The Goldilocks Zone

What a long day! I really need to either get the AC fixed in the truck or buy something with air. It would make days where I have a lot of running around to do much more pleasant. One of the real estate agents today said she’ll get me the number of someone she knows whom she’s certain could do the job for only about $1,200 (100CAD)! If that’s the case, I’ll get it done!

There was a lot of running around back and forth in roughly the same quadrant of Mérida. I planned quite a bit of time between appointments so that I’d have time for contingencies and to make it to air conditioning to wait. I also decided this would be a food treat day and I was going to let myself buy all little manner of NOB luxuries I usually scoff at down here. 🙂

Here’s a map that will give you an idea of where I was running around and where things are in relation to each other (click to embiggen):

Here’s a link to yesterday’s post with pictures of the houses.

My first appointment was at 9:30 in Montecarlo. That meant leaving at 8:30, a time that I’m normally getting up these days (!). But I had slept so poorly Tuesday night that I managed to pass out early last night and woke up exactly one minute before my alarm!

The Montecarlo house had several strikes against it — it’s far and not easy access to centro, it’s in one of those cookie subdivisions I swore I would not live in, and it doesn’t have covered parking. But it also had some pluses, being super close (walking distance!) to two shopping plazas and everything else I want.

I did not expect it to wow me and it did. It was by far the cleanest house I’ve been to and has the best maintained bathrooms. And, get this, it has a guest house!!! The kitchen was as great as the pictures made it out to be. It needed colour (don’t tell all seem to?), but the layout was very pleasing and the price was very right.

The other house this agent has for rent rented just as I arrived and I didn’t like another one she’d told me about because it’s in Francisco de Montejo. So that was it for her today.

I had an hour and a half to kill till my next visit. I went straight to Plaza Altabrisas (where the Apple repair shop is located) because it was super nearby and I knew I could get a coffee and a bathroom there. For coffee, I went to Starbucks. Holy moly, a tall regular black drip coffee in Mexico is more expensive than in England — I could actually get a macchiato in England for the same price! But a nicely portioned “mini” chocolate croissant was only $17 (super cheap by Starbucks standards) and when I reminded the cute barista/cashier that almondmilk (one word in the Starbucks world) is a $9 surcharge that he forgot to add to my order, he winked and told me not to worry about it. Awww. 🙂

Next, I headed to a real estate agency just north of Colonia México. I was early, so I decided to go out to Campestre to scope out the location of my 2:00 appointment so that I could have lunch without worrying about finding my destination after. I went back to the real estate office and the agent took me in her car to Churburna de Hidalgo, which is 5KM straight north of centro. The consensus is that there isn’t much south of centro in Mérida — the neighbourhoods are rougher and there’s the airport. So for the northern part of the city, Chuburna de Hidalgo is almost exactly right smack in the middle.

The neighbourhood for this one frankly wasn’t much to look at, but the location was probably the best I could encounter, right on the main north-south road so you only have to walk a block to grab a bus to go to the beaches in Progreso or south to grab a bus to centro, and just about all the services I desire except possibly the cinema are in a 2KM radius walking distance (sometimes more by car — dang one-ways!), including the Lebanese bakery.

This house was fully walled and accessible through automatic garage doors. Yes, plural. As in three. Inside the walls was an inviting front entrance.

They layout of this house was okay. Not wow, that’s exactly what I’m looking for, but close enough. The office would have to be on the ground floor. I liked the bright kitchen that I could fully close up and hide and the size seemed right for one person. I was surprised that it had a lot of really good quality furnishings, including brand new twin mattresses in the guest room and two sofas in the living room. Since I have my office furniture and a hot plate, I’d really only need a fridge to move in. The price was a bit high, though, and I was glad that I was going to see another one today at the same price to get a point of comparison.

I then went back to the rental office to get my truck and went back to Plaza Altabrisas because there is a Chili’s restaurant there and if there was day to be silly and eat at an American restaurant chain, this was it 🙂 I was going to go with my standby, their margarita chicken, but they had another take on that dish where its ingredients, and more, are made up into a “fresh bowl,” kind of like a salad. There’s seasoned rice, romaine, pinto beans, pico de gallo, avocado, and more. The $120 price was very right for that type of restaurant and the meal was quite light and very yummy. No regrets. 🙂

It was then time to head back to Campestre to check out a tiny house with a surprisingly high price tag that was justified by the location, just a little northeast of Chuburna de Hidalgo.

I was not impressed that there are at least two expats on that street, right by the house, and expat-oriented services nearby. The house was probably super cute in its prime, but it needs a lot of work… that is being done. Every issue that I noticed and didn’t comment on was brought up, like the mould is from a roof leak that’s been fix and they will disinfect and paint with the antifungal paint. The kitchen, though, was glorious, with a long stretch of countertop and a huge deep sink that was perfectly maintained. The house had a lot of light and air. The master bedroom, bathroom, and the room I’d use as an office were very nice. The guest room and bath needed me to use my imagination based on what the agent said they were going to do (the thought of a refurb was a plus). I loved the backyard, half sunny, half shady, and that there was a bodega (storage room) and maid’s quarters in the back that with a bit of scrubbing could actually be decent guest quarters.

My next appointment was at four, so I headed to Gran Plaza. There, I got myself another rolled ice cream. They had maraschino cherries this time, which I knew was what that ice cream needed (I love almond flavouring!), and combined them with mango and pineapple. Perfect! The toppings weren’t as good this time, though, and I just went with raisins, chocolate sprinkles, and coconut.

