April-May 2015
Well, we're finally here.
After several months of planning and build up, we finally arrived in London a week ago - and what a week it's been.
After touching down Gatwick, getting Oyster cards and SIM cards, we lugged our, er, luggage along on the Tube and through the streets, and finally made it to Bex's place in West Hampstead. It's been a handy base for the week.
Right up to when we got off the plane, it hadn't sunk in that were moving to the other side of the world. Somehow it felt like we were going on holiday and would be back at work in Wellington in a few weeks. Not anymore - living out of a suitcase for weeks and the reality of finding work and a flat have changed that.
It's taken a while to adjust to the time difference, but after a few 3:30am starts I think we're mostly there.
The biggies - jobs, flats and bank account
We're finding the job market here quite different to back home. For starters, everyone seems to advertise and find jobs through recruitment agencies. I can see how they're helpful (more on that soon) but our short experience so far has been a bit mixed.
I've registered with a couple and they haven't contacted me back (after several days). Rach registered with one and had to go through a rigorous 2.5 hour registration, interview and testing process. The others she registered with so far haven't contacted her either.
So, on helpful agents: I've been lucky enough to land a temp job - 3 weeks doing data entry and scheduling (but in reality I don't know what the job entails) - through one agent, starting Tuesday. My registration process was a piece of cake compared to Rach's - a 3 minute interview followed by basic spelling, Word, and typing tests done and dusted in under an hour. They were taking me on for general admin roles (as opposed to Rach's which was for HR specifically) which might explain the difference. Obviously it's not the ideal job for me, but it's a foot in the door, and it'll be good to have some income. Hopefully I can be properly registered soon with agencies that can get me more permanent and relevant work. Rach was put forward for what would have been a great job, but her CV was apparently "too senior".
Flats are less strange, and more straightforward. After a fair bit of Gumtree browsing and calling around, we did some flat viewings all over the city. We've now landed a nice little one bedroom flat in Kensal Green. The paperwork should be finalised in a few days' time.
And lastly, the bank account - our appointment was to be Thursday morning but the bank manager's wife apparently went into labour so it's now been postponed to next Thursday. Fair enough - that's a pretty solid reason to have it postponed - but it's still a bit of a pain for us.
The more fun stuff - exploring London and Britbound
We've spent a fair bit of time out and about the city, getting good use out of our monthly Oyster tickets.
We did the really big attractions back in 2013 so we've mostly visited the areas we missed last time. They've generally been the lower key areas, and where we've looked at flats - around Liverpool Street, near the British Museum, West Hampstead, Clapham, Kensal Green, Rotherhithe, Notting Hill, Hyde Park, Covent Garden, Holborn, Little Venice...
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Outside the British Museum. |
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A very patient and calm dog at the Canalway Cavalcade festival. |
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A monument outside somebody's house. |
We also had our Britbound arrival session a few days after we landed. They're a good bunch of people, extremely helpful and welcoming and full of information. We also hadn't realised exactly what they do - we thought once they set you up you were on your own. But no - they seem to have built up a good community of Britbounders (mostly Kiwis, Aussies and Canadians) over here. They've also got a year round events calendar which we'll be hoping to take advantage of.
So we're starting to feel more comfortable. Those first few days are quite daunting, but things are slowly starting to click into place. We're definitely not there yet, but it's starting to move in the right direction.
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How very British.
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