What happened when I lost my passport

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slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
You can't lose your passport, can you? I mean, you keep it close, don't you.....?

I went on a long weekend trip to Amsterdam last week. The plan was: take the overnight Harwich-Hook Stena ferry on Wednesday night, ride to Amsterdam on Thursday, stay with friends in central Amsterdam until Sunday, put the bike on the train back to the Hook, catch the ferry on Sunday night and go home. Great plan.

I rode off the ferry ramp on Thursday morning and waved my passport at the Dutch immigration people. The passport was in a ziplock freezer bag with my ferry ticket and parking ticket at Harwich. Not wishing to hold people up in cars behind me, I stuffed it into a zip pocket in my baggy cycling shorts, rather than stashing it in my panniers. Some Euros, brought from England were in one or other of the four pockets . My maps were in the back pocket of my jersey.

It was a great pootle up the LF1 and then the LF20. The wind was gentle and the sun shone for most of the way. I stopped at Katjwick (?) for a coffee, gulped a couple of bananas somewhere near Zandvoort, and got lost somewhere a couple of times near Amsterdam, but arrived at the Kaizersgracht at about 4 pm. Friday and Saturday were spent riding about on Dutch bikes and having fun.

At noon on Sunday, I thought I would check the ferry time to return home that evening, and couldn't find the ticket. Upturned panniers, upturned bedroom, upturned house. We had no luck, and had to concede defeat. My passport and tickets were lost.

The British Consulate website in Amsterdam said it would be available if emergency travel was required the same day. "Ring on the bell". I didn't hold out much hope for that on a Sunday lunchtime, so we went to the local Dutch police station to file a report of the loss of a passport. The police said that we needed a passport number before they could file. We didn't have one at that time. We rode to the Consulate anyway. The " Grey They" didn't answer the bell. I was not entirely surprised, but my Dutch friend was.

Back at my friends' house, I phoned home and asked my wife to search through My Pictures for a jpeg of my passport that I had taken, as a close-up experiment, when I first bought my camera. By some kind of miracle, and despite my chaotic filing system, a clear image came back. We went back to the police station, made a lost passport report to the Dutch police, and came away with a couple of typed sheets of A4 in Dutch. The police were wonderful.

My Dutch friends called Stena Ferries and asked what the deal was for someone without a passport. They said that there was absolutely no way that they would allow such a person to travel without official documentation. They were happy to re-book my ferry ticket for 24 hours later, without charge, but I had to have a passport or official document from the Consulate. Stena gave a reference number over the phone for the new booking. All I had to do was give them that number at the dock on the Hook.

The total time from realising that I had lost the gear to getting to this stage was about four hours. The Police station was about five minutes on the bike. The British Consulate was about 12 minutes away. My friends could ask all the right questions in their native tongue. I was very lucky.

Monday morning found me outside the British Consulate at 8:30 am. It opens at nine, but I was getting eager. I had the police report, a jpeg of my mugshot on my passport, and also a completed application form for emergency travel documents that my Dutch friends had downloaded from the Foreign Office website. A charming lady helped when the doors opened. She could issue me with an emergency passport if I came back at about 11:am. It would be good for one journey to England and would expire within 24 hours and then be worthless. All I had to do was pay 113 Euros ( about £100) , and they only take cash, no plastic. She gave directions to the nearest cash machine, offered some sympathy, and was delightful. I rode around Amsterdam wasting time and having fun until I picked up a strange white passport from their office at about 11 am.
I went back to my friends' house. They had been trying to contact me to report that they had had a phone call from the Kajwick police to say that my passport and other documents had been found and handed in by a public-spirited person. Alas, too late...my original passport was cancelled and now worthless. I was happy to have an excuse to stay another day with friends.

On Monday, I took the ferry back to Harwich. Some people were very kind when I got there.

It was a fantastic trip and losing my passport took only five hours out of a much longer holiday. Go to Holland.....but do yourself a favour....buy a bar bag.


BTW, I have to buy a new passport as well. How much do they cost???
 
I got a new one recently, think it was 85 quid, but check online!
 

jay clock

Massive member
Location
Hampshire UK
sorry to hear all that! Even with a bar bag, you could just leave it in an ice cream shop in Portugal containing wallet, passport, phone etc and then spend an hour on the beach before pedalling back (touching cloth [lycra]) and giving a huge sigh of relief when they still had it!
 

sabian92

Über Member
A new passport with the standard waiting time is around 80 quid, more if you want an extended passport or you want it faster (Up to about £150 if you want it same/next day, I think!).

