Welcome back fam, I hope this video helped clarifying something’s for you. Find Vera here youtube.com/@VerabellaOparah Watch my process as I move to Australia here ua-cam.com/play/PLzT-fbvmNghL7nL4js-zNNVFBlH-41U1A.html More exciting news coming soon💙 Love Deo
I will be waiting for your own experience. It's usually explicit. Thanks for inviting her although I expected her questions especially the most important ones to be answered clearly but it wasn't. Thank you so much for your time and effort. More win ma 🙏🙏
Looks like Verabella has limited knowledge of Australia, her response/comments are too general and doesn't reflect deep facts about Australia. In terms of climate, from the Northern tip of Australia to few latitudes before before Brisbane is a tropical (warm humid, like in Nigeria) around Brisbane to the Gold Coast is sub-tropical (a bit milder than Nigeria). The Climate of New South Wales (NSW) is diverse, Sydney is warm temperate that it warm to mild summers and mild winters, but the southern part of NSW is cool temperate and can get really cold like -5 degrees, with snows in alpine areas. Canberra, which is the capital territory is like the coldest or second-third coldest CITY in Australia. Other cold cities include Melbourne, Adelaide, and Hobart, which are cool temperate zone. Don't underestimate the cold in these cities, it may not snow, but can be close to what you'd experience in southern England low lands/plains. All Australian cities are clean and well organized than what I have seen in the UK. Roads are bigger and houses more spacious. Australia is generally more beautiful than the UK and infrastructures are way better, including health care system. Australian wildlife is exaggerated than it is. Yes, they have some of the most dangerous creatures, including snakes, jelly fishes and spiders. However, the diversity of big animals isn't much, the diversity is more in small animals and invertebrates. As you would expect, the probability of you encountering a snake in the neighborhood increases as you go north due to the warmer climate and decreases as you go south due to the colder climate. In NSW, Sydney center of business district (CBD, otherwise known as downtown in North America) and regional Sydney (~50-100 km to the city center) are the most expensive, outside these areas is way cheaper to buy and rent a accommodation. Be also aware that the east coast of Australia including Sydney usually experience natural disasters (bushfire, flooding, hail storm) than most other parts of Australia. Personally, I would choose Melbourne, Canberra, and Perth over Sydney. Also note, these cities are more affordable than Sydney. I believe Racism in Australia is more subtle, as Aboriginal people were and still the land owners for over the last 50,000 years before British invasion 230 years ago and everyone else is a visitor or a tenant in Australia. So if a non-Aboriginal tells you to go back to your country, you can as well tell them to go back to theirs. Will you save more in Australia than the UK, oh yes. If you earn 5k/month as a single, you will enjoy yourself in Australia and save more, especially if avoid living in major city centers. However, UK visa/immigration is more straightforward and quicker, while that of Australia can be complex and slower. Just so you know, the salary package is not offered by all employers (so check with your employer) and you can only use it for key bills like childcare (I think rent too in certain situation) but definitely not for groceries or couch or their likes.
Certainly you can get a meal card on salary packaging to buy groceries and eat out, or you can nominate big bills like rent or mortgage, that’s with Eziwzy salary packaging.
Verabella, I'm so happy you have had a good experience living in Oz and felt welcomed. I'm in Brisbane, we don't see many African's here but more now than 10 years ago it's getting better, more multicultural, when I first brought my wife to Brisbane ~30 years ago (she's Chinese) people would stare at her because there were so few Asians around, but now there are a lot of Asians, hopefully in another 10 years it will be the same for Africans too 🤞🏻 Brisbane is not considered "regional" for Immigration, Adelaide and Darwin are, but the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast are considered "regional" and are only a short drive to Brisbane, and also have good Uni's so that's something to consider for people wanting to study in Australia. A small correction Darwin is not actually hotter than Sydney, Sydney can get 40+ºC days where as Darwin and north QLD will rarely get above 35ºC even in Brisbane it's very rare to get 40ºC, these areas are hotter than Sydney because they have more days above 30ºc than Sydney A warm Winter day in Sydney might be 20ºC but a warm winter day in Brisbane can still be 30ºC . The other difference is the Humidity when it's hot Brisbane will be more Humid than Sydney at 30ºC and Darwin will be more humid than Brisbane in Darwin's wet season (Darwin is tropical it doesn't have summer and winter, but wet and dry seasons) I hope you continue to enjoy life in Oz and go explore different areas on your holidays
Hi ladies. I really enjoyed your video of your experience living in Australia. Also Vera welcome to Newcastle. I also live in Newcastle. I also work with a lot Nigerians who've made Newcastle home. I'm glad to hear that your experience here has been mostly positive. I am someone who has mixed race including Aboriginal but I look very very white. When I have a shift with someone from another country I'm always up for a chat because I am genuinely interested in a person's background and reason for moving to Australia. I have to say I have the most laughs when I work with someone from Nigeria. There is a language barrier at times but it's fun for us to try work out what the other is trying to say. Welcome to Australia and thank you for your honesty and love for Australia. I look forward to seeing more diversity in Newcastle. We aren't like Sydney because we are much better then them. So I hope you and your family continue to live in Newcastle and love it as we do. Lol yes we do have snakes and spiders but like you said we mostly don't see them here in suburban Newcastle but they are there. But it's different in Queensland where they have a lot of pythons and tree snakes that can make their way into your home. Above all, always be aware they're there and mostly found near bush land.
