Is there diving, SCUBA or snorkeling in and around San Miguel de Allende?
Jonathan Peters - Ventanas de San Miguel
I'm not aware of any diving, scuba or snorkeling activities in and around San Miguel de Allende because there isn’t anything to inspire people to come and do water activities. San Miguel de Allende is at least 300 miles from the closest beach, which is 8-9 hours by car.
If you lived in San Miguel de Allende, you could incorporate going to the beach into a vacation but you wouldn't take an entire day to drive out of San Miguel de Allende to engage...
I'm not aware of any diving, scuba or snorkeling activities in and around San Miguel de Allende because there isn’t anything to inspire people to come and do water activities. San Miguel de Allende is at least 300 miles from the closest beach, which is 8-9 hours by car.
If you lived in San Miguel de Allende, you could incorporate going to the beach into a vacation but you wouldn't take an entire day to drive out of San Miguel de Allende to engage in water activities. There is the Presa Allende Reservoir, which is like a little lake behind a dam, but no scuba or snorkeling activities are available. San Miguel de Allende is located in the middle of Mexico, so it's almost equidistant from the Atlantic to the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific, which is a long way. If there are scuba divers they would go when they go on vacation or take a plane and go scuba diving.
(San Miguel de Allende on map of Mexico, pictured.)
What's the best way to choose a real estate agent in Panama?
Yuri Sapozhnikov - Cpanama.com
When choosing a real estate agent in Panama it would be wise to set up a time after business hours to speak on the phone or Skype to find out the agent's qualifications, experience and the product of interest.
When choosing a real estate agent in Panama it would be wise to set up a time after business hours to speak on the phone or Skype to find out the agent's qualifications, experience and the product of interest.
What's the language most often spoken in Corozal? Can I get by if I just speak English?
Grant D'Eall
Yes, in Corozal you can get by if you just speak English because most people will speak English to you. Corozal, unlike Belize City, is a predominantly Spanish-speaking place. The mother tongue here is Spanish, the second one is Creole, and then they have English. There are people who have lived here for many years that do not know Creole and don’t know Spanish but they got by just fine. There are no issues.
As for myself, my girlfriend is Belizean...
Yes, in Corozal you can get by if you just speak English because most people will speak English to you. Corozal, unlike Belize City, is a predominantly Spanish-speaking place. The mother tongue here is Spanish, the second one is Creole, and then they have English. There are people who have lived here for many years that do not know Creole and don’t know Spanish but they got by just fine. There are no issues.
As for myself, my girlfriend is Belizean so she speaks English, Spanish, and Creole, and she knows sign language, so she is very educated in those languages. I have put it on myself to learn Spanish and over the years, I have picked up quite a bit and can converse because I like to do it. For me, it is just part of assimilating. I want to learn their mother tongue but I don’t have to. I could just continue speaking in English and I would be perfectly fine to do all my commerce and business that I need to do without a problem, at all as English is spoken broadly here.
I love Creole. It is so interesting to listen to. I can understand it in part. It is not New Orleans / Louisiana Creole, it is not Haitian-French Creole; it is unique to Belize. In Belizean Creole, words are abbreviated. It is very “slangy.” It is a bit of a lazy language in that they do not us the “th” consonant blend. So instead of saying “thing”, they say, “ting”. It is a very succinct language. They can say in three words what it would take an English-speaking person ten words to say because Creole is so abbreviated and slangy. But overall, Belizean Creole is a beautiful and delightful language.
What's the best strategy for asset protection and wealth preservation offshore?
Stewart Patton - U.S. Tax Services
Be very very careful when researching offshore asset protection strategies. There are sharks in these waters. Lots of people with absolutely no professional credentials whatsoever have set up shop as self-appointed offshore asset protection gurus, and they'll happily give you advice on all sorts of things they have no real understanding of.
In general, there are two main benefits to moving assets offshore: (i) you potentially make yourself look...
Be very very careful when researching offshore asset protection strategies. There are sharks in these waters. Lots of people with absolutely no professional credentials whatsoever have set up shop as self-appointed offshore asset protection gurus, and they'll happily give you advice on all sorts of things they have no real understanding of.
In general, there are two main benefits to moving assets offshore: (i) you potentially make yourself look less wealthy than you are to someone who may want to go after you, and (ii) you remove your assets from an environment where they can be frozen with a simple phone call from a judge or regulatory agency. However, if push comes to shove, and you are at all interested in not lying under oath, then your creditors may still be able to reach assets you hold offshore (by forcing you to hand those assets over to them).
