Wednesday, February 4, 2015

"Bringing Dogs to Ecuador" and a Family of 5- {from HOU TX = Tejas to UIO Quito, EC} 08 OCT 2014

IMG_0410
In Bush International Airport waiting for our next flight. Jonas, Ellie and Greta.
If you intend to bring pets, in our case two dogs, to Ecuador it is good to get started early and work with your local veterinary that is familiar with the USDA (United States Department of Agriculture) International Animal Health Certificate and the requirements.




Here is how our story went. Several months before our anticipated moving date I began researching the requirements to take pets out of the US and bring them into Ecuador. Around every corner there are different people providing conflicting information on this process. I also found that trying to obtain any information from Ecuador was a bit challenging.




I have attached a link at the bottom of this page to the USDA requirements for importing a dog into Ecuador. This form was not available, or at least I did not find it, when I started the process. At that time there was a document from the USDA that listed the requirements. The information is basically the same, only in a different format as the one listed here.



After going over the requirements I knew I had to get started soon. I went to our Vet clinic and met with one of the vets. I discussed the International Animal Health Certificate with him and provided him a copy of the USDA requirements for importing an animal to Ecuador. A copy was also given to the office manager who would be the one completing the form including the translations.



The dogs began receiving the required vaccines. At the time, the rabies vaccine had to be given at least 60 days prior to the date of travel, and the remainder of the vaccines at least 21 days prior to travel. It appears now, on the new form, the rabies vaccine only needs to be given 21 days prior to travel, the same as the other vaccines. Of course, I recommend you discuss all of this information with you vet at least 3 months prior to travel. Also if your dog’s rabies vaccination has expired,



I would again go back to the previous times of getting the vaccine at least 60 days prior to travel.
So here we are with our dogs all vaccinated just waiting for the next step in the process. That would be getting your dogs treated for internal and external parasites within 21 days of travel. We are about two weeks away from our flight date and off to the vet we go for parasite treatment. This was pretty painless, for me anyway. Each dog got a dose of Ivermectin for the internal parasites and a topical treatment for ticks and fleas. The vet just used an over the counter topical treatment, I don’t recall which one. It was K9 Advantix or Front Line, or one of the other brand name treatments.  We then went home to wait for our next appointment.



Here is where it got a little tricky. One of the last requirements is that the animal must be examined by the vet within 10 days prior to travel to ensure the animal is healthy and suitability for travel. The vet also has to inspect the travel containers for the pets and certify they are sterilized. The vet then completes and signs the USDA International Animal Health Certificate.  That document must then go to the USDA that serves the area you live, in our case Austin, Texas. The office manager said she has done them before and sent them by overnight mail and overnight return mail. With such a short time and us just 3 hours from Austin, we decided to take the certificate to the USDA ourselves for approval. So off the Austin went went. Dropped the documents off around 7:45 am. We were the first ones there.



 The clerk taking the documents said they don’t usually get started until around 9:00 am because that is when most vet clinics open. The bottom line was they USDA was going to find something wrong with the documents and would have to call our vet to fix it. We went back to our hotel room to wait. Around 11:00 am we were getting antsy and decided to go back to the USDA office and wait. And we did wait until a little past noon when we were presented with the now USDA approved and certified International Animal Health Certificate. We were then off to the office of the Texas Secretary of State for an apostille.



 Remember I said some information we were getting was conflicting? This is one of those times. During the research I saw different opinions and information of how this process worked. Lots of documents require an apostille for use in Ecuador, so being  told it was necessary made sense. We went into the Secretary of State Document certification office and met with one of the workers. She told us that they did not apostille this type document. Oops, we were told something different. Thanks for your help.




<read original link> http://www.ecuadorellie.com/mar.../bringing-dogs-to-ecuador/

The Bowen Knot: Moving to Ecuador with Dogs ~ FurBabies Sasha

The Bowen Knot: Moving to Ecuador with Dogs ~ FurBabies Sasha: OMGosh, moving Internationally with Dogs is complicated and it can be so expensive.

