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Thread: Sosua Reports

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  1. #35315
    Quote Originally Posted by SubCmdr  [View Original Post]
    In my opinion, on the world stage Sosua does not even deserve to make the top ten locale for hiring a prostitute. If asked I will serve
    Care to share IYHO of the top 10 locations that bump Sosua so far down the list?

  2. #35314

    The Sue

    In terms of ambience, in my opinion, Sosua is the best locale in the world for our activities.
    In my opinion, on the world stage Sosua does not even deserve to make the top ten locale for hiring a prostitute. Physical appearance of the girls: High; Quality of the personalities: Low; Total Living Expenses; High; Quality of the Amenities: High.

    The Sue is a puta pueblo that has bad infrastructure and high prices. But it is close to North America. So I can see why many would visit from the locale. I do not see the appeal of the place for those in Europe unless they just want to check out one of the cheapest places to visit in the Caribbean.

    But quality of the infrastructure is low. They cannot even keep the lights on 024/007/365. That is a sad state of affairs in my book in this day and age in a country that gets over 300 days of sunshine a year and an endless coast line for water and wind power. Electricity should be free in the Dominican Republic. The renewables are there. Add nuclear power plants to provide the 40 base of constant power the grid needs and the problem is solved.

    If asked I will serve

  3. #35313
    Quote Originally Posted by OldKool  [View Original Post]
    Sosua is no longer the 7 day a week party place it once was. The weekends are still very nice but many of the best chicas have been chased off police policy. You can have a good time but it aint what it use to be. The beaches restaurants and people are still great. Almost every woman in the town is ready to rumble but the numbers are down and the quality is sketchy.
    This is so sad. In terms of ambience, in my opinion, Sosua is the best locale in the world for our activities.

  4. #35312

    My friend lives in Sosua. About the Crack down he says the following, today:

    The police have clamped down. "They are making the girls wear less sexy clothes, but there are still girls everywhere. ".

  5. #35311
    Quote Originally Posted by Norbert61  [View Original Post]
    Well it's like this. It is still slow season at the end of a long slow season- slow for the girls and slow for the PN. So like all businesses faced with decling profits because of dwindling supplies. The cops ramp up their pursuit of bribes, liquor and pussy on the remaining putas. Sending the whole thing into a downward spiral. Come December the fields will be green -things will return to normal and next May the lessons of the previous 20 years will be forgotten.
    For reasons outlined in some of my previous posts, the politicians are trying to satisfy the interests of many parties in this ongoing prostitution farce.

    Obviously they could solve the "problem", by simply declaring prostitution and soliciting prostitution illegal. They could accomplish this by changing, then enforcing the law, or by the power they have to regulate legal business activities by zoning controls. Other Islands seem to be able to manage it.

    "Problem" solved! But that's the end of the money flow, and the graft that goes along with it.

    But like in the USA, Canada and Europe wrestling with illegal immigration, there is no overall consensus in politics to end it. They'd rather complain that they need more money from the taxpayer to "deal" with the "problem", than to actually end it!

    What we are seeing is democracy in action, and sometimes it's messy, and doesn't make sense, like trying to clear the streets of prostitution, by chasing them down and booking them on trumped up charges, but not their customers, the mongers.

    Until, if ever in our lifetimes, a political party can be elected on a stated mandate to outlaw public prostitution, the charade will continue.

    But for me I just enjoy the other personal freedoms that go along with it.

  6. #35310

    Crackdowns

    Since there is a hooker crackdown, logically there should be a pickup of activities in the apps. Has anyone observed that?

  7. #35309

    Hooker Crackdowns

    Well it's like this. It is still slow season at the end of a long slow season- slow for the girls and slow for the PN. So like all businesses faced with decling profits because of dwindling supplies. The cops ramp up their pursuit of bribes, liquor and pussy on the remaining putas. Sending the whole thing into a downward spiral. Come December the fields will be green -things will return to normal and next May the lessons of the previous 20 years will be forgotten.

  8. #35308

    I love Sosua but

    Sosua is no longer the 7 day a week party place it once was. The weekends are still very nice but many of the best chicas have been chased off police policy. You can have a good time but it aint what it use to be. The beaches restaurants and people are still great. Almost every woman in the town is ready to rumble but the numbers are down and the quality is sketchy.

    Quote Originally Posted by Explorer8939  [View Original Post]
    I am considering a lengthy stay in Sosua after my annual holiday in Brazil.

    I speak idiomatic Spanish, having made my living playing in bar bands in Mexico. My accent is terrible, but otherwise I do more than get by.

    I will be bringing a Mexicana to Brazil after the Thai lady leaves, I guess that will be my Spanish practice for Sosua.

  9. #35307
    Quote Originally Posted by SubCmdr  [View Original Post]
    Thank you! I guess you didn't know learning to speak another language is considered to be part of a diversified liberal arts education at the university that was considered one of the top in the United States of America.

