A Working Holiday Visa Overview for Americans

Here’s the thing about visas: unless you have immigrated or seriously considered trying to immigrate, you probably don’t know how difficult the process is. There are options, of course—if you do have in-demand skills you can get sponsored by a company that will bring you to your desired country, you can move abroad as a student at a foreign university or as the spouse of a foreign citizen, or if you have a lot of money or a pension you can retire to some beach town in Spain or Guatemala. But if you don’t have a ton of work experience and you’re happy just to get out for a year or two and live somewhere new, your best option is a working holiday visa.

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Until I lived in Ireland, I had never heard of a working holiday. But when I got to Ireland, it seemed like everyone was abroad (so many Canadians!) or going abroad (to Canada, Australia, etc.) on this thing called a working holiday visa. Now, just about six years after I first arrived in Ireland, I’m on my second working holiday visa and I love the opportunity it’s given me to live abroad for a longer period of time. I think one of the reasons Americans aren’t as likely to do working holidays is that we have fewer options than other nationalities (for example, Canadians can go to over 30 countries, whereas Americans only have 5 options, and three of those require you to be a student or recent graduate), but I think another reason is that we just don’t know about them! So I wanted to write up a little guide to working holiday visas available to Americans.

Note: Obviously, nothing I say here is legal or official advice in anyway. I will be providing links to the relevant government websites and I suggest you utilise them. Also, while requirements are often similar for folks from other countries, there are some differences so make sure to look up your respective country’s visa options if you are not from the States.


 

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Why get a Working Holiday visa? 

Let’s start with the big question: why apply for a working holiday visa rather than just going on vacation? For one thing, the visa lets you stay much longer than the regular tourist allowance. Generally, you get 12 months, and for Australia you can even get a whole extra year if you do 3 months of work in a rural area during your first year. And oh yeah, you’re allowed to work. Much easier to fund your travels without depleting all your savings if you’re allowed to have a job. The great thing about the working holiday visa is that you don’t have to be sponsored by a company, so you don’t have to have a job ahead of time and you can also do jobs that wouldn’t normally be eligible for a high-demand, high-skills work visa, like hospitality or admin work. It’s a great way to get to really explore a country and keep some money in your bank account as you go.

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The easiest options: Australia and New Zealand

To get a working holiday visa to Australia or New Zealand, pretty much the only thing you need is to be aged 18 to 30. Places in the Australian and New Zealand working holiday programs are unlimited for Americans, and to apply for the New Zealand visa is even free (for Australia it’s about 350USD). The visa comes through quickly (for NZ it took a couple days and for Australia only a couple of minutes) and then you can head off on your great adventure! You will need to be able show a couple thousand dollars in savings—although nobody I know has ever actually been asked for this at immigration, it’s still a good idea to have until you can get set up with an apartment, a job, and so on.

So which one should you do? Well of course, my recommendation is both! But if you feel like you can’t escape the real world for too long or you’re on the edge of 30 and only have time to squeeze one in before you age out, I would definitely go for New Zealand. I’ll write a longer post about this soon though, so stay tuned.

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For students and new grads: Ireland, Singapore, and South Korea

I didn’t technically do the Ireland working holiday visa because I went to grad school in Ireland and so the visa I got after I finished was a “postgraduate visa” rather than a “working holiday visa,” but in essence, it was the same. One of the great things about the Irish WHV is that there is no age limit, as long as you are a current college or grad student, or have graduated in the last 12 months. On the other hand, for most of us who went to college straight out of high school, that timeframe has long since passed. However, if you are still in school or thinking of going back, it’s a great option to keep in mind!

To be honest, I don’t know a ton about the Singapore and Korea working holidays. For both, you must be a student/recent grad, and for Singapore your school must be ranked in the top 200 globally. There’s also an age requirement of 18-30 for Korea and 18-25 for Singapore. So while it is possible, it’s definitely more limited, but I wanted to bring them up in case you’ve dreamed of going to Asia but aren’t interested in something like English teaching, and in case the parameters apply.

