I live in Nuevo Laredo and on the rare occasion that I go out there anymore, I hang out at Pimp daddy's. Ask Lupe, the owner; He'll know!
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I live in Nuevo Laredo and on the rare occasion that I go out there anymore, I hang out at Pimp daddy's. Ask Lupe, the owner; He'll know!
I was in Boys Town 9/30 and things were pretty quiet. I did two door girls. One was just north of the dress shop on Street One, and she was a cute short slim girl, but not much fun to screw. I got FS for $20, she asked for $10 extra to take off her top, and $10 for a CBJ, but I didn't go for either. If you like chubby girls, there is a cute fat girl in the door next to her, asking $20.
After a rest, I ran into a leggy girl on the street named Alexia. She was short and slim, wearing tight slacks and a lacy top. She took me back to an apartment by Tamyko. She asked for $30, and I talked her down to $20 and ended up paying $25 for nude CBJ and FS. Like the first girl, she just got undressed, spread her legs, and waited. Next time I'll pay a little extra for GFE from a club girl.
Embajador wrote:
>> We have always keep out of the back street in
>> the boys town because to many transexuals and
>> I always under the impresion that the TABU was
>> a transexual bar. Is this true? or not?
Ta-Bu is not a transexual bar, but you might find transexual prostitutes there. Some clubs on Back Street are trans-friendly but not all-trans like some of the bars on Street Three. I recommend you take your friends elsewhere to search for women, like on Street One, where the selection is better.
I occasionally go to Ta-Bu to relax and drink and watch dancers because it's dark and cool and I don't get harrassed by the "hey buddy" guys. I don't go to the Shamrock, the 123, La Cosa, or Pimp Daddy's because I hate running the white-shirt gauntlet.
I'm there to check out ladies, and the last thing I need is some loudmouth asshole hustling me, bugging me, hollering at me from across the street and drawing unwanted attention to me.
Cool Beans:
I have to hand it to you, that map is amazing. Are you an engineer or something? You have the patience of Job to go about and actually take notes to transfer onto the map. Did you actually count the number of rooms for each door girl that is represented by a "D"? If so, more power to you.
Really awesome map Cool Beans...THANKS!!
Nice Beans!
Thanks Cool Beans,
Thats a great map. LOL I will go tonight because I'm in a mood for nice size tits. I'll let you all know how it goes, will take my digi cam.
Embajador
[size=-2][u]EDITOR's NOTE[/u]: [blue]Posting of this report was delayed pending revisions for capitalization and punctuation. To avoid future delays, please refrain from using the "chat room" style of writing with no caps or punctuation. [i]Thanks![/i][/blue][/size]
Gracias Cool Beans! You make a guy from CA who is planning on a first trip to BT appreciate WSG hobbyists even more.
Just one more question - if I'm coming from San Antonio how much time should I allow to drive to/from NL and allow myself a couple of hours of fun in BT?
Thanks again - will be glad to share with you if you ever need info on Tijuana, SoCal, Denver or Chicago.
Hola,
Kosher has had a full day. Today he was visited by Kaptain Beavis, who stopped by Austin around noon or so. Kosher showed him apartments that will work for him when he eventually moves here, and we dined at los Kamales on East 7th. Anyway, driving time from SA is 160 miles or so, will take 2.5-3 hours tops. SA-Laredo, a trip to BT, and back to bridge to return to SA kan all be done in a 6-8 hour span, total! Of kource, this depends how fast you drive and also how fast you kum.
KosherKowboy: Was very impressed with Kool beans map, Koshe has been there 3-4 dozen time now, and kould relate to everything, the map is 110% korrekt. Nice job!
OCT,
allow ~2.5hrs for the drive between SA and Laredo. BT doesn't really pick up until 10:00p. so if you're planning to drive there and back in one night: leave SA about 7:30p, "exercise" in BT for 3 to 4 hours, then head back by 2:00a or 3:00a.
i've done the drive there-&-back-in-a-night thing, and some guys have even done it from austin (+1 hr ea. way), but damn i was f***ing tired on the way back. my advice is to stay in laredo afterwards, even if it's only to leave at 5:00a or 6:00a.
another option, albeit not my first choice, is to bus it there & back. buses leave nearly every hour between Laredo and SA. the SA bus terminal is next to the Adams Mark hotel. SATrans can take you there from the airport for ~$8. a taxi is at least twice that cost. the Laredo bus terminal is ~.75 mile from bridge #1. R/T bus ticket is ~$31 and you don't have to worry about falling asleep behind the wheel. allow 3 hrs there and 4 hrs back, though.
Cool Beans- Nice map..this will end up helping out tons of us. Will hopefully answer everyone's questions to "where is the place...." Thanks for the help. You the man!!
Thanks Dent - probably do the drive down w/return trip and sleep through my seminar that brings me to SA.
Had to laugh when you mentioned the Mark Adams. That's where I'll be staying [thanks Priceline.com] - hope it is ok!
Thanks again...
OCT,
no problem, glad to help.
the Adams Mark is a fantastic hotel (don't let the bus station thing throw ya).
enjoy SA and BT!
[-dent-]
>> I have to hand it to you, that map is amazing
>> Are you an engineer or something ?
Thanks. I'm a programmer with no tech drawing experience. I used plain old Paint. Shrinking it to fit the image size limit made it fuzzy, so maybe Jackson can make an exception to post a higher-res version of the map to the Photo gallery.
Post corrections and suggestions, and I'll try to incorporate them into future versions. I'd like to flag the bars that are mostly for the locals, like Siete Negro and most of the bars along the bottom of the map, since sometimes gringos are unwelcome there. I also need more info on which bars are TS.
