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Paradise, La mission, Baja, Mexico. By Tony Brogdon and Marcia Gershenbaum. Compiled By: Miguel Sedano

 

Is it safe to live in Baja, Mexico? Is it practical? What standard of living can I expect?

These are questions that many American baby-boomers ask themselves when planning to retire or visit in Mexico. They have been convinced by the negative media reports about the reported “violence” here and believe that it is simply not safe to cross the border. Most of these people have only been to the border towns like Tijuana or Juarez and believe that is Mexico. They are unaware that just a few miles further souths there are literally a paradise on earth. Those of us “gringos” who have discovered it and decided to move down here can’t believe what we have found. We have decided to make Mexico our home and would never want to live anywhere else! We are apart of over 1 million Americans living in Mexico.

We live in a small community about 40 miles south of the U S border called La Mission. La Mission is on the coast just about halfway between Rosarito and Ensenada. It is nestled between two huge canyons that support a beautiful river and lagoon. The lagoon runs into the Pacific Ocean under a scenic highway bridge next to a public beach. Nearly all the homes and condos here have spectacular views of both the ocean and mountains. It reminds us of how the Del Mar area of San Diego probably looked about 50 years ago. The biggest difference, besides a lack of freeway traffic, is how affordable it is to live here! Rents and mortgages are about one-third of the cost in the US!

We started this day by going to one of the local restaurants and having our favorite heuvos rancheros, rice, and beans; a delicious breakfast for only $5.00 including coffee. Next we went to the local produce market and purchased 2 dozen fresh eggs, a bag of fresh oranges, fresh tomatoes, and fresh bananas. The total cost was $6.00. Next we filled up the car and, since the government here controls gas prices, we usually spend at least a dollar less per gallon than our friends and family in the US. Not only do we pay less, but we still receive the service gas stations used to provide when we were young, they clean our windows and check the oil! Housing costs and utilities are also much less expensive, about 1/3 of the cost for similar housing in California. The weather is almost always a beautiful 60-70 degrees and being nestled between the ocean and the mountains we will spend the rest of our day enjoying the sound of the surf and beauty of the canyon and river. Later on today there is a folk-dancing festival and rodeo in our little town; Tony will enjoy taking pictures of the activities and the people here!

Tony have been traveling to Mexico from the US for 30 years and made the decision to move here full time nearly one year ago. If I had known what a wonderful place to live in the true since of the word it is, I would have made the move long ago. Both the 30 years traveling here and the experience of living here has been amazing positive. The people are amazing, very hospitable and kind, and there are also 30,000 Americans living in the Rosarito area. These are like-minded people who are here for the same reasons we are, because of the beauty, the freedoms, and the more reasonable cost of living.

In all the time we have spent in Mexico, we have never witnessed a crime of any sort. Instead I have experienced a warm welcome from both my fellow American residents here as well as the Mexican people whose families have lived here for centuries. Tony has found that this is not only a great place to retire, but to open a new business as well. Tony has started a new business called Ground Floor Technology with his partner William Yu. They consult with foreign investors interested in opening new businesses here in Baja. There are many excellent business opportunities here but one of most promising is servicing the growing senior population in regard to health care both in the US and here in Mexico. Many people are unaware that Baja, Mexico is currently the largest center for Alternative medicine and research in the world! When people come from other countries to be treated here it is called Medical Tourism. This industry is booming worldwide due to breakthroughs in technologies such as Stem Cell and other forms of treatment and medical services, Baja is uniquely capable and strategically located to accommodate these growing industries.

Having not only adequate medical care and affordable health care is an important component of living in Baja. Both office visits and prescriptions are much less expensive here than in the US. In addition, our social life has never been so active. In addition to all the wonderful people we have met here, many community activities exist. There is such a local artist community, a local Theatre Guild presenting fantastic theatre due to the actors who have retired in the area, music concerts, golf resorts, and a constant variety of festivals and rodeos. For the sportsman Baja has some of the best fishing in the world, bicycle and off road racing, and we even have our own sand dunes for those who enjoy riding quads and motocross bikes. There are many wonderful restaurants on the ocean serving world-class food, live entertainment, and at very reasonable prices. If you miss living in the US, both north and south less than 30 minutes away are familiar places you may be surprised to see in Mexico such as Super Wall Mart, Costco, Home Depot, first run movies at local movie theatres, Applebee’s, TJ Fridays, Mc Donald’s, Burger King, KFC, Subway, 99 cent stores, and modern shopping malls..

