2. Learn Spanish: 92.7% of the Mexican population speak Spanish according to the CIA. So learn your Spanish phrases, and basic words. It will help in your communications. The more fluent you are the better as you will start getting offered local rates in Mexican pesos rather than American dollars.
3. Visa: Countries from the Schengen area, UK, Canada, Japan, USA, Australia, and NZ can enter with the visa free access and stay up to 180 days. Customs and airport transit are straight forward.
4. Cancun Airport Hustle: Once you exit customs you will see a lot of tour sales staff standing in your path on the way out of the airport. There is also a lot of taxi offers here. So on the transportation front, either have a driver pick you up or take a taxi from a registered taxi stand. As for the tour sales, skip it despite how good the offer sounds. The tour will get you to the same location as other vendors selling outside the airport, but the quality of the service is a important factor here so outside vendors are better. My other articles have more details on some of the good and bad tours.
5. Respect: Family, Religion, and respect are big things in the Mexican culture. So try not to get into any debates about religion with the locals. Always extend a request/question with a please (por favor). When being introduced to someone, tradition requires the kiss on the right cheek once. This is only between men-woman, or woman-woman. Man-man is usually handshakes or the man hug (hand shake leaning into each other on the shoulder area with opposite arm reaching over the back of the other person but maintain the 10-15cm gap between both men’s front facing hips).
6. Bank Fees: If you are in deep in the tourist zone like Cancun or Playa del Carmen, make sure you take cash out from ATMS in the hotel or actual banks. Most machines are in English. Ensure that they are not charging a service fee of $50 US Dollars. Fees should be around $3-5 US dollars.
7. Pesos or US dollars:This is the common question for the first time tourist. While both currencies are accepted here, the important part is knowing when to use the correct one. The exchange rate is usually 100 pesos which equals to approximately 6.5 US dollars (April, 2015 rates). General rule is to use pesos for taxis, markets, groceries, restaurants, and tipping. For day trips/excursions try to start with Pesos and negotiate. This is why the Spanish language makes life easier. A lot of the time the tour rates are fixed in US prices but it’s negotiable. Hotels can be prepaid or done in US dollars.
8. Island time: The Mexicans run on the Island time system, which means be patient and expect things to run delayed from 15 to 30 minutes.
9. Negotiate: The Mexicans are willing to negotiate for a lot of the services/tours. Never ever negotiate for food items. As for tours you can always have a chit chat about the schedule and customize it to your preferences. Rule of thumb for tours, tip your guide in advance 20- 50 US dollars depending on length of trip and expect the deluxe VIP service.
10. Taxis: Always take registered taxis wherever possible. If you find a good driver with a good vehicle, take his details and use him as your regular driver for the rest of your trip. If you coming home from clubbing this helps to have your driver come pick you up. Otherwise you need to find a taxi and then negotiate a price.
11. “Taxi Collectivo”: This is the Collective taxi which is very popular among the locals. It is ideal for the long hauls as you are transported in a 10 person air-conditioned new van. I used this to travel from Playa Del Carmen to Tulum. It cost me 40 Pesos for the ride and 40 pesos entry into the Tulum Ruins. The tour group price for the same ride but with a guide at Tulum was $90 US dollars.
12. Rip Tides: For all those who don’t know this, it is the ocean current that can pull you out while you are swimming or just chilling in the water. Don’t try to swim against it if you do get caught in it as it will drain your energy. So preserve your energy and make a swim for it once the currents have faded. Check with the life guards if in doubt. Not fun to be stuck in one of these, after several incidents in Australia and New Zealand I strongly recommend you research the beach before jumping in, especially for evening dips.
13. Chilli Peppers: Some of the best chilli peppers + food combo. You will drop some tears but continue eating because it is that good. However know your Chillies and remember that most Chillies are mild and will just shake you but the Habanero will shake you & break you with a heat index of 100,000 – 350,000 Scoville units. The most common green chilli used is jalapeƱo which is 2500-10,000 Scoville units.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please feel free to ask any further questions :)