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Thread: Sosua Reports

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  1. #31868
    Quote Originally Posted by MarcAnthony  [View Original Post]
    Dominican and Haitian girls who do pay for play vary a lot more than girls in the US. They're not all doing drugs. Many are ordinary girls trying to take care of their kids and get along. Treating them with respect and treating the interaction more like courtship and dating rather than a hard core business transaction may produce much better experiences.
    Excellent advice! Kudos.

  2. #31867
    Quote Originally Posted by Ohsowavy1  [View Original Post]
    Hey guys,

    I'm 21 years old new to the forums and when this whole you know what blows over I wanted to go to Sosua for the first time. I'm tired of the matrix and want to experience something new. So any way I wanted to know how much to do anything you want to a chica BBFS, bbj ect. Also money is no issue so. Anyway thanks and hoping to share more in the forums.
    Since you have plenty of time, I’d suggest reading the forum in depth. Information on what people paid is there. It's not very expensive. The norm for many years is the Dominican peso equivalent of about $40-$60. The quality of a sexual experience can vary enormously though while it's still described the same way. My POV is that this is a relationship even it's it's brief. I personally like to be selective and hang out with the same Chica repeatedly if it's good and politely move on if it's not.

    Dominican and Haitian girls who do pay for play vary a lot more than girls in the US. They're not all doing drugs. Many are ordinary girls trying to take care of their kids and get along. Treating them with respect and treating the interaction more like courtship and dating rather than a hard core business transaction may produce much better experiences. This is especially natural for you since they're your age. Small gifts, taking them out for meals, being interested in them, showing respect will improve your sexual experiences more than paying a lot more. If you find a Chica who appeals to you and treat her well likely she will work at finding out what most pleases you and doing her best to provide it.

  3. #31866

    The ultimate price?

    Hey guys,

    I'm 21 years old new to the forums and when this whole you know what blows over I wanted to go to Sosua for the first time. I'm tired of the matrix and want to experience something new. So any way I wanted to know how much to do anything you want to a chica BBFS, bbj ect. Also money is no issue so. Anyway thanks and hoping to share more in the forums.

  4. #31865

    Nice

    Quote Originally Posted by Oakie  [View Original Post]
    Thanks BrotherP.

    I don't put down the locals. I grew up poor with a single mom in UK after the war and us kids used to go out and "forage" for firewood, apples and veggies from rich folk's gardens, and whatever we could pilfer from Woolworths without getting caught! When you're hungry the rules change.

    That's why I live here, I can relate.

    When they see an old fart gringo with two young hookers in tow, coming back from SuperPolo, loaded down with grocery bags full of liquor, beer and chips, and the kids at home are hungry, I know that "feeling".

    The other thing is, I'm still on moderation here, from the old flame wars we used to have here, so my info is at least a day old, by the time it appears here!

    But all things pass, what goes up must come down, so here's hoping it's not too long before you're planning your next trip!

    Salud!
    Very well said.

  5. #31864
    The Official curfew is from 5 pm to 6 am, but all shops and businesses close up at 3 pm to allow everybody to get home and off the streets by 6.

    That said, unofficially you get still get a beer in the back room of the take out bars, or a haircut, behind the curtains.

  6. #31863
    Quote Originally Posted by Oakie  [View Original Post]
    When you're hungry the rules change. That's why I live here, I can relate.
    Thanks for that, disarming and in a way altruistic, with a personal anecdote.

  7. #31862
    Quote Originally Posted by BrotherP  [View Original Post]
    Someone needed to hear that bruh! You kept it actual and factual without being overly dramatic. Well done!
    Thanks BrotherP.

    I don't put down the locals. I grew up poor with a single mom in UK after the war and us kids used to go out and "forage" for firewood, apples and veggies from rich folk's gardens, and whatever we could pilfer from Woolworths without getting caught! When you're hungry the rules change.

    That's why I live here, I can relate.

    When they see an old fart gringo with two young hookers in tow, coming back from SuperPolo, loaded down with grocery bags full of liquor, beer and chips, and the kids at home are hungry, I know that "feeling".

    The other thing is, I'm still on moderation here, from the old flame wars we used to have here, so my info is at least a day old, by the time it appears here!

    But all things pass, what goes up must come down, so here's hoping it's not too long before you're planning your next trip!

    Salud!

