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GringaMexicana

Joined: 21 Dec 2007 Posts: 8 Location: Columbus, Ohio soon to be Aguascalientes, Mexico
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 12:13 am Post subject: Ship, drive, professional movers??? |
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Hello all! I would be very appreciative if you all could give me your opinions. I am moving to Aguascalientes the end of June(probably for good). I just got a job offer there(whoo hoo) but it has put me in a bit of a rush to get everything straightened out. There are some things that I can't part with and sell. Actually a lot of things. I have an insane amount of books and sheet music and pictures and clothes & musical intruments etc. and from the research I have done while in Aguascalientes, some of these things are cheaper here in the USA.
I have a couple options.
1.Drive my car down packed with stuff.
Concerns: Should I really do that alone as a 20 yr old female, Will my 1999 toyota make it? Will I be able to legalize my car once I am there?
2. Fly down with what I can and ship the rest.
Concerns: Mail is not reliable and stuff will probably get stolen. It will cost a butt load of money.
3.Hire a mover to do it. - I like this option because I can take a lot of my furniture and not have to go searching for a bunch of stuff and I can bring my Piano. Whoo hoo! I can also buy my appliances here like a washer and dryer(which not many have in Ags) on craigslist for cheap and take it with me.
Concerns- Can I hire them if I am only going to have a tourist visa( I will eventualy have a FM3, I just have to do it when I arrive). Is it worth it. The estimates I have got are between like 2,800-3,000. It is almost worth it to me if I don't have to worry about so much.
Any advice??? |
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sarliz

Joined: 22 Feb 2006 Posts: 198 Location: Jalisco
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 1:21 am Post subject: |
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I have a friend who went the professional mover route and brought down furniture, books, and the like. I think they even kept her stuff in storage for her for a few months while she did her TESL course and found an apartment. I think she paid around 2,000 dollars and seems very happy with her decision.
I took the sell everything except for some stuff in my mom's attic route, which I'm slowly bringing down one carload at a time. And I hit up my friend for reading material. |
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GringaMexicana

Joined: 21 Dec 2007 Posts: 8 Location: Columbus, Ohio soon to be Aguascalientes, Mexico
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 2:28 am Post subject: |
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| sarliz wrote: |
| I have a friend who went the professional mover route and brought down furniture, books, and the like. |
You don't happen to know who she used do you?? Thanks!! |
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MELEE

Joined: 22 Jan 2003 Posts: 2583 Location: The Mexican Hinterland
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 1:36 pm Post subject: |
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Sam is the expert on these sorts of questions.
But until she gets here, here are some points to ponder.
Until you have your FM3 you will either-not be allowed to bring all that stuff in or be taxed VERY heavily on it.
You will be able to bring your car for as long as you are legally in the country. But you might want to think about trading it in for a different vehicle.
You might want to find a place to live BEFORE you bring the piano, to make sure you have a suitable place for it.
A dryer?? really who needs a dryer in Mexico. Solar dryers (aka clothlines) are king. |
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Samantha

Joined: 25 Oct 2003 Posts: 2038 Location: Mexican Riviera
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 3:11 pm Post subject: |
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The 1999 vehicle sounds relatively new by local standards. Not even 10 years old, so if it's in good repair, by all means drive it down. I have an older vehicle than that here and it's still doing fine. It hasn't met a "tope" yet that it didn't like, exept when there are 4 or 5 people in it! If your car rides low this can be a problem in Mexico. Get it serviced really well before your trip. Mine came all the way from Canada without a problem.
You can cross the border with quite a bit of stuff as a tourist. The snowbirds that live half a year down here do it all the time on tourist cards. I wouldn't mention anything about coming to Mexico to work as that complicates things (in the mind of the Aduana officer). You will want to find somewhere with off-street parking. Car permits can be obtained online now and mailed to you. Check out the Banjercito website for details. You will stop and pick up and pay for a tourist card after driving across. You can buy your foreign car insurance online also and print off the policy. Do comparisons in this area as the prices tend to vary, depending on the company.
Do a list of everything you have in your car and put typical garage sale low prices beside each. Show them the list if you get asked, as that usual prevents them unloading your car piece by piece. My "snowbird" friends who travel with dogs never get questioned. They recommend using those bags you can suck the air out of as it makes more room in the car to bring more stuff. Pack your blankets, pillows, linens, clothes in those. Don't bring anything newer than 6 months or anything in it's original carton, as that is when the duty can rear it's ugly head. Used items for your personal use should be fine.
Sell the electric dryer. Dryer's here are gas. An electric dryer will wreak havoc on your electricity bill. As Melee says, many homes don't have dryers. If you have a place to hang clothes out without them being stolen then that's cool. The sun does it's work and the clothes smell fresh. I did without a dryer for about 5 years. We finally bought a used gas dryer for 600 pesos and, amazingly, it still works. New ones aren't cheap here.
For the big move, if you can find a mover to do the move on both sides of the border for $2000.00USD then that's a really good deal. I would make sure you really want to live in Mexico before going to that expense though. Most people spend far more than that for a major move, and then if they decide Mexico isn't what they expected, there is that big cost all over again to get their things back "home". A mover can tell you what they require from you as far as an FM3/Menaje de Casa (which is your one-time duty free move to Mexico). Things in this area continue to change, so do lots of checking and get it in writing to prevent surprise charges surfacing at the border. That happens frequently. Also, investigate the mover's insurance coverage for the Mexican side of the border.
Lots to think about...everyone does this differently. Some people sell all and buy replacements here. That CAN be a hassle. You have to do what feels right for you. |
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GringaMexicana

Joined: 21 Dec 2007 Posts: 8 Location: Columbus, Ohio soon to be Aguascalientes, Mexico
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 5:18 pm Post subject: |
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| MELEE wrote: |
You might want to find a place to live BEFORE you bring the piano, to make sure you have a suitable place for it.
A dryer?? really who needs a dryer in Mexico. Solar dryers (aka clothlines) are king. |
The one great thing is that I already have a place to live. I was actually just down there visiting my friends/adoptive family;0) and found a place that a friend of mine is renting.
As for the dryer; I know, I know, sacrifices have to be made, but the gringa in me just can't stand having to iron jeans or t-shirts(mine are always wrinkled when the dry outside). I'm also not so great with the iron  |
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MELEE

Joined: 22 Jan 2003 Posts: 2583 Location: The Mexican Hinterland
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 5:54 pm Post subject: |
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| GringaMexicana wrote: |
As for the dryer; I know, I know, sacrifices have to be made, but the gringa in me just can't stand having to iron jeans or t-shirts(mine are always wrinkled when the dry outside). I'm also not so great with the iron  |
It's all in your hanging technique. I only have to iron when someone puts something in a drawer that should be hung. (Which unfortunately happens a lot more than I would like.)
Does the place have a safe place for the piano--like safe from potential water damange? |
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