@@NurseDeo you're welcome. Tasmania also has snakes and spiders. They're about but since Tasmania is a lot cooler than the mainland you rarely see them. I lived in Hobart for 4 years and saw 1 snake that was crossing the road near bush land. They also have some nasty ants that jump onto your legs and bight if you get too close to their nest. Again very rare encounter. I worked with a south Sudanese man while living there and he told me some things were horrific. So was glad he and his family found safety in Australia. If you have any more questions I'm only too happy to answer. Have a wonderful day.
Hey Ethan, you’re very kind. People like you make it easier for foreigners like us to easily interact and integrate into the community. I’ve lived in Sydney but prefer here for many reasons 😅. Thanks for leaving such a kind comment. Bless your heart 🤍
@@grantparfitt1565 EXACTLY!!! We don’t really worry about ‘where’ you’re from. Aussies care about your character. Are you mean? No? Good. Are you predatory towards anyone? No? Good. Are you an asshole? No? Good! That’s what we worry about. If people come here with the goal of peace and harmony, then come on in!! You’re very welcome. ♥️
Why does everyone in NSW or Queensland assume it is always cold in Melbourne. We can have 3 or 4 days in a row of high 30s and low 40s. The only thing is that will be followed by a few days in low or mid 20s before it again climbs up to the high 30s. Yes it is colder on average than NSW in Winter.
I found your comments on spiders and snakes surprising. I live in Sydney on a suburban block and in my home have encountered poisonous spiders and snakes. I have been bitten by a redback spider in my yard, had a funnel web spider in my loungeroom which tried to bite me, and have seen numerous red belly black snakes which are poisonous. You always need to be aware and take precautions such as keeping yard clean and no long grass. My grass is mowed weekly to reduce risk.
So sorry about that, I think it depends on the area you live in New South Wales as I have heard climate is a bit colder and snakes do not like cold environments. It’s good you are keeping the grasses lowered. 💙💙
I live in Queensland's Lockyer Valley and I have Common Brown snakes and Red Belly Black snakes. The Red Belly Black is very timid of Humans but will attack and devour a Brown snake. I have encouraged the Red Belly Blacks for this reason and also there are no Human deaths recorded to them, they also keep the rodents at bay.
Thank you Nurse Deo for bringing this to us... Pls I want to find out if band 2 clinical support worker gets sponsorship for tier 2 visa...pls help me find out since you're an NHS staff
My Irish mother was told to go back to Ireland. That was in 1959. The Irish were mocked and parodied in the media and jokes right up to the 1990s. Australia was very racist, especially in the regional cities. Racism isn't as open anymore thank goodness. If you go to some outback communities it is the Asian community that is targeted. Racism isn't just against people of colour but also ethnic groups.
Australia is now a multicultural society so times and people have changed in regards to attitudes to other nationalities, that’s why so many Irish people immigrant to Australia. Unfortunately racism occurs in any country including Australia but less and less here as people become more welcoming and accepting of other peoples cultures.
@@NurseDeo …. Sorry Darling, no snakes… way out in the bush land and only if you go looking for them, you would be lucky to see a snake at all…. We are pretty safe from the deadly animals.
@@NurseDeo a wonderful part of Australia… quite different from the rest of the country…. A bit more of a slower pace …. Cleanest air in Australia, it reminds people of the English countryside…. Great place to visit…. And a Cooler climate.
@@craigalden9416 thank you, I got a job there so I’m just making more research. Do you think there will be less wild life? Like less snakes haha I’m scared
We have a lot of Doctors from the UK. World wide really, the City I live in, Townsville North Queensland, our Hospital is a training Hospital connected to our University JCU.
Hey Mathew, Australia need Drs like oxygen, and you'll be compensated and appreciated VERY WELL. If I tell you the amount GPs earn here, you'll be shocked. Imagine when you're now a specialist. I know that there's an exam that Drs write, Which is tricky as it should, but the sacrifice is definitely more than worth it at the end of the day when you become a Licensed MD. I'm not very familiar with the process, but just Google search will lead you in the right direction.
This video pretty much shows that there ain’t much difference between the UK and Australia, pretty much similar system. Guys Australia is just not the new paradise. Every country has its pros and cons. Wherever you’re in the western world, simply look for opportunities around you and make the best of it
UK is too crowded and the weather is generally awful, 1 day over 30 does not a summer make. I choose wide blue skies, far horizons, azure seas and Warmth with a capital 'w'.
@@stealthwarrior5768 Watch out for when they begin to move back to the UK Do you have an Idea how many migrants and indigenes moving out of Australia due to the high cost of living. You should watch the news more on Australian cost of living
Thanks For the information and i love your response to the question asked. As a teacher migrating to Australia from Nigeria through studies (special education)is it a versatile course that can quickly earn someone a PR? thanks
Good pm sis pls ao much its caf exam did I need to migrate to new zeal b4 it can be done, ao pls do video on how to get work and visa processing thankd
I am just watching your video for the first time and I will have love to relocate to Australia. Which I am planning to save from now on. I am 38 years old only obtained an HND in public administration and I have forex trading knowledge and a little knowledge on phone fixing skills. Am not married yet and no kids and please what will be your advice for me. Thanks
I agree with DG, if that’s your career goal, suggest you get some basic training where you live now. Coming here to study will be expensive!! If you have a qualification in this area already, it might then even help more in getting a visa. There are a fair few migration agents that also consult to help you map out a plan to get you down under. I suggest checking a few out and see what their advice is.
