Retire in Lake Chapala
Retirement Down Mexico Way
Down Mexico Way
Friday, May. 22, 1964
Where can a man go to get some real living out of a pension
check—a place where it's a sunny 70° all year round, where a
five-room house can be had for $40 a month and a live-in maid
for $16, where the family food bill may be measured in pennies
per day, with beer at 80 a bottle and gin at 98¢ a quart? The
answer to this daydreaming question is not nowhere; it's
Mexico.
More and more retired U.S. citizens are discovering a
bargain dolce vita across the Rio Grande. And the Mexican
government is doing its best to help the process of discovery.
This month speakers from the National Council of Tourism,
headed by ex-president Miguel Aleman, are campaigning
throughout North America to build up Mexico's industria de los
viejitos—the oldster industry—which the council estimates would
be worth $400 million a year if Mexico could attract only 1% of
the annual retirees in the U.S. and Canada.
Mexico's imported gringos include all kinds. At the peak
there are the sleek fat cats of Cuernavaca and Acapulco,
reading their airmailed New York Times in their white-walled
gardens and practicing kitchen-Spanish on the servants, who
have servants of their own. At the other end of the scale, and
potentially more important to both Mexico and the U.S., are
Americans with as little as $150 a month, who have worked out a
comfortable design for living in such modest places as Chapala
and Ajijic.
Paseos & Tortillas. In these two pretty towns on
48-mile-long Lake Chapala, 30 miles south of Guadalajara, some
900 retired men and women from the U.S. are living with—not
away from—the Mexicans. The wife of a retired mining engineer
may not invite the wife of a Mexican fisherman for tea, but she
lives two doors away, she haggles in the same market for the
same kind of food, and when they meet on the street, Doña
Margarita greets Doña Margaret as a neighbor.
The Americans of Chapala and Ajijic have adopted many
Mexican ways as their own. They look forward to the Thursday
and Saturday paseo of boys and girls circling the town plaza in
opposite directions to look each other over and flirt their way
into marriage. They are careful to cover their mouths against
the night air "to avoid catching cold," and not to gush over a
Mexican baby, out of respect for the Indians' belief that this
will give the child the evil eye. They say "This is your home"
when guests enter their houses, and they serve frijoles instead
of potatoes and tortillas instead of white bread.
On their part, the Mexicans of Lake Chapala have gained far
more than the $200,000 their American neighbors spend there
each month and the employment they give to maids and
house-boys, gardeners and mechanics. The Americans have helped
build a road and two schools. Their wants have nudged local
markets into a wider range of merchandise.
Happiness with Highballs. Some of the retirees of the area
are Korean war veterans living on pensions that are too low to
give them the official status of "immigrant retired." This is a
category instituted two years ago by the Mexican government,
granting, to those of 55 and over who have in comes of at least
$240 a month per man (and $80 for his wife and every child of
15 or over) the privilege of entering Mexico duty-free with
their own household furniture and a car and living in the
country without the exit and re-entry required every six months
for those on tourist visas. After five years' residence, they
may become full residents of Mexico, with permission to take
jobs, and most of the privileges of citizenship except
voting.
More affluent retirees are Laurence and Helen Hartmus, both
60, who have lived in Ajijic for ten years, where they bought a
four-bedroom house with all modern conveniences plus a swimming
pool, garden, garage and workshop for $16,000. Mining Engineer
George W. Mitchell, 64, and his wife Pauline have some $500 a
month, but they find that they spend only about $300 of it
living in a comfortable house and employing two housemaids and
a gardener. "We retired here because the climate is the
best in the world and living is so cheap that you can
almost laugh," says Mitchell.
Even for the country club set. Dues at the Chapala Country
Club are $5.60 a month for two, caddie fees 350 for 18 holes,
and back at the 19th afterward, a rum highball comes to
160.
Source:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,871112,00.html
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Casa Preciosa Side Bar Notes:
Remember this article was written in 1964 for for Time
Magazine.
While some things have changed (most people don't drink
highballs anymore) the essence of the story remains true today,
retirement in
Mexico is still a bargain and the weather is world
class for comfort.
For a more recent Time Magazine Retire in Lake
Chapala article click on the link.
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