Are you wondering about security? In the past Mexico was known for corrupt and non-professional law enforcement. Today from Tijuana south, the local police officers are highly trained, highly courteous, and very professional. Their equipment is state of the art and does not resemble the police force of even a few years ago. However, the police in Mexico are interested in catching criminals who are actually harming people in some way and are not really interested in policing people just here to enjoy themselves. Because of this if you use firecrackers, camp on the public beaches, let your dog or horse run free without leases or halters, or choose not to wear your seatbelt it is not likely that you will be ticketed. However, if you bring a gun or drugs into the country you are likely to go to jail. Even if you are speeding or have an accident where someone is injured without car insurance, you will suffer the consequences.

In many ways life in Baja is like living in the United States about 50 years ago. However, the populated areas here still provide the things we have become accustomed to such a high-speed internet, Digital TV, and state of the art cell phone technology. Marcia and I and a number of other Americans here operate their home businesses here by use of Internet phone lines. What we appreciate about living here is most of the basic freedoms are still available to people. Dogs and horses are still allowed on public beaches and it isn’t a requirement that everyone live just like everyone else. If you want to paint your home with bright colors that might not be what is pleasing to your neighbor, you are allowed to do so and the neighbor just has to get over it. That type of living is not for everyone but those of us who live here appreciate the principal of it.

Is it safe to live in Baja, Mexico? Yes in many ways safer than many cities outside Mexico. Is it practical? Yes. The quality of life here is amazing at a very affordable price. What can I expect in Mexico? To live longer and happier than anywhere else in the world. Mexico is considered the # 1 retirement Country for Americans in the world.

If you are thinking in moving to Mexico, don’t think more act today.  We Can Help.  Call today 858-433-0561 or email Miguel Sedano  info@rentinginmexico.com the perfect home is waiting for you.

New Otay Border Crossing Option “Ready Lane” By: Miguel Sedano

Ready Lane

 

Otay Mesa, Calif. — Beginning Monday, May 2, U.S. Customs and Border Protection will open a new Ready Lane at the Otay Mesa port of entry for travelers who have a travel document enabled with Radio Frequency Identification, or RFID, technology.
The Ready Lane is a lane for vehicle traffic that only accepts RFID-enabled cards. The new Ready Lane at the Otay Mesa border crossing will be open Monday through Friday from 4 a.m. until 8 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. In order to use this dedicated lane, all adult passengers in the vehicle over the age of 16 must present an approved travel card. The U.S. Passport Card, SENTRI card, the new Legal Permanent Resident “green card” and the new Border Crossing Card are all RFID-enabled documents.
For example, the Ready Lane can be used by a group of travelers in one vehicle who may have different kinds of RFID-enabled travel documents, such as if the driver is a member of the SENTRI trusted traveler program, and the passengers all have other kinds of RFID-enabled documents, such as a U.S. Passport Card or a new Border Crossing Card. While only vehicles with all SENTRI members can use the dedicated SENTRI lane, a group with any mixture of RFID-enabled travel cards can use the Ready Lane.
Travelers using the Ready Lane should follow these three simple steps as they approach a U.S. land port of entry with their RFID-enabled travel card:
•    Stop at the beginning of the lane and make sure each passenger has their card out.
•    When it is your turn, drive slowly through the lane and hold all cards up on the driver’s side of the vehicle.
•    Stop at the officer’s booth.

If you are thinking in moving to Mexico, don’t think more act today.  We Can Help.  Call today 858-433-0561 or email Miguel Sedano  info@rentinginmexico.com the perfect home is waiting for you.

What retirees wish they knew when they were younger? By Miguel Sedano

Their answers were both simple and wise so I’ll summarize here.
1. Be happy now.  Not next week, not next month, not next year. Now. The great Western disease we are spreading around the world is “I’ll be happy when.” When I get that BMW, when I get that Ocean front house, when I get that status. Americans are among the luckiest people in the history of the world. Don’t get so wrapped up looking at what you don’t have that you miss that, what you do have.
2. Appreciate your friends and family. When you’re 95 years old and you’re on your death bed, do you think you’ll be surrounded by your clients? It’s your friends and family who matter most.
3. If you have a dream, go for it.  Want to write a book? Visit Mexico? Learn to speak Spanish? Your dream doesn’t have to big–it could be one that people think is silly, or just plain nuts. It’s your dream, and you should go for it now because when you’re 75, you may not be able to do it.
If you are thinking in moving to Mexico, don’t think more act today.  We Can Help.  Call today 858-433-0561 or email Miguel Sedano  info@rentinginmexico.com the perfect home is waiting for you.

Ocean Front Condo for less than 300K? By: Miguel Sedano

Palacio del Mar 2020 sq ft Unit.

