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November 17 2008 Page 2

 

Agoda is the on line company that we book through when we travel.

Mexican Pacific Coast Tourism Project to Outshine Cancún
Barnard R. Thompson - MexiData.info
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Escuinapa de Hidalgo, Sinaloa, México.

 

The Mexican government has announced a major new tourism development that will stretch along the Pacific Ocean coast of southern Sinaloa – a project that will ultimately be twice the size of Cancún. A master planned tourist area to rival not just Cancún, but too the Riviera Maya that runs along the shores of the Mexican Caribbean.
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President Felipe Calderón, with officials from the Mexican government`s National Trust Fund for Tourism Development (Fondo Nacional de Fomento al Turismo, or Fonatur), made the announcement at the September 29 opening of the Fonatur sponsored Mexican Real Estate and Tourism Investment Expo, in Mexico City.
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Provisionally called the Pacific Coast Integrally Planned Center, infrastructure work is scheduled to begin during the first half of 2009, with the final stage of the phased developments to be completed by 2025. This in much the same way that other Fonatur master planned seaside resorts, such as Cancún, Los Cabos, Ixtapa, Loreto and the Bays of Huatulco, have been done.
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The 5,884 acre [9.2 square miles] Pacific Coast CIP will be in the midst of the Sinaloa National Wetlands, in part on the near 5,000 acre Rancho Las Cabras, owned by former Sinaloa governor Antonio Toledo Corro. The area is 80 miles south of Mazatlán and west of the Mexico Highway 15 town of Escuinapa, in the municipality of the same name. On land between the Pacific Ocean and lagoons and marshes known as the Laguna Agua Grande, the area will include 7.5 miles of beaches between the villages of Isla del Bosque and Teacapán to the south on the State of Nayarit border.
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The coastal area is well known locally for its beauty and tranquility. Slightly inland from the coast, the estuaries, lagoons and mangrove stands are surrounded by palm and tropical flora filled valleys, with a notable abundance of birds and migratory waterfowl. Deer, mountain lions and peccary, among other animals, are found in the area.
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And fishing is big in the region, commercial fishing (and shrimp farming), and of course sportfishing. Several species of protected sea turtles come to area beaches, and at sea among the many species found are billfish, humpback whales and white sharks.
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Of historical significance, there are large oyster shell mounds near Teacapán that experts say were harvested by indigenous peoples living in the area as long as 4,000 years ago.
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The investment by the Mexican government is to be around MX$5 billion pesos [US$465 million as of September 29], according to President Calderón (who made the announcement before the current worldwide financial crises came to a head, and the anticipated cutbacks). Calderón added that the aforementioned Mexican public sector investment should spark another US$6.638 billion in private national and international investments.
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First stage construction costs will be some MX$1.5 billion [US$139 million as of 9/29], according to a Fonatur executive, that will be applied to 988 acres. That first phase is scheduled for completion in 2012.
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The President went on to say that the mega-development will ultimately create 78,000 direct and indirect jobs. He also said estimates are that the Pacific Coast CIP will attract nearly 3 million tourists by the year 2025, and US$2.8 billion in foreign exchange.
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Once completed the overall complex is to include four golf courses; two marinas for a total of 1,000 vessels; 44,200 hotel rooms (hotels, condominiums, etc.); a five mile beachfront walk; and a light railway. Plus the possibility of a new airport is in the offing (or the small airport at Teacapán could be expanded).
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Based on what has been learned from other CIPs, such as Cancún, hotels will not be allowed right on the beach. The required buffer zone will be 300 meters. Hotels will also have a maximum height limit of four stories.
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Urban zones and shopping areas will integrate open space shielded by law against construction, as will cultural centers and convention facilities.
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Emphasis will be placed on nature and the environment, with 25 percent of the total 5,884 acres dedicated as natural protected areas, acreage that must be devoid of development. Furthermore, 109 acres of the surrounding wetland environs will be kept intact. Regarding the lagoon and marsh areas, visitors will be able to enjoy ecotourism activities via a series of canals and pathways.
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As well, Pacific Coast CIP developments will have to meet marine and land area environmental standards and requisites that are included in the 2006 Marine Ecological Ordinance of the Gulf of California Program.
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For workers, at least 5,000 homes will be built, along with schools, hospitals and facilities for needed community services.
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Water will be provided through three separate systems, wastewater treatment plants will be built, and each hotel will have to install not only rainwater catchment receptacles, but too separate systems for rain and wastewater drainage and control.
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On an interconnected regional basis, highway improvements are planned for the stretch of Highway 15 from Mazatlán south to Tepic, Nayarit (and on to Tequila and Guadalajara; or southwest to the Bahía de Banderas-Compostela Tourist Corridor and Puerto Vallarta). Too, the road inland from Mazatlán to Durango is to be improved, all arteries that will give area visitors, among others, easier access to tourist and cultural sites, neighboring cities, mountain regions, archeological zones, and indigenous communities.
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And finally, for ocean going visitors, the Pacific Coast CIP is to be in harmony with Fonatur`s Sea of Cortez Plan, the system of Transient Marinas, and the so-called Nautical Staircase.
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Barnard Thompson, editor of MexiData.info, has spent 50 years in Mexico and Latin America, providing multinational clients with actionable intelligence; country and political risk reporting and analysis; and business, lobbying, and problem resolution services.