I was at my wits end trying to figure out all the USDA Guidelines,
Ecuador Guidelines, what shots, when to get shots, rabies shots,
Microchip or not, Parasite checks, flea medications, and the list goes on and on.  Then I got on the phone with our new friends Brenda & Bard.  They had recently moved down to Ecuador from nearby town back in November, with their two FurBabies.  Brenda called me up after I left her a frantic message...




  I told her how stressed out I am with the whole PupProcess.  I filled her in on the process we have dealt with so far and she suggested that I make an appointment with the Dade City Animal
Clinic in Dade City, Florida....<read more> The Bowen Knot: Moving to Ecuador with Dogs ~ FurBabies Sasha:

Monday, February 2, 2015

Howard's Blog: The Ecuador Coast

Howard's Blog: The Ecuador Coast:

Monday, February 2, 2015-

 The Ecuador Coast-

Wednesday afternoon we joined our friends Curt and Scott in a rental car from Cuenca Car Share and started the six hour journey to the coast of Ecuador.  The cities on our agenda were Puerto López and Montañita. This was the first trip for Mike and me completely across and through Cajas National Park. This part of The Andes are known for unpredictable weather and fog. We weren't disappointed.

 There was plenty of fog and Scott did an excellent job getting us across the mountains safely. Once we got to the other side of the mountain there was a drastic change in the landscape. The area is mostly flat with some mountains in the distance. The most dramatic change was in the temperature. Cuenca was in the high 60's when we left at noon.

The other side of the mountain was humid and 90-degrees or hotter. The highway was surrounded, on both sides, by agriculture. We saw sugar cane, cocoa, and lots of banana trees. From this point forward, the most entertaining part of the trip was observing the traffic.....Howard's Blog: The Ecuador Coast:

Argentinian airlines plans to start flights to Quito UIO & GYE in DEC 2015

ECUADOR NEWS MAGAZINE: Argentinian airlines plans to start flights to Qui...: Ecuador news magazine - Quito, Feb. 02 feb -

Argentinian airlines plans to start flights to Quito and Guayaquil in December 2015


Ecuador
news magazine - Quito, Feb. 02 feb -The company Argentine Airlines
announced it would open operations to Ecuador at the end of 2015.


FromDecember 1, 2015, the Argentina national company will offer a daily flight between Buenos Aires-Ezeiza and Quito and Guayaquil, for which Boeing 737-800 aircraft carries eight passengers in Business Class and 162 in Economy.

With the resumption of flights to Ecuador, a destination abandoned after its privatization in the 1990s by the government of Carlos Menem, the company now serves the SkyTeam alliance "in all of South America"


From December 1, 2015, the Argentina national company will offer a daily flight between Buenos Aires-Ezeiza and Quito and Guayaquil, for which Boeing 737-800 aircraft carries eight passengers in Business Class and 162 in Economy. 

With the resumption of flights to Ecuador, a destination abandoned after its privatization in the 1990s by the government of Carlos Menem, the company now serves the SkyTeam alliance "in all of South America".

The company has already launched flights to Salvador de Bahia, Havana, Cancun and Punta Cana, but postponed until December flights to Quito and Guayaquil, despite having announced that they would begin in April 2015. 

Aerolíneas Argentinas is ranked twenty-fifth place among the hundred best companies worldwide according to a survey by eDreams. 

The study last year by more than 90,000 users eDreams determined that the airline is among the leading companies in commercial air transport according to customer preference. 

Friday, January 30, 2015

Event Horizon Chronicle: The Great Unraveling of 2015

Event Horizon Chronicle: The Great Unraveling of 2015: The coming year, 2015, will be a real humdinger. Get Ready For Financial Turbulence For the record, a major, global, financial collapse .......Let The Games Begin

That is no accident. Ecuador will hold the rotating presidency of CELAC in 2015. As Ecuadorean head of state, Correa will therefore occupy a crucial position of international leadership in 2015. It will not have been lost on the Chinese that Rafael Correa is a PhD economist, whose doctoral work at the University of Illinois had to do with "game theory."

 Game theory is concerned with the mathematical modeling of strategic decision-making, including international decision-making. It is widely used and studied in economics, policy making and political science.