    After I moved to the Dominican Republic, I brushed up on my Spanish skills by attending university in UAPEC. Is considered to have one of the best language schools in Santo Domingo. Street Spanish and formal Spanish is indeed different. I am smart enough and have put the work in to master both.

    1. I don't need practice. 2. I speak Spanish everyday while in Pattaya. Why? Because I am in touch with my girls in Colombia and the Dominican Republic. In touch with the manager that runs my business in the Dominican Republic. In touch with my lawyer (abogada). None of them speak English. Since asked, I was on Soil Tree Town and met a Colombian who was visiting Thailand. If Pattaya was his fourth stop on a tour of the country. We held our conversation in Spanish so I could practice. Afterwards he told my he understood everything I said and that my Spanish is pretty good. Just that I needed to work on my accent. LOL!

    If you want to limit yourself and be stuck traveling to places like Sosua then don't learn Spanish I ask for more out of myself and I get it by putting the work in. The point is NOT if you are marked as a tourist. The point is communication and enhancement of your experience when you travel. Now my Thai is not so good. That is because I have not decided how much time I plan to spend in Pattaya. But trust me it will be a lot more than the time I plan to spend in Sosua. My language skills has allowed me to become an investor in a business in Colombia and I plan set up a base there Colombia. I have plans travel to 5 different countries in Latin America. Immigration processes are straight forward in Thailand and Colombia.

    How much Spanish do you speak Exporer8939?

    Will you be bringing a Thai lady with you to Sosua? You know Thais can visit the Dominican Republic by just showing up and getting their 30 day VOA. If you didn't know, now you know.

    How you like me now?
    I am considering a lengthy stay in Sosua after my annual holiday in Brazil.

    I speak idiomatic Spanish, having made my living playing in bar bands in Mexico. My accent is terrible, but otherwise I do more than get by.

    I will be bringing a Mexicana to Brazil after the Thai lady leaves, I guess that will be my Spanish practice for Sosua.

  10. #35306

    I lived full time in the Dominican Republic for 10 plus years

    Quote Originally Posted by Explorer8939  [View Original Post]
    I am proud of you for learning Spanish.
    Thank you! I guess you didn't know learning to speak another language is considered to be part of a diversified liberal arts education at the university that was considered one of the top in the United States of America.

    After I moved to the Dominican Republic, I brushed up on my Spanish skills by attending university in UAPEC. Is considered to have one of the best language schools in Santo Domingo. Street Spanish and formal Spanish is indeed different. I am smart enough and have put the work in to master both.

    Quote Originally Posted by Explorer8939  [View Original Post]
    Do you get to practice much in Pattaya?
    1. I don't need practice. 2. I speak Spanish everyday while in Pattaya. Why? Because I am in touch with my girls in Colombia and the Dominican Republic. In touch with the manager that runs my business in the Dominican Republic. In touch with my lawyer (abogada). None of them speak English. Since asked, I was on Soil Tree Town and met a Colombian who was visiting Thailand. If Pattaya was his fourth stop on a tour of the country. We held our conversation in Spanish so I could practice. Afterwards he told my he understood everything I said and that my Spanish is pretty good. Just that I needed to work on my accent. LOL!

    If you want to limit yourself and be stuck traveling to places like Sosua then don't learn Spanish I ask for more out of myself and I get it by putting the work in. The point is NOT if you are marked as a tourist. The point is communication and enhancement of your experience when you travel. Now my Thai is not so good. That is because I have not decided how much time I plan to spend in Pattaya. But trust me it will be a lot more than the time I plan to spend in Sosua. My language skills has allowed me to become an investor in a business in Colombia and I plan set up a base there Colombia. I have plans travel to 5 different countries in Latin America. Immigration processes are straight forward in Thailand and Colombia.

    How much Spanish do you speak Exporer8939?

    Will you be bringing a Thai lady with you to Sosua? You know Thais can visit the Dominican Republic by just showing up and getting their 30 day VOA. If you didn't know, now you know.

    How you like me now?

  11. #35305
    Quote Originally Posted by Explorer8939  [View Original Post]
    I am proud of you for learning Spanish. Do you get to practice much in Pattaya?
    He can always go find Rin. She speaks Spanish. Has a tattoo on her thigh that says Muy Caliente.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Screenshot_20241021_130325_WhatsApp.jpg‎   Screenshot_20241021_130358_WhatsApp.jpg‎  

  12. #35304

    Language skills

    Quote Originally Posted by Explorer8939  [View Original Post]
    I am proud of you for learning Spanish.

    Do you get to practice much in Pattaya?
    I tell newbies to Sosua it's not necessary to learn Spanish to enjoy the delights of P4P. I've travelled in many European countries, and had no problem getting laid in the red light districts. The local language there is always money.