 

                        Trees of the Riviera Nayarit Jungles  

By Tara Spears

            One of the most enchanting aspects of visiting or living in southern coastal Mexico is being in a real tropical jungle. I know that many come just to savor the sun and sea from a beach, but if one looks the other way from the ocean- magnificent exotic trees and fauna abound.  Even more impressive is the fact that much of our part of Mexico is virgin jungle, with trees that are hundreds of years old.  If one boldly leaves the highways and villages, a hike in the wild is thrilling.

            Since all of Nayarit is south of the Tropic of Cancer, all the emerald green that pulses over the mountains thrive in what is classified as a ‘warm sub-humid tropical’ climate that has high annual rainfall. What is more commonly known as jungle is more accurately termed tropical deciduous forest.  Although the jungle is very similar to the tropical rainforest, sharing several characteristics, jungles have an actual dry season that causes the trees to lose their leaves (deciduous).  In addition to the huge trees in a jungle, the undergrowth is a dense thicket of tropical shrubs, herbaceous plants, vines, and smaller trees. Unique to the tropical deciduous forests are epiphytes (aerial plants) that do not need soil to grow.  

Parts of the Riviera Nayarit’s tropical deciduous forest are among the top ten species-rich habitats in the world. It is home to over 300 species of orchids, 400 bird species, with an astonishing array of reptiles, amphibians, and mammals that run the gamut from monkeys to big cats such as the Jaguar. The local jungles contain the familiar pine, oak and junipers, but this article will highlight the native species that you do not see in other countries. Even if you are a confirmed urbanite, coming toe-to-trunk with these stunning trees is a spiritual experience.

 

This photo focuses on the giant limbs of the Ceiba tree’s umbrella-shaped crown. The ancient Maya believed that the great Ceiba tree stood at the center of the earth, connecting the terrestrial world to the spirit-world above.  The long, thick vines hanging down from its spreading limbs were believed to provide a direct path to the heavens for the souls that ascend them. The Ceiba flowers open in the evening and are pollinated by bats. Flowering and fruiting takes place when the tree is leafless in the dry season. The Ceiba’s massive trunk thickens with many above ground roots to withstand wind. Photo below, right.

                                          

 

The Mexican madrone tree is the tropical relative to the northwestern

Arbutus species. It’s distinctive waxy, orangish-brown peeling bark

stands out amid all the lighter tans and greens of the jungle. The

clustered leaves are elongated dark green with a reddish edge. The

white woolly clusters of spring flowers turn to red fruit in early summer.

 

 

Madrone  tree                                       Madrone fruit/seeds

      

 

                                                                                 Another interesting tropical tree is the Palo Blanco arcadia. (left)  This slender, upright tree’s mature height is 15-25 feet. Notice the weepy, airy quality of its leaf clusters.  The beautiful, white spike flowers in spring mature into dark brown, 8” long seed pods.  Perhaps the most  distinguishing feature of the Palo Blanco is its peeling, papery, silver-white bark.

