Only City in Nicaragua Worth Living In 🇳🇮

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 109

  • @JamesScalf-rn7kl
    @JamesScalf-rn7kl 3 месяца назад +10

    Interesting perspective. I have lived in Nicaragua for the last 9 years ( before that Costa Rica 5 years) as a resident. Comparing different cities I personally found Leon (lived there 2 years) my least favorite. Just my personal opinion. So far I have lived in Laguna de Apoyo, Granda, out side of Masaya in Sierra Doradas, Leon and now in Monte Tabor. The problem with Leon outside of very high heat is the quality of the air. During January, February and March the high winds start. This is also the time the farms around Leon harvest their peanut crops. The soft soil gets blow high into the atmosphere. The sky would turn brown.
    I could clean my house and within an hour all my furniture would be covered with dirt again. Not good to breath. You would have to close off your home and relay on A/C which is very expensive. There are a lot of other areas I have not lived at but so far Monte Tabor being much cooler, cleaner, more Rural, quite but still close to all shopping needs meets my needs much better. It is always best to rent and live in different places before making a final move. For some Leon is great but other no so much.

    • @davidmendez5050
      @davidmendez5050 Месяц назад +1

      Brotha keep it real and simple. Where are all the most beautiful women at

  • @GPosner8
    @GPosner8 2 месяца назад +3

    Another superb video my friend. 👍🏻👏🏻✌🏻🤙🏻
    Your videos are chock a block full of so much useful information. I do see myself spending months in various parts of Nicaragua knowing that each place is different.

  • @donsebera
    @donsebera 4 месяца назад +6

    I just discovered your videos and I really appreciate your presentation. I am just considering my retirement options and while I am first considering Costa Rica and have a trip planned there that I am open to adjusting, I really appreciate your practical considerations. For me, I would not be concerned about airports or getting out of town so to speak but being a sports fan, it would offer me a way to connect with locals while also feeding my own interests. I am sure as I continue watching your videos there are already things out there about cost of living, healthcare costs, transportation etc, so I will continue watching but I am very much appreciative of what you are sharing.

  • @mugwump5949
    @mugwump5949 6 месяцев назад +10

    Visited Nicaragua first time recently (took my e-cig away from me in customs). Stayed in Granada. I enjoyed it very much. I agree with you about what you're saying. Is Granada THE PLACE in Nicaragua? No. But it is a great place for a first time visit and I recommend it. I also enjoy the company of expats because, like you said, you get the lay of the land so to speak before you move on. I also spent a day in Leon while I was there. Interesting, but not the place for a first time stay FOR ME. Kind of hot too compared to Granada, and I'm from Florida! My first time in Mexico was Ajijic. Love that place. Got comfortable with Mexico there and moved on. I could care less about beaches so SJDC holds zero interest for me at all. I will be in Nicaragua again soon. Preferably for the season. Amazing country. Keep up the good work.

    • @10sandovalallan
      @10sandovalallan 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yea they take you e cig you gotta keep in pockets not 🧳

  • @ask-mw5hk
    @ask-mw5hk 6 месяцев назад +12

    Any town or city in Nicaragua is good.

  • @gravedadpuntocero
    @gravedadpuntocero 2 месяца назад +3

    Wow, with all respect to your point of view, as a Nicaraguan native, mi point of view is so different, there so many places north, south, west or east if the capital, whic i define as beautifull, so grabin a bunch of places it does'nt mean that is the right place and leon is not one of them, it all depends and what are your taste.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  2 месяца назад

      I'm not really sure what my point of view was on this video. Wasn't it that there are lots of places? Someone told ME that there was only one city in the country worth living in. And I was pointing out that that was not the case.

