Nov. 6th, 2006

Mexico!

Nov. 6th, 2006 01:40 am
dagibbs: (Default)
I have arrived safely at my hotel in Mexico City, after an uneventful flight. I'm glad the drive didn't happen while the traffic was busy.

Apparently they don't officially have internet in the rooms -- the front desk said I would have to come down to the lobby/business centre, but I seem to have sufficiently close access that I can do it from my room. Yay.
dagibbs: (Default)
It went so well last time, I think we'll do it again!

Gaming at my place, Saturday November 11th, 3pm extending through a potluck dinner into the evening. This will be after gabriel_le's 11am hiking departing our place as well.

RSVPs appreciated.
dagibbs: (Default)
Prices on everything are shocking -- the monetary symbol looks like a dollar sign, room service caesar salad $101, then I have to remember that pesos are about 10:1 to the Canadian dollar, and I can breathe again. (Yeah, that's still expensive for a caesar salad, but it is room service.) Four of us had lunch for about $170, or about 3.25 $CAD each. That was 1/2 a (small) BBQ chicken, a sausage like object, tortillas, salsa, and sodas/water/a beer. So, actually, it looks like things are a bit cheaper, actually, which is more what I expected.

Lane markings are, at best, gentle hints.

Stop lights are often treated more like stop signs -- stop, look around, go. Especially if traffic is light. Even if there is a cop clearly visible on the next block.

Street parking is crazy. People will angle-park (that is, nose straight in to the curb) all around some corners.

I haven't seen much obvious extreme poverty (I saw more pan-handlers and obvious homeless in downtown Vancover for instance), but I'm also probably in mostly better neighbourhoods.

This is a good enough part of town, that my local guide suggested we walk back from the work site to the hotel.

The air is a bit rough, but not totally nasty. Still, I'm not sure I want to live here.

There's a lot more Volkswagon Beetles around than I've seen anywhere else in ages.

The hotel I'm in is very international-business-traveller, and even has its own water treatment plant, and labels all its water as potable. My local hosts assures me the hotel water actually is safe to drink. (He has seemed to have reasonable level of caution and understanding about other things, so I'm inclined to think he is right on this.)

Canadians are the "nice gringos".

Sidewalks can be really chopped up, and you need to watch where you're walking.

Rush? Hurry? What's that?

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