  

                                                                             Mexico has over 10,000 acres (4,440 ha) of tamarind trees. 

Another mainstay of the jungle is the lacey-leaf, slow-growing giant that reaches 80-100 feet (24-30 m).  Its massive trunk – up to 15 feet diameter-is designed to withstand high winds during the thunderstorm season.  In the spring, the tamarind has inconspicuous inch long flowers that evolve into cinnamon brown seed pods.

  

             Just the name, cacahuanache, invites exploration and hints of its ancient importance.  A small tree, they have simple, alternate leaves; bisexual flowers with five sepals, two to five petals, and two to 300 stamens; and fruits as drupes that supports a wide variety of birds and animals. Licania  arborea are primarily centered in tropical North America. Licania supplies water and rot-resistant wood and seed oil.

  

                                          Cacahuanache leaves and bark

                                                                                                                                                                                          The guavas originated in southern Mexico, and has been spread by man, birds, and animals to all warm areas of central and South America. This small evergreen tree has shallow roots. 

 

My favorite jungle tree is one of the many types of fichus that

belong to the banyan family. This symbiotic tree starts out

 attaching itself to a larger tree, sending out aerial roots that

become trunks and eventually chokes the life out of the host-

 hence the common name of ‘strangler’.  Weirdly beautiful

trunks with vivid green smooth leaves.

  After viewing the glorious diversity of the Riviera Nayarit jungles, it is easier to understand how the primative, indiginous Mexican  people arrived at some of their medical remedies and spiritual beliefs- the forest nurtured them.        

 

 

 






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Jaltemba Bay Animal Rescue

Advocating humane and healthy practices for animals in the Jaltemba area by promoting health, education, sterilization, adoptions, foster care and positive relationships with animals and their owners.

December 2006 to April 2008…One and a Half Years, 6 clinics and a Total of 642 Animals Spayed or Neutered in the Jaltemba Bay Area!!!

Upcoming Free Spay and Neuter Clinics

Our next clinic in the Jaltemba Bay area will take place in Guayabitos at #12 Flamingos in la Zona Residencial in Guayabitos on November 13, 14 and 15th  with clinic set up on the 12th and clean up on the 16th.  

On November 12, people wanting to help set up the clinic can meet at 9:00 a.m at the clinic site and a meeting of all new volunteers will take place at 11:00 a.m.  We will begin operating on the 12th as soon as we are ready.

Many thanks to Tom Plattenberg for offering to make coffee and provide snacks for the clinic.

San Poncho’s clinic is taking place November 7, 8, and 9.

Cats and dogs are welcome at all the clinics but do go early as the space fills usually by 9 am. for the entire day of operating.

Animals for Adoption:

In the last 4 months, 12 dogs and numerous cats have been adopted out by JBAR. 

However, we have just received 8 more dogs for adoption including 6 beautiful puppies!!  These animals will be sterilized at our clinic and be ready for adoption.

 

 

Six adorable puppies waiting sterilization and adoption   

Handsome, young male for adoption…ADOPTED!

 

Very loving young puppy for adoption ….ADOPTED

Young kitten for adoption


Many thanks to the following people for their wonderful donations:

 Allyson Willams for receiving a donation of 8 cases of Frontline spray (totaling 96 bottles) from Merial for use in our clinics along with two boxes of collars, harnesses and leashes donated from Lupine Pet including 124 collars, 12 harnesses and 20 leashes!!  Thank you Allyson for pursuing these much needed donations and for transporting them down for us!  And thank you to Merial and Lupine Pet for their generous support.

Dr. Brian Gibbs for sending 6 boxes of powdered latex medical exam gloves (100 per box) and a bag of prep razors.  A special thanks to Bob and Linda Gibbs for bringing these supplies down to us.

 

Eric LeBlanc for coordinating and transporting a huge load of medical supplies and kennels from Canada to Mexico as well as donating dog dishes, leashes and a bed.

Thank you, Eric!

Dr. Heather Raitt DVM:  medical supplies, books, kennels, and surgical instruments (so needed!!!) 

Chery Watson and Tony McLintock : a large cage and bedding.

Wendy and Dave Reed :a large kennel which we so need and also for driving all the supplies down to meet Eric for transportation to Mexico.

