MeXscape

Living, working, and playing in Mazatlan, Mexico

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

Sunsets

E-mail Print PDF

Sunsets are pretty sacred for Chuck and me. We drop everything we are doing, grab a cold Pacifico, and go onto the upstairs terrace and enjoy a cool ocean breeze and the show. And the show is usually quite spectacular. Sometimes the sky is a riot of blues, greens, purples, oranges, yellows, reds and pinks, with the sun a fiery magenta disk in the middle. Other times, the sky is tranquil, and the yellow sun simply drops behind the sea.

Read more...
 

Bed Dread

E-mail Print PDF

It's 5 am. Its 5 am, and I'm awake. Its 5 am, and I am awake and upstairs and writing. We moved to paradise, the land of no schedules, no alarm clocks, and I'm up, alone, in the dark, writing. What's wrong with this picture? Its the bed. I hate it. Actually, we have two. I hate them both.

Read more...
 

Summer Solstice

E-mail Print PDF

Summer has descended on Mazatlan like a fat, sweaty wrestler smothering his opponent with the sheer audacity of his presence. The heat and humidity seem to be in constant competition for the high number of the day and it’s still only June. The resorts are almost empty and the cruise ships are rare, even the time share and condo sales people have only themselves to converse with. Soon the spectacular tropical thunderstorms will light up the night sky with their piercing bright tendrils of lightning randomly stabbing the landscape. We have already had our first rain that flooded a few streets and flushed scattered pieces of trash and debris to who knows where. The deciduous jungle is starting to leaf out in anticipation of the coming monsoon, the vines are adding inches per day and the mangos are ripening nicely. The flowering shrubs and trees are starting to put out colorful displays that will never be seen by the seasonal residents. The perspiring Pulmonia drivers are vainly searching the streets for small herds of souvenir laden tourists and some restaurants are closed for the summer.

Read more...
 

Living in Paradise and Stocking Up for the Apocolypse

E-mail Print PDF

Living in mainstream society in the US, it is not hard to decide how much of anything to buy at once. Everything comes prepackaged or in set amounts. If you like something typically you buy more of it at once because you get a bulk discount. Even produce is priced in groups. 5 limes for $1.00; 2 pounds for $1.89.

Read more...
 

Learning Money - I Feel Like I'm Back in Elementary School Again

E-mail Print PDF

One of the things you have to deal with in moving to Mexico is money. On the surface this is not too difficult. Mexico uses Pesos; the US uses Dollars. A fraction of a peso is a centavo. One hundred centavos make a peso. That's pretty simple. It gets even easier. The current exchange rate very roughly works out to 10 pesos make a dollar. Right now it is probably somewhere between 11 and 12 pesos to a dollar, but 10 is very easy and I'm not hurting myself. About now you are thinking about skipping to the next post. I would be. I mean this is easy stuff why bother writing about this anyway? I'm going to ask that you keep reading, but at the same time, I'm going to tell you it gets even easier.

Read more...
 


Page 43 of 55
Banner

Login

M! This Month

  • Chicken Little

    At first, I thought, “Ho-hum, just another chicken place.”

    But that was before I tasted Gustavo Gama’s succulent salt, herb and mustard encrusted pollo rostizado, a far cry...

  • Beet Greens

    Mazatlán’s new Mercado Orgánico is a huge success! It pleases me so much to know that so many pantries in Mazatlán are becoming “the natural pantry.” Many of...

  • Kitchen Magicians

    From the outside, the stores look like a jumble of stuff: garbage cans and laundry hampers, wooden rolling pins and planters, molcajetes and margarita glasses, flowered clay piggy...

  • Bgotcha's Got It Going On

    Playing an innovative mix of blues and jazz, Bgotcha took the Mazatlán music scene by storm this season. The band members (Mexico City bassist Daniel Sanchez, Northern California...

  • On Being Canadian, Eh

    ALMOST everyone knows that Canadians do not live in igloos and don’t get to work, school or go shopping by dog sled or horse and buggy; television, social...


Banner

Mazatlan Weather

Mostly CloudyMostly Cloudy 75 oF • 24 oC
Humidity: 44%
Wind: SW at 10 mph
Mon 59 - 73 oF » Mostly Sunny «
Tue 59 - 73 oF » Mostly Sunny «
Wed 55 - 75 oF » Mostly Sunny «

Latest Mazatlan News

Latest National News

Topics