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  1. #2265
    Quote Originally Posted by DramaFree11  [View Original Post]
    Everything is online in Mexico City. As I said, a million times, if you are not using SA you're making a big mistake in Mexico.

    Maybe the girls on the street are a little bit better in Columbia, I have no idea, but you don't have to deal with the violence and drugs, in Mexico.
    Thanks for the info.

    Do you know any places that's like gustos in medellin, or dolce in cartagena Colombia? Basically just chica bars with dancing and club feels?

    I don't really enjoy the online SA style arrangements. I love the club pick up atmosphere.

    Ijust feel like sometimes the pic will be changed too much and I'm not sure who I'm going to get.

  2. #2264
    Quote Originally Posted by DramaFree11  [View Original Post]
    Everything is online in Mexico City. As I said, a million times, if you are not using SA you're making a big mistake in Mexico.

    Maybe the girls on the street are a little bit better in Columbia, I have no idea, but you don't have to deal with the violence and drugs, in Mexico.
    I don't use SA but I do agree CDMX is all online for sure. Be it twitter, sa, tinder or the few agency websites.

    I also agree a major pull is you don't have to worry too much about getting drugged.

    Quote Originally Posted by Questner  [View Original Post]
    There is one thing which we inevitably can't put aside, it's the amount of money or price point for services rendered. Overall this point is half in Colombia for myself compared to Mexico, or even one third. But those who spend USD250 to USD1,000 per encounter may like Mexico more.
    ID say a good middle ground in Mexico is probably GDL. You have agencies and other online options, esteticamasculina (casas), SW, Strip clubs (tho I've never been), with none of the scoping. Its not over run with tourists and of course good food.

    You will pay more than MDE but the way things are going there with foreigners getting murdered its probably worth it paying a little more.

  3. #2263
    Quote Originally Posted by JacoJaco123  [View Original Post]
    With SA girls, spread your net wide.

    IN your communications mention what you actually will include andwhat you won't. Girls will get stuck, some excuse, need money, need to book tickets for me etc. So always double book and cancel one.

    2-4 k is the average price for 3-4 hours, 2 x. The photos are usually very heavily photoshopped, so it's good to have current photos, It's impossible to tell if photos were pre pregnancy or not, untill you see the sugar without clothes.
    Yep, if you are not using SA or other on-line applications, you are making a huge mistake in CDMX.

  4. #2262
    Quote Originally Posted by Gabacho  [View Original Post]
    Thank you. DramaFree a while back was trying to tell me that these women are better than the colombianas and venezolanas in Medellin Colombia en centro and parque lleras. I said fuck no, no comparison CDMX street scene is fucking garbage. Matter of fact Mexico as a whole is a big fucking dumpster.

    P.S.: for ATMs you're going to want to use either CitiBanaMex or Santander. They only charge 30 pesos for the ATM fee. There are cheaper tho, if you're ever inside a sanborns they have an ATM that charges 17 peso fee I forget what bank it was it was some smaller less known one.

    -Gabacho.
    I haven't met DramaFree11 in person; the posts seem credible to me. Even if I've got an opinion I don't want to extend it upon the whole country. The streets are safer in CDMX than in Meddy. There are enough poor souls in Meddy's centro: malnourished scrawny girls scarred by abuse, unhealthy sweating carton faced cows in massage parlours behind iron doors etc. There is one thing which we inevitably can't put aside, it's the amount of money or price point for services rendered. Overall this point is half in Colombia for myself compared to Mexico, or even one third. But those who spend USD250 to USD1,000 per encounter may like Mexico more.

  5. #2261

    Sa

    With SA girls, spread your net wide.

    IN your communications mention what you actually will include andwhat you won't. Girls will get stuck, some excuse, need money, need to book tickets for me etc. So always double book and cancel one.

    2-4 k is the average price for 3-4 hours, 2 x. The photos are usually very heavily photoshopped, so it's good to have current photos, It's impossible to tell if photos were pre pregnancy or not, untill you see the sugar without clothes.

