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FOR RENT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Guayabitos residential home

Available this season

Pool, 3 bedrooms, lots of deck

Call Dorothy @ 327-274-3356

 


 

 


 






 

 

 

 

 

January 9 2008 Page 2 Jaltemba Features

 

 

Gella Navarro: Award Winning Local Fashion Designer

By Tara Spears

Gella Navarro was born to the designer’s life: “God gave me the talent and imagination to create beautiful clothes, so I have worked very hard to become a recognized Mexican designer.”  Her Galion label clothes are sold in several countries.  In fact, Gella earned the Mexican fashion industry’s highest award for several years (1985-87) for the most foreign clothing sales. Other notable events in her long professional career are producing wardrobe for the movie “Cocoon” and for Bette Midler.

 

 

 

 

Gella’s trademark style is luxurious tactile combinations that creatively blend several fabric types to form a 3-D garment. As a tribute to her Mexican heritage, Gella frequently includes hand-beaded embellishments.  The results are unique garments that have the look of artwork.   

Purse, below; shawl, right.

 

 

 

 

Although she was born in Mexico City, Gella spent her formative years in Aguacaliente state .  “I attended a bilingual primary and secondaro (Mexican high school)”said Gella.  “I drew my first design when I was four years old.”  Both of her parents worked in the garment industry. Her father, Julian Navarro, was the designer and manager of a large garment company.  

 

 

 

Gella apprenticed for two years working with her father, during which he taught her all phases of the design process and the steps involved with garment production.  She also went to school to learn the techniques for creating patterns.

“As a child, it was a hobby for me to sketch designs and make my own outfits,” she says. “It was my friends and father that encouraged me to turn my hobby into a career.”  Gella went to work as a director for a design shop, creating original patterns and sewing the haute couture clothes. “My design philosophy is to take elements from the Mexican artisans, use organic Mexican fabrics to create fashions. I was the first to combine jute and cotton for casual wear; the first designer to prewash fabrics before the garments are cut out,” she proudly relates.  For 36 years Gella worked hard to develop the quality that the Galion label stands for and to earn respect for Mexican designs in the international fashion market.  “I feel euphoric when I complete the process from imagining the design, creating the pattern, selecting the right materials, cutting and then sewing the garment to end up with a unique, comfortable, and beautiful garment.” She travels all over Mexico searching for just the right fabrics for her creations.

All three of her children inherited Gella’s sense of style and artistic talents: Wesley, 24, is a jewelry artist, Oliver, 22, and Rochelle, 19, are painters. About 14 years ago, Gella started to show her designs in Las Vargas, Nayarit. She decided to relocate to the Riviera Nayarit area in order to reduce her 60 hour work-week schedule and to have more time for herself and her family.  Gella is passionate about the importance of art for children, and dreams of establishing an art school in the area: “Art is such a part of me,” she says, “I want the local people to have an opportunity to develop their talents.” Although there has been an explosion of development in the area, Gella would like to see better education and services for the local people.    

Presently, Gella’s Galion designs can be viewed by appointment in her boutique at Bahia de Manzanillo 9A, La Penita.  She accepts commissions for original outfits, or you can see her work modeled at the Mujeres a Mujeres Fashion show, February 10, 2009.

 

Gella is wearing Galion garments; son Wesley

Original designs: Galion label                                           close-up of intricate details 

Contact Gella:  gella_wor3@hotmail.com  or, telephone for an appointment: 322-103-6777

Original jewelry available at Gella’s boutique by Rochelle & Edy

 

 


 

Alicia Conshey:

