Saturday, June 29, 2013

The New Highway From Guadalajara -A Catalyst For This Market

Robert:

"A new highway from Guadalajara? I'll believe it when I see it!"

"Then just look at Google Earth. There it is, well under way, right under your nariz, cutting through the mountains from Jala towards Las Varas."

For years there was talk of this amazing new highway, that would drop the driving time from Guadalajara to Puerto Vallarta from a white-knuckled five hours, to a much more comfortable and much safer three hours (some say even less time than that).

Those of us who have lived here a long time usually shrugged this talk off, with the cynical, "It will happen when it happens" attitude. It was never anything we promised to clients as imminent.

But, in late December of 2011, the crews and bulldozers arrived in Jala, Nayarit en masse, and work began on the first 80 kms, from Jala into the mountains.

Jala is a town on the existing four lane freeway from Tepic to Guadalajara. So, when the higway is open, Guadalajarans will head out on the existing freeway just as they do now, but when reaching Jala (just before the Ceborucco volcano), they will exit and swing southwest on the new highway.

This first phase, from Jala to near Las Varas, will be a four lane super highway, with two tunnels for wildlife to cross (deer, jaguars, etc.). The longer of the two tunnels, called Nayaguar, is to be 800 meters long, and will enable deer and jaguars to roam their natural habitat without crossing the highway. 

Even now on Google Earth's imagery, if you locate Jala, Nayarit you will see long stretches of the new highway leaving the existing super highway from Tepic to Guadalajara and extending southwest into the mountains.

The satellite images currently on Google Earth were taken on October 11 of 2012; so the progress you see is what was done in the first ten months of work. Undoubtedly, in the additional eight months since those satellite images were taken, a great deal more progress has been made.

The second phase, from just inland of Las Varas, and on to Vallarta, will be a wide two lane highway, just a few kms inland from the existing coastal hiway 200, but both straighter and better engineered.

The new highway will swing to within 1.5 kms of La Cruz and Bucerias, with an exit/entry for local traffic of course, before cutting back inland toward Valle Banderas, then to San Jose del Valle, then crossing the Ameca River and entering Jalisco at Ixtapa, finally terminating on the northeast edge of Vallarta. 

The projected completion date is late 2014.

When this new highway is open, it will make accessing the Bay of Banderas significantly quicker, safer and easier for people driving from Guadalajara and beyond.

Already, some savvy Mexicans are taking advantage of the depressed prices here, and buying in advance of the highway opening, because that event will undoubtedly bring many new buyers into this area.

It's something to consider with regard to the potential return on investment at today's low prices.

Robert Foster

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Return to Vivero (Nursery) El Eden, New Video

Robert:

Saturday I bought three new plants to dress up the front of the office. While they were being potted, I was able to get better video of the place. As mentioned before, El Eden Nursery in Bucerias is like a botanical garden, except admission is free. :)

Notice the bird sounds in the later part of the video.





El Eden is almost five acres of tropical forest, ponds, plants, birds, cats and dragonflies. Plus white mariposas (butterflies) the size of a saucer.







Friday, June 21, 2013

There's Even More To Russell Brand Than You Might Think

Robert:

Russell Brand on Margaret Thatcher: 'I always felt sorry for her children'

The actor and comedian recalls a bizarre recent encounter with the Iron Lady, and how it prompted him to think about growing up under the most unlikely matriarch-figure imaginable. 

http://m.guardian.co.uk/politics/2013/apr/09/russell-brand-margaret-thatcher

Thursday, June 20, 2013

The Flickering Warmth


 Robert:
"Gentleness is everywhere in daily life, a sign that faith rules through ordinary things... 

Even in a time of elephantine vanity and greed, one never has to look far to see the campfires of gentle people. Lacking any other purpose in life, it would be good enough to live for their sake."

Garrison Keillor

Friday, June 14, 2013

Viven Viveros!...The Joys of Nurseries in the Tropics...El Eden

Robert:

One of the great things about living in the tropics is how low-priced all the beautiful plants are in the ubiquitous nurseries (viveros). Just about three blocks from my house is a big wholesale nursery aptly named El Eden...it covers almost five acres, and is beautiful to walk through...like a botanical garden or tropical park...with groves of towering Royal Cuban Palms shading the plants.

Yesterday I bought a new plant for the office...here's a bit of the hike through the nursery that we had to take to locate the plant I wanted.




It's always hard to decide what to buy...there are so many tempting plants...here's what I took back to the office this time.



I forgot to ask the name. Some sort of Dracaena? Dracaena Reflexa maybe? What would this plant cost in the 'States or Canada? Here it was $100 pesos...about $8 USD. Maceta (planter pot) not included.



Monday, June 10, 2013

Musing On the Potential Effects of Google Glass

From Andrew Sullivan's blog:


Kyle Baxter worries about the effects of Google Glass:


What I find most troubling is the philosophy underlying Larry Page and Sergey Brin’s thoughts on devices like Glass. They say that Glass’s goal is to get technology “out of the way,” but that isn’t it. The idea is that we will all be better off if we’re always connected to the web, always on, and have uninterrupted and instantaneous access to it and humanity’s “knowledge.”

The idea that Page expresses is that if I can immediately learn about something I don’t know much about, I’ll be better off. I’ll be able to make smarter decisions and live a deeper, richer life by spending the time it would have taken to research and learn about something on more meaningful and substantive tasks.

I think, though, that is a terribly deluded and shallow understanding of what it means to “learn” about something.