  6. #2260
    Quote Originally Posted by WorldJockey  [View Original Post]
    Agreed. The street scene in CDMX cannot hold a candle to MDE or even BOG. Not in terms of looks or accessibility.

    In those colombian cities things are mostly centralized. In CDMX its spread out and the quality is really not there.

    CDMX is mostly an escort town.
    Everything is online in Mexico City. As I said, a million times, if you are not using SA you're making a big mistake in Mexico.

    Maybe the girls on the street are a little bit better in Columbia, I have no idea, but you don't have to deal with the violence and drugs, in Mexico.

  7. #2259
    Quote Originally Posted by Gabacho  [View Original Post]
    Thank you. DramaFree a while back was trying to tell me that these women are better than the colombianas and venezolanas in Medellin Colombia en centro and parque lleras. I said fuck no, no comparison CDMX street scene is fucking garbage. Matter of fact Mexico as a whole is a big fucking dumpster.

    P.S.: for ATMs you're going to want to use either CitiBanaMex or Santander. They only charge 30 pesos for the ATM fee. There are cheaper tho, if you're ever inside a sanborns they have an ATM that charges 17 peso fee I forget what bank it was it was some smaller less known one.

    -Gabacho.
    Agreed. The street scene in CDMX cannot hold a candle to MDE or even BOG. Not in terms of looks or accessibility.

    In those colombian cities things are mostly centralized. In CDMX its spread out and the quality is really not there.

    CDMX is mostly an escort town.

  8. #2258
    Quote Originally Posted by Questner  [View Original Post]
    Merced Start at Pino Suarez Metro Station (blue line 2) and walk east on the northern side on Jose Maria Izazaga towards Avenida San Pablo. The action starts near motorcycle parts stores and bicycle repair shops. The ladies usually dressed to work or hold umbrellas. Continue to Circumvalacion and turn left (north). Then the action is to Corregidora (on the left towards west). It's easier to move on the western side near green fences. You can spot ladies near the following hotels in the area: Regina, Mesones San Marcos, Ampuda, Tampico, Liverpool, Gran Veracruz, Hispano and Soledad. Rates around 300 pesos (which is about your daily minimum wage for the Northern states). Counted this trip around 40 ladies and then stopped counting. Quality very bad (3 on my personal scale of zero to twelve). The only scenario I envision is for anyone to enjoy them is to be at the last breath when the only thing that matters is for both contracting parties to be alive, and at the same time the lady has the charms to wake up the last passion.

    Calzada de Tlalpan I tried the section from Metro Viaducto to Metro Xola to Metro Villa de Cortes (blue line 2) to Gas Station Daniela G500. The action is on the western side (and goes up north towards San Antonio Abad and south to Hotel Monteal as well). This area has the following hotels: Aranjuez, Harare, Condesa, Casa Silencio. Walk up rates at motels are around 320 pesos. On Calzada de Tlalpan the following street numbers are points to mention: 543,559, 605,789, 877,913, 949,959 and 977. During the after-lunch business day walk counted about 30 miracle workers including a couple of likely 'modern women', one femboy, and three 'modern women' (well they were more modern maybe fifteen years ago) at the lane near the gas station which goes to a public school. Quality bad (4 on my scale). Generally, they tend to be older, heavier, shorter, painted in war colours, tattooed, and with looks of a culture that in the past sacrificed the beautiful but preserved the deformed. On top of that some still wear masks. Haven't seen any gems, but maybe the day was too bright
    Thank you. DramaFree a while back was trying to tell me that these women are better than the colombianas and venezolanas in Medellin Colombia en centro and parque lleras. I said fuck no, no comparison CDMX street scene is fucking garbage. Matter of fact Mexico as a whole is a big fucking dumpster.

    P.S.: for ATMs you're going to want to use either CitiBanaMex or Santander. They only charge 30 pesos for the ATM fee. There are cheaper tho, if you're ever inside a sanborns they have an ATM that charges 17 peso fee I forget what bank it was it was some smaller less known one.

    -Gabacho.

