a vehicle, the weight will exceed the limits of most vehicles.
Count on bringing less. But off we went, Linda driving the van and
me in the Triumph.
Knowing very little about Florida geography, we decided that
the Tropical port was near Miami, so we decided to spend a couple
of days touristing on South Beach. We made the trip to South Beach
very leisurely. We doubled the amount of time it typically takes
to drive that distance. After arriving in South Beach, we decided
to scout out Tropical’s location. Good thing we did. It’s a two
hour drive north of South Beach. That was another mistake. Oh,
well.
The actual shipping of the vehicles was quite simple. We had
followed the Tropical checklist religiously so we were only in
their offices for about twenty minutes. Now we were 1500 miles
from home and my cars were gone. That was a scary feeling.
When we arrived on St. Croix, we picked up our rental car from
Judi of St. Croix as we had done on our first trip. As before,
that went smoothly. We picked the Waves at Cane Bay as our short
term rental. Victoria was very helpful. All the boxes of stuff we
mailed, we sent to her address. That worked very well. But now I’m
2500 miles from home and homeless and without my cars. I was
really nervous. It was time to get it together here.
We contacted a couple of realtors about long term rentals
because we wanted to get to know the island better and make sure
we wanted to stay here before we made the commitment of buying a
house. The realtors were very nice, but everything they showed us
was way out of our price range. Now I was getting very nervous.
Had we misread this island on our last trip? One day while out
driving around, I saw a “For Rent” sign on a driveway. I wrote
down the number, went back to the Waves and called. The next day
we had a lease on a small two bedroom house that was only slightly
more expensive than our apartment in Louisville. With the deposit
and first & last month’s rent, we spent a big chunk of our ready
cash. I was glad we had it to spend.
Our new landlord was very helpful. When we told him our cars
would be here the following Monday, he said he would take the day
and help us get them taken care of. That was a good thing because
I never would have found all the places we had to go. The Triumph
was a bit of a problem. Being a British car, I had to pay customs
on it. The problem was no one at the Customs office knew what a
Triumph was. They had Tropical bring the car to customs so they
could look at it. Everyone in the Customs office and all the
people at Tropical had to look at it. That was a little exciting.
Our landlord’s son owns an insurance agency. We decided it
would be a good idea to buy our car insurance from him. He also
said he would take care of the registrations for us. Not knowing
any better, we drove the cars from his office to our new home. You
really aren’t supposed to drive a vehicle in the Virgin Islands
with Kentucky license plates on them. I guess we could have gotten
in a lot of trouble, but we got them here. By the next day, they
had Virgin Islands plates on them. More of our money gone.
Fortunately, Customs and the road tax people took Visa. The
insurance guy took a personal check from a Kentucky bank. Most
folks won’t do that.
Next was getting a mailing address. They don’t home deliver
mail here so we went to the Post Office to get a box. When I went
by myself, there were none available and the lady put our name on
a waiting list. The next day the landlord went with me and we got
the box. More money spent.
I need a bank account. The banking choices here are much more
limited than in the states. After talking to people, we picked a
bank. We gave them most of the cash we had left and wrote a check
on our Kentucky account to open the checking account. We were
informed it would be about two weeks before we could access the
money from the check. To open a bank account, you need a physical
address, a mailing address, photo ID and your social security
card. You don’t have those, you don’t open an account.
Now we have a place to live, cars to drive, a mailing address
and a checking account. We need a phone and cable. That’s a trip
to Innovative. They have virtually all the communications systems
on the island. When you go to Innovative, be prepared to sit a
while. It took an hour and a half of waiting and about ten minutes
with the people to get all set up. More deposits required. More
cash gone. They won’t take temporary checks.
Finally, I want to get a Virgin Islands driver’s license. VI
driver’s license is the most expensive in the world to get. First
I go to the driver’s license office and get the forms. Then I have
to schedule a physical ($30 at the clinic). Then I have to get two
passport photos ($13). Then I have to take the written test ($10
for the test and $2 for the forms). After passing the written
test, I have to pay for the license ($35). Now I’m all set. Except
that the camera is broken. I explain that I have given them two
pictures and they can use one of them. Oh no. They are attached to
my application. I don’t know why. Three weeks later, the camera
was fixed and I have my VI driver’s license.
Here’s a list of things you have to have here. A social security
card. I have shown my social security card more times since we
have been here than I have in the last thirty years. A passport.
Everybody wants to see a passport for ID. If you try to use your
out of state driver’s license, they just look at you. Bunches of
cash. Including the trip to Florida and all the deposits that were
required, our moving expenses were nearly $7000. You could
probably do it for less, but I don’t know how. When I stop and
think about it, except for the plane tickets, I don’t think it
cost us a whole lot more to move here than when we moved to a
different state.
This may all sound like a hassle. I prefer to think of it as
part of the adventure of starting a new phase of our life. Is it
worth it? So far the answer is a resounding YES.
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