It totally depends on the company you work for. Each state and sometimes company has a different EBA (enterprise based agreement) so for e.g in Perth a full time worker working for the government is entitled to about 4 to 5 weeks if I’m not wrong. On top of that you get 10 days sick leave which about 5 of those are non cumulative. On top of that you are entitled to professional development leave, toil ( time off in lieu) etc. let’s say for eg you want to home for 7 weeks you’ll plan well and join those leaves together and you can be away on your holiday. Essentially it depends on who you work for but there’s plenty of leave
@@australasiafyyou also get Long Service Leave in Australia. Depending on your state after 7 to 10 years you are entitled to additional leave - in NSW after 10 years working for my employer I had 10 weeks LSL. You can use this leave as you see fit. One colleague added it to their annual leave an spent 12 weeks travelling in Nth America. I cashed out mine when I left the business - instant savings as I find the annual leave and sick leave provisions more than adequate.
I have lived in regional Australia for 56 years, I have seen only 3 snakes (out in the bush) and none ever in the house - and snakes never attack you unless you threaten them.
The eastern brown snake is a bit of a problem in Australia and is responsible for the vast majority of snake deaths given it is a common snake and also has a deadly venom. However, I think on average only 1 or 2 people die a year so it is not that common to be killed by a snake. A funny fact you can share with people who are worried is that Cows and Horses kill more people every year than snakes do here and I don't think we have had a spider fatality for more than a decade. So if you are going to be afraid, be careful of the cows! Kangaroos and bees also have killed more people than snakes in the last few decades. A snake is more afraid of you than a bee is. Most snake bites have occurred when the person didn't see the snake and surprised it. If you live in an area that is prone to having snakes, just keep the grass cut and make sure the garden isn't too densely packed so if a snake happens to be passing through, you can see it. They sometimes go looking for mice, if they don't find any they move on.
Oh this is helpful, how do we know the areas that are not prone to snakes.. I've heard big and cold cities. Is this true? Thank you so much for your comment.
@@NurseDeo Generally if you live in an inner suburb of a city you probably will never see a snake but snakes tend to follow the food. If you live near a river or lake and you have frogs, a lot of mice, bats, etc in the area then snakes might be in the area if they can get there avoiding humans. I've lived in inner Melbourne and Sydney for a long time and have never seen a snake in either city. A friend of mine lives very close to a river and he has seen a few in his lifetime. I also lived in rural NSW for a few years for work and I was expecting to see a lot of snakes there but only saw one and I went camping in the hills very often. The majority of snakebites occur for outdoor workers like gardeners, landscape employees and people who work in agriculture. It is generally not something Australians worry about.
Actually guys the name 'Toronto' is from UK and NOT from Canada - which itself borrowed it from UK. Toronto is a village in County Durham, England. Just google it !
We are desperate for nurses here. You are likely to have your qualifications checked for a match to Australian qualification equivalence. And you may need to be prepared to live in a remote or rural region for a period of time as determinedby the Immigration policy at the time. But those can be incredible, life changing experiences. And it is not unusual to find people settling in the regional towns as they immerse themselves into community, which of course is why the policy exists. We are a coast hugging nation, because we have a vast desert outback. 85% of Australians live with 50km of the sea! So settling in a regional town brings with it pros and cons, small close kit community, good house prices, but this comes with battling drought, fires and floods, fewer school options and limited career move opportunities. You MUST do your research first.
Australia is larger than Europe (and a bit bigger than the US, minus Alaska) So yes, of course there are colder parts, but even those colder parts get warmer than northern Europe in the summer and there are A LOT of warm parts.
Exactly!!!! 😭 the way she glows is on another level!! Even The Christmas tree behind Verabella should be jealous of how Deo is glowing... I'm jealous too
Honestly depends on what you want as a person. Nurses are paid well IN Australia. The ones I watch on UA-cam are not sharing. I think sharing is done by students. Even the lady on the video, her husband went to Australia as a student which explains why he had to share.
@@fiazhussain6771 DONT be lazy! People like you expect everything on a silver platter! Why can’t you just use google? Also she already did a video about moving as a nurse there and which agencies sponsor you
When you spoke of "black people" you were really talking about Africans, ignoring Aboriginals and Melanesians. But numbers are rising now Australia has more migrants from Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, Zimbabwe and South Africa.
Couldn’t you have silenced the child in the background? For such an important discussion… why would you guys let a child interfere?? Let’s try to be more professional please 😊🙏
@@onyebuchiihejirikauche9213 keep him/ her out of the conversation!?? Time and place for everything? Look at your reasoning! Maybe go duct tape your mouth..
@@NurseDeo I am sorry if my comment came off as rude hun. I didn’t mean that way, I just struggled to hear especially in the beginning with the child playing. I am not in any way discounting everything that you have done for the nursing community. I personally have benefited greatly 🙏
@@NurseDeo is it a common practice in Nigeria to clap hands to emphasise points of conversation? You guest repeatedly did it so I am curious. In Australia it’s not done . I am sure most of the population have something that annoys them. Thanks for your time.
Welcome back fam, I hope this video helped clarifying something’s for you.
