Monday, 23 May 2011

Oxal and Floratil

No matter how careful you are about what you eat and drink here in Mexico, you will get some sort of parasite-based gut rot.  Often, a doctor will not diagnose and treat gut-rot until a stool sample comes back positive for an organism, which unfortunately often requires multiple samples be taken because of the life cycle of microscopic organisms.  This can take weeks of collecting your own noxious diarrhea.  Instead, a person showing symptoms can go to the pharmacy and get a full-spectrum parasiticide like Oxal.

Oxal kills amoeba (dysentery), protozoa (giardia), nematodes (roundworms), and cestodes (tapeworms) -- basically, everything but viruses and bacteria (including tissue-parasites like trichinosis).  It should not be taken by children under 2 or pregnant or breatfeeding women.  Men who take it should avoid possibly conceiving children for up to one month afterwards.

While you're at the pharmacy, pick up some Floratil -- a natural gut flora supplement.  It is used both in the treatment and prevention of diarrhea.  Because it is some of the same stuff that you already should have in your system, anyone in most any condition can take it, including children.  There is a pediatric version, but it is literally the exact same powder as is in the capsules (so sayeth the pharmacist).  Also, you can't overdose on the stuff.

Good luck!

Xochimilco

Xochimilco is all that remains of the floating gardens and canals of ancient Lake Texcoco.  It's a fun day out with friends and family, floating along, but it's easy to get taken advantage of by the locals.

The tourist board has fixed all of the prices -- boats, mariachis, food -- everything but the plants.  The price list is here, and you should print it out and take it with you for when they try to charge you per person (it's per hour per boat).  If they try to give you a hard time, take out your phone and report them -- they will probably back down before you get finished dialing. The tourist board's phone numbers are: 5676-8879 and 5676-0810.


For the southern route:
Embarcadero Caltongo
Nuevo León s/n
Barrio San Cristobal
19.261429N, 99.09705W

Embarcadero Nuevo de Nativistas

San Jerónimo
Xochimilco, Distrito Federal, México
19.251472N, 99.094187W


For the northern route:

Embarcadero Fernando Celada
Cda. 3 Guadalupe I. Ramírez
San Juan, Xochimilco, Distrito Federal, México
19.264583N, 99.108157W


Embarcadero Cuemanco
Antiguo Canal Cuemanco
Pista Olimpica Virgilio Uribe (Canal De Cuemanco), Xochimilco, Distrito Federal, México
19.286893N, 99.102443W



For your reading pleasure: An article from the Toronto Star.

Car Rental Insurance

Unlike in the US, your auto insurance does not also cover a rental car.  Also, the auto insurance that comes with a credit card in the US also doesn't work here in Mexico.  American Express has a Premium Car Rental Insurance that covers Mexico (and most other countries) for collision insurance (which is the very expensive insurance that the car rental place will try to sell you).  You have to sign up for it, but it only costs you when you use it, and the cost covers the entire rental period up to 30 days.  It's $20US or $25US depending on what plan you select while the same insurance that the rental company will sell you is about $35US/day.

Keep in mind, it is only for collision/comprehensive -- scratches, smashes, and dings to the rental -- so you will still need liability (Responsabilidad Civil) that the car company will sell you for about $15/day when you pick up the rental.

Vet - Clinica Animal


We have happily used:

Clinica Animal de Bosques
Bosques de las Lomas
Tel.: 5596-1672 
Emergency: 5208-5520 / 5208-7866 (Code B-519)
Open 24 hours.

They are difficult to find: go into the parking lot and around like you're going to exit, and then go left to the underground parking (which is marked "Clinica Animal") and the vet is at the end.  It doesn't look like a shiny doctor's office like in the US, but they love the animals and take good care of them, and the vet speaks English.

We also use the vet when we need to kennel our dogs -- they go and stay at his house for the duration and then get a bath before we pick them up.  It's $200MX/night (per dog).

19.40725N, 99.239962W

US Embassy


Even if you are not here as a diplomat, it's good to know where the embassy is, and have their website bookmarked.  Occasionally, check out the travel advisories, and when you first arrive, be sure to register with the State Department that you are here at their Smart Travel Enrollment Program (STEP) website.

19.428018N, 99.166238W

Chapultepec Stake Center


View Mexico in a larger map


Av. Jesús del Monte y Av México
Col. Cacalote, Cuajimalpa, DF


19.36995N, 99.294664W

The Mexico City Temple


Location:  Avenida 510 no. 90, Colonia San Juan de Aragón, México City, Distrito Federal, México.
Phone Number:  (52) 55-5003-3734
Website: http://lds.org/church/temples/mexico-city-mexico?lang=eng

19.4653N, 99.087454W

Muebles Rusticos


Many people in the ward have used this fabulous furniture guy from Metepec.  He's courteous, punctual, and does excellent work, including custom things from your own designs, and delivers.  We do all of our communications with him through email, making translations easier, and most things take about 3 weeks from the time we approve the price to the time he delivers.


Jose Rivas Carrillo <j.rivascarrillo@hotmail.com>

Muebles Rusticos de Mexico
Pino Suarez Sur No. 2116-C
Col. Benito Juarez Toluca 50190
Tel- 722-232-2080

Fabrica- 722-190-5770



His showroom is here (near the Metepec Home Depot, between a Chinese restaurant and a hotel), though we've never actually needed to visited it.  
19.251616N, 99.614764W


Edit: Sr Carrillo lost his previous email address, and I have updated it here. --JBW