Holding assets offshore typically does NOT reduce your U.S. income tax liability. The typical offshore asset protection structure is tax-neutral, which means that it doesn't change your U.S. tax position at all--you are still subject to tax on income from passive investments you hold offshore. However, there are certain offshore strategies that DO work to reduce or defer payment of U.S. tax, but these are specialized structures that must be designed by working with a U.S. tax attorney.
(Shark Spotting Mac notebook sleeve by Jet Metier, pictured.)
The construction standards in Portugal are not on par as the standards in Scandinavian countries. The main concern here in Portugal is to build houses that will withstand an earthquake, so from that point of view, the basic structure is world class. The finishing and the insulation is where they fall short of the world class standard. They could not be compared to the Dutch standards, for example. Basically, Portuguese houses are cold in winter and hot in summer!
...
The construction standards in Portugal are not on par as the standards in Scandinavian countries. The main concern here in Portugal is to build houses that will withstand an earthquake, so from that point of view, the basic structure is world class. The finishing and the insulation is where they fall short of the world class standard. They could not be compared to the Dutch standards, for example. Basically, Portuguese houses are cold in winter and hot in summer!
Some builders or contractors who have permits but do not have work, “rent” those permits up to other builders or contractors who don’t have permits. In a situation like that you have “cowboys” free to operate in the market. Fortunately, because of the severe recession in the building industry since 2007, most of these guys have run out of business.
In the US, you can rest assured that the home that you are buying met certain minimum standards because the contractors have to pull permits and the building gets inspected. That is not the case in Portugal. You don’t have to pull permits for electrical or any sort of requirement here in Portugal in order to build something. If you sell or rent a property, you have to get an Energy Certification, which is done by an engineer but it doesn’t really tell you much about the quality of the electrical installation of the building or the house.
It’s the local government that issues construction licenses and building permits, as opposed to the central government. Most of these guys are as corrupt as they come. You could find a builder who pays someone at the local municipality not to come around. If you are having an argument with your neighbor, you could probably go to the municipality and say, “Hey, look, these guys are putting this swimming pool in. Is this on the building permit?” It’s sort of like the “wild west.”
(Traditional houses in Algarve, Portugal, pictured.)
Does Nicaragua quarantine pets, such as dogs or cats?
Daniel Snider - Snider's Realty Nicaragua
If you are going to bring your pet to Nicaragua, first of all, you have to pay for his ticket. You would have to take your pet to a veterinarian before you come to Nicaragua and get a general check-up and the vet will fill out a waiver for you. Then you will be able to bring your pet with you. Once you reach customs in Nicaragua, you are going to present that waiver that you got from your vet in the US or from wherever you are coming from. Then the customs agent, they say,...
If you are going to bring your pet to Nicaragua, first of all, you have to pay for his ticket. You would have to take your pet to a veterinarian before you come to Nicaragua and get a general check-up and the vet will fill out a waiver for you. Then you will be able to bring your pet with you. Once you reach customs in Nicaragua, you are going to present that waiver that you got from your vet in the US or from wherever you are coming from. Then the customs agent, they say, “Okay,” and then you leave.
(Koko the acting dog, getting the red carpet treatment, pictured.)
After a year of retirement in Turkey and 6 months back in Australia, I decided on Thailand and have been here 11 months. My one-year 'Retirement Visa' is up for extension in a month and is a straightforward process [HA!!]
Bangkok was dreadful, the "Concrete City" of choking traffic and humid heat. No thanks. Next was Chiang Mai, a smaller Bangkok. No thanks. A friend from OZ has lived in Chiang Rai in the extreme north of the country, for 12 years so the next and last...
As we arrived early to our appointed visit at the third floor dermatologist office we encountered a lone, smiling face and asked him if the receptionist had already arrived.
"No, she doesn't get here until 9:30" he tells us.
We thanked him and then he asked if we were from the USA. Of course he was too!
This is so typical of Panama. You say something to each other and a person overhears the English or the...
In the part of the year she is not in Colorado, Anne-Michelle Wand experiences her continued romance with the warm Caribbean and the idyllic beaches that dot the shores of Bocas Del Toro, Panama. Anne-Michelle tells Jet Metier how lovely it is to boat on placid waters, camp on a deserted island and other reasons to pack your surfer jams and sexy, black maillot to see for yourself.