-
Fb?
Yes, let's write about the possibilities and use of FB. Why just write? Put it into practice right away. So I create a new profile, not with my real name Tinte, of course, but with 'vahiny mafana' or "vahiny tsara fanahy" or Claude bonne jour.
In the search function, I enter 'fille malgache', among other things. I select a few girls and make new friends. Wow, this is a sure-fire success. I am inundated with suggestions and friend requests and am spoilt for choice. Hard work LOL.
All age groups are represented. All parts of the country. I am drawn into lengthy conversations. I am also questioned endlessly. Some want to marry me soon, some want a little money quickly. There are also some naive, super pretty village girls among them. The old horny goat couldn't ask them for sex. Shame on me. There are also obviously professional working girls among them, help, rip-off guaranteed.
Mission aborted!
-
FB – I've been diving back in a little myself. Keywords are milely or even milely fory. Check the translation! Professionals and extremely pretty women are then suggested in high numbers. They obviously tend to offer themselves to locals, and the price is said to be 25 K. Probably as a starting point. LOL.
Is this a new game? Attitude? Less professional women on the other hand block their pages to strangers; only once a man has become their 'friend' does he have access to the eye candy of promises.
In my view, all of that: the similarities and results on site are comparable to a taxi brousse station and often just as much of a waste of time. That's why it's good to know the prices, then you can get one without any fuss on the street on the way, in any bar, restaurant with great fun – taxi or escort alike.
But anyway that's just me.
-
[QUOTE=Tinte;3054635]FB I've been diving back in a little myself. Keywords are milely or even milely fory. Check the translation! Professionals and extremely pretty women are then suggested in high numbers. They obviously tend to offer themselves to locals, and the price is said to be 25 K. Probably as a starting point. LOL..[/QUOTE]Give it a try: you text the number: no reply. You call: reply on malgache. Some speak French. They tell you an address to go there, mostly in 67 HA. Hesitant to come to your hotel.
This girls you find after sunset along Rue Independence, asking from Vahaza's 100 k. Stupid foreigners pay, not knowing that their local rate is 25 k.
-
[QUOTE=Amadeuss;3054767]Give it a try: you text the number: no reply. You call: reply on malgache. Some speak French. They tell you an address to go there, mostly in 67 HA. Hesitant to come to your hotel.
This girls you find after sunset along Rue Independence, asking from Vahaza's 100 k. Stupid foreigners pay, not knowing that their local rate is 25 k.[/QUOTE]Yes, the 67, not necessarily a nice neighbourhood and probably not recommended for people like us. It's not worth 25 K to me, possibly saving in the wrong place. Could it also be a trap?
LT is 50 K, I pay for drinks and food and let them know in advance if it suits both parties, even for a few days.
Some of you may remember the story of how I bypassed the taxi mafia on the back of a scooter for a tip to get to the airport. We waved past all the taxis I had previously asked about the price, and in 67 the lad told me to keep an eye on my rucksack, as pickpocketing is not uncommon here.
I'm not a fan of SW at night either; the dangers involved are not worth it. Antsirabe at daytime is ok.
-
2 photos
Tana briefing
Spent nearly 3 months in Tana, discovering the surroundings.
Paid 40 K weather short or long stay.
Used Tonga Soa and had 1 stunner from FB.
Being able to speak French has been an amazing advantage.
The country is cheap as chips, no hustle or any major crime to report.
Watch the food as I had the shits for 4 weeks due to some bad market food.
Mada = Paradise.
-
3 months in Tana
Well that's about 2 months and 3 weeks longer than I would like in Tana, but that figure almost makes me willing to reconsider! Now I feel like booking a flight and not waiting until September.
-
Three months in Tana
It's exciting to read about your experiences in paradise.
If it weren't for the diarrhea, that paradise Eden would have been a guaranteed 100% experience.
It's the true counterpoint to the old pirate La Buse-LOL and his horror stories.
For my part, the reality is somewhere in between, depending on how you manage to settle in and what needs are desirable and necessary to you.
What I treated myself to again was a week in Tana "avec" with family connection. For 50 K private login in the slums below the Rova, including 24-hour entertainment.
Yes, I am sometimes a stingy bastard?!
In addition, I took the lady out, which didn't cause the family any headaches either on the other hand. Because. She still orders extra food, which is packed up by the staff and taken home as a treat for the family.
-
[QUOTE=Hungambia;3054970]Spent nearly 3 months in Tana, discovering the surroundings.
Paid 40 K weather short or long stay.
Used Tonga Soa and had 1 stunner from FB.
Being able to speak French has been an amazing advantage.
The country is cheap as chips, no hustle or any major crime to report.
Watch the food as I had the shits for 4 weeks due to some bad market food.
