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Thread: Santo Domingo

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  1. #15662

    SDQ Covid Check

    Just arrived today at the airport, automatic temp scan then the random Covid testing line on the left. I stayed to the right and the person in front and behind me were pulled for the test. I definitely look like a tourist but the two pulled looked Dominican to me. I knew about the random test from this forum which started after my visit last month. I feel fine and would not have traveled if I thought I was sick but the "what if" thought was in the back of my mind.

    Now I'm sitting on the hotel terrace smoking a cigar and drinking a Presidente. Tomorrow morning my Latina shows up! But the La Sirena is directly across the street so we will go look at what 1200 pesos will buy. So SubCommander were you ever on subs?

    Strawhat.

  2. #15661
    Quote Originally Posted by Remy316  [View Original Post]
    This is all very good information and thanks for sharing your personal experiences on this board.

    1200 is nothing. Its just 22 dollars, barely enough for one day expense for them. I come to the capital on my business and fun trips regularly but now wanting to switch to non pros. Most of them, almost all are only interested in money compensation cause the economy and jobs have tanked so much and the chicas are so desperate now. I have seen video chats of their empty fridge from at least three random chicas. And I know its real cause everything is so messed up during the curfew last few months. Even the cops are looking to target Americans so I hope everyone stays vigilant and avoid trouble if you plan on visiting.

    Back to the point, the chicas are getting desperate and agitated for money, they have to buy food, pay rent, do their fuckin hair and nails LOL, but from what I seen they don't budge on compensation requests. They're not interested in small change cause their list is too big. And the biggest problem that I hear from others is the constant pressure for requests for money transfer before the meeting which everyone should avoid and not fall in that trap. And like you said, there are others that just want to dine and wine and just be seen out there with foreigners, but either way you pay for it somehow. A lot of pussy here but it ain't going for free for sure. I'll be returning next week in the capital for three weeks this time and will provide another update soon after. My greatest disadvantage is I barely speak few sentences in Spanish and not enough to engage in conversations.
    Dominican business logic is if there is less demand and less customers, raise prices. Hotels and restaurants also do it.

  3. #15660
    Quote Originally Posted by BoricuaOnline  [View Original Post]
    It has not always been like that. Utilities were public before privatization. In the past, outages were a pain, services goes out several times a day in all the city. Now that it is private outages are zoned. People in zone A gets electricpower 24 hours a day, people where most people do not pay their bills gets 2-4 hours per day. She had a 2 yr. Old so she has the milk all the time in the freezer to keep it cold. Dominican Republic is in many ways similar to my country.
    Even in the 24/7 zones the electric will go out. Often when Edesur owes the power generators. Most "Torres" in these zones have a planta though. I have modems, computers, routers, switches, cable box, Apple TV etc all hooked up to UPS. When power goes out, I lose lights for maybe a minute or two, but the UPS keeps me online. Sort of miss the old days when if power went out we would go to a bar with a generator!

  4. #15659
    Quote Originally Posted by BoricuaOnline  [View Original Post]
    It is a cultural thing, very common in latin countries. In Puerto Rico (my country) it is customary to offer food and or drinks to visits all the time.
    I have been to all 50 states and at least two countries in every continent and have never not been offered at least a water when entering a person's home.

  5. #15658

    Really good girls

    Quote Originally Posted by SubCmdr  [View Original Post]
    I missed the signifigence of length of time it took you to get into the panties of a girl and the quality of the girl.

    Nothing allows for anyone to vouch for what a girl is doing when she is not with you. Unless you are going to put a body camera on her that she can't remove or turn off and a GPS tracker on her ankle. No one owns the pussy but her. It is always your turn. Never your pussy. LOL!

    What the fuck do I know gentlemen? I only live here!
    I agree.

    I really do not care what my chicas do when I am not in the Dominican Republic. I just want them to be very pretty, very willing to have sex whenever and however I like it, free of disease and to give me the type of GF experience that suits my fantasy. I give them money but never negotiate on price (in fact, 99% of the time, I don't even talk about payment). If a hardcore pro behaves like a naïve non-pro and fools me, I am happy in my ignorance.