Maxine Zurbrigg for her generous donation of 500 pesos

To Make a Donation:

Please contact linchimes@hotmail.com

Thanks to all of you for your wonderful support!



 

Museo Nacional de Antropología

Photography by Bill and Dorothy Bell

The Museo Nacional de Antropología (MNA, or National Museum of Anthropology) is a national museum of Mexico. Located within Chapultepec Park in Mexico City, the museum contains significant archaeological and anthropological artifacts from the pre-Columbian heritage of Mexico, such as the Piedra del Sol (Aztec calendar stone) and the 16th-century Aztec statue of Xochipilli.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Want to Buy in Mexico? Here's What You Need to Know
Michael Sasges - Westcoast Homes
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AddThis 
Buy smart, just as you would in Canada, former Vancouverite recommends.

In Mexico, the asking price of a new-construction home is one-quarter to one-third the asking price of a comparable Canadian home. But property ownership by foreigners is restricted. The weather is lovely, but... And the scenery is so different, but...

A recent Mexican real-estate seminar by Canada2Mexico Consulting provided an opportunity to investigate the dream and the reality. Providing the answers below is Victoria Pratt, a former Vancouverite now selling Mexican real estate.

Q: At which Canadians was the Canada2Mexico Consulting seminar aimed?

A: We are seeking Canadians interested in buying a vacation home or a second residence, which could be either a condo or a single-family dwelling, on the Costa Vallarta of Mexico.

This zone is anchored by Puerto Vallarta and the greater Bay of Banderas, and includes towns and resort destinations that Vancouverites may have heard of, such as Nuevo Vallarta, Sayulita and San Francisco in the states of Jalisco and Nayarit.

Q: If a holiday or retirement home in Canada, on average, costs X, what is the Mexican equivalent, or Y?

A: The cost of a resort residence in our area is generally one-third to one-quarter the cost in Canada. Good developments are ranging from about $150 US to $250 US per square foot, completely outfitted with quality ceramic or marble floors, granite countertops, integrated kitchen cabinets and good carpentry for closets and finishes.

I have a buyer who bought a three-bedroom condo in Mexico as a second home for $425,000 US and jokingly commented that he had paid $1.2 million US for his False Creek condo of smaller square footage. Both were bought in pre-construction and both are waterfront properties.

Some listing examples:

• An excellent pre-construction condo development on the El Tigre golf course offers large two-bedroom plans for less than $250,000 US and includes beach-club and health-club memberships and golf-club privileges.

• A three-bedroom oceanfront townhouse with about 2,500 square feet, and fully-furnished, is listed at $789,000 US.

• A two-bedroom oceanview condo of about 1,400 square feet, fully-furnished, is listed for $445,000 US.

The very highest end condos and homes with the finest finishes and most exclusive locations would be in the $300 to $400 per-square-foot range.

Q: The seminar news release says rising house prices, an unstable economy and increasingly expensive medical and health-care costs in Canada are changing the way many Canadians consider their future. Is the Mexican economy stable? What's stability?

A: As a resident of Mexico, I consider the Mexico economy as stable as the global economic conditions currently permit. I am not an economist so can't elaborate on what stability is in technical terms, but can give you my sense of the economic environment in my area.

The tax base is increasing - more people are paying taxes - and tourism has steadily grown over the past 10 years, along with tourism infrastructure in our area, as has real estate development and investment. We will be most affected on a national basis by declining oil prices, similar to the factors that are currently affecting Canada.

Q: Can gringos own real property in Mexico?

A: Yes, foreigners can own property fee simple in the non-restricted area, which is 50 kilometres beyond the ocean borders and 100 kilometres beyond the national borders.

The restricted zone was established within the Mexican constitution for sovereignty reasons. In the mid-1970s, an administrative mechanism was created to permit foreigners to own in the restricted zone by way of deeding the property within a trust.

The trusts are administered by the chartered banks of Mexico and ownership is registered with the secretary of foreign affairs. The owner is named as the first beneficiary of the trust and has all the rights of being able to sell, bequeath, rent or chattel the property in the same manner as a fee-simple regime.

