Showing posts with label Lessons Learned. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lessons Learned. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

๐—”๐—ป ๐—”๐—ณ๐˜๐—ฒ๐—ฟ๐—ป๐—ผ๐—ผ๐—ป ๐—ฎ๐˜ ๐—˜๐—น ๐——๐—ผ๐—ฟ๐—ฎ๐—ฑ๐—ผ ๐—•๐—ฒ๐—ฎ๐—ฐ๐—ต ๐—–๐—น๐˜‚๐—ฏ: ๐—ฆ๐—ฎ๐˜ƒ๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด ๐— ๐—ผ๐—ป๐—ฒ๐˜† ๐—ถ๐—ป ๐—ฅ๐—ฒ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ฟ๐—ฒ๐—บ๐—ฒ๐—ป๐˜ "๐—Ÿ๐—ฒ๐˜€๐˜€๐—ผ๐—ป ๐Ÿญ๐Ÿฌ๐Ÿฎ"

 How Does That Save Money?

Lounging at the El Dorado Beach Club

We’ve been considering taking a Mediterranean cruise this year—a shortened version of the one we had reserved in 2020 but was canceled when COVID-19 happened. When I looked at booking Virgin’s 7-Night Greek Island Glow plus a few days on each end to explore, we would easily spend around $15,000 US with airfare from Puerto Vallarta added. Even a Virgin Caribbean Cruise from San Juan, Puerto Rico, with the same criteria, wouldn’t save us much.

Los Muertos Beach in Puerto Vallarta
(Looking South)

First Way to Save Money is Staycation Activities: We thought, We live in Paradise! Why not take tours and dine at cruise-worthy restaurants in the Puerto Vallarta area? We could splurge on adventures we haven’t done near home and save money. By not flying anywhere, we could skip air travel, save thousands of pesos, and be kind to the environment. By taking more day trips, we could stay in our own Puerto Vallarta condominium or motorhome in Nayarit and eliminate hotel expenses.

El Dorado Beach Club View to the North

So, we started a Staycation List. El Dorado Beach Club was the first adventure we planned. El Dorado is one of our favorite seafood restaurants on the beach, but their dinner prices can be expensive. We decided to spend four daytime hours on their lounge chairs under an umbrella, gazing at the ocean and listening to the waves while we dined on less expensive breakfasts or lunches. It was wonderful!

Some People Decorate Their Umbrellas for the Day

Two lounge chairs can be reserved at El Dorado Beach Club from 11:00 to 3:30 for a minimum charge of 500 pesos (about $25 US, mรกs o menos, depending on the exchange rate that day) per person. Any food and drink we ordered would be applied to the 500 pesos—no problem to spend that much if we each ordered an alcoholic beverage along with our meals. We could order from the less expensive Beach Club menus rather than dinner menus and save money. El Dorado serves breakfast until noon, and then they start lunch service. We ordered orange juice and waited for lunch. It's essential to stay hydrated while on the beach! 

There’s Lots to Do, Watch, and Buy at the Beach Club 

We Each Ordered Fish Tacos and Sodas
Delicious!
Watched Parasailers But Decided to Wait.
That Will Be an Adventure for Another Day.

Time for Margaritas and Reading Our Kindles

Watched the Break Dancing Show
And Were Happy to Tip Them 50 pesos

Second Way to Save Money on Mexico Staycations: Pay in pesos, not US dollars. Look at the red box: $79.68 US means the restaurant gave an exchange rate that day of only 18.80 pesos per dollar. On that date (Jan 31, 2025), the exchange rate was 20.68 pesos per dollar (see Orange Arrow below), so our check amount of 1498 pesos divided by 20.68 would equal $72.43 USpaying in pesos saved $7.25 US! (We saved even more after we added a 20% tip in pesos.)

Our Lunch Receipt from El Dorado Beach Club
20.67 Exchange Rate on January 31, 2025 (Google)

Third Way to Save Money on this Staycation:
Pay with cash (effectivo), not a debit or credit card. With a US card, you will not only lose money on the exchange rate the restaurant charges for conversion to US dollars, but you may also lose money on the exchange rate the banks give you in debit/credit card transactions and/or fees they charge. You never know how much you have lost until you see your bank charge 
and calculate the exchange rate you received, which usually shocks you! (Note: Using a Spin by Oxxo Visa card is as good as paying in cash with pesos.)