  • @kellyannthomas5727
    @kellyannthomas5727 3 месяца назад +4

    I love in Cardenas along the CR border, one of four full time expats in the pueblo. i would much rather live in the countryside than a city. I lived in San Juan del Sur for 12 years. I love my friends and neighbors, but it was too loud, too much traffic and more expensive than other cities.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  3 месяца назад +1

      Most people only know that town because it has a sign on the highway and everyone says "what town now?" lol
      That's awesome. I need to visit there sometime. It looks nice but I've never been. Is that far enough from the border that you can buy there? or is that in the rental only zone by the frontera?

    • @kellyannthomas5727
      @kellyannthomas5727 3 месяца назад +1

      @@ScottAlanMillerVlog That is why I love living there. It is a beautiful place unspoiled by expat bars, hostels, and barely clothed foreigners. If you want to live in a city, Leon or Granada are fine. I have 263 acres of gorgeous jungle on the lake, a waterfall tucked in an old growth forest, and views of 9 volcanoes from my mirador. The scenery and wildlife make up for the lack of amenities. Plus I can drive 45 minutes to Rivas or spend a day or weekend in Granada if I need a reprieve.

  • @treasurethetime2463
    @treasurethetime2463 6 месяцев назад +5

    My university was located near NYC. That was supposed to be a big deal.
    By the time we graduated, we had partied "in the city" twice.😂
    Real life should always be the priority.
    I personally feel in love with Rivas, Leon, and Granada and Big corn Island for different reasons.

  • @livingabroadwitheric
    @livingabroadwitheric 6 месяцев назад +5

    Loved the phantom of the opera comparison, SAM. And yea i totally agree about Granada being a 1st stop for newbies. After my 6 weeks on a farm in the Granada outskirts i would have loved to have lived in Leon instead. Your city is amazing. IMHO granada should only be considered as a 3 or 4 day tourist stop max... not to live long term

  •  2 месяца назад

    Always great perspectives, Scott. I've lived here since 2004, at first half time and now full time after marrying a NIcaraguan. We've traveled all over the country and have a pretty good feel where living is best for us. In my humble opinion, coming from really great California weather, living somewhere between Lake NIcaragua (Cocibolca) and the coast will be the most satisfying if one likes less oppressive heat, characteristic of Nicaragua (Leon and Chinadega the worst heat). We have a beach front condo in Tola. We also have a mountain top house in Jinotepe which is a short new improved ride down to Managua where we shop for things we cannot get in the major Administration Centers (Rivas and Jinotepe). During one week I stay with my Nicaraguan family in Jinotepe and make an easy one half hour+ runs down to Managua to shop. Every other week and all weekend I'm on the beach. Here on the beach we get daily cooling breezes flowing to the ocean from the lake. So consider Tola. If you can afford it, Hacienda Beach and Golf Resort (small houses and golf course condos less than $125k), beach front condos with pools starting at about $200k. Rancho Santana is a level up, and La Isla Guacalito a big leap up! Budget housing on the beach at Guasacatge or Popoyo are favorite surfing spots. If the beach isn't important then Maltagalpa is our strongest second choice, high and gorgeous mountain surrounding especially on the road up to Dalia. Hacienda Iguana has a a new airport outside its guarded gates, but is currently waiting for re-opening. The new Coastal highway makes San Juan Del Sur, favorite restaurant city, less than a half hour away. Rivas, the Administrative Center is 45 minutes away. While there are sxcellent clinics and dental services close, the best hospitals are in Managua. If you are going to be staying here and need to make border runs, Cities in the Rivas area are easiest for border runs to Costa Rica.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  Месяц назад

      Definitely lots of benefits to the Rivas area. Although I think border run benefits are incredibly minor. Twice a year to save a little time is tiny, and it comes with higher costs and more risk. But if you use Costa Rica regularly, then it's huge. Like my kids would enjoy that, they love food and outings in CR. They love Managua too. And I plan to get them addicted to San Salvador and Guate. But San Jose is an awesome place for a few days outing and if we were closer we might do it a lot more. So if that fits your profile that a big difference. But as I don't want to drive that, the bus costs the same from Chinandega as from La Virgen and gets you there at the same time. So waking up a little earlier here is a minor detail. Just nap on the bus instead of at home, everything else is the same.
      I think Iguana was actually the place that first piqued our interest in Nicaragua back maybe in 2007. It's funny that we saw that and got interested, tried Granada, then spent time in SJDS, decided to move down and in the first three days ruled out everything south of Carazo as not meeting our vibe. Those were the areas that convinced us to try Nicaragua. But once we got deeper into traditional Nicaragua, we never looked back.