  9. #2257
    Quote Originally Posted by CaptainSolo  [View Original Post]
    Without water to wash perhaps putas will move to Tijuana?

    https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/25/clima...ntl/index.html

    Alejandro Gomez has been without proper running water for more than three months. Sometimes it comes on for an hour or two, but only a small trickle, barely enough to fill a couple of buckets. Then nothing for many days.

    Gomez, who lives in Mexico City's Tlalpan district, doesn't have a big storage tank so can't get water truck deliveries there's simply nowhere to store it. Instead, he and his family eke out what they can buy and store.

    When they wash themselves, they capture the runoff to flush the toilet. It's hard, he told CNN. "We need water, it's essential for everything. ".

    Water shortages are not uncommon in this neighborhood, but this time feels different, Gomez said. "Right now, we are getting this hot weather. It's even worse, things are more complicated. ".

    Mexico City, a sprawling metropolis of nearly 22 million people and one of the world's biggest cities, is facing a severe water crisis as a tangle of problems including geography, chaotic urban development and leaky infrastructure are compounded by the impacts of climate change.

    Years of abnormally low rainfall, longer dry periods and high temperatures have added stress to a water system already straining to cope with increased demand. Authorities have been forced to introduce significant restrictions on the water pumped from reservoirs.

    "Several neighborhoods have suffered from a lack of water for weeks, and there are still four months left for the rains to start," said Christian Domnguez Sarmiento, an atmospheric scientist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).

    Politicians are downplaying any sense of crisis, but some experts say the situation has now reached such critical levels that Mexico City could be barreling towards "day zero" in a matter of months where the taps run dry for huge swaths of the city.

    Historic lows.

    Densely populated Mexico City stretches out across a high-altitude lake bed, around 7,300 feet above sea level. It was built on clay-rich soil into which it is now sinking and is prone to earthquakes and highly vulnerable to climate change. It's perhaps one of the last places anyone would choose to build a megacity today.

    The Aztecs chose this spot to build their city of Tenochtitlan in 1325, when it was a series of lakes. They built on an island, expanding the city outwards, constructing networks of canals and bridges to work with the water.

    But when the Spanish arrived in the early 16th century, they tore down much of the city, drained the lakebed, filled in canals and ripped out forests. They saw "water as an enemy to overcome for the city to thrive," said Jose Alfredo Ramirez, an architect and co-director of Groundlab, a design and policy research organization.

    Their decision paved the way for many of Mexico City's modern problems. Wetlands and rivers have been replaced with concrete and asphalt. In the rainy season, it floods. In the dry season, it's parched.

    Around 60% of Mexico City's water comes from its underground aquifer, but this has been so over-extracted that the city is sinking at a frightening rate around 20 inches a year, according to recent research. And the aquifer is not being replenished anywhere near fast enough. The rainwater rolls off the city's hard, impermeable surfaces, rather than sinking into the ground.

    The rest of the city's water is pumped vast distances uphill from sources outside the city, in an incredibly inefficient process, during which around 40% of the water is lost through leaks.

    These five cities could be one natural disaster away from a catastrophic water crisis.

    The Cutzamala water system, a network of reservoirs, pumping stations, canals and tunnels, supplies about 25% of the water used by the Valley of Mexico, which includes Mexico City. But severe drought has taken its toll. Currently, at around 39% of capacity, it's been languishing at a historic low.

    "It's almost half of the amount of water that we should have," said Fabiola Sosa-Rodrguez, head of economic growth and environment at the Metropolitan Autonomous University in Mexico City.

    In October, Conagua, the country's national water commission, announced it would restrict water from Cutzamala by 8% "to ensure the supply of drinking water to the population given the severe drought. ".

    Just a few weeks later, officials significantly tightened restrictions, reducing the water supplied by the system by nearly 25%, blaming extreme weather conditions.

    "Measures will have to be taken to be able to distribute the water that Cutzamala has over time, to ensure that it does not run out," Germand Arturo Martnez Santoyo, the director general of Conagua, said in a statement at the time.