Mada = Paradise.[/QUOTE]Thanks for the info. I am planning a work trip to study Garcorops Madagascar, a species of wall spider that moves extremely fast and squeezes into small tight cracks.
-
[QUOTE=SouthEaster;3055051]Well that's about 2 months and 3 weeks longer than I would like in Tana, but that figure almost makes me willing to reconsider! Now I feel like booking a flight and not waiting until September.[/QUOTE]Well. I spent now a total of 13 months in Tana. Pussy paradise. If you speak French of course and stay away from the expired hard core stealing and drug consuming hookers in LE Glacier. Only for Alcoholics.
La Buse.
The best place to spend Cyclone Season is Tana or Antsirabe. December to March.
-
The typical bars / discos for the non-french speaking intruders where matured gold diggers waiting in hordes to squeeze out $$$ are The Glacier, The Manson and Taxi Be. All in order of the timely appearance of procession. Glacier as early as 6 pm. Manson gets filled as from 11 pm and Taxi Be after midnight.
A side kick for high rollers on company expenses is the Irish Pub opposite Radisson Appartements with the attached night club Red Night. Be aware of the rare species of ladyboys there.
But well. What you find there, you can find as well in Dubai or Bangkok. [blue][Deleted by Admin][/blue]
-
How times change, right?
The addresses mentioned were once celebrated "must-visit" locations in this family. And today that's no longer the case?
As for Manson, I agree that the glory days are probably over—if it's even still open or has reopened. On my last visit, it was just a smelly dump, and the ladies there, excuse me, matched the atmosphere—only the beer was good. Taxi Bee was never my thing.
But I still think highly of LE Glacier as an institution, even today. Morning, noon, and night, it's always a great pastime, suited to the situation and your needs. I also meet old acquaintances there every time.
The downsides are still the same as when I first enjoyed myself there. And yes, I saw Tana with her family after a week; without that, I would only stay briefly as a buffer before the journey home.
-
Select a city
I want to go to Madagascar soon.
I have two weeks for the trip.
Currently, I'm planning to spend 5-7 days in Antananarivo and the rest of the days on Nosy Be.
My needs:
1. I like 18-year-old, slender women.
2. I want to have a wide selection of new women every day.
3. My budget is unlimited; I'm not looking to save money.
Have I chosen the right cities and timeframes for my trip?
Is it worth staying in Antananarivo, or are the selection worse and smaller there than on Nosy Be? Should I consider other cities?
-
Hello Makswww
You clearly defined your needs and possibilities, and yet the forum did not respond. Why might that be? Why is the forum not participating?
Is it a matter of obligation and respect that you should fulfil first by reading and understanding the posts? Incidentally, your questions would already be largely answered in the process.
I have never been to Nosy Be, but even there, where Mada may come closest to your specific needs, you will probably be disappointed. Fortunately, Madagascar does not cater to your needs.
Anyway, don't be discouraged, take a trip and report back afterwards.
-
Tana memories
[QUOTE=Tinte;3055483]
As for Manson, I agree that the glory days are probably overif it's even still open or has reopened. On my last visit, it was just a smelly dump, and the ladies there, excuse me, matched the atmosphereonly the beer was good. Taxi Bee was never my thing.
But I still think highly of LE Glacier as an institution, even today. Morning, noon, and night, it's always a great pastime, suited to the situation and your needs. I also meet old acquaintances there every time.
[/QUOTE]I haven't really spent much time in Tana since before 2015. Since then, maybe a night here or there due to necessity for travel between home and Nosy Be or Toliara, and maybe a few girls found in the last decade. But before that, I loved Glacier and Manson, among a few other places the names of which I forget. One key thing at Glacier was to find out when the Toliara bands were playing, and they bring the Toliara girls that are visiting on vacance. Many a good night. I don't even recall a Taxi Be in Tana, that must be post 2015?
So I suppose they have changed quite a bit?
-
Memories
Before my first visit to the Red Island, I read all the posts and formed a picture of the place from afar. I had made a note of all the popular spots mentioned in various cities. And yes, I did visit these places and hotels whenever possible. Some of the highly recommended spots lived up to the expectations described, whilst others did not. I would just like to highlight one unexpected incident during my first trip that fundamentally changed my behaviour on subsequent visits: Hotel Colbert.
After coffee and cake, my bladder was full, and whilst heading to the loo, I greeted a lady sitting on the sofa next to the entrance door. She immediately offered her services to provide relief in the said room.
With this, and with other encounters I have described, I can only emphasise that there is no need for Facebook or a bar, a restaurant or a brothel with a line-up. If you understand Madagascar.
A greeting, a smile is returned – let's go home.
Never a disappointment.