Thread: Medellin Reports
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04-11-21 00:22 #45274Senior Member

Posts: 221N-O. The idea is absurd. As was pointed out by another member, if you want to pay dollars go to Ecuador,. Or Panama if you really want to part with large amounts.
Originally Posted by Gbaby32
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04-11-21 00:01 #45273Regular Member

Posts: 1643Yes, even to the extreme
There used to be a girl in my line up who if I even suggested that she was pay for play, forget about using the word puta, she would not come near me. I was always "helping" her as a friend. She stuck to her guns on this, one time for weeks, until I finally acquiesced and agreed, "You are not a puta, you do not have sex for money. I am helping you as a friend. " Then she would come over and boff my brains out. Like I said, she was certifiable but I liked her. But after adding Secret and Silky this trip, no more room for her.
Originally Posted by ColombiaLover
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I can't recall my name for her, but she was built, and could dance in a way that was truly a turn-on. She would go out in public with her camel toe showing like this without a second thought, jaja.
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04-10-21 20:48 #45272Senior Member

Posts: 284Beauty and love
Happy for you bro.
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04-10-21 20:44 #45271Senior Member

Posts: 3802Seems like quite an Estate you have up there on the Mountaintop, and being a Contractor the delivery of construction materials like blocks, lumber, fixtures, conduits, plaster, tile, roofing, cement, sand, and so on must of been quite an undertaking utilizing 4 WD vehicles. Almost as though more of an issue the transport of materials versus the actual construction, assuming this is what you built, and I am curious as to your source of power and water there.
Originally Posted by Osteoknot
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Regardless, it's quite an accomplishment, and I agree with you in that Medellin is about as close as you can get to Heaven on Earth if you have the time and money to enjoy it.
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04-10-21 20:37 #45270Senior Member

Posts: 590Among guys, we often use "puta. " It is a bit crude and I don't know any chicas in Medellin who like to be called a puta. "Prepago" is a nicer sounding word for prostitute, as Mr. E said. Some chicas who are really sensitive about what they do (especially some of the ones who are a bit older) refer to themselves as a "dama de compania. ".
Originally Posted by MrEnternational
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04-10-21 20:18 #45269Senior Member

Posts: 18154Prepago is just Colombian slang for hooker. It does not mean you pay the girl beforehand. In a facebook group that I am in a guy said he cursed a girl out when she told him she was a prepago. He thought she was saying that he had to pay beforehand. We explained to him that it just meant she was a prostitute. I guess it is one of those occurrences when it not only helps to know the language, but the culture as well.
Originally Posted by Castolo
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04-10-21 19:20 #45268Senior Member

Posts: 3939Never pay before
If she demands pre-payment walk away and find another, if she is in your room, boot her out.
Originally Posted by Castolo
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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...xury-cars.html
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04-10-21 19:13 #45267Regular Member

Posts: 1643I always pay after
A few times the girl wanted to be paid up front, I politely took a pass and moved on to someone else. So many choices no reason to get hornswoggled. Make sure you have a clear understanding of what you will pay, in pesos not dollars. If you can, nail down the services provided including the time. Don't be afraid to get specific. If you can't reach an agreement or feel comfortable about the transaction, move on. Ten times better to find someone else than to get stuck in a situation you don't want to be in.
Originally Posted by Castolo
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04-10-21 19:00 #45266Regular Member