    Around 60% of Mexico is experiencing moderate to exceptional drought, according to a February report. Nearly 90% of Mexico City is in severe drought and it's set to get worse with the start of the rainy season still months away.

    "We are around the middle of the dry season with sustained temperature increases expected until April or May," said June Garcia-Becerra, an assistant professor in engineering at the University of Northern British Columbia.

    Natural climate variability heavily affects this part of Mexico. Three years of La Nia brought drought to the region, and then the arrival of El Nio last year helped deliver a painfully short rainy season that failed to replenish the reservoirs.

    The world's largest lakes are shrinking dramatically, and scientists say they have figured out why.

    But the long-term trend of human-caused global warming hums in the background, fueling longer droughts and fiercer heat waves, as well as heavier rains when they do arrive.

    "Climate change has made droughts increasingly severe due to the lack of water," said UNAM's Sarmiento. Added to this, high temperatures "have caused the water that is available in the Cutzamala system to evaporate," she said.

    Last summer saw brutal heat waves roil large parts of the country, which claimed at least 200 lives. These heat waves would have been "virtually impossible" without climate change, according to an analysis by scientists.

    The climate impacts have collided with the growing pains of a fast-expanding city. As the population booms, experts say the centralized water system has not kept pace.

    'Day zero?

    The crisis has set up a fierce debate about whether the city will reach a "day zero," where the Cutzamala system falls to such low levels that it will be unable to provide any water to the city's residents.

    Local media widely reported in early February that an official from a branch of Conagua said that without significant rain, "day zero" could arrive as early as June 26.

    But authorities have since sought to assure residents there will be no day zero. In a press conference on February 14, Mexican President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador said that work was underway to address the water problems. Mexico City's mayor, Mart Batres Guadarrama, said in a recent press conference that reports of day zero were "fake news" spread by political opponents.

    Conagua declined CNN's interview requests and did not answer specific questions on the prospect of a day zero.

    But many experts warn of a spiraling crisis. Mexico City could run out of water before the rainy season arrives if it carries on using it in the same way, Sosa-Rodrguez said. "It's probable that we will face a day zero," she added.

    This doesn't mean a complete collapse of the water system, she said, because the city isn't dependent on just one source. It won't be the same as when Cape Town in South Africa came perilously close to running totally dry in 2018 following a severe multi-year drought. "Some groups will still have water," she said, "but most of the people won't. ".

    Ral Rodrguez Mrquez, president of the non-profit Water Advisory Council, said he doesn't believe the city will reach a day zero this year but, he warned, it will if changes are not made.

    "We are in a critical situation, and we could reach an extreme situation in the next few months," he told CNN.

    'I don't think anyone is prepared'.

    For nearly a decade, Sosa-Rodrguez said she has been warning officials of the danger of a day zero for Mexico City.

    She said the solutions are clear: Better wastewater treatment would both increase water availability and decrease pollution, while rainwater harvesting systems could capture and treat the rain, and allow residents to reduce their reliance on the water network or water trucks by 30%.

    Fixing leaks would make the system much more efficient and reduce the volume of water that has to be extracted from the aquifer. And nature-based solutions, such as restoring rivers and wetlands, would help provide and purify water, she said, with the added advantage of greening and cooling the city.

    In a statement on its website, Conagua said it is undertaking a 3-year project to install, develop and improve water infrastructure to help the city cope with decreases in the Cutzamala system, including adding new wells and commissioning water treatment plants.

    But in the meantime, tensions are rising as some residents are forced to cope with shortages, while others often in the wealthier enclaves remain mostly unaffected.

    "There is a clear unequal access to water in the city and this is related to people's income," Sosa-Rodrguez said. While day zero might not be here yet for the whole of Mexico City, some neighborhoods have been grappling with it for years, she added.

    Amanda Martnez, another resident of the city's Tlalpan district, said for people here, water shortages are nothing new. She and her family often have to pay more than $100 for a tank of water from one of the city's water trucks. But it's getting worse. Sometimes more than two weeks can go by without water and she fears what may be coming, she told CNN.