Find Vera here
youtube.com/@VerabellaOparah
Watch my process as I move to Australia here
ua-cam.com/play/PLzT-fbvmNghL7nL4js-zNNVFBlH-41U1A.html
More exciting news coming soon💙
Love
Deo
I will be waiting for your own experience. It's usually explicit. Thanks for inviting her although I expected her questions especially the most important ones to be answered clearly but it wasn't. Thank you so much for your time and effort. More win ma 🙏🙏
@@something2curt Perhaps do your own research? If the questions weren’t answered to your taste.
That is good, can someone like a welder have opportunity in Australia
Nurse deo hi
Looks like Verabella has limited knowledge of Australia, her response/comments are too general and doesn't reflect deep facts about Australia. In terms of climate, from the Northern tip of Australia to few latitudes before before Brisbane is a tropical (warm humid, like in Nigeria) around Brisbane to the Gold Coast is sub-tropical (a bit milder than Nigeria). The Climate of New South Wales (NSW) is diverse, Sydney is warm temperate that it warm to mild summers and mild winters, but the southern part of NSW is cool temperate and can get really cold like -5 degrees, with snows in alpine areas. Canberra, which is the capital territory is like the coldest or second-third coldest CITY in Australia. Other cold cities include Melbourne, Adelaide, and Hobart, which are cool temperate zone. Don't underestimate the cold in these cities, it may not snow, but can be close to what you'd experience in southern England low lands/plains.
All Australian cities are clean and well organized than what I have seen in the UK. Roads are bigger and houses more spacious. Australia is generally more beautiful than the UK and infrastructures are way better, including health care system.
Australian wildlife is exaggerated than it is. Yes, they have some of the most dangerous creatures, including snakes, jelly fishes and spiders. However, the diversity of big animals isn't much, the diversity is more in small animals and invertebrates. As you would expect, the probability of you encountering a snake in the neighborhood increases as you go north due to the warmer climate and decreases as you go south due to the colder climate.
In NSW, Sydney center of business district (CBD, otherwise known as downtown in North America) and regional Sydney (~50-100 km to the city center) are the most expensive, outside these areas is way cheaper to buy and rent a accommodation. Be also aware that the east coast of Australia including Sydney usually experience natural disasters (bushfire, flooding, hail storm) than most other parts of Australia. Personally, I would choose Melbourne, Canberra, and Perth over Sydney. Also note, these cities are more affordable than Sydney.
I believe Racism in Australia is more subtle, as Aboriginal people were and still the land owners for over the last 50,000 years before British invasion 230 years ago and everyone else is a visitor or a tenant in Australia. So if a non-Aboriginal tells you to go back to your country, you can as well tell them to go back to theirs.
Will you save more in Australia than the UK, oh yes. If you earn 5k/month as a single, you will enjoy yourself in Australia and save more, especially if avoid living in major city centers. However, UK visa/immigration is more straightforward and quicker, while that of Australia can be complex and slower.
Just so you know, the salary package is not offered by all employers (so check with your employer) and you can only use it for key bills like childcare (I think rent too in certain situation) but definitely not for groceries or couch or their likes.
Omg Mathew, thank you for this!
This is so detailed and I enjoyed reading it,
Can I send your a message on instagram if you don’t mind, please help 😩😩
Certainly you can get a meal card on salary packaging to buy groceries and eat out, or you can nominate big bills like rent or mortgage, that’s with Eziwzy salary packaging.
Insightful
Thank you so much. This is very detailed.
Thank you so much
Nice chat with you Deo. We should do this again soon ❤. Guys don’t have double minds. Australia is truly great.
Thank you darling, sure we can💙💙💙
Am interested in coming to Australia can you put me through
Verabella, I'm so happy you have had a good experience living in Oz and felt welcomed.
I'm in Brisbane, we don't see many African's here but more now than 10 years ago it's getting better, more multicultural, when I first brought my wife to Brisbane ~30 years ago (she's Chinese) people would stare at her because there were so few Asians around, but now there are a lot of Asians, hopefully in another 10 years it will be the same for Africans too 🤞🏻
Brisbane is not considered "regional" for Immigration, Adelaide and Darwin are, but the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast are considered "regional" and are only a short drive to Brisbane, and also have good Uni's so that's something to consider for people wanting to study in Australia.
A small correction Darwin is not actually hotter than Sydney, Sydney can get 40+ºC days where as Darwin and north QLD will rarely get above 35ºC even in Brisbane it's very rare to get 40ºC, these areas are hotter than Sydney because they have more days above 30ºc than Sydney A warm Winter day in Sydney might be 20ºC but a warm winter day in Brisbane can still be 30ºC . The other difference is the Humidity when it's hot Brisbane will be more Humid than Sydney at 30ºC and Darwin will be more humid than Brisbane in Darwin's wet season (Darwin is tropical it doesn't have summer and winter, but wet and dry seasons)
I hope you continue to enjoy life in Oz and go explore different areas on your holidays
@@NurseDeo is there a group chat for people who want to relocate to Australia.