Energetic Designs

By Tara Spears

 This novice designer may be new to the local fashion scene but she radiates enthusiasm and creativity. Alicia Rivas designs express a youthful outlook on life- one can’t have a bad day when wearing one of her original outfits!  Her colorful clothes radiate positive energy, as does her shop, Nahual, located on Lazaro Cardenas Calle #12 in La Penita.  You can sip fresh espresso while browsing the artfully displayed funky bags, hats, blouses and slacks.  There is also an attractive selection of original jewelry to compliment the outfits and complete the ensembles.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Although Alicia was born in Los Angeles, California, she has been living part-time in the Riviera Nayarit area for more than 20 years.  The commercial development and expansion in the area is not to her liking: “It is such a beautiful natural area with a relaxed lifestyle” Alicia said, “I hate to see it get too big.”  Settling permanently in La Penita about three years ago when she married Wesley Rivas, a talented jewelry artist, they decided to open a boutique/coffee shop to market their creations to the public. The colorful shop mirrors their philosophy: “We think it is important to live a healthy lifestyle, work hard, and to take the time to appreciate what you have!” she says with a dazzling smile. Alicia finds designing clothes very satisfying, a perfect outlet for her creativity and imagination. “In the future, I hope to be able to make a living from my clothing sales and offer a larger selection of items.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This self-taught seamstress began designing clothes for herself eight years ago and was surprised when others asked her to make a similar outfit for them. “I love working with natural non-dyed materials,” Alicia laughingly explains, “and I find such satisfaction creating clothes that others enjoy.”   She comes up with inspiration from music, fabrics, and dance:  Alicia relaxes by belly, jazz, or modern dancing. Right now, Alicia describes her style as ‘spontaneous eclectic’. She loves quirky details, lots of color, and a surreal feel in her designs. To see her fashions, Nahual boutique is open Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sundays from 7 am to 2 pm., or attend the Mujeres a Mujeres Fashion Show 2009 to view her latest designs.

                                                                                                    Email: clavada@hotmail.com

Daughter Catalina, Alicia, husband Wesley                         Contact Alicia: 322-157-4519

 

 

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

Polar bear Swim

Photographs by Bill Bell and Dianna Belitski

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mexico Book Club's January Book Recommendations
Ed Hutmacher - MexicoBookClub.com
 


For more information on these or other books with Mexico-related themes, please visit MexicoBookClub.com.

A new year always brings a rededication to read more books. From the biography of a literary legend to a true-crime thriller to books for Mexico travelers, here are a handful of recommendations you might want to dig into this January.

Elena Poniatowska: An Intimate Biography by Michael K. Schuessler (University of Arizona Press; 2007; Non-fiction) — Author, journalist and poet Elena Poniatowska is a living literary legend in Mexico. With scores of books, essays and articles to her credit, she is perhaps best known for her novels Hasta no verte, Jesús mío (1969; "Until I see You, My Jesus") and La noche de Tlatelolco (1971; "Massacre in Mexico"). Born in Paris in 1933 (her father was French-Polish and her mother Mexican), Poniatowska's family moved to Mexico City when she was nine. By the time she was twenty, Poniatowska was making a name for herself in the male-dominated world of Mexico City journalism. Her skill as a journalist and novelist was her ability to combine fact with fiction, allowing the voice of the Mexican people to be heard through her writing. Many of her characters are women whose lives are ruled by men in a world made up of double standards. This superb biography is a great read for anyone interested Mexico's journalistic-literary scene of the past 50 years.

Trail of Feathers: Searching for Phillip True by Robert Rivard (Public Affairs Publishers; 2006; Non-fiction) — There's nothing as suspenseful as a true-crime thriller, and this fascinating tale of a Mexican misadventure is a page-turner from the get-go. "If I'm not back in 10 days, come looking for me," he said, then waved goodbye through the open window as the taxi disappeared from view up the steep, winding street. No one who knew True ever saw him alive again. When Phillip True, a journalist chasing down a story, disappears in Huichol Indian territory in Mexico's forbidding Sierra Madre, newspaper editor Robert Rivard goes on his own long journey to discover what happened to him — and why. True's life and death in Mexico is not exactly a warning, but it is a reminder that there are cultural elements that can trip up the most seasoned travelers. It doesn't matter the size of a person's heart or the pureness of intentions.

Mexican Days: Journeys Into the Heart of Mexico by Tony Cohan (Broadway Books, 2006; Non-fiction) — Tony Cohan fired the imagination of every armchair traveler north of the Rio Bravo in his 2000 bestseller On Mexico Time, a seductive chronicle of discovering a new life in 1980s San Miguel de Allende. But Mexico has changed considerably since then, thanks in large part to a horde of touristy, well-to-do North Americans like Cohan who have turned once-remote colonial pueblos into chic expatriate havens. In Mexican Days, Cohan embarks anew into Mexico's heartland, hoping to rediscover the lost authenticity and charm of his adopted homeland, "...to see how the puzzle of old and new fit together." Well written, evocative and perceptive, he gives readers a sympathetic portrait of Mexico, without ignoring its political problems, its poverty or the changes that have marred its landscape and its culture.

