Columbia escorts.
1) Are there escorts at Columbia in NY? Kinda of in a rough area near harlem yikes.
2) Or are you thinking about BC?
It is spelled C-O-L-O-M-B-I-A
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Columbia escorts.
1) Are there escorts at Columbia in NY? Kinda of in a rough area near harlem yikes.
2) Or are you thinking about BC?
It is spelled C-O-L-O-M-B-I-A
[QUOTE=Drakar]Hi
I am primarily an escort monger. I much prefer calling up someone and having the girl come to my hotel room like room service. Since I am new to the Columbia scene an I am trying to learn more, can someone tell me which city in Columbia has the most escort services? Are there any websites that have accurate pictures that you can recommend?[/QUOTE]Just check the classifieds section of the local newspaper. There will be ads for individual escorts and ads for escort services. Some of the escort services will have web sites, some will not. Generally, the web sites are useless anyway due to phony photos of the escorts. Please, do not agree to "Gringo" pricing.
In some cities, there are print magazines that have ads for escorts. For example, I think the "Contactos" magazine in Medellin has ads for escorts. Here is the link- [url]http://contactosteune.com/[/url] - and click where it says "Revista No. 34" on the left side of the home page.
In some cities, there are internet guides to local nightlife with ads for escorts. For example, the "Plan B" site in Bogota has ads for escorts. Here is the link - [url]http://www.planb.com.co/home.aspx[/url] - and click where it says "Adultos" at the top of the home page.
In some cities, one or more of the taxi drivers outside upscale hotels will have "tarjetas" for escort services. This is common in Cali, for example.
The absolute best way to meet escorts in Colombia, however, is to to get them through networking. It is incredibly common for young Colombian women in certain areas of employment (actresses, beauty, cosmetics, design, entertainment, fashion, hair salons, media, modeling, news reporters, etc.) to be available as escorts. Try to meet the women and gay men that supply models as "presentadoras" and "promotoras" to local companies. Alternatively, just speak directly to such women - they are everywhere you go in Colombia. Many (probably most) of them want to meet you as much as you want to meet them. This is a good strategy for Barranquilla, in particular.
It is common knowledge that some of the most famous young women in Colombia are available as escorts. The more famous they are, the more expensive they are. Just because they are famous, however, does not mean they are more attractive than some of the "promotoras" you will see everywhere you go in Colombia.
Also, most of the young single Colombian women without children on the dating sites are "prepagos" but many of them will hide that fact. This can have advantages and disadvantages.
Presently, the vast majority of the young single Colombian women without children in the marriage agencies are also "prepagos" but such agencies are no longer cost-effective.
[size=-2][b][u]EDITOR'S NOTE[/u]:[/b] [blue]I would suggest that the author or another Forum Member consider posting a link to this report in the Reports of Distinction thread. Please [url=http://www.internationalsexguide.info/forum/announcement-reportsofdistinction.php?]Click Here[/url] for more information.[/blue][/size]
[QUOTE=MiamiHeatLuver]I read Bloomberg every day and I didnt see that thread, I will look for it again. I never ever trust those estimate cronies anyway. They have consistently steered me wrong anyways.. lol[/QUOTE][url]http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=ammpDqa73cq4[/url]
[QUOTE]Latin America Currencies: Colombia Peso Gains on New Debt Sales
By Drew Benson
Aug. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Colombia's peso climbed the most in three weeks after the central bank said it will auction interest- bearing deposits to absorb cash from bonds maturing tomorrow.
The peso rose 1.2 percent to 1,862 per dollar at 1:55 p.m. in New York, from 1,885.45 yesterday, according to the Colombian foreign-exchange electronic transactions system, known as SET-FX.
Banco de la Republica said last night it will auction deposits with maturities ranging from seven days to 90 days starting tomorrow. About 5.6 trillion pesos of bonds mature, the Finance Ministry said in a statement. The peso led a rally today among most Latin American currencies against the dollar.
The debt maturity ``will generate a lot of liquidity in the market, and the government is trying to sterilize this in line with its program to control inflation,'' said Edgar Jimenez, an analyst with Stanford Financial Group's unit in Bogota.
Jimenez expects the peso rally to be short-lived.
He predicts it will weaken to 2,010 by year-end, driven down by central bank dollar purchases and a drop in commodity prices.
The yield on Colombia's benchmark 11 percent bonds due in July 2020 fell 9 basis points, or 0.09 percentage point, to 11.59 percent, according to Colombia's stock exchange. The price rose 0.518 centavo to 96.274 centavos per peso.[/QUOTE]Mind you, this is one of the guys who's fucked over the world economy, so I wouldn't be inclined to believe him if he told me I had two legs without counting 'em.