Paradise Found… this is Palacio Del Mar which has unspoiled coastlines and awe-inspiring sunsets. Luxury oceanfront resort offers 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms unit (2020 sq/ft) with designer decor and state-of-the-art amenities. The finest of amenities including: Indoor Pools, Jacuzzi, Fitness Center, Private Movie Theater, Private Shuttle Service, Play Room, Library, Tennis courts, and fine details such as granite counter tops and designer furnishings.
If you are thinking in moving to Mexico, don’t think more act today.  We Can Help.  Call today 858-433-0561 or email Miguel Sedano  info@rentinginmexico.com the perfect home is waiting for you.

An Added Amenity at Palacio del Mar. By: Miguel Sedano

Yes our private shuttle service will take you and all your family on time to catch a plane and fly to many destination in Mexico, with rates as low as $79 Dollars with Volaris a low cost airline that has a lot of flights from and to Baja Mexico.

Actually you can fly to: Los Cabos (San Jose del Cabo), Puerto Vallarta, La Paz, Acapulco, Can Cun, Morelia, San Miguel Allende, Cuernavaca, Mexico City, Toluca, Hermosillo, Culiacan, Mazatlan, Veracruz, Zacateca, Puebla, Oaxaca, Aguas Calientes, Merida, Ciudad del Carmen, Huatulco, Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo, Ciudad Obregon, San Luis Potosi, Manzanillo, Tapachula, Lazaro Cardenas, Tepic, Saltillo, Colima and internationally to Tokio and Shangai with rates as low as $990 Dollars for a round trip (That’s a Deal, just like Palacio Del Mar Deals).

Also did you know that a border crossing connecting Baja’s international airport to a passenger terminal in San Diego County cleared a key bureaucratic hurdle last week, winning a presidential permit from the State Department. Presidential permits are necessary authorizations for the construction of new border infrastructure, such as ports of entry, rail linkages, etc. The crossing would allow travelers to park on the U.S. side, walk across an enclosed pedestrian bridge into Mexico, and board planes directly out of the General Abelardo L. Rodríguez airport, located 16 miles north of downtown Rosarito.

Please be aware that all Americans need to have a valid passport and if you don’t live in Mexico please make sure that your passport get a stamp (FMT) prior to boarding your plan in the migration boot at the airport.  Airlines will not check if you have a valid stamp, they only check for a valid passport. If you don’t stamp your passport you will be subject to a fine that could go anywhere from  $100 to $5000 Dollars plus a not pleasant time with the Mexican immigration authorities.

If you are using our Shuttle service to the airport you don’t need to worry about anything because the concierge team at Palacio Del Mar will make sure that all the proper documentation is on place.

If you are thinking in moving to Mexico, don’t think more act today.  We Can Help.  Call today 858-433-0561 or email Miguel Sedano  info@rentinginmexico.com the perfect home is waiting for you.

Best “Out of Office” Automatic Replies. By: Miguel Sedano

Splash BajaEmail inefficiency is probably a major contributor to the  technology Stress that some of us experience. My wife and I have often joked, sometimes seriously, about clever auto-responders to help filter the daily load. Here’s a couple of funny ones that I, ironically, got in a junk email:

1. You are receiving this automatic notification because I am out of the office. If I was in, chances are you wouldn’t have received anything at all.

2. Thank you for your email. Your credit card has been charged $5.99 for the first 10 words and $1.99 for each additional word in your message.

3. Thank you for your message, which has been added to a queuing system.
You are currently in 352nd place, and can expect to receive a reply in approximately 19 weeks.

4. I will be out of the office for the next 2 weeks for medical reasons. When I return, please refer to me as ” Sharon ” instead of “Steve”.

5. Hi, unfortunately I am out of the office sipping margaritas on a beach somewhere in Baja-Mexico. I’ll be back, Month Day, Year, tanned, relaxed and likely avoiding your email then.

If you want to have an auto response like number five, please contact Miguel Sedano Miguel.sedano@bajaREgroup.com  858-433-0561.  We can help you escape from daily stress, here in beautiful Baja.

Benefits of Playing Tennis. By: Miguel Sedano

Playing tennis on a regular basis can help maintain or improve balance, mobility, agility, strength and fitness. It also helps burn calories. According to the Miller Family Heart & Vascular Institute  exercise physiologist and avid tennis player Gordon Blackburn, Ph.D., research shows that three hours of moderate aerobic exercise every week can cut the risk of developing heart disease by 50 percent. “Playing tennis at a moderate to vigorous intensity on a regular basis,” says Dr. Blackburn, “is a good way to get your aerobic exercise. You’ll exercise your muscles and burn calories. Tennis can even help lower your blood pressure. All of that helps reduce your risk of developing heart disease or of having a cardiovascular event, such as a heart attack or stroke.”