Mexican Cinema: Reflections of a Society, 1896 – 2004 by Carl J. Mora (McFarland & Company Publishers; 2005; Non-fiction) — Much can be learned about the culture of a country by examining (and viewing) the films made there, particularly so in Mexico where uniquely Mexican values and symbolism are depicted quite differently than in Europe or the United States. Mexican Cinema is primarily a reference book, but Mora's intelligent narrative and comprehensive review of Mexican films is a captivating chronicle of Mexico's history, politics and social mores viewed through the medium of cinema. Especially enjoyable is reading about the groundbreaking films from Mexico's Golden Age, the 1940s, out of which some of the world's greatest cinematic art was born.

The Mexico Reader: History, Culture, Politics edited by Gilbert M. Joseph and Timothy J. Henderson (Duke University Press; 2002; Non-fiction) — The Mexico Reader should be on the shelf of every Mexico aficionado or in the suitcase of every Mexico traveler. It's that good. There's nothing in this hefty paperback (792 pages) that isn't informative, enlightening or entertaining. The considerable collection of articles, essays and excerpts explores what it means to be Mexican, tracing the history of Mexico from pre-Columbian times through the country's epic 1910-17 revolution to the present day, leaving no political, cultural or social stone unturned. Already considered a classic, readers will find themselves referring to The Mexico Reader for a lifetime.

Ed Hutmacher is Editor in Chief of Mexico Book Club. For more information on books with Mexico-related themes, please visit the website at MexicoBookClub.com.


Bargains Galore! 25% Discount on

 Everything in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
Jim Scherrer - PVNN