[b]Looking For Eden, UrbanWildlife, Tiny 12:[/b]
Thank you my fellow monger gentlemen. Your input is appreciated. :)
[QUOTE=Looking For Eden]I would say Cartagena but I have not been to all the cities you mentioned. Cartagena is the safest from what I hear and experienced and also gets the most tourists from around Colombia too. Also, I speak just a little spanish and got by fine there.[/QUOTE][QUOTE=UrbanWildlife]After thinking it over you should really go to Medellin! :)You will probably find other gringos in the same situation as you, and it is a very good possibility you will find a wing man there. It is my opinion that Medellin is the best place for a gringo to visit. :) I would never recommend you come to Cali because of the safety and language factor, and if you like nightlife, Cartagena really does not have much to offer. It is a big city, but very small at the same time.
Have fun and be safe, and ENJOY Medellin! :)[/QUOTE][QUOTE=Tiny 12]If cost and comfortable weather are your biggest priorities I'd pick Medellin, otherwise Cartagena. Bogota would be my #3 choice, and Barranquilla a distant #4. I've never been to Cali or Bucaramanga, but from what I've read they wouldn't be good choices for someone with intermediate language ability who's concerned about crime.[/QUOTE]
[b]======================================================[/b]
[QUOTE=Bobisee]Bogota, Cali, Medellin, Cartagena, Barranquilla, Bucaramanga, or ?
If a guy with only an intermediate spanish ability was to go to Columbia for only a 1 or 2 week mongering experience, which destination city should he choose ?
I'm guessing that some of the criteria to consider would be climate, crime, hotel/hostal prices, chica prices, chica friendliness or attitude, flight accessability, etc
I'd appreciate any opinions/info from some of you more seasoned Columbia mongerers to help me decide a trip there.[/QUOTE]
I was wonderingif anyone could share any experiences with getting tourist visa from ny embassy. How long does it take to get visa? etc.
You do not need one.
[QUOTE=Sam Fun]I was wonderingif anyone could share any experiences with getting tourist visa from ny embassy. How long does it take to get visa? etc.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=World Travel 69]You do not need one.[/QUOTE]Well, that depends.
What country's passport are you travelling on, and how long do you intend to spend in Colombia?
[QUOTE=AddictedToWomen]Well, that depends.
What country's passport are you travelling on, and how long do you intend to spend in Colombia?[/QUOTE]If he is going to the New York embassy, my guess is that he has a US passport. It does not matter how long you intend to stay. If you arrive without a VISA, you can stay no longer than 180 days in any calendar year.
You are correct in that citizens of some countries, Ireland for example, do not qualify for a tourist VISA to Colombia.
[QUOTE=Tom 33]If he is going to the New York embassy, my guess is that he has a US passport. It does not matter how long you intend to stay. If you arrive without a VISA, you can stay no longer than 180 days in any calendar year.
You are correct in that citizens of some countries, Ireland for example, do not qualify for a tourist VISA to Colombia.[/QUOTE]Actually I am from a country that requires visa for me to travel to colombia. I have a US green card though. anyways I am sure I need a tourist visa. given that does anyone have experience with "getting a tourist visa" experience at the NY embassy.
Thanks
[QUOTE=Tom 33]If he is going to the New York embassy, my guess is that he has a US passport. It does not matter how long you intend to stay. If you arrive without a VISA, you can stay no longer than 180 days in any calendar year.
You are correct in that citizens of some countries, Ireland for example, do not qualify for a tourist VISA to Colombia.[/QUOTE]Or is legally in the US.
Iirc the maximum is 90 days/calendar year, so back to back you could get up to 180 days. But its a real pita going to das every 30 days, hence the question. If you intend to go for more than 90 days, get a visa.
[QUOTE=AddictedToWomen]Or is legally in the US.
Iirc the maximum is 90 days/calendar year, so back to back you could get up to 180 days. But its a real pita going to das every 30 days, hence the question. If you intend to go for more than 90 days, get a visa.[/QUOTE]No, the maximum is 180 days per calendar year. At least one friend of mine has used nearly the full 180 every year for 3 or 4 years. Thus you can get 360 if you work your time right. You can get a max of 90 days upon entry. However, they generally give 30 or 60 days. You can get the initial time extended in 30-day increments at your local DAS office.
[QUOTE=Tom 33]No, the maximum is 180 days per calendar year. At least one friend of mine has used nearly the full 180 every year for 3 or 4 years. Thus you can get 360 if you work your time right. You can get a max of 90 days upon entry. However, they generally give 30 or 60 days. You can get the initial time extended in 30-day increments at your local DAS office.[/QUOTE]Thanks Tom.
You got a link to that information anywhere?
[url]http://www.cancilleria.gov.co/wps/portal[/url]
4 dead 24+ wounded and counting! Keep your guard up! Be observant!
[url]http://www.reuters.com/article/americasCrisis/idUSN01262929[/url]
[url]www.elpais.com.co[/url]
The prognosticators suggested that FARC activity will increase as they get more fragmented and desperate for funding.
This means for kidnappings.