During high season, reserving a beach chair at El Dorado Beach Club is essential. Otherwise, if the beach chairs are all occupied, you can dine inside the open-air restaurant. Don’t worry—that’s fun, too! It’s just a different type of experience. We went to El Dorado to make our reservation with the hostess, explaining that we wanted two lounge chairs on the beach. Reservations can also be made through the El Dorado website, but we prefer to take a healthy walk in the Romantic Zone to the restaurant and speak to the friendly hostess. 

We can't wait for our next Staycation adventure! Follow us on our Healthy Living and Traveling in Mexico Facebook page to see what's next.
Terry L Turrell and Jonathan P Turrell, Authors

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Monday, January 29, 2024

Happy New Year, Surprising Lessons Learned๐Ÿ˜ฒ, and An eBook Sale

 Happy New Year! ¡Feliz Aรฑo Nuevo!

We’re learning lessons this month—again. Maybe 2024 will be our “Surprising Lessons Learned as Expats in Mexico” year. Maybe there will be an eBook #6.


One surprising lesson was that we’ve grown to like La Peรฑita de Jaltemba, Nayarit, more than we expected. Each month, we spend a week in La Peรฑita in our motorhome. Surprisingly, our enjoyment of the fishing village and our RV grows. Then, when we return to Puerto Vallarta, the contrast makes us love our condo life even more.

La Penita de Jaltemba Beach and Coral Island
You might like to read my latest article, Our Tour of La Penita de Jaltemba, Nayarit While Walking to Breakfast, Shopping, and Errands: We See So Much While Walking Downtown and Back Home!

A View of La Penita Looking Toward the Ocean

This month’s hardest lesson was that we never should have painted the bedroom floor of our 2005 motorhome. From experience, we knew paint would seal a nasty cat urine smell into the wood subfloor and eliminate it. It worked well! But that was when we installed carpeting afterward.

But this was different! We were going to install vinyl plank flooring in the RV bedroom. Jon discovered through his online research that our vinyl adhesive would not stick to the paint! So we had to sand it all off. That Home Depot Behr paint/primer is very tough stuff! It took us five days with an orbital sander, sanding blocks, and 40-grit sandpaper to return that small area to bare plywood. It was good exercise—a combination of yoga and mindfulness training!

Jon Sanding the Paint Off of the RV Floor

Read more HERE.

Thank you for reading my articles and books.

Don't miss this 99-cent eBook sale on Living in Mexico Lessons Learned! (Limited time only)

Cheers,

Terry



Sunday, October 15, 2023

My October Newsletter is Out! FREE eBook ๐Ÿ˜Ž Mexico Expat Life During Crisis

That's Jon and Me in 2010 Near Mazatlan!
Jon and I love expat life in Mexico, but it isn't for everyone. Keep reading to see more about our real-life experiences in Mexico. My novels depict the good life in tropical Mexico while coping with medical crises. Jake and Lindsay, the main characters, learn many lessons the hard way. These three novels follow their love and challenges as young professionals in the U.S. and then as expats.
Just Another Manic Moment, Novel #1 in the series, is FREE through October 17, 2023 (On Amazon.com). Don't miss it!
For A Limited Time Only

Lindsay and Jake continue their expat life in tropical Mexico in Novel #2 and Novel #3. Click the covers to read more about these stories.

R๐ž๐š๐ ๐ฆ๐จ๐ซ๐ž ๐š๐›๐จ๐ฎ๐ญ ๐จ๐ฎ๐ซ real-life ๐ž๐ฑ๐ฉ๐š๐ญ ๐ฅ๐ข๐Ÿ๐ž ๐ข๐ง ๐Œ๐ž๐ฑ๐ข๐œ๐จ ๐ข๐ง ๐ฆ๐ฒ ๐ŸŒบHe๐š๐ฅ๐ญ๐ก๐ฒ ๐‹๐ข๐ฏ๐ข๐ง๐  ๐š๐ง๐ ๐“๐ซ๐š๐ฏ๐ž๐ฅ๐ข๐ง๐  ๐ข๐ง ๐Œ๐ž๐ฑ๐ข๐œ๐จ N๐ž๐ฐ๐ฌ๐ฅ๐ž๐ญ๐ญ๐ž๐ซ ๐ŸŒดHERE.

Thursday, November 3, 2022

Pickpocketed in Mexico During Dรญa de Los Muertos

 I WAS PICKPOCKETED!