  • @timothyirwin8974
    @timothyirwin8974 5 месяцев назад +2

    Saw the dress rehearsal for Phantom of the Opera at the newly renovated and reopened Pantages Theatre in Toronto in 1989. Everyone involved in the reno was invited to the event. Packed house. Great night, great project. Was given seats right next to Garth and his guests for some reason.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  5 месяцев назад +1

      Wow, that's pretty cool. Boy do I remember Pantages re-opening for that. What a big deal it was.

    • @timothyirwin8974
      @timothyirwin8974 5 месяцев назад

      @@ScottAlanMillerVlog From complete gutting to finished for Phantom in September was nine months. Pressure was on. How do youthful single seniors fare in your city?

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  5 месяцев назад +1

      They fare pretty well. Dating scene here is good. Going out for drinks and to see a band with friends is good. Hanging on the beach is good. It's a lively scene in Leon. Youthful city, but lots of older expats hanging out, too.

  • @RedOctober2011
    @RedOctober2011 5 месяцев назад +2

    Good info. Thanks.

  • @mathieutallard6328
    @mathieutallard6328 6 месяцев назад +6

    Negative shit is always what we remember first !
    Good happens also. I was at UNO in Rivas and a family was eating on the back of their truck and they invited me to join !
    They came from Leon, claiming it's the best city in the world !!! Nicaragua can be expensive if someone wants to. There are resorts at a thousand dollars a night near Majagual and the road is awful !

  • @1stLukecifer
    @1stLukecifer 6 месяцев назад +5

    Scott, have you posted one of your barrio-treks of Masaya before? Interested in the living culture of the artisans and hand-crafters. Looking to add them to a list of 90 day rentals.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      The artisans are MOSTLY not in Masaya but in the Witch Villages. I've only done the smallest amount of Masaya. I really need to do some trips there and do some serious walks. Lots to cover.

    •  2 месяца назад +1

      We like Masaya a lot. In many ways, the best kept secret for expat living. A large city with lots of services, and Granada and Managua onll minutes away. Just up the road, and much cooler, is another best kept secret, Catarina, center of hundreds of arts and crafts artesans AND COOLER.

  • @kiddtuffnuff
    @kiddtuffnuff 6 месяцев назад +6

    Im still tryin to figure out what city is best

  • @miguelpalma8389
    @miguelpalma8389 3 месяца назад +1

    Leon is very nice if you like the Univetsity vibe.

  • @dallasbarkman1261
    @dallasbarkman1261 6 месяцев назад +3

    19:00 minute mark..
    I m wondering if they'll run a ferry from.the new airport to Managua

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +3

      Hmm.... interesting thought. I think that they might, personally. There is a ferry there currently BUT it is super shallow water the ferry seats like three people. I kid you not. They'd have to build a new port at the new airport to handle a ferry. Personally I LOVE ferries conceptually and I'd fine excuses to use it for sure even though it would never go somewhere that is useful for me. So I love this idea. However, I think it's a long shot. There WAS a ferry on the lake when the old train was in service, but not from that location. Managua has a ferry terminal today, but nowhere else on the lake does. If they added an amazing connection from the ferry to the airport to Matagalpa somehow... boom, total success.

