This morning, I accompanied my friends L&D to Office Depot to help them purchase a printer for the Isla school, where they teach English. This was a sponsored trip, so I was not uncomfortable that all transportation costs and tips were covered for me. What a treat this trip was since I barely had to carry anything and it took minutes to get across town, not an hour!
We took a pulmonía to Office Depot and were out very quickly because I had done research prior. We’d met at the Isla panga at 9:00 and left Office Depot at 9:50! We wanted to go to Soriana next door, so I asked if we could leave the purchases behind the till (not so eloquently) and the cashier understood and said not a problem.
Next, L&D headed to Soriana while I hit the bank. Now, this was one heck of an uncomfortable situation because the bank guard insisted on helping with my transaction. I wasn’t able to withdraw 7,000 from that bank (Scotia). The guard explained that I needed to do increments of 2,000 or 5,000. I can’t take 8,000 pesos out at once (daily limit), so that meant I would need to pay two withdrawal fees in both Canada and MX.
I thought of trying the bank across the street to avoid that, but the guard didn’t understand and was adamant about helping me do the two transactions. Frankly, crossing a very busy highway with no guarantee I’d have any luck at the other bank, that could have even higher fees for all I knew, wasn’t appealing, so I let him have his way, but I did not tip him! I don’t know if he was expecting it or not, but that an expensive enough withdrawal as it was. But the experience was worthwhile just to understand why I had issues at ScotiaBank in the past.
I then went to Soriana and spent almost 600 pesos! Unfortunately, they no longer carry hummus (I asked), but I did find a falafel kit with tahini sauce for 123! Wow! I did not buy it, though! My only real food splurge was some Spanish salami that I occasionally find in Canada. I also found the sweet relish! It’s not with the mustard and ketchup, but rather with the hot sauces. Heinz brand squeeze bottle for 30 pesos, very reasonable!
I loaded up on paper goods and laundry detergent, taking advantage of transportation! My only non-splurge was a 37-peso magazine at the checkout because the headline ‘A world without chocolate, the cocoa tree illness’ caught my eye.
The lady ahead of me in line noticed that I’d put the magazine on the belt and asked if I could do some translating for her as her Spanish isn’t good. She wanted me to tell the baggers to put her cold stuff in her insulated bag and distribute the rest into a lot of bags as she has had back surgery and can’t lift anything heavy. I managed it!
L&D had been just ahead of me in line, so they were waiting at the entrance. We took our carts to Office Depot to get the printer, then headed across the parking lot to flag down an auriga, a pick up truck taxi, since we had too much stuff to fit in a pulmonía. Home Depot is across the road, so there are always aurigas there to help people lug home materials. L has a good whistle and was able to catch the attention of a driver who swung around in traffic to come pick us up.
The aurigas have benches along the length of the truck bed, a canopy, a gate because people have actually fallen out of them, and a healthy sound system! The trip to the panga took no time at all.
There, a guy was quick to grab our big stuff and bring it down to the dock for us. Funny how in Canada and the US I’d be worried about getting robbed, but this is perfectly normal here!
The water was really rough today, so we had to be very careful getting out of the panga. Someone brought our things up to an auriga on this side. I told the driver that L&D were going to their hotel, but first we had to go to my place. I gave my street name and said the white house with the orange door (I really need to learn the word for gate). He understood perfectly, took the exact route I would have taken, and even backed up to the gate before helping me unload.
The internet wasn’t back when I got home. I put together the rent money and went to see my landlady. I’d stopped first thing this morning to ask her to call TelMex and she told me that I should have internet by 1PM, which I do!
I’ve had a full couple of days, so I don’t think I’ll be working this afternoon. I’ll clean the house, go for a walk, and I’m meeting Contessa for dinner.
So glad you are doing well on your journey in Mexico! Sounds like you’ ve gotten very good with your Espanol!
I am having a blast! People I speak to regularly say that they are seeing a marked improvement in both vocabulary and understanding, but I really need to work on my verbs this summer! I have the present, but the past, not so much.
Sounds like a very productive day. Glad you are having a break from working non stop.
Caroline, I took two hours off on Sunday afternoon for lunch and two hours off on Monday afternoon for riding!
At the ATM were you given a choice of continue where you put in the amount? I was told that if you hit continue then you can put in the amount you want and only one ATM charge is applied. Have not tried it as I use a bank in Centro where I have a choice of English and can withdraw 8000 Pesos at a time. Like your header picture.
I didn’t see that option.
I don’t need the menu in English and I certainly didn’t need the help, but I did like getting the explanation as to why my request for 7,000 was refused. 🙂
And thank you for the comment about the picture. Reader John Bruce gets the credit for my changing it occasionally. 🙂
Norma was always searching for English language magazines in Mexico. The odd time she actually found one it was a month old and cost her 125 to 175 pesos.
It was an expensive shopping trip but no transportation costs which paid for the ATM fees. A good day!
Norma needs to get an iPad or Kindle to read electronic magazines!
I don’t consider that it was an expensive trip at all, actually. It was just weird to drop that much all that once!
She still hasn’t found the mouse pad on the laptop.
*chortle* Kindles and iPads are good for people who can barely turn on a computer. I like to use the Zinio app on my iPad to read magazines as I get a nice crisp image that is almost the same size as a paper magazine.