Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2000 17:49:51 -0800
Reply-To: BRENT CHRISTENSEN <bchristensen@INFOGENESIS.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: BRENT CHRISTENSEN <bchristensen@INFOGENESIS.COM>
Subject: Re: driving to rio (little vanagon content)
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
Jason: I forgot to mention a few other things related specifically to your
e-mail:
1. DO NOT TAKE ANY PETS!!! You will end up having to quarantine them at
the first border crossing. Then if you do wait for two weeks at each border
crossing, pay the "fees" etc, good luck getting it back into the US after
driving to Rio and back! (I've had friends tell me that in arduous trips
across Siberia, China, South America, etc. often the biggest PITA is getting
back into the US!)
2. Do NOT take any "medicinals" unless you have a VERY CLEARLY WRITTEN
prescription from a doctor for it/them. Even if you do, expect to be
charged a special "fee" for being allowed to keep them if stopped.
3. Do NOT take firearms
4. Do LOTS of research before leaving.
5. Glue/weld everything loose that can be taken off your car, like license
plates (a favorite target), mirrors, hubcaps, etc. I have friends that
actually had "copies" of their license plates made in Mexico, and used
those, keeping the real ones safe inside the car.
6. Spanish will do you more good than Portuguese, since all the countries
you will pass through speak Spanish. You can learn Portuguese while you are
cooking in Rio! :-)
7. Make sure you have enough money to make the trip. Have pre-arranged
places along the way where you can have money wired to you by people in the
US. You definitely DON'T want to carry all your money with you. (Or you
could end up like a friend of mine who got robbed on a surfing trip in Costa
Rica, and they took EVERYTHING - including his clothes. He had to walk
about 4 miles buck naked into the next village, where he was promptly picked
up by the police. Needless to say, it took him a while to explain the
situation. After about three days in jail (he had no money for a hotel),
some other Americans learned about him and helped him out so he could get
back home.
8. Bring a spare of everything - tires, CV joints, ECU, etc. You may find
them VERY hard to locate on your journey. My general rule is that if some
local with a welder and some basic equipment can't fix it or fabricate a new
one, bring along a spare.
Hope this doesn't scare you away from the idea, but please understand the
full extent of what you are considering. :-)
I have made many trips to Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, and Costa Rica, and
have never had any serious problems. (Other than "La Mordida" - the "bite"
as it is called - small bribes)
Brent Christensen
'89 GL Syncro Westy
Santa Barbara, CA
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