Q: How easy or difficult is probate down there? Is there probate in the Napoleonic Code? Is there joint tenancy? Tenancy in common?

A: A lawyer and the Canadian consulate could be your resource to answer those technicalities.

A foreigner buying real estate in the area in which I sell is required to register title to the property under a trust, as it is located in the "restricted zone.'' The trust offers the advantage that one can name one's heirs as beneficiaries and the process for claim is as simple as proving identity and presenting a death certificate to the authorities in Mexico, notarized and legitimized, of course.

Q: The last half-dozen headlines atop Mexican dispatches published on the Vancouver Sun's news pages, and published before the seminar, suggest that Mexico is plagued by cultural and natural violence. People do ask, I am sure. What do you say?

A: The violence to which the headlines refer is all related to the crackdown on corruption and particularly drug trafficking that is the mandate of Mexico's presidente, Felipe Calderon. The violence is occurring between factions and in retaliation for policing and convictions, as the president implements his anti-corruption campaign.

My personal viewpoint is that there is a lot of money at stake and there is bound to be a power struggle, but it is infighting and the violence is not targeted at the public.

I know similar issues are affecting Vancouverites as one sees the reports and debate on rampant gun use, escalating gang violence and cross-border drug and gun-smuggling.

As residents of the Puerto Vallarta area, we have seen increased security personnel and we feel safe in that protection is there and, if one is not part of a criminal lifestyle, one should not be affected.

With regard to hurricanes, I chose the Costa Vallarta, as it is relatively safe from those perils, being protected by Mexico's third largest bay and having what sailors refer to as a meteorological trough off the coast and that buffets drastic weather. Hurricane risk is mainly in the Atlantic/Gulf/Caribbean area of Mexico and is seasonal.

Q: Please share with Sun readers one "horror story" and its lessons and one life-should-be-so-good story and its lessons.

A: In my 10 years as an owner and nine years living on the Costa Vallarta, I have not had any horror stories among my friends or clients that I could say are unique to Mexico.

There have been a couple of instances of medical emergencies for which my friends rave about the level of medical care. People are happily living their life of retirement, semi-retirement or on vacation.

One hears of folks making silly real-estate deals from time to time. I would say they have likely not acted in the manner they might at home and perhaps made snap decisions or have not consulted with credible professionals.

The lesson is to align yourself with reputable advisers and make an educated decision -- same as in Canada.

Q: Am I wrong to think that in September, when your cross-Canada meetings were announced, they were anything but extraordinary, and now are extraordinary, with so much wealth disappearing around the world?

A: Of the two conferences staged by Canada2Mexico, I have identified buyers for my area. The common denominators are that they have funds earmarked for a vacation-home purchase.

There is, however, warranted concern on where the dollar will settle, but it has not stopped them from actively looking with a purchase goal in mind.

Many developers are considering setting an advantageous peso exchange rate or publishing in pesos (rather than the traditional U.S.-dollar-based price lists) to give a sense of stability to both national and foreign buyers.

We have had, and continue to have, many positive factors as stimulants in our market and we certainly hope they will at least partially offset the effects of the economic crisis.

Victoria Pratt is a sales associate with Pacific Boutique Properties. Her Mexican telephone number is 011 52 1 322 779 9283. Her email address is vp(at)pacificboutiqueproperties.com

 

 

NOVEMBER 2008
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Veterans Day
Golf Tournament

  Market Day
Mens Golf
eric

enrique
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
  Beginning of the
Mexican Revolution

Market Day
Mens Golf
eric


 
Grey Cup @ Mateja's 5pm
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
  Market Day
Mens Golf
eric
Thanksgiving
Xaltemba Restaurant

Thanksgiving   Benja's 



 

SOLD OUT
 

 

 

DECEMBER 2008
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
  Market Day
Mens Golf
eric


8 9 10 11 12 13 14
  Market Day
Mens Golf
eric
Día de Nuestra
Señora de
Guadalupe

6 pm Crazy Nelly's Anniversary Party
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
  Market Day
Mens Golf
eric

22 23 24 25 26 27 28
Death of José
María Morelos
(1815)
  Nochebuenas 
Navidad

Los Santos
Inocentes
29 30 31
 

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