Latuna,
Anina on Platynum speaks excellent English and is pretty much up for anything as long as you are paying. She'll show you around, take you shopping etc. Also.
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Latuna,
Anina on Platynum speaks excellent English and is pretty much up for anything as long as you are paying. She'll show you around, take you shopping etc. Also.
If you're serous about learning some Spanish, I'd recommend you keep them separate. If you're thinking about fucking her during the language lesson, you'd be wasting the lesson. I had to change my teacher once, I couldn't concentrate.
Thanks for the weather update.
We are all impatiently waiting.
:|
Regards,
BM.[QUOTE=El Queso]I eyed that pool all day today while I was working - soon! Soon![/QUOTE]
What US condoms are the best, most sensitive for the man? I used AR ones last time I was down south, felt like a Michelin.
Although I've been here several times, I have never actually spent Christmas and New Year here. So I am wondering whether to stay here or plan to go somewhere else for the Christmas period. What's the chica scene like then? Do privados stay open? Do the triangle clubs operate as normal or does everything die? Does night life continue as normal?
Any advice?
Lysander
Many of the foreign workers will go home to see family over the holidays. Leave something like the middle of December and return the middle of January or later, depending on their situation.
On the actual night of Christmas (even Christmas Eve, if I remember) things will be pretty much shut down with the exception of eating places, where it seems like 1/2 the people in the city go to have dinner.
You are generally getting into the time of summer vacations. Many Argentinos will go find a house in the country somewhere for a month to three months, take off from work or commute in if they aren't too far and need to work some.
Times are slow at this point for working girls, except for the foreigners coming in. I think there will be fewer available, but there also won't be as many locals either.
So you might find it slower, but I doubt dead.
[blue]Come on Guys,
It took me about 3 seconds to find this using the Forum's Search function to search for the word "Christmas".
[url]http://www.argentinaprivate.com/forum/showthread.php?t=5199[/url]
Thanks,
Jackson[/blue]
Ok, is there anything for the dryer like anti-static sheets? I've looked in Disco and now Carrefour since arriving and haven't seen a thing. In Rio everything was hungup to dry.
[QUOTE=SunSeeker;424319]Ok, is there anything for the dryer like anti-static sheets? I've looked in Disco and now Carrefour since arriving and haven't seen a thing. In Rio everything was hungup to dry.[/QUOTE]Hell! If you have a electric or gas dryer here your living in the lap of lujo! I can't even find one out where I live. But to answer your question I have seen them in Jumbo. But with all the restrictions from the "Tres Chifilados" they might not be available now.
[QUOTE=Gandolf50;424348]Hell! If you have a electric or gas dryer here your living in the lap of lujo! I can't even find one out where I live. But to answer your question I have seen them in Jumbo. But with all the restrictions from the "Tres Chifilados" they might not be available now.[/QUOTE]Thank G50, there is a washer and dryer in the apartment building that I live in. 5 pesos per wash and 5 per dry. Hardest part is getting enough 1 pesos or 25 centavo coins as that is all the machines will accept.
Was happily surprised to see Galeria Pacifico and other malls open last Sunday. Not sure when that shifted to US norms but couple years ago they mostly used to be closed Sundays.
Least I can now get shopping done on otherwise slow Sundays
I've heard a lot about the level of crime in Buenos Aires. When I was in Argentina over the summer, I didn't get robbed. I felt safe most of the time, but perhaps I was just lucky and naive?
I'm worried about getting robbed on the street / in a private apartment on my next trip to BsAs. How likely am I to meet one of these fates? What can you do to reduce your risk of something like that happening? Or is it just random?
[QUOTE=Chicago Guy; 427361]I've heard a lot about the level of crime in Buenos Aires. When I was in Argentina over the summer, I didn't get robbed. I felt safe most of the time, but perhaps I was just lucky and naive?
I'm worried about getting robbed on the street / in a private apartment on my next trip to BsAs. How likely am I to meet one of these fates? What can you do to reduce your risk of something like that happening? Or is it just random?[/QUOTE]I lived there for a total of six and a half years and I walked around drunk and fucked up a lot, and I never got robbed. I SAW several robberies, though. Also one time two guys started to chase me and I'm pretty sure they meant to rob me but I outran them. And a guy tried to pull my backpack out of my arm while I was sitting in Retiro, but also failed. I have heard of two privado robberies but they did not rob the customers.
I think you must be from Skokie or someplace like that and not Chicago. The dangerous areas in Buenos Aires are outside the centro. It is kind of the opposite of Chicago in that regard.