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Pros:What're the general thoughts on moving to Mendoza from CABA? What are pros and cons? Any advice from those who have personal experiences would highly be appreciated. Asking for a friend 😉
Ha you can move to Mendoza because according to @StatusNomadicus there no inflation in Mendoza!! 🤡What're the general thoughts on moving to Mendoza from CABA? What are pros and cons? Any advice from those who have personal experiences would highly be appreciated. Asking for a friend 😉
Great photos Tony! Mendoza has some beautiful scenery. I will have to make my way there. Been over a decade. How did you find prices in restaurants there @TonyTigre? Less than BA?Some photos I took in Mendoza a few weeks ago...
I was in Mendoza a few months ago and had an amazing time, especially at the Termas de Cacheuta, such a great experience, highly recommended. I loved it so much that I want to go back. This year, I also want to visit Córdoba, I’ve heard it’s a beautiful place.Great photos Tony! Mendoza has some beautiful scenery. I will have to make my way there. Been over a decade. How did you find prices in restaurants there @TonyTigre? Less than BA?
Are you moving @Jakoval? I read some of your posts in the past about crime. Has crime increased at all in your area? I know primo areas of BA are safe but I'm wondering how conurbano are fairing? I see some videos and it looks rough.What're the general thoughts on moving to Mendoza from CABA? What are pros and cons? Any advice from those who have personal experiences would highly be appreciated. Asking for a friend 😉
Not anymore. A possible opportunity came up but then it fizzled out fast like tirar un pedo 🤣. However, I am going to move a new barrio which is Villa Urquiza and I am excited about that.Are you moving @Jakoval? I read some of your posts in the past about crime. Has crime increased at all in your area? I know primo areas of BA are safe but I'm wondering how conurbano are fairing? I see some videos and it looks rough.
Villa Urquiza is MUCH nicer than where you were! Congrats on the move. That's a nice hood.Not anymore. A possible opportunity came up but then it fizzled out fast like tirar un pedo 🤣. However, I am going to move a new barrio which is Villa Urquiza and I am excited about that.
bruh, take a walk in the 5th Section and on Civit street and tell me you still believe that! there are Ford Raptors and Audis everywhere, and people have huge houses with electronic garage doors, and are ALWAYS having expensive barbecues, and the Aristides tourist street is always packed! i just went to a street fair on Sarmiento and there were hundreds of people, all spending tons of money. people here are filthy rich, just like all over Argentina 🙂Food is probably a lot less too as people there probably don't make as much.
i seriously get bored of this. other than going to big-name concerts, what can you do in CABA that i can't in Mendoza? there are 100,000 people here who live non-boring lives, and the overwhelming majority think BsAs is too crazy. i have seen this same misunderstanding in the USA as well, from Commiefornia and NYC folks - they think that everyone in Montana/Minnesota/Idaho/Texas/etc. 90% of the USA land mass are just sitting around 'bored' all the time. this is crazy! i have been to probably more cities and countries than any of you aside from earlyretirement, and CABA was a dogpoop mess of a city with beggars constantly bothering me on patios...you can have a fantastic life in the 'flyover' states of the USA, just like you can in Cordoba or Mendoza. ask Portenos where they go on vacation, and you will wonder how it's so boring here when they are always visiting 😉Cons;
Boring if you like doing a lot of things or going to cultural events.
300 sunny days a year, and only rains once a month, but we're still talking 40-45% humidity....in the southwest of the USA i've lived in 20% humidity. THAT is a real desert!The climate is dry
Claro Fiber internet is everywhere, and Starlink negates this for most peopleif you work remotely, keep in mind that internet connectivity isn’t always the best outside the city center.
Cordoba has laws making Uber illegal which is some communist sh*t grey-area nonsense, the Governor didn't support Milei a year ago when he was trying to do the Pacto De Mayo, and the police are corrupt and always pulling cars over. more shady people; bigger city. i got chased by dogs THE MOST in Cordoba. my chick hated Cordoba, although the people were nicer than Portenos. i left after 4 months and moved to Mendoza and bought a house because life was so fantastic. but for sure try it out before you commit! Mendocinos are fantasticCórdoba
can't confirm because i left CABA and never looked back, but seems like people here say Palermo is horrible to eat out. i would be cooking, in that case. we have a touristy season Dec-Mar (Vendimia harvest, and then nice weather until it cooled-down just now) so prices went up in Pesos and Dollars on the main tourist streets filled with Brazilians and Chileans and EU/USA/UK/Australia, but i can still get a 500cc of draft beer for 3,000 Pesos and a nice smashburger and fries for 6,000 Pesos. just gotta walk around and look, or find nice discounts! for instance, today i saw coffee and torta for 1000, then 1500, then 2000, all within a 5-min walk. and then a medium coffee plus a big medialuna for 3000 Pesos $2.55 USD), so life is good here! of course you can go to Starbucks and spend a ton, if you want.eating out is usually more affordable than in Buenos Aires, unless you're in a super touristy spot.
nice, i think you're the first person i've seen here actually leave BsAs for more than a short trip. good on you! the Sierras outside of Cordoba are lovely, with condors flying around, and the nearby lake town Carlos Paz is cool.Córdoba for six months
#1 is my run route almost daily along the lakephotos
heard of it, thanks for the recommendation! and yes, Cordoba outside the city is great if you have a car and like nature. SO MANY tourist towns to stop at. fantastic views (i was in the northwest outside the capital).Cacheuta
heard great things, but i only saw Saavedra, Nunez, Belgrano, and Villa Crespo. you're welcome in Mendoza, just tag me if you'll be around (i don't have a rental property yet to offer you, but happy to host or take ya out to lunch). sorry i didn't see this, i am much less on the internet these days now that i'm super settled with a friend group here. and contrary to what those who have never left CABA for more than a minute say, these mofos are ALWAYS partying and going to events. i decline 9/10 things going on because i can't stay up until 3am every day 😛Villa Urquiza
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