What about brisbane ? Especially for Nursing
Hi ladies. I really enjoyed your video of your experience living in Australia. Also Vera welcome to Newcastle. I also live in Newcastle. I also work with a lot Nigerians who've made Newcastle home. I'm glad to hear that your experience here has been mostly positive. I am someone who has mixed race including Aboriginal but I look very very white. When I have a shift with someone from another country I'm always up for a chat because I am genuinely interested in a person's background and reason for moving to Australia. I have to say I have the most laughs when I work with someone from Nigeria. There is a language barrier at times but it's fun for us to try work out what the other is trying to say. Welcome to Australia and thank you for your honesty and love for Australia. I look forward to seeing more diversity in Newcastle. We aren't like Sydney because we are much better then them. So I hope you and your family continue to live in Newcastle and love it as we do. Lol yes we do have snakes and spiders but like you said we mostly don't see them here in suburban Newcastle but they are there. But it's different in Queensland where they have a lot of pythons and tree snakes that can make their way into your home. Above all, always be aware they're there and mostly found near bush land.
This is well detailed
Thank you so much
How about Tasmania? How is living there like? The snakes as well haha
Thank you
@@NurseDeo you're welcome. Tasmania also has snakes and spiders. They're about but since Tasmania is a lot cooler than the mainland you rarely see them. I lived in Hobart for 4 years and saw 1 snake that was crossing the road near bush land. They also have some nasty ants that jump onto your legs and bight if you get too close to their nest. Again very rare encounter. I worked with a south Sudanese man while living there and he told me some things were horrific. So was glad he and his family found safety in Australia. If you have any more questions I'm only too happy to answer. Have a wonderful day.
Hey Ethan, you’re very kind. People like you make it easier for foreigners like us to easily interact and integrate into the community. I’ve lived in Sydney but prefer here for many reasons 😅. Thanks for leaving such a kind comment. Bless your heart 🤍
@@ethanmorrison6330 thank-you so much for your kind words 💙
Can't wait to experience life there
Beautiful nurse, this is an eye opener. Amazing video darling. Thanks for this Vera. I enjoyed this🥰
Thanks Ada 😍❤️
Thank you darling 💙💙
Deo, please do video on your skincare. The brightness from your skin is blocking my view😂😂😂😂
Your skin is skinnnningggg🧡🧡🥰🥰🤗💐
🤣🤣Thank you hun
I will
Nice information, I am now considering leaving the UK for Australia ☺️
Haha I know right
Get over here.We love everyone who is cool
@@grantparfitt1565 I will Grant, 🤣
@@grantparfitt1565 EXACTLY!!! We don’t really worry about ‘where’ you’re from. Aussies care about your character. Are you mean? No? Good. Are you predatory towards anyone? No? Good. Are you an asshole? No? Good! That’s what we worry about. If people come here with the goal of peace and harmony, then come on in!! You’re very welcome. ♥️
@@AnEnquiringMind Spoken like a kind law abiding happy Aussie.Happy newyear🙏👍🍺
Make can u make a video of UK vs us vs Australia vs Canada... If possible. The video is amazing
Hi dear, this video is Canada vs Uk
Kindly watch here
ua-cam.com/video/FRE60xxJxqg/v-deo.html
AWESOME!!! I will move to Aussie when i complete my Mental health nursing :)
You'll love it here💙
thank you, my love 😘@@NurseDeo
You’ve always have a worth watching content deo💙
Coming to join you baby girl, will surely reach out when I’m ready.
I’m glad you find my videos useful, thank you for watching 💙💙
I just subscribed ☺️Thanks Nurse Deo for this video.
Thank you and welcome 💙
Why does everyone in NSW or Queensland assume it is always cold in Melbourne. We can have 3 or 4 days in a row of high 30s and low 40s. The only thing is that will be followed by a few days in low or mid 20s before it again climbs up to the high 30s. Yes it is colder on average than NSW in Winter.
I think in comparison people have to choose one💙
I found your comments on spiders and snakes surprising. I live in Sydney on a suburban block and in my home have encountered poisonous spiders and snakes. I have been bitten by a redback spider in my yard, had a funnel web spider in my loungeroom which tried to bite me, and have seen numerous red belly black snakes which are poisonous. You always need to be aware and take precautions such as keeping yard clean and no long grass. My grass is mowed weekly to reduce risk.
So sorry about that, I think it depends on the area you live in
New South Wales as I have heard climate is a bit colder and snakes do not like cold environments. It’s good you are keeping the grasses lowered. 💙💙
I live in Queensland's Lockyer Valley and I have Common Brown snakes and Red Belly Black snakes. The Red Belly Black is very timid of Humans but will attack and devour a Brown snake. I have encouraged the Red Belly Blacks for this reason and also there are no Human deaths recorded to them, they also keep the rodents at bay.
After reading this comments...am never going to Australia 😅...any place one can holiday and avoid snakes and spiders😢
@@max41124 Wahala...😀😀😀😀
You are very diplomatic with your comments and I love you for that 😍
Thank you so much 💙
Medicare levy is included in your income tax, similar to the UK. You don't notice it.
Yesss, thank you so much 💙
Minimum wage is around $42,000 a year. Average for people working full-time is around 90k.
Thank you for sharing 💙
My captain, thank you for always bringing us great content
I’m glad you find it useful 💙💙💙
Nice video always 🔥
Thanks Deo
Thank you darling 💙💙
Thank you Nurse Deo for bringing this to us... Pls I want to find out if band 2 clinical support worker gets sponsorship for tier 2 visa...pls help me find out since you're an NHS staff
Not very common
My Irish mother was told to go back to Ireland. That was in 1959. The Irish were mocked and parodied in the media and jokes right up to the 1990s. Australia was very racist, especially in the regional cities. Racism isn't as open anymore thank goodness. If you go to some outback communities it is the Asian community that is targeted. Racism isn't just against people of colour but also ethnic groups.