    "I don't think anyone is prepared. ".

    CNN's Laura Paddison and Jack Guy reported from London, and Fidel Gutirrez reported from Mexico City.
    Tijuana has water problems too.

  10. #2256

    Rebecca the Curly Haired Jarocha

    Between metro Stations Villa de Cortes and Viaducto on Tlalpan, you can find real women (anywhere out of there, watch your booty) on a Friday, I was walking with a comrade and we saw a bunch of fine chicas. We went to Zocalo first and got a good view, on the way back there was one chica, a curly haired Jarocha (from Veracruz) that had caught my eye. I got her into the momo. She charged about 1,400 mxn for everything. The room was like 200 mxn, I think. It was a standard fuck, but when I got her on her fours, I was watching me fuck her skinny body (she had implants) until I came. So worth it, I wasn't able to set up a date on time since that night we were going to watch an event, so this hit the spot. We went to check later on that night and some chicks were hanging out around that area 12:30 am but I'm not sure I would go alone.

  11. #2255

    Security. Street Scene

    Use this link to assess the security street risk in CDMX:

    https://hoyodecrimen.com/en/sectores-map#12/19. 3505/-99.1734.

  12. #2254

    CDMX Runs out of Water

    Without water to wash perhaps putas will move to Tijuana?

    https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/25/clima...ntl/index.html

    Alejandro Gomez has been without proper running water for more than three months. Sometimes it comes on for an hour or two, but only a small trickle, barely enough to fill a couple of buckets. Then nothing for many days.

    Gomez, who lives in Mexico City's Tlalpan district, doesn't have a big storage tank so can't get water truck deliveries — there's simply nowhere to store it. Instead, he and his family eke out what they can buy and store.

    When they wash themselves, they capture the runoff to flush the toilet. It's hard, he told CNN. "We need water, it's essential for everything. ".

    Water shortages are not uncommon in this neighborhood, but this time feels different, Gomez said. "Right now, we are getting this hot weather. It's even worse, things are more complicated. ".

    Mexico City, a sprawling metropolis of nearly 22 million people and one of the world's biggest cities, is facing a severe water crisis as a tangle of problems — including geography, chaotic urban development and leaky infrastructure — are compounded by the impacts of climate change.

    Years of abnormally low rainfall, longer dry periods and high temperatures have added stress to a water system already straining to cope with increased demand. Authorities have been forced to introduce significant restrictions on the water pumped from reservoirs.

    "Several neighborhoods have suffered from a lack of water for weeks, and there are still four months left for the rains to start," said Christian Domínguez Sarmiento, an atmospheric scientist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).

    Politicians are downplaying any sense of crisis, but some experts say the situation has now reached such critical levels that Mexico City could be barreling towards "day zero" in a matter of months — where the taps run dry for huge swaths of the city.

    Historic lows.

    Densely populated Mexico City stretches out across a high-altitude lake bed, around 7,300 feet above sea level. It was built on clay-rich soil — into which it is now sinking — and is prone to earthquakes and highly vulnerable to climate change. It's perhaps one of the last places anyone would choose to build a megacity today.

    The Aztecs chose this spot to build their city of Tenochtitlan in 1325, when it was a series of lakes. They built on an island, expanding the city outwards, constructing networks of canals and bridges to work with the water.

    But when the Spanish arrived in the early 16th century, they tore down much of the city, drained the lakebed, filled in canals and ripped out forests. They saw "water as an enemy to overcome for the city to thrive," said Jose Alfredo Ramirez, an architect and co-director of Groundlab, a design and policy research organization.

    Their decision paved the way for many of Mexico City's modern problems. Wetlands and rivers have been replaced with concrete and asphalt. In the rainy season, it floods. In the dry season, it's parched.

    Around 60% of Mexico City's water comes from its underground aquifer, but this has been so over-extracted that the city is sinking at a frightening rate — around 20 inches a year, according to recent research. And the aquifer is not being replenished anywhere near fast enough. The rainwater rolls off the city's hard, impermeable surfaces, rather than sinking into the ground.

