bacavoit
bacavoit
bacavoit

Doesn’t matter. Looks better.

10/10 would get groceries in

I’m lazy and don’t usually bother hand drying my cars after I wash them. Water spots aren’t too bad most of the time either.

I’m lazy and don’t usually bother hand drying my cars after I wash them. Water spots aren’t too bad most of the time

Yeah, but the Tahoe is the one I would buy. I mean, I don’t want a track focused off roader. I want a faster, more powerful truck to haul family/boat/ass in that order. There is certainly room in this world for both types of buyers:

glad to hear that he’s ok - he’s sure got one whale of a tail to tell.

I was in Bulgaria last summer and one weekend in Plovdiv, it was 46C in the shade (proof below), not taking into account the crushing humidity. So I have an idea of what I’m heading into...

Also helps if you put this on your backpack when traveling especially for most Americans.

In my case, I travelled full-time in an RV for the better part of six years, seeing most of the US and Canada. I finally figured out where in Canada I wanted to live and bought a property. The plan was to summer there and winter somewhere warm. There was no internet or cell service when I bought, but we were promised

Thank you. Glad to read this. I’m spending 3 days in Mexico city in May and most people i’ve told look at me like i’ve got a death wish. From what i’ve been reading the city has changed for the better in the last 15 years.

Keep in mind that there are a lot of Americans who think London and Paris and even NYC are impossibly dangerous places to visit.

Although to be fair, the homicide rate in America for Americans wealthy enough to travel internationally is probably much lower than the national rate.

I’ve found this perception exists because many Americans mistakenly think that all of Mexico is like Tijuana (that city is a completely different story). They have no idea how cosmopolitan Mexico City is.

I’ve been to Mexico many times, including Mexico City. You just have to be smart in terms of which areas you go to and be very aware of taking taxis (don’t, generally, use a car service from your hotel).

As a Yucatecan:

It’s even funnier when people get scared to go to a the resort part of Mexico in Cancun/Playa del Carmen. Then they say, “oh this is nothing like that I thought Mexico would be!” Which is true, because it’s not really Mexico.

Americans think Mexico City is just non-stop taxi kidnappings. And by Americans I mean me. :.-(

Ugh, Mexico City is such an amazing place! I’ve been all over Latin America, and and had some pretty crappy stuff happen to me (muggings, stuff stolen from me, etc.), but never Mexico City. Just don’t be stupid. I live in Dallas and there are certain parts of DFW that I would never go, especially not alone, and

If Conan O’ Brien can do a silly skit there demanding that people pay for the wall and not get hassle for it, it must be a chill city. I look forward to visiting one day :)

I’m a Canadian who wintered two years in Mazatlán and is in the process of moving permanently to Mérida. I’ll be the first person to admit that when I lived in Maz, I paid attention to where I was. I did not stick to solely the established Gringo areas, but I also didn’t purposely venture into the known areas with

My wife and I have been to Mexico several times alone and with friends, always staying in resort areas in and around Cabo or Riviera Maya. Some people think we are crazy including her father, an ex cop. I would,like to go to Mexico City, but she’s a bit afraid of going there. I try to show her pictures of these