Unfortunately, Racism is everywhere we just have to cope with it💙💙
Australia is now a multicultural society so times and people have changed in regards to attitudes to other nationalities, that’s why so many Irish people immigrant to Australia.
Unfortunately racism occurs in any country including Australia but less and less here as people become more welcoming and accepting of other peoples cultures.
@@stealthwarrior5768 racism is Everywhere 🤣🤣🤣
@@bellabana true💙
Hi, ladies. I enjoyed your video. Please could Verabella send me a direct link to her channel?
See pinned comment
I’m glad you enjoyed it 💙
Sorry… the weather in Melbourne can definitely get hot …. We’ve experienced 45 degrees at times…. So it can Get Hot.
Awww I heard so too
How about the snakes?😭😭
@@NurseDeo …. Sorry Darling, no snakes… way out in the bush land and only if you go looking for them, you would be lucky to see a snake at all…. We are pretty safe from the deadly animals.
Thank you Craig
What do you thing about Tasmania?
Your replies are so helpful
@@NurseDeo a wonderful part of Australia… quite different from the rest of the country…. A bit more of a slower pace …. Cleanest air in Australia, it reminds people of the English countryside…. Great place to visit…. And a Cooler climate.
@@craigalden9416 thank you, I got a job there so I’m just making more research.
Do you think there will be less wild life? Like less snakes haha
I’m scared
Great Deo, thanks for sharing.
Thanks for watching 💙💙
God bless you for this timely and relevant information. What about a Medical Doctor moving from UK to Australia?
I’m not sure about their process💙
But I’ll ask my doctor friend who moved from Nigeria 🇳🇬
There’s a shortage of doctors as well as nurses in Australia, so you’d have no trouble as long you pass all the required qualifications.
We have a lot of Doctors from the UK. World wide really, the City I live in, Townsville North Queensland, our Hospital is a training Hospital connected to our University JCU.
Hey Mathew, Australia need Drs like oxygen, and you'll be compensated and appreciated VERY WELL. If I tell you the amount GPs earn here, you'll be shocked. Imagine when you're now a specialist. I know that there's an exam that Drs write, Which is tricky as it should, but the sacrifice is definitely more than worth it at the end of the day when you become a Licensed MD. I'm not very familiar with the process, but just Google search will lead you in the right direction.
Thank you very much for this Deo.
I’m glad I could help💙💙
Thank you for sharing this video
You are welcome
This video pretty much shows that there ain’t much difference between the UK and Australia, pretty much similar system.
Guys Australia is just not the new paradise. Every country has its pros and cons.
Wherever you’re in the western world, simply look for opportunities around you and make the best of it
True, thank you 💙
With all looking the same like in Uk , I will still choose Australian because of the weather and bigger space .
UK is too crowded and the weather is generally awful, 1 day over 30 does not a summer make. I choose wide blue skies, far horizons, azure seas and Warmth with a capital 'w'.
@@stealthwarrior5768 Watch out for when they begin to move back to the UK
Do you have an Idea how many migrants and indigenes moving out of Australia due to the high cost of living.
You should watch the news more on Australian cost of living
@@stealthwarrior5768 That’s good for you
@nurse Deo , thanks for the good job you're doing.
I'm glad I can help 💙
Thanks alot for this video is an eye opener
I’m glad you found it useful, thank you darling 💙💙
Thank you so much for the video.
I'm glad you found it useful💙
Thanks For the information and i love your response to the question asked. As a teacher migrating to Australia from Nigeria through studies (special education)is it a versatile course that can quickly earn someone a PR? thanks
Thanks for watching
We are not immigration lawyers and cannot help with that, we only share our experiences 💙
Good pm sis pls ao much its caf exam did I need to migrate to new zeal b4 it can be done, ao pls do video on how to get work and visa processing thankd
It's on my page
I am just watching your video for the first time and I will have love to relocate to Australia. Which I am planning to save from now on. I am 38 years old only obtained an HND in public administration and I have forex trading knowledge and a little knowledge on phone fixing skills. Am not married yet and no kids and please what will be your advice for me. Thanks
I’m not an expert in migration, I’m only sharing my journey. You can look up the immigration website for Australia for ways to move💙
Nurse Deo, can you network for us on how to get care giver jobs with no healthcare experience. I'm prepared to do training once in Australia
I’m not sure about that 💙
Kindly find out for us.
I agree with DG, if that’s your career goal, suggest you get some basic training where you live now. Coming here to study will be expensive!! If you have a qualification in this area already, it might then even help more in getting a visa.
There are a fair few migration agents that also consult to help you map out a plan to get you down under. I suggest checking a few out and see what their advice is.
MY SPECIAL REGARDS TO THE MOST IMPORTANT PERSON IN THIS VIDEO, THE LITTLE BABY MAKING THE BACKGROUND SOUNDS. TELL HIM I LOVE HIM 💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕
Yassssss, thank you so much 💙💙
Aww you’re so sweet thank you. Bless you for not finding it too distracting 😊❤
@@NurseDeo hi please can I chat you up privately if you don't mind please. Help a sister
What is the work life balance in au, how many weeks holiday does a person get in a year
This new government is promising a better leave package but for now You get mostly 4 weeks paid leave every year.