  • @dontimoteo2416
    @dontimoteo2416 6 месяцев назад +2

    The troubles in 2018 led to Granada having far less USA expats and far more tourists from Costa Rica and other parts of Nicaragua. The Costa Rica tourists are usually families which has changed the tone of the tourist parts of the city (improvement). The downside is that many of them drive to Granada. That leads to crazy traffic around Christmas and easter. Also, there is talk of new airport on the other side of lake Managua.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +3

      The airport (runway) is already there. It's an existing airport being upgraded for passenger service.

  • @nihil6128
    @nihil6128 6 месяцев назад +1

    Newsies is the best musical. Thanks for another great vid.

  • @luisbilbao8693
    @luisbilbao8693 6 месяцев назад +3

    Bluefields ❤

  • @mathieutallard6328
    @mathieutallard6328 6 месяцев назад +1

    In the coming days, i will go check what kind of affordable hostal room i can find in Managua.
    Any suggestions ?
    Private room with private bathroom and windows that open on the outside....

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      Sadly no, I never do hostal stays in Managua. If I'm staying cheap, I crash with friends. Major advantage of living here. If I'm going for something fancy like when my kids want to go as a treat, then we stay at the Hilton properties.

    • @mathieutallard6328
      @mathieutallard6328 6 месяцев назад

      @@ScottAlanMillerVlog I found a 450 Cordoba near the airport and it sucks. Saw a few others that should be cheap and wasn't. And the city is dirty etc .
      I don't know how the locals can live with what they earn and the cost of things.
      Outside of town,in Pica Pica,i needed help and it cam from a policeman and his family. The level of comfort...well,humans can addapt to anything...I think it's true...

  • @arosalesmusic
    @arosalesmusic 6 месяцев назад +3

    And that would be the capital, Managua. At least for a musician like me.

    • @loafgaming4624
      @loafgaming4624 3 месяца назад

      Or Leon, the city of non-stop live music.

  • @dallasbarkman1261
    @dallasbarkman1261 6 месяцев назад +1

    If I were to live there , not just visit, I'd like to see what Matagalpa/Esteli are like .
    I can also envision, if I was financially independent, building an adobe home w/ air conditioning & an inground pool near Chinandega ( I think the beaches are probably beautiful that way )
    Finally, I'd like to visit Ometepe, if I was single I'd consider living in a small home there & just veggng by myself.
    I've been to Granada , but I really didn't care for it, other than, yes it's interesting to get to know it, visit it

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +1

      For sure, those mountain towns are so nice.
      Adobe homes exist, but are uncommon here. Very specialty. Only issue is a lack of construction and maintenance knowledge because it isn't the norm.
      Chinandega has some beautiful stuff for sure. And gonig into "town" yields a good restaurant selection if you are feeling more spendy - even for us in Leon, it's a high cost food destination. We go there when we want a fancy night out.

    • @dallasbarkman1261
      @dallasbarkman1261 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah the ongoing maintenance of a modern adobe home w a pool makes sense that itd be rough .
      Because of hurricane mitch in 99' i had a different perception of Chinandega, but thats cool that ive learned that it has some higher dollar reataurants & probably housing though
      Even though its so hot there id like to visit there next time i m there if i can ​@@ScottAlanMillerVlog

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +1

      It's a nice town. Great central park. Great restaurants. But it is small and hot.

  • @mrnogood
    @mrnogood 6 месяцев назад +1

    My Fair Lady is hands down the best musical of all time. A close second is The Wiz. Honorable mention is Annie Get Your Gun and Grease 2.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      OMG ... The Wiz. I saw that on its original broadcast!
      I do love My Fair Lady.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      Downloading "the Wiz" now. Man, that was 1978!! How was it so long ago? I'd have guessed more like 1986!

    • @mrnogood
      @mrnogood 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@ScottAlanMillerVlog my mother took me to see it in the theater as a kid.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      @@mrnogood nice.