  8. #31861

    Nice

    Quote Originally Posted by BrotherP  [View Original Post]
    Someone needed to hear that bruh! You kept it actual and factual without being overly dramatic. Well done!
    Great report.

  9. #31860

    Good stuff!

    Quote Originally Posted by Oakie  [View Original Post]
    A couple observations, and a word of caution.

    Sosua, and perhaps the DR in general, has become a more dangerous place as the Covid restrictions get tighter.

    The ladies are off the streets and back home hunkered down with family and friends. They are surviving and not going hungry.

    There are a lot of young guys however on the streets, who normally make their living off tourists. As the tourists have disappeared, so has the money. I'm stopped every day on my walk, by some I know and some I don't. They are hungry and getting desperate. Selling everything they can for food, and whatever else they need. Old used facemasks and gloves, even old TVs and phones. It's the guys now, not chicas who are asking for money for milk and food for their kids.

    It's good there is a curfew, as going out on the street at night could be more dangerous to your health than the virus. But at the same time it adds to the general pent up desperation for some.

    There are no newbies to worry about anymore, but we expats need to be extra aware of the potential for trouble, as long as this dire situation lasts.

    So as long as you stay safe, the weather's good, there's wi fi to keep in touch with "loved ones" (but no public transport to bring them in) there's food at the supermercado, and it's not the worst place to be in an emergency!

    Be smart!
    Someone needed to hear that bruh! You kept it actual and factual without being overly dramatic. Well done!

  10. #31859
    Quote Originally Posted by HuskerDude  [View Original Post]
    Colombia is now banning citizens too besides foreigners.
    Also the land borders with Ecuador, Brazil and Peru will be closed.

  11. #31858
    A couple observations, and a word of caution.

    Sosua, and perhaps the DR in general, has become a more dangerous place as the Covid restrictions get tighter.

    The ladies are off the streets and back home hunkered down with family and friends. They are surviving and not going hungry.

    There are a lot of young guys however on the streets, who normally make their living off tourists. As the tourists have disappeared, so has the money. I'm stopped every day on my walk, by some I know and some I don't. They are hungry and getting desperate. Selling everything they can for food, and whatever else they need. Old used facemasks and gloves, even old TVs and phones. It's the guys now, not chicas who are asking for money for milk and food for their kids.

    It's good there is a curfew, as going out on the street at night could be more dangerous to your health than the virus. But at the same time it adds to the general pent up desperation for some.

    There are no newbies to worry about anymore, but we expats need to be extra aware of the potential for trouble, as long as this dire situation lasts.

    So as long as you stay safe, the weather's good, there's wi fi to keep in touch with "loved ones" (but no public transport to bring them in) there's food at the supermercado, and it's not the worst place to be in an emergency!

    Be smart!

  12. #31857
    Sometimes as a BM you should just add a poster to your Ignore List. Always recognize a troll, don't feed them. Hopefully moderators act swiftly to ban any resurfacing fuckturd.

  13. #31856
    Quote Originally Posted by Bootycrusher  [View Original Post]
    Hey guys,

    I'm going to sosua once all this you know what blows over and I wanted to go down and film big booty chicas for my amateur porn adventures. I was wondering do you think the chicas will be down if so how much pesos do I think it will run me?

    I know you guys know Toticos LOL but they kind of faded out.
    Taking couple of pictures is one thing. But to use them for porn videos is totally different. You might be in legal trouble. Maybe better to hire a lawyer and sign agreement with the chica in question.

  14. #31855

    Filming?

    Hey guys,

    I'm going to sosua once all this you know what blows over and I wanted to go down and film big booty chicas for my amateur porn adventures. I was wondering do you think the chicas will be down if so how much pesos do I think it will run me?

    I know you guys know Toticos LOL but they kind of faded out.

  15. #31854

    Yes they did

    Quote Originally Posted by Bravo  [View Original Post]
    Did they recently change it from 5 PM to 6 AM?
    Ozzie is correct. The new curfew hours country wide is 5 pm to 6 am. Around 4 pm I was near Las Palmeras hotel today, and saw PN police in their pick up truck loaded with men with rifles. They've been circling around Sosua a lot. I was told by someone a few Haitians went into a restaurant in Sosua and menaced the worker inside, and demanded food. If that person made a report to the police, I'm sure that's one more reason patrols during and beyond curfew would step up. I still hear motos every now and then, going up and down one of the back streets near where I live (during curfew), and they arent police.

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