Accommodation with old style hard spring mattress?
Excited for my first trip to Medellin. Just booked last minute and don't have much time to research.
Can anyone recommend accommodation hotel, Airbnb etc. That has the old style flat and very firm spring mattresses.
Don't need fancy. Just safe and quiet. I have back issue and allergies so accommodation that keeps me pain free is always a trial and error process.
Sadly I'm allergic to the newer memory and hard foam kind and definitely not the fluffy pillow tops that most hotels now provide.
Also what choices do I have if I want to find a heated pool to go swimming besides a high end hotel. Thanks.
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More fotos of Cali chica #1 and Ayenda to the rescue again
More photos of Cali chica #1 from her bedroom. She was kind enough to put me up for the night which was nice because I told her I was afraid to walk outside in the dark in her neighborhood, jaja. Early the next morning, from her place I made a pitstop in the nicest Love Motel I have ever seen called the Palazzo by myself which entertained the receptionist and security guard to no end and from there I made a bee-line to the closest Ayenda hotel which also happened to be the cheapest by far, $18 a night The entire first floor of the hotel is a restaurant with really good food, you have to walk thru the restaurant to get to the entrance of the hotel which is quite unusual in fact one of the food servers left the buffet line to register me kind of funny and cute. The elevator is broken and the Wi-Fi is out so I'm using data but still loving it. My dinner was under 10000 mil COP without meat. This Ayenda is number 1406 and named Depeapan Hotel in a great safe neighborhood with lots of shops and restaurants and a grocery store around the corner. Tomorrow is Cali Chica #2 if she does not ghost me and is pretty much the opposite of chica number one, short and round. Posting from my phone, not easy. Ostee Out.
Coffee Girls versus Candy Girls The Saga Continues
[QUOTE=JjBee62;2542912]I believe all of them are there just to sell coffee, just as every bar waitress is there to sell drinks. Either one may be willing to entertain an offer for extra-curricular activities, but you need to approach with the understanding they are working and not necessarily able to drop everything and run off for a quick fuck.
My understanding is that the candy girls buy the candy, they basically are the sole proprietor. The coffee girls have a central location they go to for refills. It's likely they have to sell a certain amount of coffee daily to earn their pay. That means, in my opinion, a candy girl can take an offer at any time, while a coffee girl is probably doesn't have the same freedom.
Why focus on the coffee girls? There are hundreds of girls working the kiosks west and north of San Antonio station, plus hundreds more working in all the little clothes shops. Most of them can't immediately run off for a quickie, but getting WhatsApp numbers and setting up something should be pretty easy.[/QUOTE]A couple of points for consideration which I previously posted about, and you have better articulated. I believe, like you to do, that the majority of the coffee girls don't entertain extra-curricular activities as they just don't do "ratos", meaning they are not used to fucking guys for money, meaning their not part time hookers.
However, I hope to shatter this thought, as yesterday afternoon upon arriving at Parque Berrio I noticed several women with just single flasks of coffee that I believe could easily slip away for a rato, hence they wouldn't really be dropping everything versus a vendor with 4 flasks and a cart. I'm going to try my luck this coming week and approach a coffee girl if I see one I like.
As far as the candy girls, well in my opinion, and based on my observations, they are all available for ratos as they are not really purveyors of See's candies, yet using the candies to interact and possibly get a guy to go with them for a rato if they are comfortable with them. I have seen numerous girls working the Botero / Veracruz area sans the candies, and then with the candies.
Two weeks ago I interacted with a candy girl and gave her 200 Pesos to check her out, and then the subject came up of a rato, and 20 K was the price, and she was good, yet an older model. In talking with her she told me that she is lucky if she can make 15 K to 20 K per day selling candy. Hence, 20 K for an hour's work is a good day's pay, and huge for them. So my advice to anyone seeing a candy girl of interest is to go for it.
However, whether it be a coffee girl, a candy girl, or somebody who works in a store which could be challenging and very time consuming to cultivate, you need to have a fair amount of Spanish speaking skills, along with knowing how to broach the subject of going to the room with finesse as been previously posted about.