Thank you Vera💙💙
It totally depends on the company you work for. Each state and sometimes company has a different EBA (enterprise based agreement) so for e.g in Perth a full time worker working for the government is entitled to about 4 to 5 weeks if I’m not wrong. On top of that you get 10 days sick leave which about 5 of those are non cumulative. On top of that you are entitled to professional development leave, toil ( time off in lieu) etc. let’s say for eg you want to home for 7 weeks you’ll plan well and join those leaves together and you can be away on your holiday. Essentially it depends on who you work for but there’s plenty of leave
@@australasiafyyou also get Long Service Leave in Australia. Depending on your state after 7 to 10 years you are entitled to additional leave - in NSW after 10 years working for my employer I had 10 weeks LSL. You can use this leave as you see fit. One colleague added it to their annual leave an spent 12 weeks travelling in Nth America. I cashed out mine when I left the business - instant savings as I find the annual leave and sick leave provisions more than adequate.
@australisify how about maternity leave?
Welcome to Newcastle from Toronto down the road (not Canada) 😉😃
🤣🤣🤣
Thank you guys
You welcome 💙
Hello nrs Deo pls relocating to Australia from the U. K any medical test to be done, how much ?
Yes, during the visa stage
I live in a house on edge of town. 3 bedrooms and 2 sheds for $550 a week
That’s really affordable
Which area is this?
@@NurseDeo Queensland, North of Brisbane
@@needaman66thank you
@@NurseDeo your welcome
I have lived in regional Australia for 56 years, I have seen only 3 snakes (out in the bush) and none ever in the house - and snakes never attack you unless you threaten them.
Which area?
Thank you for sharing 💙
@@NurseDeo Mildura, Bendigo, Gisborne, Cockatoo :)
Amazing ❤️
Thank you hun 💙💙
I hear you have to have a degree to practice nursing in Australia Is this true? Some o of us who have a diploma we don't get a chance...
Depends on what you are applying for💙
Hi Deo my name is joy am a nurse in Nigeria
Welcome💙
How easy it is to get African foods in Australia
I'm not sure.., it's on here channel 💙
Ladies, Melbourne can get very hot in summer, 42º-45º some days. It's not common but we've had many days over 40º the last few summers.
Wow we have that in England as well, but one or twice a year
Is it possible to change a visit visa to a work permit over there?
I'm not sure about that
Can you do USA vs Australia please. Both good and bad
Alright 💙
@@NurseDeo I am waiting for this video ❤
The USA is the ghetto. Don’t come here!
Still waiting oo nurse Deo USA vs aus
The eastern brown snake is a bit of a problem in Australia and is responsible for the vast majority of snake deaths given it is a common snake and also has a deadly venom. However, I think on average only 1 or 2 people die a year so it is not that common to be killed by a snake. A funny fact you can share with people who are worried is that Cows and Horses kill more people every year than snakes do here and I don't think we have had a spider fatality for more than a decade. So if you are going to be afraid, be careful of the cows! Kangaroos and bees also have killed more people than snakes in the last few decades. A snake is more afraid of you than a bee is.
Most snake bites have occurred when the person didn't see the snake and surprised it. If you live in an area that is prone to having snakes, just keep the grass cut and make sure the garden isn't too densely packed so if a snake happens to be passing through, you can see it. They sometimes go looking for mice, if they don't find any they move on.
Oh this is helpful, how do we know the areas that are not prone to snakes.. I've heard big and cold cities. Is this true?
Thank you so much for your comment.
@@NurseDeo Generally if you live in an inner suburb of a city you probably will never see a snake but snakes tend to follow the food. If you live near a river or lake and you have frogs, a lot of mice, bats, etc in the area then snakes might be in the area if they can get there avoiding humans.
I've lived in inner Melbourne and Sydney for a long time and have never seen a snake in either city. A friend of mine lives very close to a river and he has seen a few in his lifetime.
I also lived in rural NSW for a few years for work and I was expecting to see a lot of snakes there but only saw one and I went camping in the hills very often.
The majority of snakebites occur for outdoor workers like gardeners, landscape employees and people who work in agriculture. It is generally not something Australians worry about.
@@vimzim8576 thank you very much, really helpful 💙💙
Actually guys the name 'Toronto' is from UK and NOT from Canada - which itself borrowed it from UK. Toronto is a village in County Durham, England. Just google it !
I’ve just seen it haha, I think it’s more popular in Canada because it’s a city💙
Are there Nigerian community in Brisbane?
Yes . Brisbane is one of the major places you’d find many Nigerians. Just like Melbourne and Sydney.
💙
Lots of companies also pay per month.
That's good to know
Thank you
Deo is beautiful oo🥰❤❤
Really informative video 👌
I’m blushing, thank you darling 💙💙
Such an excellent video
Thank you for your kind words 💙
@Nurse deo, if someone gets a PR as a nurse, will it be easy to get family members into Australia like Canada?
Yes you can 💙
@@NurseDeo can you make a video on that please
We are desperate for nurses here. You are likely to have your qualifications checked for a match to Australian qualification equivalence. And you may need to be prepared to live in a remote or rural region for a period of time as determinedby the Immigration policy at the time. But those can be incredible, life changing experiences. And it is not unusual to find people settling in the regional towns as they immerse themselves into community, which of course is why the policy exists. We are a coast hugging nation, because we have a vast desert outback. 85% of Australians live with 50km of the sea! So settling in a regional town brings with it pros and cons, small close kit community, good house prices, but this comes with battling drought, fires and floods, fewer school options and limited career move opportunities.