  • @mrnogood
    @mrnogood 6 месяцев назад +2

    Also if i could find. Mountain town with a swimming hole, like Ojos de Agua, id go there. But my daughter wont like a city with no natural place to swim.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      Lots of the mountain towns have like public pools. But I don't know of any real city with something like Ojos de Agua. That's a pretty unique spot. Natural places to swim are rare because many rivers are polluted.

  • @buddist1210
    @buddist1210 6 месяцев назад +4

    Do you find that expats are clickish? Just a question not an observation.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +4

      I'd say that generally that tends to be the case, yes.

  • @CandyLV72
    @CandyLV72 6 месяцев назад +1

    Where BESIDES San Juan del Sur should you If you love the Beachside Lifestyle and want to live in Nicaragua?

    • @LeoJaramaz
      @LeoJaramaz 6 месяцев назад +4

      Las Penitas and Poneloya !

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +2

      Those are my favourites!

    • @GoochGooch-cc7sj
      @GoochGooch-cc7sj 6 месяцев назад +1

      Those are all perfect. SJDS is the best. I live in the worst place in Nicaragua, no expats. I am the only immigrant that I have seen in my town. Stick to the Expat communities, do not even consider an area that isn’t full of expats.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +2

      What area are you in? Zero expats is tough. But light expats, often just fine.

    • @GoochGooch-cc7sj
      @GoochGooch-cc7sj 6 месяцев назад +3

      ⁠@@ScottAlanMillerVlogsmall costal town in the south. There is an area a few km away that is full of them, some do venture out this way though. I just hope the new road doesn’t change that too much. “Real Estate” agents are already playing the game in the area as well. I think the thing that keeps them away is that they would have to travel in order to get to the restaurants that sell poor imitations of American and Canadian food. I am happy to stick to my C$200 langosta.

  • @BryanPierce-y1i
    @BryanPierce-y1i Месяц назад

    Can me and my wife and I live there on $3,500 a month? I'm a retired vet, and we want to live well . Do they expect tri-care anywhere

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  Месяц назад

      $3500/mo for a couple in Nicaragua makes you rich. Very, very comfortable. Nicaraguan middle class starts at $800/mo.
      Many vets move to Nicaragua specifically to get access to health care out of their reach in the US. It's specifically something vet friends here rave about, decades of problems going untreated or barely treated being fixed rapidly once coming to Nicaragua, at lower cost than the VA (ancillary cost of free care in the US still being higher than the full cost here of private care here) and without waiting lines, or red tape or rejection risks. It's unlikely that tricare will come here as the US will never do anything to promote moving to the region and especially not to use the healthcare as it is a regular pain point for the US if people experience Nicaraguan healthcare as it exposes much about American healthcare. So they discourage it.
      But it's also a strange system to need tricare for as public healthcare in Nicaragua is free. So what would tricare pay for? In theory, private care. Which is totally plausible but less clear when they would pay and for what. But rest assured, healthcare here is so cheap and so good, you'll not likely be concerned with tricare benefits once you see it in action. Still nice to have if available, but not as necessary as you'd imagine.

  • @jumpinjehoshaphat1951
    @jumpinjehoshaphat1951 28 дней назад +1

    Eventually, living in a museum would get tiresome.

  • @MrsAllieMac
    @MrsAllieMac 6 месяцев назад +2

    Question, my husband and I are seriously considering Nicaragua as a new home for our family from the US. We have 4 young children, (7,5,3,1) and my husband will need good internet to work. I’m a professional artist, so being close to an art scene would also be a plus. We would only fly to the states once a year and want to be immersed in the culture, we don’t need to necessarily be in a large city either. (Our goal is to be able to homestead in the long run.) All the cities look amazing, and we would like to be able to be in a very walkable city where we can homeschool, and have access to transportation and a house that is safe, could you make any recommendations? Leon actually seems like a good contender for us. We are just unsure how it will work to be able to get there and find a place to stay. Would we need to find a real estate agent? We are applying for passports this week and hope to be down there in a matter of months, depending on when they come through. Thank you for all your information! 😊

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +3

      Answered this with its own video. Basically just posting this comment for my own records, lol.