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Well, it appears as though the effects of the mortgage crisis in the US, which began in March, 2008 followed by the collapse of the stock market in October, 2008 are finally being felt in Puerto Vallarta. Thanks to the strong Canadian Dollar, tourist expenditures in Vallarta for goods and services, including retirement real estate, held up fairly well for most of 2008.
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However, during the September/October timeframe, the Canadian Dollar plunged by more than 20%, thus reducing the Canadian purchasing power accordingly. Consequently, both the Americans and Canadians are now hesitant to aggressively invest in anything, especially foreign retirement properties.
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The airplanes and cruise boats packed with tourists continue to arrive daily in PV; however the visitors are much more thrifty and prudent with their purchases than they were a year ago. Many of the restaurateurs and shop owners are claiming that sales are down from last year by as much as 35%. The construction of new condominium projects has also noticeably decreased as new sales slow to a trickle.
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During the past ten years, Vallarta has literally been a boom town with explosive growth and new construction everywhere. Obviously, many of the developers and entrepreneurs failed to see the oncoming global financial crisis and committed to many long term construction projects resulting in a glut of more than 7,000 new condominiums now on the market.
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Finally, with the supply of goods and services, including retirement properties, currently exceeding demand, we are now witnessing a true buyer's market in Vallarta. Even though list prices for real estate have not dropped noticeably, the developers and sellers are much more apt to negotiate than they were a year ago. The same is true for store merchants and other vendors in the area.
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Okay, now that we have a better understanding of how the economy in the US and Canada have affected business in Vallarta, we should have a better appreciation for the North American bargaining position in this beautiful resort destination.
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Therefore, let's take it a step further. With the exception of real estate, most all other goods and services in Puerto Vallarta are sold on a Peso basis and therefore we must consider the monetary exchange rate.
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The Mexican Peso has held steady with the US Dollar for more than ten years at about 10.8 Pesos per US Dollar. It wasn't until early in October, 2008 when the Peso precipitously devalued to about 13.5 Pesos per Dollar resulting in a 25% increase in the value or purchasing power of the US Dollar relative to the Mexican Peso.
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For those of us fortunate enough to still be holding a few US Dollars, almost all goods and services in Mexico just went on sale! For example, we recently purchased a high-end brand name washer/dryer set, normally priced at $1300 USD, for $1015 USD.
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Most all grocery and food products, clothing, hardware, and electronics manufactured in Mexico, gasoline, electricity, and other native commodities are also 25% less expensive to those of us holding US Dollars.
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Through inflation over time, the costs of these Mexican products will eventually rise until they return to where they were only a few months ago. The one category where costs will rise much more slowly is that of labor. Almost every worker in Mexico just took a 25% reduction in wages relative to the US Dollar! That includes all maids, gardeners, restaurant and store employees, taxi drivers, doctors, architects, engineers, etc. It will probably require several years for the Mexican labor rates to be equivalent to where they were only six months ago.
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One very important labor group is that of the construction workers which represents a significant portion of the total cost of retirement residences, all priced in US Dollars. Add their 25% cut in pay to the cost of Mexican concrete and other native materials which also dropped by 25% and you can imagine how that will affect the completion costs of the thousands of condos currently under construction!
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Now, with the demand for goods and services reduced relative to their supply and the US Dollar being 25% stronger, you can see the benefit of shopping in Paradise at this very moment; the time for buying your retirement dream could never be better!
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As Billy Mays, the famous TV pitchman would say, "But wait, there's more!" Yes, aside from the 25% savings associated with the Peso devaluation and an increase in willingness of the local vendors to negotiate lower prices (caused by the reduction in tourist consumption brought on by the uncertain US economy and the devaluation of the Canadian Dollar), effective in June, 2008, you now receive a rebate for the 15% IVA tax that you pay on many of your purchases while visiting Mexico.
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The 15% IVA or Value Added Tax (VAT) is returned to foreign tourists who can prove they have spent a minimum of $1200 Pesos (approximately $90 US Dollars) on Mexican territory and who are returning home by sea or air. Tourists now have the right to receive up to 50% of the net rebate, an amount not to exceed $10,000 Pesos (approximately $750.00 US Dollars), in the form of cash; the remaining 50% will be refunded via electronic funds transfer within a period of 40 days.
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In conclusion, after being exposed to the past six months of economic frustrations, you deserve to escape from the prevailing gloom and doom. If you have ever considered traveling to or retiring in Paradise, now is the time and Puerto Vallarta is the place!
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You will find many great values on everything this season; values that have not been seen for almost a decade and may not be available again in the near future. As Billy would say, "Why wait, pick up the phone" and call your travel agent.
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The weather is guaranteed to be perfect during the months of November through May, the scenery of the Pacific Ocean, the sandy white beaches, and the Sierra Madres is world class, the Margaritas are ice cold, and the Mexican hospitality is second to none. So, come on down; you'll find bargains galore while enjoying the time of your life on the Mexican Riviera!


The founder of Puerto Vallarta Real Estate Buyers' Agents (PVREBA), Jim Scherrer is a retired entrepreneur who has owned property in Puerto Vallarta for 24 years. Utilizing his experience and extensive knowledge of the area, Jim has written a series of informative articles about travel to and retirement in Puerto Vallarta, which you can read on his website at PVREBA.com.
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Click HERE for more articles by Jim Scherrer.

 

 


New Classified Ads

Car Trailer For Sale

16 feet car trailer with brake on both axels.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Very strong and ride very good. The trailer is plated in Québec Canada and is also legalise here in Mexico.

27 000 pesos.
 
Stéphane at elrefugio rv park in lo de marcos (villas tlaquepaque)

or cell 322-111-5390 or skype at stephane.rvpark
 
 

 

 


 

FOR SALE 5TH WHEEL TRAILER

2000 HITCHHIKER PREMIER

35 1/2’ BAY WINDOW  TRIPLE GLIDE                                        

NUWA products are known for their quality and craftsmanship.

Large queen bedroom with full closet.

Front loading Simplicity washer.

Full frig and freezer, microwave, 3 burner gas stove/oven

Lots of cabinets + pantry

2 recliners + love seat (hide-a-bed)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

27” TV set in Oak cabinetry with computer station, VCR & DVD

This is a well maintained unit inside and out, and

Is being sold furnished with linens, dishes, pots and pans,

Small electrical appliances as well as a “beer” frig.

 7 years remaining on a 10 year import tag.

Asking  US$ 19,000.

ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED               

 

Email: fire117@hotmail.com

Location:  Site # 52 La Penita RV Park

 

Go to our classified Ad Page

For Sale Quad

Yamaha 350 Warrior
6 speed
Low miles-Like New Good Condition
 $3000.00 US ($40,877 Peso)
La Penita RV Park Site 127
Talk to Bob or John
 We can email and we can send picture :  shirley@infinitycoach.com 
 

Freezer Wanted

Want to buy a small used freezer. Please contact: corvina@shaw.ca with size and price."

"Quiero comprar un pequeno congelador usado. Por favor ponerse a contacto con Judy a correo electronico corvina@shaw.ca , dar precio y tamano del congelador".

 



On the Tracks of Villa and Zapata in Mexico City
Monsters and Critics
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Mexico City - Whoever follows in the footsteps of Francisco 'Pancho' Villa (1878-1923) and Emiliano Zapata (1879-1919) is in for a surprise: discovering the other face of Villa's black legend and understanding how the two revolutionaries of 1910 can still live on so long after their deaths.
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The tourist will find wartime love stories and victorious troops who beg rather than loot, and see Villa, 'The Centaur of the North,' forcefully recruit 350 children not to make them fight, but to make them go to school.
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Among its cultural tours, Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) offers one which not only follows the activities of the two revolutionaries, but also looks at their personalities and ideologies.
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On December 6, 1914, Villa led his cavalry unit Los Dorados into the Mexican capital. Three years earlier, he had spent a week's honeymoon with Luz Corral in downtown Mexico City's Iturbide Hotel which currently houses the Banamex Museum and Palace.
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The famous 'sarakof' hat Villa wore during most of his campaigns contribute to the myth surrounding the womanizing, sexist and violent macho. Inside the hat shown in the History Museum at Chapultepec Castle, sewn and protected with a plastic cover, there is a photograph of Luz, 'the love of his life,' as the revolutionary once confessed.
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Of the 12 women certified by the registry as Villa's wives, she was the only one whom he actually married in a religious ceremony, even though he did not believe in God and although the parish priest at San Andres, Chihuahua, had to demand that he disarm before the May 28, 1911 ceremony.
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A month before Villa's triumphant return to the capital, his main ally, Emiliano Zapata, had done the same, followed by thousands of well-armed peasants and indigenous people.
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For Zapata, this was one of few encounters with a world of a French-style cobbled streets which appeared to intimidate him.
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The two men had no opposition. Their common enemy, Venustiano Carranza, had fled, and they were hailed by the people.
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They posed for photographers at the National Palace: Villa smiled while Zapata stared at the camera suspiciously.
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From the building's main balcony, the revolutionaries watched one of the longest military parades in history, featuring some 50,000 men and lasting over eight hours.
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Afterwards, the two leaders looked for simple accommodation. Neither of them contemplated using official facilities. And they soon left, separately, to pursue other fights.
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Villa made use of his brief stay in the capital to rename Plateros street with the name of a man he greatly admired, Francisco I Madero, who launched the Mexican Revolution.
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A shot that left a mark on the roof of the restaurant La Opera, at the corner of 5 de Mayo and Filomeno Mata, is often said to have been made by Villa. However, Armando Ruiz Aguilar, a researcher at the INAH, rules out such an episode.
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Some Zapatistas, with their .30-30 rifles across their shoulders, had coffee and paid the bill at an old branch of the Sanborns cafe chain, where the Madero bookshop currently stands, at the corner of Madero and Gante. Others wandered through the streets, knocking on doors to ask for food.
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'None of their bosses was made to take on the responsibility of the presidency or wanted to be in power forever. Zapata took up arms with the slogan 'Tierra y Libertad' (land and liberty), in the name of peasants who lived in abject poverty in what is now the state of Morelos,' Ruiz Aguilar says.
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'Villa's biography, personality and vision were different, more complex. He had gone a longer way, carrying out more activities, holding ties with foreign companies like Wells Fargo and the German armament maker Krupp,' the researcher noted.
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With Wells Fargo, he negotiated a generous payment in exchange for not raiding its facilities and 'protecting' it.
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Such unconventional methods, along with many other controversial episodes like the 1916 raid on Columbus, New Mexico, practically kept Villa out of official Mexican historiography until 1964.
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For the same reason, he was also kept off the mural, A Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park, by Mexican artist Diego Rivera, which shows important figures of that era.
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In 1964, following intense debate, the legislator Everardo Gamiz finally managed to have Francisco Villa's name included in golden letters in the honours wall of the Legislative Palace of San Lazaro, the seat of the Mexican Congress where it still shines.