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The bottom line

A working holiday visa is generally only temporary (it can’t usually be extended and if you want to stay longer you have to find sponsorship for a different visa type), but it’s an amazing way to experience long-term travel in a different part of the world. You’ll meet locals and other travelers, mix work and adventure, and come back richer in life but not poorer in savings (at least not significantly poorer… hopefully). Obviously it does often mean putting career and other aspects of your life on hold, but I think it is 1000 percent worth the trade-off and I would recommend it to almost anyone if it is available to you. This is only a small overview of working holiday visas, but if you have any questions, please reach out! I love to share my experiences and advice.

Happy travels!

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Heartbeats, holidays, hopefulness, helplessness

When I was in grad school in Ireland, my friends and I made an agreement that if one of us should find ourselves with an unwanted pregnancy, we would rearrange our schedules for an immediate “girls’ holiday” to the UK—cocktails, spa visits, shopping, all that fun, female stuff. And an abortion.

It’s something that I had never had to think about in the United States. Roe v. Wade had been settled by the Supreme Court almost two decades before I was born, and while another Supreme Court ruling from my own home state, Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey, allowed for more restrictions and guidelines, abortion would have been generally accessible to me had I needed it.

Continue reading “Heartbeats, holidays, hopefulness, helplessness”

It’s Women’s Equality Day (via Harsh Reality)

I haven’t written a journalistic-type article since… I was a journalism major? But I’m pretty proud of this one. In honour of Women’s Equality Day, a US holiday commemorating the (98th anniversary) of the Nineteenth Amendment, I spoke to four women in different countries (USA, Ireland, Canada, New Zealand) about women’s rights in their respective countries, and their hopes for the future. I’m hoping to do more with their words because they had such amazing things to say—maybe a series of some sort on my blog? But for now, I’m delighted to share this piece I wrote for Harsh Reality:

August 26 is Women’s Equality Day in the United States, commemorating the anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which gave American women the right to vote. In the USA, women’s rights have seen huge strides forwards (as well as some big steps back). But how do women’s rights in the States compare to other countries around the world? Four women — from the United States, Ireland, New Zealand, and Canada — weigh in.

Read the rest at Harsh Reality

Best of Ancient Ireland

After General Leia, Finn’s face, and those cute little floofy owl creatures, the star of The Last Jedi was surely Skellig Michael. Throughout the film, magnificent shots of the Irish island punctuated the intergalactic action.

While this little island is now famous worldwide as the hideout of Luke Skywalker, it has always been an important part of Irish history. The site of an ancient monastery, it is also well known as a conservation area for an array of seabirds such as puffins. Skellig Michael can only be visited from May to October because of the rough ferry route, and unfortunately I haven’t had the chance to explore it yet, but while I was in Ireland this fall Steve took me around the Ring of Kerry and we were able to see the Skelligs (Skellig Michael and its smaller companion) in the distance.

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I’m sure I’ll get the chance to explore Skellig Michael and its craggy, epic cliffs at some point in the next few years, but there’s no shortage of impressive historic sites in Ireland, and I have been lucky enough to visit a number of them. Here are a few of my favourites.

Brú na Bóinne / Newgrange

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Stonehenge may be the most famous example of a neolithic site in the British and Irish isles, but it’s also one of the most overrated. You have to drive nearly two hours from London to walk around a largely unimpressive circle of rocks—at a distance and on the other side of a cordon, mind. Newgrange, on the other hand, is a chance to get up close and personal with a way cooler instance of neolithic architecture and design. This site is located a mere 45 minutes from Dublin and consists of a circular mound with an underground passageway made of stone that you can actually enter.

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The most notable feature of this site is that the upper entrance of the mound aligns with the sun on the winter solstice so that a ray of light shines through into the inner chamber. To be inside the mound on this special day, you have to enter a lottery on your visit, and one of the reasons this site holds such a place in my heart is that I was actually lucky enough to win the lottery while I was living in Ireland. Unfortunately, the weather was too cloudy (in Ireland in December? You don’t say!) for any sun to make its way into the chamber, but it was still an incredible experience to know that we were standing in the same place, doing the same thing, as those who lived five thousand years before us.

