|
This forum thread is moderated by Admin
-
Regular Member
Posts: 657
Major Hotel Chain warning.
There is a project with major hotels to monitor and report male guests suspected of "[CodeWord908]" to the US government and NGO's such as the SPLC. " Typical tells that a male guest is a "human trafficker" include parking your car by backing it into a parking lot, paying cash, having women visit him in your room. This ID covers most men staying in a hotel. For this reason, you are better off using non-chain hotels who do not spy on or snitch on their guests. In short, most guys who have their girlfriend travelling with them are at risk of being reported as a "human trafficker" by a nosy hotel employee "trained" to ID male guests with women like this. While the hotel may allow you to bring girls to your room, it doesn't mean you aren't being snitched off by a feminasty hotel worker. FYI.
Originally Posted by HotelAl
[View Original Post]
Does anyone know if the Sheraton Ambassador Hotel, Safi Towers Hotel, LQ Hotel by La Quinta Monterrey Centro, iStay Hotel Monterrey Histrico, or NH Monterrey La Fe are ok with bringing in ladies? I am trying to change from Best Western Plus Royal Courts (which is girl friendly) to a different hotel. Also have anyone of you stayed at Motel Casa Blanca, Hotel Cascada, Motel Kyoto Suites, or Hotel Begona. I am curious to know.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 123
Does anyone know if the Sheraton Ambassador Hotel, Safi Towers Hotel, LQ Hotel by La Quinta Monterrey Centro, iStay Hotel Monterrey Histrico, or NH Monterrey La Fe are ok with bringing in ladies? I am trying to change from Best Western Plus Royal Courts (which is girl friendly) to a different hotel. Also have anyone of you stayed at Motel Casa Blanca, Hotel Cascada, Motel Kyoto Suites, or Hotel Begona. I am curious to know.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 1301
Set Up for what?
Originally Posted by Zygomatic
[View Original Post]
As I was walking down a street close to the central bus station, I saw a few hot girls so I stopped to get a better look at them. One of them pulled me away to a strip club and asked me to buy her a drink for 20 pesos, when the drink came I was charged 120 pesos (scam) and then she insisted that we go to a back area but that back area was so dark that I just asked the waiter for my change and left. I told what happened to one of my big booty friends and she told me that I was being set up. The strippers are sometimes in with the waiters. Be careful out there guys, my opinion about strip club is now changed. I don't think the people who read this forum go to the same places that I go to anyways.
You can't even get your own drink for 20 pesos, much less a drink for a girl. Maybe you didn't correctly hear "ciento veinte" which is $6. 30 and is not unreasonable at many strip clubs. The strippers and waiters work at the same club. They are in cahoots? Poor guy, you bought the drink but didn't reap the benefits in the "dark area"? That is where she was going to "work" on you to up sell to a privado.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 175
Re: the zygote matic doldrums
Zygo, I got a pocket full of pesos and want to get neck deep this weekend.
Please point me in the right direction?
And, also, thanks for tips in avoiding the Honduran version of mSTtreice.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 2119
Originally Posted by Zygomatic
[View Original Post]
Bbond, do you know of any benefits that you may have from the American BBVA compass bank given that they are under the same BBVA umbrella as BBVA bancomer in Mexico?
Other than no ATM fees? No.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 353
Weekends AR good in Monterrey
It's busy on weekends yes but not terribly but there are lots of options and I would say very good options.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 353
Originally Posted by Bbond
[View Original Post]
Of course it it is. Open a BBVA Compass account with a check from your old account. On the other hand, a Schwab card makes more sense for traveling a lot. I tried to open a CS account, but, for some reason, was denied. BBVA Compass works fine, no ATM fees but a 1% international fee, at BBVA Bancomer bank ATM's.
There is a BBVA compass bank in the United States but they don't share the same banking system than BBVA bancomer in Mexico, from what I was told. Yea, I like the idea of banking with Charles Swabb and just having money in another good bank aside from Wells Fargo brings me peace of mind also. Thanks for the info guys. Bbond, do you know of any benefits that you may have from the American BBVA compass bank given that they are under the same BBVA umbrella as BBVA bancomer in Mexico?
-
Senior Member
Posts: 353
Yesterday I went to a nice place called plaza nuevo sur which is not far from el tecnolgico and it was really awesome. I went with a date from tinder who is about 7 years younger than me to a movie there and afterwards she said that I didn't look like my pictures and that I was thicker in person. Well that the third time that I feel like a woman in monterrey from tinder is kind of using me. A good friend that I hang out with at the macro plaza, actually one of the massage therapists, asked me why I have not gone walking at paseo Santa Luca and I said because I don't have a partner and she said that I should go alone. I said I would rather be amongst the street vendors, restaurants and markets. To me being around a bunch of mexicanas is funner than being at touristic areas by myself.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 2119
Originally Posted by Zygomatic
[View Original Post]
Bbond, Do you know if it's possible to transfer money from an American bank to your BBVA bank?