While I was at Gran Plaza, I remembered that I needed dog treats, so I went to Comercial Mexicano. I came in through the mall door. To get to the pet section, I had to cross the book section. There, I found they were having a “buy one, get one of equal or lesser value free” sale on a bunch of books. I selected two very nice cookbooks. I like getting recipes from Mexico because they have the correct names for the more special ingredients. Sometimes things get lost in translation. There was a lovely book about sushi in this collection, but I don’t want to make sushi at home. 🙂 One book is more Italian-cuisine theme and the other more Tex-Mex themed (!). I think I will get a lot out of them.

The store didn’t have much for dog treats, but I found a big bag of biscuits in a brand I know he likes that would be perfect for continued training. Spoiler: he worked really hard at fetch tonight to get his biscuits. 🙂

It was then time to head to Los Pinos to see the house that charmed the pants off me in photos. It was located right near a shopping plaza and walking distance to everything I want, set in a quiet cul-de-sac. It also had an automatic gate, but was not walled, and had a very nice front porch. The house was many things I thought it might be. I loved the ground floor office with so much light and cross-ventilation. The kitchen had beautiful old Mexican tiles and an amazing pantry, all of its shelves tiled. In the yard was another building that housed the maid’s quarters, but they were surprisingly rough and not immediately a place I could see myself bringing guests. Up the stairs in the main house were three large and airy bedrooms and two bathrooms. So like the house in Chuburna Hidalgo, not an ideal layout, but close and this house was the first one I’ve visited that I could deem to be truly gorgeous. At the same price point as the Chuburna de Hidalgo house, it offered a heck of a lot more house for my money, but felt enormous.

It was getting late by this point, I was cooked and exhausted, and Puppy’s dinnertime was coming up fast. I was eager to get back to my little piece of paradise, ie. the pool. 😀

Which reminds me, a couple of agents have helpfully pointed out that water here is cheap and you can get inflatable pools at Costco… 🙂

It was a great day of house hunting and I’m 99% sure that I’m renting one of the four houses I visited today. Care to guess which one?

Here’s a possible hint to narrow the list: one of the houses did not have fibre optic internet in the neighbourhood, making it a definite no.

Now would be a good time to address some comments Colm made in reply to yesterday’s post because they bring up a few interesting points about house hunting here.

He mentioned that some houses are very nice, but the neighbourhood isn’t. I’m seeing both here and in Maz that there are cookie-cutter type neighbours like we see in suburbia in Canada and the US, slum-type areas like you see on many Native reserves, and then you get the mixed neighbourhoods that can have a few really nice houses mixed in with rougher ones or vice-versa. These are the neighbourhoods I find most interesting because they tend to be well established and have all the services like a tortillería and taquerías and the street parties and communal living that I love about Mexico. The more homogeneously wealthy neighbourhoods tend to be more insular. The poorer neighbourhoods also tend to be communal, but do not have residences I’d be happy in. Of course, I’m generalising, but those have been my impressions. So I’ve learned to not discount a neighbourhood that might look a bit “rough.”

He also talked about bars on the windows which I’ve known as rejas in Sinaloa and Spain, but are called protectores here. They come down from Middle Eastern and North African custom brought to Spain and then to the new world, where people in that climate didn’t need windows, but did need to keep kids in and livestock and the odd bad person out. In Mexico, like in Spain, protectores on windows do not usually mean that the house is in a bad neighbourhood. They are a part of the architectural style. Of course, they do serve as protection and their presence apparently lowers home insurance rates. In houses that don’t have AC, I find them a luxury because you can leave your windows open when you go out.

Finally, he asked about flooding. Mérida has had two bad manmade floods this year (one today!!!) from mains broken during construction and from downpours. These events happen in centro and in the older neighbourhoods around it. When I started reading about such things, I made a mental note that maybe I really would be farther out from centro and today’s break confirmed it. So far, I have only visited one house (the very first one I saw, in Pensiones) that has been in an affected area.

I’m sure there’s more I need to say, but this post has been super long, it’s past midnight, I’m exhausted, and I have a huge work day tomorrow. Please excuse any typos I missed and I look forward to sharing which house I’m going with. 🙂

7 thoughts on “The Goldilocks Zone

    • Had to think about that for a minute. So you narrowed it down to the house in Campestre and the one in Chuburna de Hidalgo. Okay. What’s your reasoning?

    • I lost count and meant either the Churburna de Hidalgo one or the last one. The Churburna de Hidalgo is close transportation and has most conveniences within walking distance. It needs a fridge but since you thought the RV fridge in Miranda was “large”, I know you would be happy with one of the smaller, inexpensive fridges.

      The last one has the well ventilated office and extra bedrooms for guests. The additional maids quarters may have potential as a rental.

      • Oh, so you actually voted for Chuburna de Hidalgo, and Los Pinos. Okay. Your reasoning sounds very logical to me, but house hunting isn’t always about logic, is it?

        No small fridge here. With the humidity, the fridge has to double as a pantry. I’m hoping to get a large side by side model. Soon as I know where I’m moving and have kitchen dimensions, I’ll post a want ad. I’ve seen several variations on my dream fridge for sale for quite a bit less than new.

  1. I would choose Los Pinos, I always liked, you can walk all avenidas sorrounding the neighborhood. Calm, quieter, much less traffic (except in the Oxxo near to Macroplaza and el Buen pastor church), and is close to restaurants, tortillerías, cocinas económicas, tiendas, bancos, etc. Its on the center between Poligono 108 and Altabrisa, low-middle/middle class and up-middle/upper class (by yucatan standards).

    Like everywhere in Mérida, transport to the centro by bus is so slow, can be a problem with our climate.

    Good luck with your househunting!

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