Continue reading “Best of Ancient Ireland”

This weekend in #sports: 1 out of 4 ain’t bad?

Italy 20 – 61 Wales, Scotland 10 – 40 Ireland, England 55 – 35 France

I’ve never been a big sports fan in general. I’ve always liked to play sports, but apart from the Olympics fever that grips us all to some degree every two years, I won’t watch much of anything apart from football [note: to be fair, I do make up for this by watching as much football as humanly possible].

However, while living in Ireland I came to discover that rugby is much more similar to soccer football than American football in terms of skill and speed, with a set of rules I still don’t quite understand but find interesting to watch. Sitting on the floor of a packed Galway pub, at the edge of my non-existent seat while the referee deliberated about France’s last-second try in the final match of the 2013 Six Nations (the try was eventually taken away due to a forward pass, giving Ireland the win both of the match and the tournament), was at least as intense as watching anything during this summer’s football World Cup.

I caught the odd match on television or at the pub during the year, and went to see Munster take on Clermont live in Limerick in November (a fun, if cold, experience), but I don’t follow any team or league closely like I do football. Still, when this year’s Six Nations rolled around, I was firmly supporting Ireland. And this year’s tournament was just as dramatic as the last.

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On the final day, Wales, Ireland, and England all had the chance to nab the title. Each team needed to win their match (against Italy, Scotland, and France, respectively), and then furthermore they had to have a higher points difference than either of the other two. With Wales beating Italy comfortably, Ireland had to win by 21 points to take the lead. Despite odds, they managed a record-tying victory over Scotland to put themselves ahead.

One of the key moments of the game came when Scotland appeared to have gotten a try, but video replay (come on football, get on this!) showed Ireland had made an important tackle to knock the player forward. The commentators speculated this could have been the difference-making tackle, and they turned out to be absolutely correct. In what has been said to be one of the best matches in recent memory (obviously I can’t comment having only watched one previous tournament and having only seen one half of this match due to being on the way to PPL Park to see the Union – more on this in a moment), England tok on France, needing a 26 point margin of victory to overtake Ireland. For the last 5 minutes, England was close, needing only one try to get ahead, but in the end they couldn’t quite get there. Despite scoring over 50 points against France, their points difference ended at +21, and the Irish boys in green were victors once again!

Philadelphia Union 0 – 2 FC Dallas

Now the bad times begin. Remember that picture of the snow from my post Friday? Well, 24 hours later the weather looked like this:

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The match had been postponed from the day before and the reschedule meant that my dad and I were able to pick up some fairly cheap tickets, so we headed to PPL Park in Chester, outside of Philadelphia. I didn’t follow the MLS closely the last two seasons, given that many of the matches started at midnight or later due to the time difference, but I was excited to see them again.

At first, things looked alright. Dallas were outplaying Philadelphia on the wings, with the U unable to match their opponents’ bursts of speed. But when about 20 minutes in, Sheanon Williams was injured and substituted for Fernandinho, things started to go downhill. Things went from bad to worse before the end of the first half; a stupid, Fellaini-esque elbow by Zach Pfeffer saw him sent off, and the Union were down to 10 men for the rest of the game.

The second half was sluggish, with two goals by FC Dallas giving them the 3 points, but few strong attempts overall. I was impressed by Eric Ayuk, a midfielder who debuted during the match and at least had the speed and push to compete with the opposing team, but as a whole the Union need to do much better in their next match. However, it’s still always fun to go to a game live, especially at a nice stadium like PPL Park, and especially when the weather is 55F and sunny after a day of 34 and snow.