A 135-pound woman playing an hour of tennis can burn 330 calories during doubles and 420 calories during singles, says Dr. Blackburn. An average-sized man playing an hour of tennis can burn about 425 calories during doubles and 600 calories during singles. In fact, says Dr. Blackburn, you’ll burn more calories playing three hours of tennis per week than you will doing three hours of light weightlifting, bowling or golfing.

“If you complement the tennis with other aerobic activities such as brisk walking or cycling, so that you are getting some sort of aerobic exercise most days of the week,” says Dr. Blackburn, “you can make an even bigger impact on improving heart health.” For instance, numerous recent studies, says Dr. Blackburn, have documented the physiologic benefits of walking on a regular basis and at a moderate intensity.

Stretching
Whether you’re a former tennis player ready to take up the sport again, or you’re taking it up for the first time, pre-play stretching is one of the most important precautions you can take to minimize the risk of muscle or limb injury. Stretching prepares the body for physical activity by warming the muscles and joints. The process takes only a few minutes. Stretching does not guarantee that you won’t be injured during play, but the evidence shows that it can help significantly reduce the risk.

For those of you thinking, “Dude, this body don’t bend,” stretching exercises are not designed to contort the limbs, inflict pain or serve as a tryout for Cirque de Soleil. The objective is to ready the muscles and joints for the stretching and extending you’ll do as play begins and progresses.

To keep tennis safe and healthy, always keep these tips in mind:

•    Get the body’s muscles and joints properly warmed up by stretching.
•    Use water or healthy sports drinks to keep the body properly hydrated before, during and after play. This is particularly important when playing in hot, humid weather, or for longer than an hour per session.
•    If you injure yourself or experience chest pain, stop playing immediately and contact your physician.
Play within your means. (In other words, leave the acrobatics to Roddick and Henin-Hardenne.)
Get Your Game On…Safely
Dr. Blackburn encourages anyone who can to take up tennis, but certain individuals, he says, need to check with a physician before doing so. If you are interested in playing tennis, check the list below to see if any of the criteria describe or relate to your health status. If so, you’ll want to discuss your intentions with your doctor.

•    Chest discomfort or pain during physical activity
•    Current inactive lifestyle, by choice or because of a medical condition
•    Rheumatoid arthritis
•    Heart disease
•    Recent surgery (within past year)
•    Pacemaker
•    High or low blood pressure
•    Osteoporosis
•    Regular dizziness or loss of consciousness
•    Vision problems
•    Joint replacement

If you are thinking in moving to Mexico, don’t think more act today.  We Can Help.  Call today 858-433-0561 or email Miguel Sedano  info@rentinginmexico.com the perfect home is waiting for you.

Look What I received at my front door at Palacio Del Mar. By: Miguel Sedano

Tijuana group aims to change city’s image
Gore, other leaders expected at meeting