    The rest of the city's water is pumped vast distances uphill from sources outside the city, in an incredibly inefficient process, during which around 40% of the water is lost through leaks.

    These five cities could be one natural disaster away from a catastrophic water crisis.

    The Cutzamala water system, a network of reservoirs, pumping stations, canals and tunnels, supplies about 25% of the water used by the Valley of Mexico, which includes Mexico City. But severe drought has taken its toll. Currently, at around 39% of capacity, it's been languishing at a historic low.

    "It's almost half of the amount of water that we should have," said Fabiola Sosa-Rodríguez, head of economic growth and environment at the Metropolitan Autonomous University in Mexico City.

    In October, Conagua, the country's national water commission, announced it would restrict water from Cutzamala by 8% "to ensure the supply of drinking water to the population given the severe drought. ".

    Just a few weeks later, officials significantly tightened restrictions, reducing the water supplied by the system by nearly 25%, blaming extreme weather conditions.

    "Measures will have to be taken to be able to distribute the water that Cutzamala has over time, to ensure that it does not run out," Germáand Arturo Martínez Santoyo, the director general of Conagua, said in a statement at the time.

    Around 60% of Mexico is experiencing moderate to exceptional drought, according to a February report. Nearly 90% of Mexico City is in severe drought — and it's set to get worse with the start of the rainy season still months away.

    "We are around the middle of the dry season with sustained temperature increases expected until April or May," said June Garcia-Becerra, an assistant professor in engineering at the University of Northern British Columbia.

    Natural climate variability heavily affects this part of Mexico. Three years of La Niña brought drought to the region, and then the arrival of El Niño last year helped deliver a painfully short rainy season that failed to replenish the reservoirs.

    The world's largest lakes are shrinking dramatically, and scientists say they have figured out why.

    But the long-term trend of human-caused global warming hums in the background, fueling longer droughts and fiercer heat waves, as well as heavier rains when they do arrive.

    "Climate change has made droughts increasingly severe due to the lack of water," said UNAM's Sarmiento. Added to this, high temperatures "have caused the water that is available in the Cutzamala system to evaporate," she said.

    Last summer saw brutal heat waves roil large parts of the country, which claimed at least 200 lives. These heat waves would have been "virtually impossible" without climate change, according to an analysis by scientists.

    The climate impacts have collided with the growing pains of a fast-expanding city. As the population booms, experts say the centralized water system has not kept pace.

    'Day zero?

    The crisis has set up a fierce debate about whether the city will reach a "day zero," where the Cutzamala system falls to such low levels that it will be unable to provide any water to the city's residents.

    Local media widely reported in early February that an official from a branch of Conagua said that without significant rain, "day zero" could arrive as early as June 26.

    But authorities have since sought to assure residents there will be no day zero. In a press conference on February 14, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said that work was underway to address the water problems. Mexico City's mayor, Martí Batres Guadarrama, said in a recent press conference that reports of day zero were "fake news" spread by political opponents.

    Conagua declined CNN's interview requests and did not answer specific questions on the prospect of a day zero.

    But many experts warn of a spiraling crisis. Mexico City could run out of water before the rainy season arrives if it carries on using it in the same way, Sosa-Rodríguez said. "It's probable that we will face a day zero," she added.

    This doesn't mean a complete collapse of the water system, she said, because the city isn't dependent on just one source. It won't be the same as when Cape Town in South Africa came perilously close to running totally dry in 2018 following a severe multi-year drought. "Some groups will still have water," she said, "but most of the people won't. ".

    Raúl Rodríguez Márquez, president of the non-profit Water Advisory Council, said he doesn't believe the city will reach a day zero this year — but, he warned, it will if changes are not made.

    "We are in a critical situation, and we could reach an extreme situation in the next few months," he told CNN.

    'I don't think anyone is prepared'.

    For nearly a decade, Sosa-Rodríguez said she has been warning officials of the danger of a day zero for Mexico City.