    I have waited for a girl to sleep with me on the second and rarely, the third date, but after that I move on. Two years to get into her panties? This must have been love. Most of us operate on lust.

  6. #15657
    Quote Originally Posted by Tempoecorto  [View Original Post]
    On another note, when I asked you about what one can buy for 1200 pesos, it was not a rhetorical question. I am truly curious.
    When I talk to chicks and ask them what they had for dinner, it is usually along the lines of rice, beans, and eggs. Meat is never really mentioned. I think 1200 pesos could actually buy a large supply of rice, beans, and eggs.

  7. #15656
    In the USA And Europe it is a sign of very poor breeding to fail to offer food or drink to someone who visits your home. Please don't anyone be offended. Pero si te sirve el sombrero.

    Quote Originally Posted by BoricuaOnline  [View Original Post]
    It is a cultural thing, very common in latin countries. In Puerto Rico (my country) it is customary to offer food and or drinks to visits all the time.

  8. #15655
    Quote Originally Posted by SubCmdr  [View Original Post]
    In Republica Dominicana you have to be so down and out. Have no friends or family. You have to be a complete social outcast in order to not have someone not offer you food.
    In fact, on my first trip to the Dominican Republic over ten years ago I was partying at a colmado. One of the regular party girls bought a sandwich and insisted that she share half with me. I knew it might be the first or last thing she ate for the day. So after we finished the sandwich, I instead that I was still hungry. I went in and bought the same type of sandwich she did. I came back out of the colmado and insisted that she share my sandwich.

    ...I just live here. Been grocery shopping lately? LOL!
    Enjoyed reading the post and liked your sense of belonging to the place and your speaking well of the people around, men and women. On another note, when I asked you about what one can buy for 1200 pesos, it was not a rhetorical question. I am truly curious.

  9. #15654
    Quote Originally Posted by BoricuaOnline  [View Original Post]
    People in zone A gets electricpower 24 hours a day, people where most people do not pay their bills gets 2-4 hours per day.
    I was not aware of this. Essentially, it appears that power outages are not a result of low volume power generation but that of planned delivery, based on ability to pay. Interesting!

  10. #15653
    Quote Originally Posted by SubCmdr  [View Original Post]
    It makes no sense to own a refrigerator if you only have electric power for just a few hours a day. Why bother?]
    It has not always been like that. Utilities were public before privatization. In the past, outages were a pain, services goes out several times a day in all the city. Now that it is private outages are zoned. People in zone A gets electricpower 24 hours a day, people where most people do not pay their bills gets 2-4 hours per day. She had a 2 yr. Old so she has the milk all the time in the freezer to keep it cold. Dominican Republic is in many ways similar to my country.

  11. #15652

    Very

    Quote Originally Posted by MrEnternational  [View Original Post]
    I agree with that. It might not be a steak dinner, but they will offer you something. Soup, oatmeal, fruits, etc.
    It is a cultural thing, very common in latin countries. In Puerto Rico (my country) it is customary to offer food and or drinks to visits all the time.

  12. #15651
    Quote Originally Posted by SubCmdr  [View Original Post]
    You have to be a complete social outcast in order to not have someone not offer you food. I have been in the homes of people that live in some very economically disadvantaged barrios. And not once has the person in charge of the home fail offer me something to eat or drink. Not once!
    I agree with that. It might not be a steak dinner, but they will offer you something. Soup, oatmeal, fruits, etc. I usually turn it down when I see the roaches and rats running around though.

  13. #15650

    I use deodorant to control BO.

    It makes no sense to own a refrigerator if you only have electric power for just a few hours a day. Why bother? Buy a cooler and put ice in it. You would be better off.

    A modern refrigerator in good repair will keep food cold within the food safety guidelines of large western nations for 4 hours if you do not open the door. A full freezer can go 48 hours before food begins to reach a unsafe temp. But this situation is different for each person and the temperatures the refrigerator is operating in.