Posts: 1643Thanks for the shout out and concern, really.
Thanks for the shout-out and concern, really.
Originally Posted by SavePros321
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I've known my novia for 2 years. This is my second trip to MDE, I spent 6 months here first time pre-Covid starting in 2019, for a total of nine months here.
As far as first taste of Paisa Poontang, I have mongered on six continents, been laid on seven. I am not liquidating my assets back here in the states so there will be 3-4 trips per year back and forth, hopefully with the various chicas I put on "work" visas, but I openly admit to that part being unchartered territory at this stage. I had more pussy in the United States than I needed but was fed up with the culture, personal and professional.
I had my sites on settling in Cambodia (Lao was better except it is landlocked) and thought Medellin was the last place I wanted to be until I got here for the first time in 2019. I lived in Miami during the height of the Cocaine Wars and my impression of Medellin was all that Pablo Escobar shit, so I was trying to avoid coming here. I had met my novia briefly elsewhere, and we Wassapped for a year before I showed up. Her not wanting to leave Medellin (Unlike the 90 Day Fiance reality TV show) and wanting me to come here instead intrigued me, but of course that did not rule-out potential foul-play.
I took all kinds of precautions before my first visit. I hired a Private Detective agency and did a back ground check on her and had her shadowed before I arrived. I had every bit of identifying data I could confirm on her, her family, and her friends on file with my attorney before I left. I did not tell her my arrival date. I sent a double in my place for our first meeting here. Now it all seems overly cautious and paranoid. But not at that time.
This is not my first rodeo, but I have done and do a lot of things in ways that I would not suggest other guys try. If I die tomorrow I die a happy man, literally, preferably not being tortured to death, jaja. Other than that, I live life to the fullest.
One of my best friends in the world is an ex-hardcore Puerto Rican drug dealer and he was convinced that if I went to the mountaintop to see my casa build, that I was going to end up as pig-feed after they tortured my assets out of me, like the poor guy in your linked story. Made me stop and pause but obviomente I went anyway. I found warm, gentle and loving people. Catgirl's family welcomed me like part of their own and the love was real all the way from the 92 year old great grandmother down to her stud-muffin brother.
No regrets. I got this. There is no such thing as Heaven-On-Earth, Utopia, Garden of Eden, Shangrila, Nirvana, or Shambala, but for me Medellin is as close as I will get in this lifetime. There is no reason for me to look back. I am setting up a lifestyle for an apartment in the city and a place in the country to get away and chillax. Sort of the Manhattan-Connecticut lifestyle, except here a helluva lot cheaper, and I prefer Medellin to Manhattan, anyway.
The last foto is the view from our front door at our casa on the Mountaintop, overlooking the pueblo school. After a two hour bus ride from Terminal Norte in MDE, it takes another hour to get up the mountain by 4 WD, barely, if it hasn't rained. Easier access by horseback. If you met Catgirl you would think she was a city girl, but she was reared there and still spends a lot of time on the mountain. I can ride, but not like her with our dog Leah in one hand, plucking and eating mangos out of a tree with the other, on the steepest and most treacherous horse trail I had ever been on, jajaja.
Thanks again for the feedback! Ostee Out.
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04-10-21 18:38 #45265Senior Member

Posts: 3802Most definitely water under the bridge.
Originally Posted by JjBee62
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04-10-21 18:35 #45264Senior Member

Posts: 3802Yes there are taxation issues depending on whether your considered a "tax resident" meaning your in the Country more than six months a year. If you did own an apartment in Colombia, and were not in the Country more than six months a year, and did not rent or have any rental income form the apartment, there would be no "double taxation issues", however if you had rental income, and were in the Country less than six months you would have to pay approximately 20% of the net income in taxes to DIAN the Colombian IRS but these taxes would be deductible on your USA tax return. And if your in the Country more than six months a year whether you have Colombian rental income or not you would need to file taxes in Colombia, and may have to pay taxes to DIAN depending on your wealth and income. For this reason, most foreigners of wealth do not reside in the Country more than six months a year.
Originally Posted by Luminous
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04-10-21 18:34 #45263Senior Member

Posts: 2981Avenida de Greiff
Here is a map.
Have Fun.
Originally Posted by Combo
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04-10-21 18:23 #45262Senior Member

Posts: 3802Colombian Real Estate Primer
There are strict guidelines and procedures required to obtain a residency visa in Colombia, let alone all the pitfalls of buying property as there are no "escrow companies" so hence you have to utilize attorneys to do your due diligence, and finding a competent and trustworthy Colombian attorney is difficult, and anyone can be an attorney in Colombia, all they need is a degree, and there is no bar exam which at least is a benchmark, but doesn't mean the attorney will be any good.
Originally Posted by MojoBandit
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If this individual you mentioned did actually buy the property and paid for it in US dollars from a US Bank, he may have an issue even selling the property to begin with, let alone getting his money out of the Country. When properties are sold and bought in Colombia, they use notarys, almost like para-legals to facilitate the recording of ownership, and with no trackable / verifiable purchase information which is used as a basis for taxation, this may preclude someone from buying the property.
The selling and buying of real estate in Colombia is not regulated in the sense like in most States in the USA, like in Callifornia where there is a stack of disclosures required for transactions. It's basically like the "wild west" with so many pitfalls, hence gringos getting burned is the "norm". And there are no "exclusive listings" there will be multiple agents representing sellers and different prices as well.
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04-10-21 18:16 #45261Senior Member

Posts: 100Apartment
Multiple times I have considered buying an apartment in Colombia but the numbers never make sense. The ROI is no better than in US, plus there is double taxation issue. The biggest issue is the currency depreciation risk you are taking. The prices for these apartments tend to go up as the peso depreciates but that gets you to net neutral at best instead of any gains. As most of the members suggested, best to rent unless you are planning to live there permanently. I have a real estate broker that is trying hard to sell me an apartment but when I ask him how the numbers make sense. He has no answer.
Learn from all the American's that have bought properties overseas and can't wait to get rid of them.
Originally Posted by ColombiaLover
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04-10-21 18:10 #45260Senior Member

Posts: 100Currency
Or just save it for the next trip.
Originally Posted by HappyShiva
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