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Liverpool 1 – 2 Manchester United

Well. This was the big one. I had a good feeling about it, based on Liverpool’s recent form. A good enough feeling that I had no qualms about talking smack to my United-supporting boyfriend (although to be fair I would probably do that even if our form was LLLLL). That feeling didn’t last long. Juan Mata is the only player I like at Manchester United (I was sad when he left Chelsea for the only team I dislike more than Chelsea), so of course he scored the first (and later the second) goal. Liverpool were outplayed at every turn in the first half.

I hoped that things might pick up in the second half, and the entry of Stevie G, back from injury, seemed to indicate that they might. Well, the drama picked up, but not to Liverpool’s benefit. Gerrard was shown a red card for a reckless tackle after less than a minute on the pitch, unceremoniously putting an end to his long string of entertaining matches against Liverpool’s biggest rival.

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While even with my obvious bias I have to admit that there was some merit to the sending off, an equally biased United supporter should then have to admit that the referee should’ve sent Phil Jones off shortly afterward for an equally bad tackle. Instead, he merely received a yellow card – the latest in a long line of bad refereeing decisions in the Premier League this season (although at least Atkinson sent off the right Liverpool player).

Despite the blow, I actually felt more optimistic about the team when the match ended. We conceded another goal (Mata again), but pulled one back with a great run by Coutinho leading to a goal from Sturridge. In the final minutes, Mignolet saved a penalty taken by Wayne Rooney, continuing his long, goalless time at Anfield (only 1 goal in 11 games played against us at our home ground). It was a dirty game, and obviously not the result we wanted, but I guess it could have been worst.

Barcelona 2 – 1 Real Madrid

Take that last sentence above and transplant it here. A dirty game, a bad result, but at least it was exciting.

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Blah blah blah, something something Ronaldo versus Messi… now that that’s out of the way, I’ll begin with the worst part: Suarez reminded Liverpool fans what we’re missing. If we could’ve brought him on instead of Balotelli, sure, he might’ve bitten Rooney, but he would’ve scored an equaliser, and really, would anyone (but Wayne) really care?

Poor defending and a good free kick led to Barcelona’s first goal. The drama began a minute later when Pepe was booked for a foul on Suarez. A few minutes after that, the latter also went into the book for a foul on the former. Fight, fight, fight, fight…

Of course it was Ronaldo who equalised, but the best move of the play was Benzema’s backheel. Obviously the best possible commentator for El Clásico is BeIn Sport’s exuberant Geordie, Ray Hudson, who waxed poetically/orgasmically about this and every other play of the game.

In the second half: more yellow cards! Suarez scored – ugh. Mascherano acted like a diving whiny brat. Barcelona won. Not great, Bob.

So there you have it: this weekend in “Matches I care about of sports I watch.” Tune in next week (or after international break), maybe, and hopefully at least one of these teams (excluding Ireland), will get a few more points in the bag.

25 stupid things I already miss about Ireland

I’m a very sentimental person, especially when it comes to being nostalgic. I could go on for hours about some happy or bittersweet memory, and I have to admit I’m one of those people who tells people present for an event about the event, just because it’s such a great story. And if there’s one place I’ll be sentimentally nostalgic about for a long time (forever), it’s Ireland. After a year and a half in Galway – getting my Master’s in Literature and Publishing, meeting amazing people, exploring one of the most beautiful countries I’ve ever seen – I moved back to the United States last week. On one hand, I’m excited; I have plans to move across the country in the next few months and I’m looking forward to a new adventure. On the other hand, I miss Ireland already. I could make this blog post about all the wonderful people I met and all the amazing places I visited and how much I love Galway even when it rains for two weeks straight. But c’mon, that’s mushy, I’m not going to make ye read that. Instead, here are 25 of the silliest things I already miss about living in Ireland:

  • Getting garlic-cheese chips AND curry-cheese chips after a night out.
  • Cans by the Spanish Arch (or anywhere else)
  • Every sentence containing “Ah,” “sure,” or “be grand”
  • “Ah, sure, be grand” also being a complete sentence in itself
  • That ridiculous Garth Brooks/Croke Park saga

Continue reading “25 stupid things I already miss about Ireland”