That sucks you lost your passport though - least you were lucky enough to be in a country that speaks decent English AND have native speakers to help you. I hope it doesn't happen again, for your wallet's sake! :biggrin:
 

jay clock

Massive member
Location
Hampshire UK
....and also you were so close to a consulate. You could have been hours away. Just had a quick look and for Spain if you are in Santiago (popular holiday spot and cyclists too) you have choice of Madrid or Bilbao. Two days return I suspect
 
OP
OP
slowmotion

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
Yes, I was extremely lucky to be so close to the Consulate and in friendly company. I got off very lightly, all things considered, and had a one day bonus in Amsterdam. What's not to like? :thumbsup:
 
A new passport with the standard waiting time is around 80 quid, more if you want an extended passport or you want it faster (Up to about £150 if you want it same/next day, I think!).

The same day service is expensive but really good. I was going to South Africa and just perusing the Foreign Office site for the latest updates and it advised having at least two clean pages on your passport to get through immigration. I didn't have a single page so panic call to the Passport Office helpline at 9PM where they very helpfully walked me through the process and booked me an appointment at the London Victoria office the next day. Dropped my passport off and picked it and the new one up a couple of hours later. Flew out the next day.
 

dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
I went on a uni coach tour of France. We wanted to go to Berlin, but the tutors thought that some dopey Le Corbusier monastery, without the distractions of television or newspapers would be better for us. This was 1989. When we arrived back in England we found out that the Berlin Wall had come down.

Anyroadup - I lost my passport on the way there. I think somebody flushed it down the toilet - the entire bus was a rolling, reeling, rocking tube of booze and dope smoke by the time we got to Calais and got worse thereafter. By the time we reached Lyon any resemblance to consciousness was purely co-incidental. I remember the coach driver opening up the back door and being knocked back by the smoke, which, when combined with the sodium lights of the service station put one in mind of 'The Annual Girandola at the Castel Sant' Angelo, Rome' by Joseph Wright of Derby

annualgirandola.jpg


I wasn't particularly worried. It seemed to me that the French would be far more keen to kick me out than the British would be to keep me out. The worst that could happen would be that I would be marooned in Calais, where, true to my then principles and bank balance, I would retire to a garret, there to waste away in pursuit of poetry. Which, to overuse a phrase, puts one in mind etc...

WAH001_L.jpg


In the event the coach was waved through immigration. The French took one look at us and thanked their lucky stars, and the British took another look and decided we were a bit of a health risk. I believe passports were collected and a count made, but, since most of us were only in partial contact with our extremities, both sets of immigration officials could be forgiven for miscounting the show of hands.

It did turn up - having been in the toilet tank of the coach for a week. The coach driver sent it to me wrapped in plastic. I put it in the bath and poured water over it for a couple of hours. This was clearly one of those British passports capable of stopping a rifle bullet in the Khyber pass, or plugging a hole in a lifeboat that one just happened to be set adrift in somewhere in the South Seas. It all puts one etc. etc. of the chap in the white shirt - he's one of ours, and his passport is not up his sleeve. 'No worries, geezer, you aim for the heart and it's my turn next!'

goya_2.jpg


It came up smelling of dishwashing liquid and served for many years after. I pronounced it lost when it was time to renew, and have it still.....
 

Saluki

World class procrastinator
I have lost my passport. I didn't actually lose it, the local sorting office did. It was sent guaranteed next day delivery, signed for and everything, back to me from the local council. From there, it vanished. This has been ongoing since about July now and I am getting fed up. That envelope has my birth certificate, driving licence and marriage certificate in it too. I am having great entertainment getting a job or even a library access card with no identification.
The council say it will be about another month before the post office compensates them and then they will compensate me. Having literally just moved to another part of the UK, I could really do with some id.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
The latest version of the UK passport is a thing of outstanding beauty, the security features are elaborate and expensive and the whole document is an absolute work of art.
 

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
It was a fantastic trip and losing my passport took only five hours out of a much longer holiday. Go to Holland.....but do yourself a favour....buy a bar bag.

I wouldn't let my passport leave my person. When touring in France, I wear a bumbag, and it goes in that. and the bag never leaves my person, either round my waist, or slung over a shoulder like a mini handbag. Passport, money, and camera when I'm not using it, all go in there.

Did you say it went in a zipped pocket? Didn't you do the zip up?

Still, glad it all worked out.
 
OP
OP
slowmotion

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
Did you say it went in a zipped pocket? Didn't you do the zip up?

Still, glad it all worked out.

My baggies have four pockets. The top two are deep but not zipped, the bottom ones are shallow but zipped. I'm always fumbling around in pockets no matter what I'm doing and I guess I searched for some cash and forgot to re-zip.

Back at Harwich, I realized that my parking ticket was lost with the other documents. I had visions of some horrendous penalty fee as I was pointed in the direction of the Stena office. Seven days (or part days) should cost £54.60, and I suspected a massive hit on top of that already eye-watering sum. I explained the situation to the lady at the desk..... " I think you have suffered enough....no parking charges at all..." Amazing. All I could think of doing was buying her a Twix from the vending machine as I marvelled at peoples' random kindness.
 
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