You MUST do your research first.
Are there jobs with visa sponsorship for healthcare assistant in Australia
I'm not sure about that, if it's in the shortage list then yes
Talk about visa 186. Is there age limit.
45 years.
You can try New Zealand though their PR age limit is 55 years.
Hello am new here dear ❤️🥰
Welcome dear 💙
Na we Dey here ❤
Thank you darling 💙💙💙
Lets do this again i live in aus for 15yrs
Thank you, Hello, kindly send me a message on instagram 💙
i saw dangerous snakes and spiders. I was in the regional locations though.
Yes in regional areas
thanks for all you do nurse deo. i thought they said australia is very cold
Depends on the exact location
Australia is larger than Europe (and a bit bigger than the US, minus Alaska) So yes, of course there are colder parts, but even those colder parts get warmer than northern Europe in the summer and there are A LOT of warm parts.
Waiting for you to get your 186 so as to show me way. Thank you.
🤣🤣
Deyo..why are you glowing like that?! Your light is too bright..heeei!
Exactly!!!! 😭 the way she glows is on another level!! Even The Christmas tree behind Verabella should be jealous of how Deo is glowing... I'm jealous too
🤣🤣🤣 I need shades myself
@@xaenab219 thank you darling, I’m only glowing for you guys🤣🤣🤣
Thank God I'm not missing this 🤗🤗
Thank you for watching hun 💙💙💙
I pay 68 pounds a day for child care here in the UK
Wow
That’s expensive
Also, your skin is gorgeous captain 😍🥰
🤣🤣 thank you darling 💙💙💙💙
Not even a new nurse just out of school in US will have to share.
Thank you for watching 💙💙
Honestly depends on what you want as a person. Nurses are paid well IN Australia. The ones I watch on UA-cam are not sharing. I think sharing is done by students. Even the lady on the video, her husband went to Australia as a student which explains why he had to share.
@@miss_pearl I will share mine once I get there 😍
💙💙💙💙💯
💙💙💙
If i want to get visa and work as a nurse in AU, can my fiancee come with me and get visa as a family member?
I’m not sure about that
I have taken front seat
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Please
@@NurseDeo hello💙💙💙💙💙💙
She did not answer the question on saving money properly. Typical. Sigh.
Ok
Can I please have a fair idea of how the education system works? For kids.
Adelaide is a much more livable city.
How about Melbourne and Tasmania(Launceston)?
Can a UK-trained nurse associate practice in Australia?
Good question 😊
They might register As enrolled nurse probably
But I’m not sure about it
I am looking for sponsor from Australia any one there?
All online
@@NurseDeo any particular website
@@fiazhussain6771 DONT be lazy! People like you expect everything on a silver platter! Why can’t you just use google? Also she already did a video about moving as a nurse there and which agencies sponsor you
I don answer present....my tax no be here....please ask about tax
Thank you so much for watching💙💙
Hi Doe
I think you are interviewing wrong people about Australia.
Why do you say so?
My wife
Mine💙💙
as the white dude , I hope you feel welcome ,
I look forward to that, I am very hopeful but no pressure at all💙
When you spoke of "black people" you were really talking about Africans, ignoring Aboriginals and Melanesians.
But numbers are rising now Australia has more migrants from Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, Zimbabwe and South Africa.
I’m glad the numbers are rising, good stuff 😅
I eat snakes, unfortunately I haven't found any here in UK 😂😂😂😂
😳😳😳😳
AUSTRALIANS ARE ALL IMMIGRANTS UNLESS YOUR ABORIGINAL 😂😘
🤣🤣 makes me feel better
@@NurseDeo you'll be right here
Play our favourite game
SPOT THE AUSSIE 🤭
@@cheryltravis8616 what’s your thoughts about Tasmania?
@@NurseDeo I don't DO DRUGS 🙄 so I'll give Old Tassie the flick Thanks 😉😁
I’m confused 🤣🤣
Covert racism
K
Couldn’t you have silenced the child in the background? For such an important discussion… why would you guys let a child interfere??
Let’s try to be more professional please 😊🙏
Ok
The most insensitive comment I have read in a long time. What are they suppose to do with the child? Tie her or duct tape her mouth? Crazy ass human
@@onyebuchiihejirikauche9213 keep him/ her out of the conversation!?? Time and place for everything? Look at your reasoning! Maybe go duct tape your mouth..
@@NurseDeo I am sorry if my comment came off as rude hun. I didn’t mean that way, I just struggled to hear especially in the beginning with the child playing. I am not in any way discounting everything that you have done for the nursing community. I personally have benefited greatly 🙏
@@onyebuchiihejirikauche9213 thank you so much,
I couldn't be bothered replying hence I typed ok.
Is clapping your hands whilst talking a cultural thing ? To be honest it drives me crazy.
Hope you get well soon
@@NurseDeo is it a common practice in Nigeria to clap hands to emphasise points of conversation? You guest repeatedly did it so I am curious. In Australia it’s not done . I am sure most of the population have something that annoys them. Thanks for your time.
@@keithkearns93 yeah it is cultural thing Nigerians do
@@NurseDeoI love you for this response 🥰🥰🥰