Beware of Pickpockets in the Crowds!
I made a newbie mistake Sunday night on the Malecรณn in Puerto Vallarta. After living in Mรฉxico for many years, I let my guard down in a crowd for the first time and a skillful pickpocket helped himself to the contents of my backpack purse.

Puerto Vallarta's 2022 Beautiful La Catrina

I brought my Canon digital camera to try to get better photos of this year's Dรญa de Los Muertos Catrinas, especially our record-making tall beauty. I had raised my arms over the heads in front of me to snap a couple of shots of the Beatles—they were great!

The Beatles Catrinas

When I turned to find my husband, Jon, I immediately realized my backpack was significantly lighter. Every zipper on the back was wide open! A slick pickpocket got my Clinique bag containing paracetamol, ibuprofen, carbidopa/levodopa for Jonathan's Parkinson's disease, and other miscellaneous OTC meds. No big loss. I hope they were greatly disappointed. But he or she also got my cell phone.

My Gratitude for the Day, Week, and Month: They didn't get my wallet with my ID, debit card, and money. And I’m happy that I got some nice photos of the Catrinas and displays on the Malecรณn with my Canon camera.

There Were Some Great Older Model Cars Displayed

It's crowded out there during the parade and evening viewings of the Catrinas. It’ll continue to be crowded in tourist cities from now through the holidays. Beware of pickpockets! Another Lesson Learned...

My Canon Zoomed to Capture the 23-Meter-Tall Catrina's Face

The two women who helped me at the Telcel store with a new phone both said they had had phones stolen. One said she was taking a photo with her phone and someone snatched it out of her hand! The other had it taken out of her front pants pocket. They were both coaching me on how to hold my backpack purse—it was so sweet! Most Mexicans are so caring and helpful. It’s during these busy holidays that the thieves come out to work the crowd.

After their advice, I’ve been carrying my backpack purse in a front/side position with my arm hugging it. I've always kept a leash from my purse to my belt loop or my chair at a restaurant so it can't be snatched. But during these crowded holidays, skilled pickpockets don't need to snatch your whole purse—just smoothly remove the contents. Fortunately, I’ve always kept my wallet in a secret pocket. Now my phone will be stored there, too. We can’t be too careful.

To read about “More Lessons Learned”, check out my latest book available on Amazon worldwide. Thank you for reading my blog articles and books.

I invite you to SIGN UP for my "Healthy Living and Traveling in Mexico Newsletter", published monthly with stories about our latest adventures, my recent blog articles, and news about my books.

Terry L Turrell

Sunday, October 23, 2022

7 HAZARDS OF WALKING AND “WHEELCHAIRING” IN Mร‰XICO—and 7 Safety Suggestions

 Walking in Mรฉxico can be Dangerous

Careful! Don't Step Off the Curb Here!

Walking in Mรฉxico can be dangerous—but not for the reasons you might think. It’s the obstacles in the sidewalks and streets that you need to watch for constantly because there are many. I’ve included “Wheelchairing” in this because now that my husband, Jon, sometimes uses a wheelchair, we’ve learned that there are even more obstacles, ones we had previously overlooked.

The Sidewalk Ends Abruptly Without a Warning

Watch for obstacles constantly while walking. This might seem obvious, but I’ve seen too many tourists with new casts on their arms or ankles. Bleeding knees and black eyes are all-too-common among newcomers, too. No, it’s not from being mugged. Stumbling, tripping, and falling can easily happen in Mรฉxico and there’s no one to blame. The belief in this country is that if you fall and hurt yourself on the sidewalk, it’s the sidewalk’s fault. 

Everyone is responsible for themselves here. So, to help keep yourself safe, here are 7 common hazards to watch for when walking or “wheelchairing”.

1.     Tripping Hazards

Beware of Bent, Damaged Drainage Grates in the Middle of the Sidewalk!

Tripping hazards come in more shapes and forms than you can imagine. And they pop up in the most unexpected places, even walking along a popular tourist Malecรณn. It’s easy to become so distracted by all of the amazing views in Mรฉxico that you don’t see the danger your feet are about to encounter.

Bolts are Left Sticking Up When Signposts are Removed--Ow!

This Toe-Stubber is Right at the Crosswalk!

Abandoned Raised Concrete Slabs in a Walkway are Common

     These are just a few examples of the many tripping hazards for pedestrians. We now understand how abruptly these obstacles can jarringly bring a wheelchair to a halt, too.