What's next ? Heck, why not clickable links to photos and reports for specific door and club girls?
Restaurant reviews? Hotel ratings? The mind boggles.
>> You have the patience of Job to go about
>> and actually take notes to transfer onto
>> the map.
Ha. I'm old, friend. Sometimes that rest between girls really drags on. It was fun to have something to do besides drink and get hustled. I got lots of funny looks, but no hassles. They probably thought I was a reporter.
>> Did you actually count the number of rooms for
>> each door girl that is represented by a "D"?
Yep. With proper motivation, obsessive compulsive disorder can be channelled toward productive uses.
The copyright is to discourage someone from selling the map. I am donating it to the forum, and future versions will bear a WSG copyright, unless Jackson would prefer they not.
Nice map Cool Beans,
Now if someone could just put a map from the entrance gate in Laredo to Boys Town I would have it made.
i'm not one to dwell on the negative and i don't favor posting on a place i've never been, but i just wanted to give a head's up on this story i saw today:
ap: mexican deserters start drug turf war
by mark stevenson, associated press writer
nuevo laredo, mexico - members of an elite mexican army unit have deserted and formed a drug gang, using their military training to launch a violent battle for control of this border city, mexico's top anti-drug prosecutor said in an interview with the associated press.
the war for nuevo laredo is unlike other recent drug conflicts — it's a turf war involving most of mexico's major cartels in broad alliances not seen in a decade. it has the mexican army fighting an organized unit of former comrades, and it has cost american lives.
"they are extremely violent, and they are very much feared in the region because of the bloodshed they unleash," jose santiago vasconcelos, mexico's top anti-drug prosecutor, told ap.
the battles, which have taken 87 lives since 2002, have involved unprecedented alliances among mexico's drug cartels, according to nuevo laredo police commander martin landa herrera.
"i don't think anything like this has happened before in mexico," he said in an interview. "i have never heard of this many cartels fighting for one piece of territory."
known as the "zetas" or "z"s, the new drug gang — which appears to have won control of the city — is led by former members of an elite paratroop and intelligence battalion that was posted to the border state of tamaulipas in the 1990s to fight drug traffickers.
vasconcelos said about 31 of the estimated 350 members of the special air mobile force group, posted to the border state of tamaulipas in the 1990s, had deserted and joined the drug turf war.
"they have high-powered weapons, training and intelligence capabilities," landa herrera said of the zetas, whose name comes from the radio code word designating a police commander. "they have even tapped our radio communications. they listen in on us."
the defense department has refused to confirm any of its soldiers formed the zetas. but the army recently began posting wanted posters across the country offering rewards for the deserters, some still pictured in army uniforms. that led to speculation the soldiers were behind the zetas.
the skirmishing began in 2001 as a dispute among local drug gangs that operated with the permission of reputed gulf drug cartel leader osiel cardenas. by early 2002, the battle had heated up enough that the zetas appeared, working as hit men for cardenas in a bid to restore order.
but cardenas' arrest march 14 during a shootout in the nearby border city of matamoros opened the floodgates for a wider conflict. with cardenas in jail, cartels across mexico — michoacan, ciudad juarez, sinaloa and possibly tijuana — sensed weakness and tried to move in on the territory.
escaped sinaloa drug lord joaquin "el chapo" guzman reportedly allied himself with the juarez cartel, sending in gunmen to take over nuevo laredo. at the same time, another local trafficker tried to form an alliance with the valencia cartel, based in the western state of michoacan. and police even arrested a midlevel operator for the tijuana-based arellano felix cartel in nuevo laredo.
such alliances — and an all-out war between multiple cartels — haven't been seen since the wars between mexican gangs in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
"we're seeing these alliances, but this is just proof of the crisis these gangs are in," vasconcelos said. "there is no one single group strong enough anymore to dominate the territory."
the zetas do appear to have the upper hand and are still linked to cardenas, city police say. while dozens of hired gunslingers from other cartels have died, vasconcelos said only a few zetas have been killed and only one or two have been captured.
the zetas have killed dozens of rival traffickers, trading shots from passing sport utility vehicles on the streets of nuevo laredo. in one attack, they engaged in a shootout in broad daylight just yards from where the city's mayor was attending a flag-raising ceremony.
the zetas sometimes leave their victims' bodies packed in car trunks. in one massacre, they wrote information about a rival gang on a wall above a pile of victims, encouraging police to dismantle the other group.
nobody has to tell houston resident noe villarreal how vicious the war has become. on sept. 27, a commando of at least 30 masked men carrying assault rifles kidnapped his brother — hayward, calif., businessman juan villarreal garcia — from his mexico home in sabinas hidalgo, a town south of nuevo laredo.
the gunmen had fanned out across the town in search of a rival. they killed two policemen, kidnapped seven people, burst into villarreal's home — in a possible case of mistaken identity — and dragged the 78-year-old tortilla-store owner away.
the other hostages were released soon afterward, but villarreal remains missing and is presumed dead. the area is so violent that nobody is sure who kidnapped him or why.
"i don't know if it was the zetas," said noe villarreal, "because the zetas have never released anyone alive. that's not their style."
it wouldn't be the first time that americans have died in the conflict.
a wild pre-dawn battle on aug. 1 in nuevo laredo left at least three dead — one of them a man from laredo, texas — and six wounded. police and army troops exchanged fire with cars believed to be carrying drug traffickers.
the three were killed when their suv exploded after police bullets hit the vehicle's gas tank.
and in june 2001, a couple from laredo, texas, — sylvia solis and juan villagomez — were kidnapped by drug traffickers, although it is unclear why. she was raped and strangled. he was beaten and buried alive.
be careful out there brothers.