  • @yamilflores2381
    @yamilflores2381 3 месяца назад +1

    I think he meant for tourist to inhabit a new place in nicaragua

  • @jamesmcgowan5933
    @jamesmcgowan5933 6 месяцев назад +3

    Al considered. If it's about your expat community stay in your own country. If airport is so important why would you move to Nicaragua. Different topic. There was a supposed e-mail leak from a major Canadian bank that migration has become a problem of skilled people. That federal government is studying a exiting tax of 28k if you leave to work in another country. With holding money or attach a marker on passport so when returning you will have to pay up or get passport seized.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +1

      I"m going to guess that a "travel tax" of that nature will never fly. You can imagine the complications it would cause. Innocent travelers would suddenly be getting taxed in weird ways. It would cause a mass exodus of Canada. The idea that you cannot travel freely as a Canadian is pretty abhorrent and will be met with some serious pushback. It could happen, but I'm betting not. The risks would be big.

    • @jamesmcgowan5933
      @jamesmcgowan5933 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@ScottAlanMillerVlog it's a exit - departure tax to stop the mass exodus of skilled Canadians leaving to work in other countries due to the affordability crisis. If you where a Canadian and a digital nomad living in Nicaragua it would apply to you.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +1

      That's different from a tax on workers. That's just a tax on residency.

    • @jamesmcgowan5933
      @jamesmcgowan5933 6 месяцев назад

      @@ScottAlanMillerVlog this just happened.a foreign student on a visa was found by a judge to be guilty of sexual assault. The judge rule for probation cause if the person was sentenced they would of been deported. Sexual assault if your on a visa is ok.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      In canada?

  • @jerrymichaels8447
    @jerrymichaels8447 9 дней назад

    Does not seem you ever got to the title of the video "Only City in Nicaragua Worth Living In." You did plenty of trashing on Granada, but what is the "Only City in Nicaragua Worth Living In?"
    Just for your viewers, I live in SJDS about 6 months/year. Tourist town, but when you get to know the locals, a small town vibe. Kind, friendly, generous, good people. And still a great fish market on the harbor.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  4 дня назад

      THere ISN'T one, that was the point. People selling that idea are normally RUclipsrs who visit for one week, see one tourist spot and have no idea what options are even out there and often advise the most expensive, unsafe, non-authentic, least interesting, oversold places. Might as well be AI generated content. No research or knowledge.

  • @mathieutallard6328
    @mathieutallard6328 6 месяцев назад

    Im back to Nicaragua and I liked it more in covid times. And they are building a new highway instead of fixing the ones already there and who sucks a lot most of the time . Prices for rooms are up too and i travel equipped for camping, so fuck it, im camping witch is pretty fun because its warm. I met a friend i made while covid and he has plenty of land to camp.
    Also, i let a luggage where I was staying in covid time and went back to get something . The guy didn't want to keep the luggage because i wasn't renting a room, a room in the middle of the street for $15 a night !!
    I asked a few places but none wanted to keep my luggage. Im surprised, in SJDS, people are not very helpful. This is a deception. Had to ask someone i know who agreed to keep the luggage . Next trip, fuck Nicaragua and viva Mexico or Vietnam !!
    Nicaragua, building a 4 lines highway that will scrap nice isolated beaches building but keeps its bad fucken roads. as they are .
    Bravo Nicaragua

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +2

      SJDS is disliked by most of the country for being un-Nicaragua, and just a predatory playground for tourists and expats who try to take advantage of each other. It's expected that finding friendly folks there is a challenge. They exist, of course. But no one should be surprised there... the culture is nothing like the rest of Nicaragua.

    • @mathieutallard6328
      @mathieutallard6328 6 месяцев назад

      @@ScottAlanMillerVlog You skip my comment on the new highway and the bad road conditions !! Freedom of speech is limited especially for residents !!