Translation: the Chinese and Latin Americans are going to take the USSA to school. It looks like 2015 will be a Chinese chess match, with the theme being inter-regional, global cooperation, on a win-win
basis, by the Chinese, Russians, and scores of other nations in CELAC and the NAM...<read more> http://eventhorizonchronicle.blogspot.com/2014/12/the-great-unraveling-of-2015.html


Jeff Rense & Dr. Richard Sauder - A Catastrophe Beyond Measure 

Published on Feb 11, 2015
Clip from January 29, 2015 - guest Dr. Richard Sauder on the Jeff Rense Program. Click on the hazmat symbol on the mask or here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vYHYRo4XlQI
 



Thursday, January 29, 2015

Our New Andean Life: Damn Goats!

Our New Andean Life: Damn Goats!: Damn Goats!


 As many of you know we have been having serious issues with our goats. To the point where we are seriously considering selling them.  First it started off with moving up here on this mountain above Cuenca and eventually not having enough pasture.  So, we created more pasture with the hopes of moving them back and forth between pastures every two months or so.


 Well, the wire that was sold to Mark as aluminum was not and has started to rust, which has created shorts in the wire.  Which means that the electric power running through the fence is weak and the
goats have learned that.  Every two or three times a day they go through or hop the fence to head to greener pastures.  Our neighbor's pastures....<read more> http://ournewandeanlife.blogspot.com/2014/03/damn-goats.html


Sunday, January 18, 2015

PIECES OF OUR PAST: RON O'QUINN - Cotacachi, Ecuador

<Jour-Ja-Add.Comments>:) "To update this report, I want to add that R&R Rewind Ron O'Quinn moved down here to Ecuador and lives 2 hrs North of Quito in Cotacachi back in JUL 2014."
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PIECES OF OUR PAST: RON O'QUINN: An Oldie But a Goodie Who Still Rocks, If it’s a Saturday night and you are listening to the your favorite oldies music, chances are good that you will hear the voice of Dublin’s own,  Ron O’Quinn.  Ron has been spinning records, pushing buttons and wise cracking jokes on the radio
for all or parts of the last seven decades.  He has met  many of the most successful singers and rock and roll groups of the 1960s. And, many will tell you that his lively style, witty humor and musical knowledge make him one of the greatest disc jockeys  in Rock and Roll music history.



Ron O’Quinn was born on March 4, 1943 in McRae, Georgia.  There was a time when Ron joined the Air Explorer Scouts and dreamed of being a pilot like his  father, Joe O’Quinn, who was a fighter pilot in World War II and an instructor at Spence Field in Moultrie, Georgia.  Ron can’t think of a more caring mother than his own mother, Nita Adams...<readmore> http://dublinlaurenscountygeorgia.blogspot.com/2015/01/ron-oquinn.html?spref=fb




Georgia Music Hall of Fame- 

 -2012 Career Achievement Inductee- Ron O’Quinn’s long radio career began at WMGA in Moultrie, while he was a 17 year old junior in High School. After serving in the military as an Army Ranger, O’Quinn returned to his home state and resumed his radio career at WVLD in Valdosta, later working at WROD, Daytona; WLCY, Tampa; WFUN, Miami; WYLD, New Orleans, WUBE, Cincinnati and KYA, San Francisco. An unusual career move took Ron O’Quinn out of the United States in 1966, when he served as program director for Swingin’ Radio England, a pirate radio station broadcasting from the North Sea off the British coast. 

This job gave him the opportunity to accompany the Beatles on their U.S. tour in August, 1966, and led to his induction in the Pirate Radio Hall of Fame. Though he was out of radio for several years, Ron returned to the business in 1987, when he syndicated a weekly show heard on 88 stations in the U.S., Rock ‘n Roll Reunion.

 He also hosted a local oldies show each weekend on WQZY and WKKZ for 14 years. Ron now has a weekly syndicated show, Rock ‘n Roll Rewind, which is heard all over Europe. Produced from his Glenwood, Georgia home, a version of this weekly program also runs on several radio stations in Georgia.-
http://www.grhof.com/2012CAOQuinn.htm