    She said the solutions are clear: Better wastewater treatment would both increase water availability and decrease pollution, while rainwater harvesting systems could capture and treat the rain, and allow residents to reduce their reliance on the water network or water trucks by 30%.

    Fixing leaks would make the system much more efficient and reduce the volume of water that has to be extracted from the aquifer. And nature-based solutions, such as restoring rivers and wetlands, would help provide and purify water, she said, with the added advantage of greening and cooling the city.

    In a statement on its website, Conagua said it is undertaking a 3-year project to install, develop and improve water infrastructure to help the city cope with decreases in the Cutzamala system, including adding new wells and commissioning water treatment plants.

    But in the meantime, tensions are rising as some residents are forced to cope with shortages, while others — often in the wealthier enclaves — remain mostly unaffected.

    "There is a clear unequal access to water in the city and this is related to people's income," Sosa-Rodríguez said. While day zero might not be here yet for the whole of Mexico City, some neighborhoods have been grappling with it for years, she added.

    Amanda Martínez, another resident of the city's Tlalpan district, said for people here, water shortages are nothing new. She and her family often have to pay more than $100 for a tank of water from one of the city's water trucks. But it's getting worse. Sometimes more than two weeks can go by without water and she fears what may be coming, she told CNN.

    "I don't think anyone is prepared. ".

    CNN's Laura Paddison and Jack Guy reported from London, and Fidel Gutiérrez reported from Mexico City.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails 2024-02-25.jpg‎  

  13. #2253

    CDMX Street Report

    CDMX Street Report.

    My acknowledgement to all contributors living, dead or imaginary. My record is limited and incidental. I hope it might help anyone to plan on a trip.

    Got my passport stamped at MEX T1. There was no immigration at CUN airport on my exit.

    ATM: Used Scotiabank near Door (Puerta) 2. ATM fee was 100 pesos. You have to insert you card sideways, inquire your balance first, then decline an offered exchange rate and withdraw funds.

    HSBC (Reforma 26 at Wework building) fee is 81.20 pesos with an option to donate; the highest displayed withdrawal is 7,000 pesos but you can request more.

    Internet: Connect for free to 'CDMX internet para todos'. This works everywhere in the city.

    Uber: Go outside at Doors 3 to 5 and order Uber. My Uber to Reforma was 168 pesos, when taxi rates are 500-600 pesos. You can also take bus or metro, but it may be not very convenient to how the stations were planned.

    Bus / Metro: Buy later a Metrobus card. You have first to buy a card at the machine with exact 21 pesos which comes with 6 pesos credit as the machine does not dispense change, then separately load up on credits. When you tap your card, you are going to see the balance left on the card displayed. There is always police near the machine, ask them to help you to buy and load the card. Bus ride is 5 pesos, metro 6 pesos, helps you avoid traffic and saves time. Inside the double-decker bus the front section at the first floor has yellow rails: you can seat or stand there; the back section with pink rails designated for women only. Women who like men's attention can move into the front section. You can't stand on the second floor as it's too low. On the tube one of the sections is designated for women or girls under twelve, you will see an orange plastic block in front of it when the train stops.

    Hotels: Can recommend Barcelo Mexico Reforma. On the higher end I would consider staying at Hyatt Regency Mexico City or Intercontinental Presidente Mexico City as both are close to Chapultepec area and Polanco.

    Steet action:

    Sullivan – do not bother; even during the day too dusty now due to construction and no action. This area belongs to the past.

    Merced – Start at Pino Suarez Metro Station (blue line 2) and walk east on the northern side on Jose Maria Izazaga towards Avenida San Pablo. The action starts near motorcycle parts stores and bicycle repair shops. The ladies usually dressed to work or hold umbrellas. Continue to Circumvalacion and turn left (north). Then the action is to Corregidora (on the left towards west). It's easier to move on the western side near green fences. You can spot ladies near the following hotels in the area: Regina, Mesones San Marcos, Ampuda, Tampico, Liverpool, Gran Veracruz, Hispano and Soledad. Rates around 300 pesos (which is about your daily minimum wage for the Northern states). Counted this trip around 40 ladies and then stopped counting. Quality – very bad (3 on my personal scale of zero to twelve). The only scenario I envision is for anyone to enjoy them is to be at the last breath when the only thing that matters is for both contracting parties to be alive, and at the same time the lady has the charms to wake up the last passion.