TIJUANA — With drug gangs waging war on Tijuana’s streets last fall and many residents out of work, José Galicot began to brainstorm with a small group of friends. How could they show the world the Tijuana he knows, the city where he first prospered financially, the place that made the heart valve that keeps him alive today?
That conversation has now snowballed into Tijuana Innovadora, a $5 million effort led by the private sector to generate investment and change Tijuana’s image at home and abroad. Galicot is chief cheerleader for the wide-ranging conference planned for Oct. 7-21 at the city’s most important cultural center, the Cecut.
The list of guest speakers includes one of the world’s richest businessmen, Mexican multibillionaire Carlos Slim; former Vice President Al Gore; departing CNN talk-show host Larry King ; Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales; Twitter co-founder Biz Stone; Toyota executive Tetsuo Agata; space pioneer Burt Rutan; and Qualcomm Chief Executive Paul Jacobs.
Tijuana Innovadora is the latest — and by far the most ambitious — in a series of efforts led by Galicot to defend the city’s name.
“What we’re doing is taking a plate, throwing it on the ground, making noise and saying, ‘I’m here, this is what I am, look at me, United States, Europe ,’ ” said Galicot, 72, head of Tijuana’s Image Committee and a telecommunications and real estate investor. “Look at my factories. I am in a strategic location, right next to San Diego.”
Largely focused at first on the city’s manufacturing sector, Tijuana Innovadora now includes presentations on urban development, digital art, philanthropy and health care.
“What we’re trying to do is project a platform for a lot of things to happen in Tijuana — from infrastructure to new businesses to a new way of thinking to new techniques,” said Alejandro Bustamante, a Tijuana native, longtime leader in the city’s maquiladora (manufacturing) industry and champion of Innovadora.
The event’s price tag may be ambitious, but organizers are expecting to recoup their investment by selling conference tickets and vendor booths, seeking sponsors and private donations, and asking the government to underwrite one-fourth of the cost. Most morning sessions will be free, while $100 pays for the right to attend afternoon events on any given day. The dinners are being sold for $2,000 for a package of five.
Among the growing number of people joining forces for the event, many say just planning Tijuana Innovadora has had an uplifting effect — a chance to emerge from three years of incessant news about drug-related violence, kidnappings and an economic downturn that has cost tens of thousands of jobs and shuttered many businesses. At the group’s Wednesday meetings, these supporters include members of nonprofit groups, government officials, representatives of the city’s various chambers and a few backers from the U.S. side of the border.
Alida Guajardo de Cervantes, a cultural promoter in Tijuana, has joined forces with Tijuana Innovadora. She is leading a project to have residents across the city do a special dance at the same time — in schools, senior centers, factories, even in the yard of the state prison.
Scheduled for the conference’s last day, “Pa’ Bailar Tijuana” is a mass event with steps choreographed by the Tijuana-based dance ensemble Lux Boreal and set to music by Julieta Venegas, the Tijuana-born, Grammy-winning performer.
“I think it’s about showing who we really are. People in Tijuana get up and go to work,” said Guajardo, who was born in San Diego, raised in Mexicali and has lived in Tijuana for nearly four decades. “We have crime, but everybody has crime. Tijuana has always been fingered, all my life, as a city that has bad things.”
Tijuana Innovadora will strive to tell the other side of the story.
It is the story of a city that manufactures 98 percent of the headsets used by air traffic controllers worldwide, they said. A city that built the solar panels used at the stadium in South Africa that housed this summer’s World Cup. A city that expects to make 21 million televisions this year, according to DEITAC, a Tijuana group that promotes industry.
Few would deny that the city has struggled economically in recent years. Its maquiladora sector lost about 30,000 jobs between April 2008 and March 2009 — plummeting from more than 165,000 to 135,000. The factories are rebounding; they counted more than 146,000 employees in April.
IMCO, an economic think tank based in Mexico City, reports that Tijuana’s relative competitiveness slipped between 2006 and 2008, dropping from 15th to 31st place in a survey of 86 Mexican cities.
“Like the rest of the world, we’ve been in a recession, and we’ve felt it most strongly in the sectors that link us to the U.S. economy,” said Alejandro Mungarray, Baja California’s secretary of economic development.
The state has definitely turned a corner in recent months, he said, and “we’ve begun our recovery.”
Innovadora’s promoters are hoping to showcase certain industries such as medical device manufacturing, whose 41 companies employ more than 28,000 workers who assemble everything from catheters and orthopedics to pacemakers and heart valves. Another key sector is defense and aerospace manufacturing, with 31 companies and about 6,500 employees.
Promoters of industry said they are striving to grow out of the traditional model of export-oriented assembly plants that use low-cost labor and imported materials. With nearly 600 maquiladoras in Tijuana, “95 percent of the goods come from outside,” said Jaime González Luna, president of DEITAC. “We’re trying to make investment come in, but also evolve to the next step.”
One of those goals is to develop the city as a center for software development. Innovadora’s promoters have gotten some good news on that front: Microsoft has proposed establishing an “innovation center” in Tijuana that would provide millions of dollars’ worth of licenses and consulting services. The project would focus on developing technology for mobile devices.
Galicot, who like many of Tijuana’s well-to-do owns a home in San Diego, has long been a booster of Tijuana. He has spearheaded a program to decorate the city’s underpasses with murals, campaigned to copyright the city’s name and launched Paseo de la Fama, which displays photos of prominent residents in various locations.
When the Republican National Convention came to San Diego in 1996, Galicot led a public relations effort to bring journalists covering that event to Tijuana. The plan backfired when their attention was drawn to the kidnapping of a Japanese maquiladora executive in the city.
Galicot is undeterred by his critics.
“My first reaction (to Innovadora) was to tell him that he was crazy,” said Gastón Luken Aguilar, a businessman with cross-border ties and a close friend of Galicot’s. Luken has since changed his mind and plans to participate.
“It’s a very, very ambitious and very original grass-roots-driven idea,” he said. “I love grass-roots projects because there are very, very few of them in my country.”
By Sandra Dibble, UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

If you are thinking in moving to Mexico, don’t think more act today.  We Can Help.  Call today 858-433-0561 or email Miguel Sedano  info@rentinginmexico.com the perfect home is waiting for you.