2.     Crossing Bike Lanes Next to Walkways

Look Both Ways Before Crossing Bike Lanes!

     Once, I stepped into this bike lane without looking when I crossed from the sidewalk to the street to get on the bus! Fortunately, there weren’t any bicycles coming. Bicyclists travel fast in Mรฉxico! Be aware that they travel on sidewalks and streets, as well, so always be on the lookout for bikes and motorcycles. And they sometimes ride against traffic or the wrong way on a one-way street, so look both ways!

3.     Steep Ramps Can be Slippery, Especially if Damp or Sandy

There are No Slope or Width Requirements for Ramps
     Stepping onto a steep ramp can be dangerous, especially if it is damp or has a film of sand on the surface. I once stepped onto a tiled ramp that had a film of dust on it, my foot slipped out from under me, and down I went—fast and hard! Taking a wheelchair down a narrow, steep “Handicap” ramp can be especially treacherous. This one is in the middle of the block, drops onto the rough cobblestone road, and has no ramp up to the sidewalk on the other side of the street. 

 4.     Uneven Step Heights and Treads, Double-Step High Curbs

Watch that Extra Unpainted Step by the Taxi Bench, Too!

     This photo shows multiple hazards that make this corner especially dangerous. I saw one young man try to quickly hop up the high double-step curb, trip, and nearly land on his face. Fortunately, he had quick reflexes and was fine—others are not so lucky. The hidden steps,  uneven stair treads, and broken concrete add to the risk of corners like this one. I've watched people fall going down unseen steps just as often as walking up! Be careful.

     And in a wheelchair, good luck! Thankfully, Jon is able to stand from his chair and walk down these steps.

Concrete Humps On the Handrail Side can Cause Stumbling

       Puerto Vallarta has plans to make sidewalks accessible to all, but some areas of Old Town still need improvement. High, broad, uneven steps and no ramp as shown in this photo make some businesses inaccessible for those in wheelchairs.

5.     Trees in the Middle of Sidewalks and Plant Cut-Outs in the Concrete are Possible Stumbling Points

Someone Tried to Repair this Broken Planter Area, But...
Trees are Protected Here, Even When Taking Over the Sidewalk

     Trees take priority in Mรฉxico, which is overall a good thing for the environment and the appearance of cities. Just be aware that trees are often growing in the middle of the sidewalks with little room to maneuver around them. Also, the edging of the concrete cut-out for the tree may be broken, raised, or sunken, creating a trip-and-fall hazard. Tree roots sometimes extend into the sidewalk and lift the concrete. Beware, be aware.

6.     Cobblestone Streets, Especially with Missing Stones and Loose Gravel

Loose Stones, Missing Stones, and Missing Concrete

     Many streets in Mexican cities are paved with cobblestone or other types of pavers. I love the old-world feel, but these streets take some practice to walk on without twisting an ankle. If stones are loose or missing, a hole is left that is even more treacherous. Stepping wrong on sand and gravel in the streets can cause your feet to fly right out from under you. I have first-hand experience with that!

7.     Pedestrian Bridges are Wicked to Cross but Sometimes Necessary

Wild Motion plus Protruding Rebar and Wire Fencing 

     Suspended walking bridges like this one are scarier to cross than they look. And they’re more common in Mรฉxico than you might think—we have to walk on this one to cross the Cuale River to our Zumba class on the Isla Cuale in Puerto Vallarta. As soon as you begin walking on this bridge, it begins to bounce and sway. If more than one person is walking, their differing cadences cause the bridge to dip and dance in three directions. On top of that, the curled rebar and bent wires at the base of the chain-link fencing will cut into your calf if you get too close. We usually end up laughing at ourselves, walking as though we are drunk, even while holding onto the fence. 

     And there’s often a guy with a motorcycle patiently waiting at the other end for the bridge to clear so he can walk his moto across. The moto will barely fit side to side, so no pedestrians can be in the way. The locals know to clear the bridge and give the moto the right of way when it’s his turn—we follow their example. Another Lesson Learned...

7 Safety Suggestions for Walking and “Wheel-chairing” in Mรฉxico (Part 2 will be published next week)

     Have you read my latest book in the Healthy Living in Mexico series, Living in Mexico More Lessons Learned? Available on Amazon worldwide, it's free with kindleunlimited.

Living in Mexico

More Lessons Learned

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     Happy reading and traveling!

     Terry