applicationerror said:
canada does not stamp the departure dates in the passport, so can the arrival date at a foreign country be counted as the departure date,as most of the eastern countries are atleast 12 hours ahead + transit time
for example if i left on 1st,my arrival stamp will be 3rd most of the times. what should be mentioned as departing date from canada?
my apologies Alabaman if i am bothering you too much
You don't need to stretch your time like that. Alabaman already recalculated this for you for your stays and here I do it again for your absences only:
5. Oct. 2006 15. Jun. 2007 252
26. Jun. 2007 3. Aug. 2007 37
26. Nov. 2007 24. Dec. 2007 27
29. Feb. 2008 4. Jun. 2008 95
4. Jul. 2008 25. Aug. 2008 51
1. Oct. 2008 15. Dec. 2008 74
1. Feb. 2009 4. May. 2009 91
14. Jun. 2009 28. Aug. 2009 74
27. Sep. 2009 22. Jan. 2010 116
11. Apr. 2010 28. Jun. 2010 77
20. Aug. 2010 17. Jan. 2011 149
6. Mar. 2011 18. Apr. 2011 42
1085
So you see, you only have 1085 days outside Canada. Your calculation error is counting one of your travel days with your absence according to the citizenship requirements but the PR requirements are different, for them, any day or part of a day spent in Canada counts as a full day in Canada. Because of that, both your departure date and your arrival date count as days within Canada.
For example, your last absence from the 6th of March until 18th of April: 6th of March is in Canada, then you have the remainder of March, 25 days outside Canada, then you have the first 17 days of April outside Canada and April 18th as staying in Canada again so total you have 25+17 days = 42 days outside.