    I would imagine I could get laid in Pattaya with no problem, and never run out of willing hoes.

    Of course it's different if you have business there, or live there. Obviously you need to be able to communicate with the local citizenry, business, culture, government etc. Or you'll forever be a tourist. But you obviously don't need to master the language of a place you are visiting for the first time, and maybe never again.

    I speak enough Spanish to get me around the Island solo, with no problems at all, or share a joke with the locals or my regular of 8 years whom doesn't speak English. Besides, the Spanish they speak and write, bears little resemblance to the formal Spanish you may learn. They have their own dialect and idiom. Their text messages often don't translate, LOL. Speak formal Spanish to them, and you'll still be marked as a tourist.

    I fell in love with Sosua my first night there with only "Dos cerveza por favor", along with some cash.

    My two centavos.

  13. #35303
    Quote Originally Posted by SubCmdr  [View Original Post]
    If you have street smarts you can just use your intuition to figure out who to hire to be your prostitutes off the street. There are bars, clubs and the infamous Casino. There is a Ho Stroll. It is hard to imagine if you have never been there before but someone up in here has described it as a open air pussy market. I call it a Puta Pueblo. Which is more accurate in my opinion. Almost every girl in Sosua is available and will slang that nasty thing to you at the right price. People can argue over quality all they want. But their opinions do not matter.

    Your time; Your money; Your dick; Your call!

    Personally I believe that your overall experience is enhanced by speaking Spanish. Do not pay attention to mother fuckers that say otherwise. They are speaking from the perspective of laziness and lack of foresight. Once I learned conversational Spanish it was like someone gave me the keys to the kingdom. I can now handle myself in any legal or medical situation. It is empowering. An added benefit, google the number of countries that speak Spanish in the world. Learn it once. Use it a life time in many different countries.
    I am proud of you for learning Spanish.

    Do you get to practice much in Pattaya?

  14. #35302

    The ins and outs of Sosua!

    Quote Originally Posted by Oakie  [View Original Post]
    I had some time on my hands, so I wrote a lengthy post, my take on the situation Sosua finds itself in. You can't spend as much time here as I do without basic understanding the cultural driving forces at play, from a political viewpoint, the viewpoint of chicas, mongers, expats and the local residents.

    Seems the political part was too controversial, or too hot to pass moderation, so I'll try again, without naming names.

    Attempts to turn Sosua into a desirable regular tourist destination will be always met with opposition from that part of business community which relies on the huge amounts of money sex tourists bring to this small town.

    That being said there are some real changes taking place to the infrastructure, and at a rapid pace not seen before, new developments, paved streets, new (thank god) sidewalks, tree planting, razing old derelict buildings, removing years of accumulated garbage from empty lots. New water mains being installed, bridge replacement, first shovel in the ground for a new hospital, garbage containers on the streets regularly emptied by new garbage trucks. Hotels and apartment complexes with back up power and free wi-fi everywhere.

    A shout out to the Mayor, who's actually doing what he promised to do.

    All this makes the town more livable, and how all these changes will affect the future of the town is just speculation, but right now, in spite of the periodic "rounding up of the usual suspects" there is a degree of personal freedom from big government that is rare, in this world.

    For me, I like that!
    For sure iv been going to the Su since 2013 had plenty of fun, many chicas, part time girl friends, even stayed months at a time, Yup you get to know all the players the good bad and the ugly. Concur Sosua is better with all the things being fixed upgrades, Now if they can get the Eletrical grid up to snuff even better, don't worry guys chicas are still going to be there they may have to dress up a bit, I'm glad there ctracking down, less bottom of the barrel rats, less beggers less hustlers less creep cammer I hope, all good you got to do your home work if your a newbie earn your sosua stripes, Also venture off the 2 block strip there more to the DR than down town sosua have fun be safe!

  15. #35301

    If you are going to visit Spanish speaking countries Learn the language.

    Quote Originally Posted by GuiGui123  [View Original Post]
    How do you meet them then? If online which apps / sites?
    If you have street smarts you can just use your intuition to figure out who to hire to be your prostitutes off the street. There are bars, clubs and the infamous Casino. There is a Ho Stroll. It is hard to imagine if you have never been there before but someone up in here has described it as a open air pussy market. I call it a Puta Pueblo. Which is more accurate in my opinion. Almost every girl in Sosua is available and will slang that nasty thing to you at the right price. People can argue over quality all they want. But their opinions do not matter.

    Your time; Your money; Your dick; Your call!

    Personally I believe that your overall experience is enhanced by speaking Spanish. Do not pay attention to mother fuckers that say otherwise. They are speaking from the perspective of laziness and lack of foresight. Once I learned conversational Spanish it was like someone gave me the keys to the kingdom. I can now handle myself in any legal or medical situation. It is empowering. An added benefit, google the number of countries that speak Spanish in the world. Learn it once. Use it a life time in many different countries.

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