 


BEACH PARTY! Always Fun Every Sunday!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 













 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Consider Retirement Options in Mexico
Laurence Iliff - McClatchy-Tribune
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Cielito Lindo is a new assisted-living development outside San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, that charges about a third of what care and meals would cost in the United States. (McClatchy-Tribune)

With 75 million American baby boomers heading toward retirement and the cost of private nursing care in the U. S. outstripping hammered retirement funds, Mexican developers say they have an irresistible product in the works: active senior and assisted- living facilities in a warm climate full of friendly people for as little as $1,100 a month.
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Some developers are shifting their traditional condo and townhouse developments midstream to include assisted- living wings focused, in part, on Americans who want modern facilities with quality services at reasonable prices.
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There are already an estimated 1.2 million retired Americans and Canadians in Mexico.
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“This is not going to be a niche market; this is going to be an entire industry,” said Eduardo Alvarado, chief executive officer of La Moreleja, a residential development in San Luis Potosi, a colonial city in northern Mexico that also sports Wal-Mart, Home Depot and many other businesses familiar to Americans.
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“We already have the pioneers here, but what we are seeing is that many people will come — perhaps not because they want to, but out of necessity,” he said. Many will find Mexico far more modern and far safer than they had imagined, he added.
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Alvarado said the drug cartel violence that gets so much U. S. media coverage rarely touches civilians. Mexico “is as safe or safer than the U. S.,” he said.
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The U. S. Embassy warns Americans to be extra careful along the U. S.-Mexico border, but otherwise considers attacks against the millions of U. S. citizens who visit and live here to be isolated and rare.
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Alvarado said his property is scheduled to be finished sometime next year, with 180 spots for assisted living and 250 for independent.
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La Moreleja will charge a onetime inscription of $9,000 and a monthly rent of about $1,100 that includes a full range of services, including meals.
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One problem, developers said, is a lack of regulations. The private assisted- living and nursing industry is so new in Mexico — there are about a half-dozen facilities under construction — that laws need to be written to cover its activities. The Mexican Association of Retirement Communities is lobbying for legislation similar to U. S. regulations.
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Marisol Ancona Velten, director of planning for Le Grand Senior Living, an assisted-living development in Mexico City, warned against informal, “clandestine” senior housing that caters to Americans and offers substandard care in converted private homes. She also said many Mexican resort cities, like San Miguel and Puerto Vallarta, do not have the world-class hospitals found in the Mexican capital.
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Mexico has a national health care system (which Americans can buy into for $350 a year) along with many private hospitals and clinics with U. S.-trained doctors. Average life expectancy for Mexicans is 75 years, just three less than in the U. S., according to the retirement organization AARP.
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Since most Mexicans take care of their parents often until death, there is not much of a nursing home industry at all, except for those run by charities or the government.
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Many Americans who retire in Mexico have often been adventurous types willing to learn the language and traverse the obstacle course of setting up a home, securing quality medical care and adapting to cultural differences.
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Jonathan Taylor, 78, came to San Miguel de Allende from Dalhart, Texas, almost six years ago.
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Taylor now spends his time running, playing tennis and socializing but can imagine the day when he might need to move into a place like Cielito Lindo, an assisted living development outside San Miguel de Allende that opened in September.
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“I hope I don’t have to consider it for a while, but if you get into your 80s and need assisted living, what could be better than this?” said Taylor. “The people are so friendly and the scenery is so beautiful.”
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At another location favored by American retirees, on Lake Chapala near Guadalajara, several small retirement homes have sprung up, often operated by locals, to serve Americans as they get older and can no longer take care of themselves.
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What’s coming now, developers say, is completely different: brand-new, turnkey developments, for sale or rent, that come with a buffet of services (from a maid to full Alzheimer’s care) at about a third or less the cost of that in the U. S.
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A report last month by the Met-Life Mature Market Institute put the average rate for an assisted-living facility in the U. S. at $3,031 a month. Generally, that included room and board, at least two meals a day, housekeeping and personal care assistance.


 

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