    • @Urineil
      @Urineil 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@mathieutallard6328 i dont know that he skipped it, as much as the rest of your comment, in regards to the airport have nothing to do with the subject of the video...but i could be wrong

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад +1

      Freedom of speech is limited in that one very specific thing that no on should ever want to do, in any country (be a foreigner and attempt to interfere with the democracy of the country.) It's purely a good thing and absolutely terrible that places like the US make it protected speech for foreign actors to come in and spread disinformation. There's no ethical time that that type of freedom of speech is a good thing. Protecting the populace from outside manipulation is a mandate of any country claiming to be a democracy.

    • @mathieutallard6328
      @mathieutallard6328 6 месяцев назад

      @@Urineil Where did I mention an airport !! 4:lines new highway instead of improving already existent roads was part 2 of my comment .

  • @kevinadams9468
    @kevinadams9468 6 месяцев назад +4

    I am so sick of these people... North Americans who come to a foreign country only search for the closest thing to their previous comfort level (housing standard, shopping, transportation, medical care, etc.) and dump on everything else they feel does not meet their avacado toast standards. I just watched a superlatively nauseating video by 'Rancho Santana' and a make-believe Real Estate agent (thanks for educating us, Scott, about the non-existent career field) in SJDS, easily the least 'authentic' Nicaraguan town at the current time. Uber-wealty expats hiding behind secured gates, sending their entitled kids to schools that only children of expats attend, etc. They extolled the wonders of the 'Rancho' and how it had 'everything' - without going outside the gates! I knew a guy who lived with a wall around his mansion and armed guards in Port-au-Prince, but he never dared say he lived in the authentic Haiti! Granada is of course a gem, but it is also losing its charm catering to drunk, entitled tourists. They say that SJDS has the highest rate of robberies and assaults (against American and Canadians), and I can only imagine why ( Well, actually I know why, and I honestly understand a certain degree of animosity the locals harbor against these folks.). Hopefully the recent news you mentioned about COVID shot mandates will help keep this crowd away. Great work, as always! Cheers.

  • @luisaragon9926
    @luisaragon9926 6 месяцев назад

    The guy that posted the comment.
    It appears.
    Was mine?
    I have traveled most of Nicaragua I adventure ride motorcycles?
    Every 6 km approximately
    There are police checkpoints.
    And it is extremely annoying. So if you wanna send people outside of the main tourist area?
    In my opinion you're exposing them to all the drama.
    Of the corrupt police.
    Every 6 km.
    If you don't believe me go from Granada to san juan count stops.
    And yes.
    I can walk to the beach in Granada.
    Why can't you swim there? It's a fresh water Lake yes they have bullsharkd. However Florida is full of bullsharks and millions of people swim there.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      I don't do that drive weekly or anything. But I do it every few months and never once in all these years have I had more than two stops between Granada and the Costa Rican border. That's not normal. Worth noting that bike stops are easily twice as frequent as car stops.
      That said, that particular drive is the only one in the country of which I am aware that has a permanent stop. So assume you'll always go through a checkpoint on that particular drive because it's the main highway chokepoints for the whole country. But I've driven it often and I'm not sure I've been asked to stop at a checkpoint more than twice on that drive in the last decade.
      If you drive any long highway on a holiday, expect loads of stops.

    • @ScottAlanMillerVlog
      @ScottAlanMillerVlog  6 месяцев назад

      Actually the reason you get those checkpoints is not because you left the tourist area, it's because you are inside it. It's the tourism areas that have nearly all the checkpoints. Certainly not all, but that's where they are most common. That's where you get drunk drivers, speeding, and other common problems. So that's where they "patrol" the most. The more "away from expats and tourists" that you get, the fewer checkpoints you'll run into. Generally.
      Some places just attract them. Western Managua departmento is well known for having way more than similar areas in other departmentos.