    I lived in a barrio ever since I moved to Republica Dominicana. I regularly experience power outages for up to 8 hours or more. I have never faced a food spoilage situation. I keep my refrigerator and freezer full at all times. Only until the week before a extended trip do I let my supplies dwindle and put it into vacation mode. Now I also have a refrigerator thermometer. And I can monitor the temperature inside of both of my refrigerators. That's right gentlemen. I keep not one but two.

    Sorry, but I'm calling a technical foul on those who are blaming what is a cultural lifestyle issue on infrastructure. I understand knowing the culture. I know the culture. It does not mean I understand it. But I operate just fine within it.

    How I see it is more about how someone choses to live than about technical issues. The just-in-time philosophy that pervades the living styles of those less affluent in Republica Dominicana speaks to chicas having empty refrigerators more than infrastructure issues.

    Right now, I can take you to a shop in Santo Domingo este where you can buy a refurbished 1500 w /12 volt modified sin wave inverter for 7000 pesos. Twelve volts means you can get away with 2 six volt batteries in series. Not a lot of power or the ability to power a lot of things. But you can keep the basics running (one fan, one light, internet and charger) for quite a while if you conserve. (This information is for the clown that would most surely throw up a post questioning my knowledge of Republica Dominicana).

    In Republica Dominicana you have to be so down and out. Have no friends or family. You have to be a complete social outcast in order to not have someone not offer you food. I have been in the homes of people that live in some very economically disadvantaged barrios. And not once has the person in charge of the home fail offer me something to eat or drink. Not once! Real life. Yeah, I live a lotta that.

    In fact, on my first trip to the Dominican Republic over ten years ago I was partying at a colmado. One of the regular party girls bought a sandwich and insisted that she share half with me. I knew it might be the first or last thing she ate for the day. So after we finished the sandwich, I instead that I was still hungry. I went in and bought the same type of sandwich she did. I came back out of the colmado and insisted that she share my sandwich.

    Now, I see someone is a little sensitive because I did not give them a complement. Sorry Charlie. They want to talk real life experiences. Here is another one. I had a girlfriend that lived in a barrio. Power would go out. No hot water. Ever. She would heat water up on her stove and then come into the shower and ladle it over my head to warm me up because she knew I was not used to living like that. Is that real life enough for all of you? That is a example of a girl with a good heart. I did not have to ask her to do this for me. But it stands in stark contrast to the horror stories I read in the Boca Chica and Sosua forum about the experiences other visitors are having with a entirely different class of chica. How do you find chicas like that? Talk to them. How do you talk to them? Speak Spanish. Don't know how to speak Spanish? You got a brain, learn.

    Give me orders all you like, I'm ignoring them. Send me nasty Private Messages all you like. I am not bothered by them. I am not skipping anything. I am living a full life here in Republica Dominicana. I am going to continue to comment about anything the moderator lets me comment about. If you don't like my comments, I suggest that you put me on ignore, grow tougher skin, or do not post in a public forum.

    Just saying. But what the fuck do I know? I just live here. Been grocery shopping lately? LOL!

  14. #15649
    Quote Originally Posted by Remy316  [View Original Post]
    This is all very good information and thanks for sharing your personal experiences on this board.

    1200 is nothing. Its just 22 dollars, barely enough for one day expense o
    Girls do not receive the 1,200. They split it with the house. Back when the cost was 1,000 pesos the split was 500/500. 500 pesos is enough for a month of groceries for a family of 12 according to a 1945 Listin Diario newspaper report. Anyway, who cares about it, this forum is about how to get the best sex at the lowest cost, right. ?

  15. #15648
    Quote Originally Posted by SubCmdr  [View Original Post]
    Thank you Sawassdee for the solid information that you are sharing about having sex with girls in the Dominican Republic. Much better than "I sleep in the barrio sometimes and there is no power and it is hot". Really? LOL!
    Skip if you don,'t like to read it instead of making that kind of comment about real life experiences.

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