Of course it it is. Open a BBVA Compass account with a check from your old account. On the other hand, a Schwab card makes more sense for traveling a lot. I tried to open a CS account, but, for some reason, was denied. BBVA Compass works fine, no ATM fees but a 1% international fee, at BBVA Bancomer bank ATM's.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 2777
Originally Posted by Unstoppable
[View Original Post]
I stayed at a hotel in the Centro area once where a big group like you described were staying but they weren't asylum seekers or attempting to cross illegally. This group had H2-A visas which is a visa for temporary agricultural workers. Not every caravan is crossing illegally.
I don't know where you hang out in MTY to encounter these Honduran killers but if you don't feel safe, stop going to those areas. I honestly have never encountered these Hondurans in touristy spots though.
I think you can drive your vehicle across the border next time so you can venture outside of centro when you're not mongering. You'll get to know MTY more and appreciate what the city can offer.
Agree 100 percent.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 75
Originally Posted by Zygomatic
[View Original Post]
I went back to hotel 500 to talk to whoever works there because I am paid up until Saturday and noticed that the caravan that entered there a couple of days ago is no longer there. The lady at the front office said that the caravan was there for only one day and she doesn't know where they went to next. I assume that some coyote took them somewhere to the Texas border. These caravans member appeared to me to be funded. I am thinking like a us citizen here who is concerned about my united States.
I stayed at a hotel in the Centro area once where a big group like you described were staying but they weren't asylum seekers or attempting to cross illegally. This group had H2-A visas which is a visa for temporary agricultural workers. Not every caravan is crossing illegally.
I don't know where you hang out in MTY to encounter these Honduran killers but if you don't feel safe, stop going to those areas. I honestly have never encountered these Hondurans in touristy spots though.
I think you can drive your vehicle across the border next time so you can venture outside of centro when you're not mongering. You'll get to know MTY more and appreciate what the city can offer.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 353
Update on caravan that stayed in hotel 500.
Originally Posted by Zygomatic
[View Original Post]
It has taken me 9 days to learn the landscape here in Monterrey. The Hondurans hang out in places that are easy to get to but there are so many places that are intertwined withing the neighborhoods or Barrios of Monterrey where things are safe, you can see old people walking the streets, etc. I did not know how repulsive the Hondurans are, they hang out in groups of 6, 7, 8 people and walk around and hang around like bums even in touristic areas. The best thing to do is just kind of pretend that they don't exist. You can tell that there are killers amongst them and to think that the Mexican president has allowed this to occur makes me think how much of a piece of crap this AMLO president really is. I am being safe but I must say that Monterrey is a risky place now and can not say that things are going to get better. It reminds me allot of the movies from blade runner.
I went back to hotel 500 to talk to whoever works there because I am paid up until Saturday and noticed that the caravan that entered there a couple of days ago is no longer there. The lady at the front office said that the caravan was there for only one day and she doesn't know where they went to next. I assume that some coyote took them somewhere to the Texas border. These caravans member appeared to me to be funded. I am thinking like a us citizen here who is concerned about my united States.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 353
Originally Posted by DramaFree11
[View Original Post]
You are real playing with fire. You are going to get yourself into a situation that you can not get out of. You were lucky this time. It is good to be cheap, but not when you put your safety in jeopardy.
It has taken me 9 days to learn the landscape here in Monterrey. The Hondurans hang out in places that are easy to get to but there are so many places that are intertwined withing the neighborhoods or Barrios of Monterrey where things are safe, you can see old people walking the streets, etc. I did not know how repulsive the Hondurans are, they hang out in groups of 6, 7, 8 people and walk around and hang around like bums even in touristic areas. The best thing to do is just kind of pretend that they don't exist. You can tell that there are killers amongst them and to think that the Mexican president has allowed this to occur makes me think how much of a piece of crap this AMLO president really is. I am being safe but I must say that Monterrey is a risky place now and can not say that things are going to get better. It reminds me allot of the movies from blade runner.
-
Senior Member
Posts: 2777
Originally Posted by Zygomatic
[View Original Post]
I wasn't planning on posting this information but given the recent invasion of caravan members in my hotel I might as well say that caravan members are also invading spas as well and they are doing so individually and in groups. Monterrey has about 30 spas in easy walking distance of the metro terminals but a handful of these spas are actually popular. The most popular one that is a small franchise is the one that I noticed was being overcome by caravan members on a regular basis so I stopped going there.
You are real playing with fire. You are going to get yourself into a situation that you can not get out of. You were lucky this time. It is good to be cheap, but not when you put your safety in jeopardy.
-
Regular Member
Posts: 8
[Commercial Message deleted by Admin]
EDITOR'S NOTE: This report was redacted or deleted because it appeared to be a commercial message and/or it contained links to a commercial website. Please post reports consisting primarily of a commercial nature and/or reports with links to commercial websites in the Classified Advertisement section of the Forum. Please read the Forum's Posting Guidelines and the Forum's FAQ for further information.
Posting Limitations
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
Forum Rules
|
|