    Calzada de Tlalpan – I tried the section from Metro Viaducto to Metro Xola to Metro Villa de Cortes (blue line 2) to Gas Station Daniela G500. The action is on the western side (and goes up north towards San Antonio Abad and south to Hotel Monteal as well). This area has the following hotels: Aranjuez, Harare, Condesa, Casa Silencio. Walk up rates at motels are around 320 pesos. On Calzada de Tlalpan the following street numbers are points to mention: 543,559, 605,789, 877,913, 949,959 and 977. During the after-lunch business day walk counted about 30 miracle workers including a couple of likely 'modern women', one femboy, and three 'modern women' (well they were more modern maybe fifteen years ago) at the lane near the gas station which goes to a public school. Quality – bad (4 on my scale). Generally, they tend to be older, heavier, shorter, painted in war colours, tattooed, and with looks of a culture that in the past sacrificed the beautiful but preserved the deformed. On top of that some still wear masks. Haven't seen any gems, but maybe the day was too bright.

    Puente Alvaro – this is the area north and south of Avenida Mexico-Tenochtlitlan- Tabacalera between Guerrero (north) and Rosales (south) on the east, and Miguel Ramos Arispe (south) and Juan Aldama (north) on the west. The closest hotel is EXE Alameda Reforma. The ladies are on Calle Saragoza near hotels Mino and Savoy, further near hotel Polly at the intersection of Saragoza and Orozco why Berra, near hotel Fuente, and west on Orozco why Berra with Juan Aldama. Example of rates: 560 pesos for 15-20 minutes hotel included. Hotel rates are around 150 pesos when paid separately. On weekends almost every girl has police or police vehicle attached to them. Certain areas are designated as safe areas and have cameras. You can always see maybe 20 girls around in after business hours and later. Quality – not good. As we always say to our atheist friends 'Good luck!' West of Orozco why Berra and Juan Aldama near the gas station, along the southern section of Av. Mexico-Tenochtitlan towards Museo San Carlos, at Miguel Ramos Arispe near the park behind the museum, area south of Exe Alameda Hotel on Teran – these areas are for 'modern women' which are beyond the forum's scope.

    Other options for everyone who likes to get what maybe is available as opposite to get what one can see:

    Sensualonas.com Sexoserviciodf.com Sexoservidoras.com Chicasyescorts.com.mx Encuentrochicas.com.

    Divasmexico.com.mx Mx. Mundosexanuncio.com Appsexyescorts.com Skokka.com and more.

    Rates which I see: 1,400 to 1,800 pesos, then 2,500 to 3,000 pesos, then 5,000 to 8,000 pesos and up.

    Should this post be my 2 centavos or more adjusted to inflation, you decide.

  14. #2252

    Fake

    Quote Originally Posted by Cabotim89  [View Original Post]
    I'm new to this group but I see a ton of girls advertising on twitter. Are these all agencies and has anyone had any luck with any of them?
    I think this should be in the escort thread.

    Most Twitter girls for CDMX are fakes, you just have to be able to pick them out and it takes some practice and a keen eye. The first thing is to look at details in the pics like the girl has a different phone case in each pic. That's an easy sign that they are just getting similar girls pics off the internet. If they only use the same 5 to 10 pics. Girls that have their phone number as part of their Twitter handle. For me the biggest is no videos.

    Also if you follow some of them you'll notice that they all seem to have updates at the same time each day which is obviously just a agency.

    My best luck is finding girls on LaBoutique and following the ones that have Twitter accounts, so I follow them to see what they post each day and I can look at who they follow.

  15. #2251

    Twitter girls

    I'm new to this group but I see a ton of girls advertising on twitter. Are these all agencies and has anyone had any luck with any of them?

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