Daily Life
Evidence that Valladolid is becoming a viable community for expat living is the recent creation and opening of the Valladolid English Library…
For the second part of our two-part series on Taking the Bus in Merida, we cover everything from bus lines and fares to combis and collectivos, how to catch a bus, how to find your way home and many other important bus-related tidbits…
Our good friend, John Venator, who lives in Valladolid, attended the Red Bull Cliff Diving Competition yesterday just down the street from his house. Here is his account of the day…
If you are an American citizen living abroad, it is not too late to vote. Read here about how to do it…
Yes, there is organic produce in Merida… and it’s grown right here in the city by a man who enjoys knowing his customers…
The Working Gringos have been living up to their name lately, but last week they treated themselves to a night out on the town. The quality of their experiences was a pleasant surprise…
A constantly growing list of the restaurants in Merida and the Yucatan Gulf Coast, with times, addresses, phone numbers, directions and readers’ comments. A valuable resource!
We aren’t at the moment worried that the hurricane will hit Merida or the Progreso area, but we’re keeping an eye on it… for ourselves, and for our friends along the Mayan Riviera. We’ll update here with how things are going in Merida…
Just two blocks from our home, the Yucatan tradition of Hanal Pixan (Day of the Dead) was brought out into the streets for all of us to share, enjoy and contribute to…
Looking for a new activity? Something that involves exercise but can be done in air conditioning? Something that’s so much fun you forget you are exercising? Looking to improve your Spanish skills at the same time? Here’s just the ticket…
Our good friend Reg is an avid bicyclist, and has spent hours bicycling in cities around the world. He brings us his best tips and ideas for safety and enjoyment on a bicycle in Merida…
Visitor or resident, it’s a rare person who can ignore the plight of the street dogs in Mexico. Terry Godown shares her story about two dogs that stole into her yard and stole her heart…
Creative thinking and follow through have been the ingredients for a very successful program helping children stay in school in Progreso. Now two more women are copying this success in their own communities…
In answer to Barack Obama’s call to service, a group of local American expats visited a local elementary school to donate chairs, tables and books for their reading library…
Every year about this time, talk turns to paying dues. There are taxes on your house and your car that have to be paid at the beginning of the year… well, at least as close to the beginning of the year as you can manage.
A local expat tells us the story of searching for nursing home in Merida to care for his wife, who is suffering from the onset of dementia. Read also about a group of local expats taking the whole issue of retirement homes into their own hands…
Day of the Dead is not celebrated in the Yucatan as it is in the rest of Mexico. Here’s a rundown of some local traditions and the events you can expect to see in the next few days…
We all get our electricity here in Mexico from the same place: CFE. We recently learned something very important about how rates are calculated and we thought we would pass on our hard-earned information…
We hate to admit it but we have actually passed up a ripe mango in the store because we were too lazy to get messy eating it. Today we learned a mango-eating style and we’ll never pass up a mango again…
You think it won’t happen to you but it might. Or you live in fear that it might happen to you and it may never. Mordida! It happened to Working Gringa one day, and here is what she learned (and you can too!) from the experience…
Merida’s long cultural relationship with Cuba makes it a cigar-lover’s paradise, but you have to know where to look to find the real thing…
Looking for something to do on the last night of the year? Merida’s hotels and restaurants are all offering something special on New Year’s Eve… here’s the quick rundown.
This year in Merida, the Day of the Dead celebration on the Plaza Grande was bigger than we expected and bigger than ever. Here’s a short report and some photos…
Do you ever wonder how you can make a real difference for a local family? Here’s a story of how one woman is making a difference in the lives of students and their families in Progreso, Yucatan…
In case you were wondering what happened to Yucatan’s finest baseball team, we don’t have good news. Here’s the rainy play-by-play, brought to you by our finest baseball writer…
Baseball season is almost at an end, which means the games are getting very exciting. Yucatan’s team, Los Leones could make it big again this year…
Hurricanes are a fact of life in this part of the world. As Hurricane Dean heads for the Yucatan Peninsula and Merida, the Working Gringos reflect on hurricane preparedness…
Our baseball reporter, Julia Kalmon, gives us the blow-by-exciting-blow of the most recent games of Los Leones, Yucatan’s winning baseball team…
The Leones, Yucatan’s baseball team, still has a chance to make the playoffs. Here’s a rundown of what’s new with the team, and the dates of the last three deciding games. Come cheer them on!
It’s the beginning of July and that means baseball season. The Leones, Yucatan State’s championship baseball team, is doing well so far this year. Here’s a little slice of life in the stands this summer…
An excerpt from a new book about the Merida professional baseball team, the Leones, and their 2005 season. This particular chapter is about the food served in the stadium, but as with everything about baseball, it’s about so much more…
Early Sunday morning, after the dogs were walked but before most of Merida had awakened, the Working Gringos found themselves down the street from their new rental at Merida’s oldest and largest cemetery…
Three totally unrelated things arrived in Merida today: locusts, sculptures and the new Yucatan Living Emergency Numbers bookmark…
When Emily and Sid visited Merida recently, they didn’t plan any celebrations, but Merida and its people made other plans…
Find out what happens when the Working Gringos call the number on the English-language flyer stuck in their door last week to get their stoven repaired…
Every other day or so, when we arrive at our office in the morning or come home at night, one or more bits of paper are either slipped into the door or under the door or between the doors…
For the last year, daily life for the Working Gringa has started with a walk along Paseo de Montejo with the dogs, URL and Mali…
Last weekend, we wrangled an invitation to film a Mayan pig farm on the same day that Mexico played its decisive game in the World Cup…
It has been nearly three months since Socco May started beauty school in downtown Merida. Here’s an update on her progress…
The last time we traveled back to California, we found ourselves sitting at a stoplight in our car and feeling rather thirsty. We were suddenly struck by the absence of something we have come to expect and even appreciate here in Mexico…
Shopping for groceries in Merida, even after four years, is not the mindless but somehow comforting activity we used to take for granted back in California…
You may remember Soco, whose quinceaños we attended awhile back in her home town of Oxtapakab. Now she’s off to beauty school…
In the past two days, the Working Gringos have had two medical experiences; one of them was comfortingly similar to experiences we have had in the States, and the other was a bit different…
Yesterday, as the world was reading about Merida and the cheap real estate here, some of us lucky residents decided to get out of Dodge for the day…
No, it’s not misspelled. The Spanish word around here for sweater is sueter, believe it or not…
We just found out about a fellow expatriate who is writing a blog about living in Mexico, Ruminations of an Expatriate…
On Saturday, a good friend of ours had a house-warming party. This was a party we did not want to miss, as the house she has just finished renovating is about one hour east of Merida in a tiny pueblito in the Yucatecan countryside…
On the way home from Costco, we were remarking how many things we used to think of as “missing” from Merida when we first moved here…
Mexicans have a much higher standard of personal grooming than Working Gringos will probably ever achieve…
Today is one of those days when those of us who moved here remember why…
Here’s something that you just don’t get in the States: a man to watch your street…
Hurricane Wilma is headed for the Yucatan. Not that we’re worried or anything. Merida is probably the safest large city in a hurricane zone that we can think of, now that we think of it…
There is a whole side of life in Merida (and many other Mexican cities) that most visitors to Merida never see…
Early in the morning, this sports park is surprisingly well attended. Surprising at first, but upon second thought, maybe not so much. At 5:30 AM, Merida is cool and fresh. By 7:30 AM, it gets hot and muggy. When would you rather exercise?..
