Thread: General Info
+
Add Report
Results 2,146 to 2,160 of 7248
-
03-06-19 12:54 #5103
Posts: 1281Originally Posted by JjBee62 [View Original Post]
Of course, if she calls and says she's two blocks from where you're staying and wants to fuck for free, your call.
-
02-27-19 00:31 #5102
Posts: 105Another Ride App
I found out there is an App that works like Uber in Colombia. It is called 'beat'. I downloaded it to my iphone and used it. Very similar to Uber. Apparently it costs a bit less than Uber.
-
02-22-19 15:07 #5101
Posts: 5465Originally Posted by BangoCheito [View Original Post]
My experience has been, the girls who I have the best time with are more likely to be punctual. The ones who are habitually late, seem to be weak in the sack. If I'm really interested in giving her a try, I'll give a bigger window. If she's just in the middle of the scale for me, I shrink the window and give her an ultimatum.
But there's always the chance of something coming up. If it's raining hard, chances are you're out of luck in Medellin. Especially if she lives up in the hills. One extremely dependable girl cancelled because her mother couldn't make it up to their house until the rain stopped. Nobody to watch the kids until she got home.
My vacation attitude is to be relaxed. I don't want to create a bunch of stress every day over things I can't change. I make allowances. If I need to take a detour, I enjoy the change of scenery instead of griping about taking a different route.
-
02-22-19 07:52 #5100
Posts: 250Thanks!
My sincere thank you!
Originally Posted by Arcangel [View Original Post]
-
02-21-19 14:36 #5099
Posts: 127Originally Posted by MjTravelLove [View Original Post]
-
02-21-19 11:58 #5098
Posts: 1281Originally Posted by JjBee62 [View Original Post]
If a girl is late, it's because she dgaf. When I've had women really into me, they have been as punctual as anybody in North America is.
-
02-21-19 11:56 #5097
Posts: 1281Originally Posted by ParamAhmad [View Original Post]
There's NO WAY 57% of Colombian women have HSV-2, because I assure you if the rate were that high, I'd be positive too after all the fucking I've done here.
Please don't use Wikipedia as a legit source of scientific data.
-
02-21-19 07:50 #5096
Posts: 250Colobian boards?
Does anybody know of a similar site but a Colombian version. Feel free to PM me. I am not disturbing sh_t here. I pay for this site and like it, but need a more well-rounded view.
THANKS!
-
02-20-19 18:32 #5095
Posts: 5465Managing Expectations.
I've written about this before and have shared these thoughts with a few others who appreciated them. I was reading through some old messages this morning and realized unreasonable expectations is what started the current row in the stupid shit thread.
My first visit to a restaurant in Colombia, a little place in Bogota, near Parque 93, left me frustrated. Simply put, I expected to receive US restaurant service in Colombia. As everyone knows, service in Colombia is much different. I expected a waiter to check on me 4 minutes after handing me the menu, and every 5 minutes after that. As you already know, that ain't happening.
It took me several days to adjust. When I did, I learned something. The waiters and waitresses were being polite, by Colombian standards. To interrupt someone with a mouthful of food, just to ask a basic question is rude.
When we're traveling, especially to common mongering destinations, it's easy to treat it just like home. At home, nobody is going to show up 90 minutes late without any effort to inform you of the delay. At home, the cashiers keep the lines moving. Waiters swoop down on you every 5 minutes. If you let them, these things can ruin your day. Even worse, these things are unavoidable.
No matter where you go, or what you do in Colombia, you're going to have interactions with the locals. That's why most of us go there. I've listened to several guys gripe about how annoying it can be dealing with Colombians. My response is, "stop expecting them to be north Americans."
You can yell all you want at the girl who showed up late, or who didn't tell you she was on her period, but it won't change anything, except for your mood. She's going to be late for the next guy. Screaming at the cashier or waitress won't accomplish anything either. Neither will complaining about them to me.
I'm almost always going to side with the Colombian. They are just being Colombian. If your dog shits in the wrong spot, I'm on the dog's side. To him, it smelled like the right place to shit. He's just following his instincts. It's not right or wrong, it's just different. There are things you can't change.
How you handle all the situations that come up is your decision. However, if you accept that these things are inevitable, you can learn to work around them or to deal with them without letting them affect your mood.
The Paisas are going to be the same next week, next month and next year.
-
02-16-19 21:02 #5094
Posts: 4Ex Pat bar.
Originally Posted by JjBee62 [View Original Post]
I actually found a another good bar that I like to hang – out at, and I will recommend this place as being worth a visit.
Philly Sports Bar it's on the ground floor of the San Peter Apartment building in Laureles.
Bill the expat owner and his sidekick chef Victor are excellent hosts.
-
02-14-19 14:04 #5093
Posts: 2843Worried?
I guess you should stay home.
Or use two condoms.
Originally Posted by ParamAhmad [View Original Post]
-
02-14-19 05:40 #5092
Posts: 276HSV incidence considerations
Originally Posted by Arcangel [View Original Post]
-
02-12-19 21:03 #5091
Posts: 127Originally Posted by ParamAhmad [View Original Post]
-
02-12-19 05:46 #5090
Posts: 27657% (or more) of Colombian women have genital herpes
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epid...herpes_simplex
According to this Wikipedia article, 57% of women in Colombia are seropositive for HSV-2, suggesting 57% of women in Colombia have genital herpes. However, also according to this article, 89% (men and women) in Colombia are seropositive for HSV-1 (which is elsewhere said to be responsible for the majority of genital herpes in some parts of the world).
-
02-11-19 17:53 #5089
Posts: 127Credit Cards
I forgot to mention: if you use your Credit or Debit Card to pay for goods or services, make sure they charge you in COP and not in USD, EUR or whatever your card's currency. I have paid in better hotels by card (when I didn't have enough cash in pocket) and most times I had to insist that they charge me the proper amount in COP, because when the machine sees a foreign card, by default it converts at its own crappy rate to your currency, costing you around 5% more. Some hotel staff didn't know how to tell the machine charge to in COP and had to get help. Always check the amount on the screen and insist on COP.
Even some ATMs offer to charge you in your currency. Don't do it.