- Funchal (Madère) au Portugal? (anglais parlé couramment, excellent internet, bonne qualité de l'air, meilleure qu'à Tenerife, 30% moins cher qu'à Montréal, également hôtels moins cher qu'à Tenerife, pas de parasites, d'insectes ou de serpents, mauvais hôpitaux, bon score sur Nomad List, température généralement idéale, mais de novembre à février, température analogue à la fin de septembre à Montréal: 16 Celsius en moyenne mais pluie un jour sur trois,)*
- Santa Cruz de Tenerife (Îles Canaries) en Espagne? *
- Agadir au Maroc? (population berbère, capitale de la région Souss_sud-ouest du Maroc, ville qui compte le plus de locuteurs tachelhit (65%)_ langue aussi appelée chleuh_, beau climat même en hiver, ville touristique, rec. par forum Youp)*
- Chypre (anglais parlé couramment)
- Ojen, Granada en Espagne
- La Valette ou Birkirkara à Malte? (anglais est l'une des deux langues officielles)
- Paphos, Limassol ou Nicosie à Chypre?
- Nice ou Toulouse en France?
- Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Mae Sai (ville située le plus au nord, beaucoup de birmans), Bangkok, Pattaya, Hua Hin, Ban Chang, Udon Thani, Ubon Ratchathani (économique, les plus jolies filles de Thailande, peau claire, sympas), Nang, Prachuap Khiri Khan (capitale de la province), Khao Takiab (près de Hua Hin), Chumphon (comme Simon de Land of Smiles), Phuket, les îles de Ko Chang ou de Ko Samui (South Chaweng) en Thailande?*
- Cebu IT Park (équivalent de BGC à Cebu, environnement piétonnier et sécuritaire, gens aimables et coût de la vie raisonnable, rec. par The Savvy Expat ), Dumaguete (sécuritaire, rec. par The Savvy Expat, gens très gentils, anglais parlé couramment, bonne qualité de l'air, ville universitaire, près de Cebu, meilleure ville pour les retraités), , Bonifacio Global City (BGC), Tagaytay (près de la capitale et des ses hôpitaux, température fraîche, vue magnifique, CrossWinds domaine de type suisse, rec. par The Savvy Expat), Davao (coût de la vie peu élevé, sécuritaire, ratio F-H occidentaux intéressant, mentalité provinciale), Baguio (beau climat, ville universitaire, ville artistique, gens très gentils), Puerto Galera (bonne qualité de l'air et vie nocturne intéressante), Boracay, Subic Bay / Olongapo (bonne qualité de l'air et bonne vie nocturne), Bacolod (deux fois qualifiée de meilleure cité pour vivre), Makati, Legazpi, , Iloilo City, Angeles City, ou encore Panglao aux Philippines?*
- Honolulu (plage de Waikiki) ou Kapa'a à Hawaii? (intuition à mon réveil) (climat magnifique, 6 ème état le plus sécuritaire aux USA, 2.9 meurtres par 100,000 habitants, l'île d'Oahu et la ville d'Honolulu est la région la plus sécuritaire d'Hawaï, population très sympathique, rec. par l'écrivain Noël L.: arbres magnifiques, trottoirs larges, bons transport en commun, vélo, tout est très propre, très moderne, gens très aimables)
- Wellington ou Hawkes Bay (rec. par Stickman) ou Auckland en Nouvelle-Zélande? ***
- Saint-Denis à La Réunion? (même coût de la vie qu'à Montréal)
- Kochi (Cochin) en Inde? (sécuritaire, économique, mauvaise qualité de l'air en janvier, services escortes intéressants) (voir NomadList)
- Kuala Lumpur en Malaisie? ( Forum BA: Outside of Thailand, KL must be a good place to consider. The air is much cleaner, the city has a good public transport system and a thriving nightlife. Everyone speaks English. I lived there for two years - a very easy place to live. Un autre répond:Yeah, I know KL well. Good place.)
- Vung Tau (très économique, qualité de l'air moyenne, vingt girlies bars, un casino et 90 minutes de Saigon par ferry), Nha Trang (station balnéaire), Da Lat, l'île de Phu Quoc, Da Nang, Vung Tau ou Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) au Vietnam?
- Suva à Fiji (sécuritaire, anglais parlé couramment, coût de la vie moitié moins élevé qu'à Montréal)
- Papeete en Polynésie française?
- Ubud ou Denpasar à Bali?
- Jakarta en Indonésie?
- Port-Louis à l'île Maurice?
- N'importe où à la Martinique (sécuritaire, gens sympathiques, coût de la vie comparable à Montréal) (comme Claude Dubois et Jean-Pierre Coallier)? *
- Aruba (criminalité très faible, climat idéal, anglais parlé couramment, qualité de l'air bonne, excellent internet, peu d'insectes sauf s'il pleut, dispendieux, visa non nécessaire pour canadiens et sud-américains, mais les hôpitaux sont mauvais d'après Nomad List)
- Grenade (assez sécuritaire et anglais langue officielle)
- Sosua, Las Terranas (petite ville où l'on parle français), Cabarete, Puerto Plata, Jarabacoa, Punta Cana ou Santo Domingo en République Dominicaine?
- Saint-Martin dans les Antilles françaises? (français et anglais mais dangereux)
- Providenciales ou Club Med (comme Blaise) aux Îles Turks-et-Caïcos? (dispendieux)
- Road Town aux Îles Vierges Britanniques? (dispendieux aussi)
- Ambergris Caye au Belize? (anglais)
- Anguilla?
- Holguin ou Cienfuegos à Cuba?
- Brades à Montserrat?
- Bridgetown à la Barbade?
- Saint John's à Antigua et Barbuda?
- Georges Town aux îles Caïmans (si je deviens riche) ?
- Gustavia à Saint-Barthélémy (si je deviens très riche) ?
- Merida (près de Cancun, sécuritaire, économique, bonne nourriture, bonne qualité de l'air, gens sympathiques), Cancun (revenir facilement à Montréal, pas de moustiques sur la plage, anglais parlé dans la zone hôtelière), Playa del Carmen ou l'île de Isla Mujeres (Quintana Roo), Valladolid (encore moins cher que Merida), Progreso, Isla Holbox ou Telchac Puerto (Yucatan), Queretaro (Queretaro), Puebla ou Tehuacán (Puebla), Tlaxcala (Tlaxcala) ou encore San Miguel de Allende (Guanajuato) au Mexique?
- Key West (Floride) aux USA? (voir extrait ci-dessous)
- Arequipa ou Lima au Pérou?
- Cartagena ou Medellin en Colombie?
- Panama City au Panama? (relativement sécuritaire et coût des hôtels raisonnable)
- Guayaquil ou Cuenca en Equateur?
- Arica, Iquique, Antofagasta, Copiapó, La Serena, Vina del Mar ou Valparaiso au Chili?
- San Jose au Costa Rica?
- Santa Cruz en Bolivie?
- Mendoza en Argentine?
- Montevideo en Uruguay?
- Victoria (ou à la rigueur Halifax) ici même au Canada?
- le coût de la vie (si possible un endroit plus économique que le Québec),
- la qualité de l'internet (je gagne ma vie grâce à l'internet),
- la pollution de l'air (je suis asthmatique),
- le taux de criminalité (je n'ai pas envie de me faire tuer),
- la qualité des soins de santé (la probabilité de faire des séjours à l'hôpital croît avec l'âge),
- le climat (je ne suis pas outre mesure enthousiasmé à l'idée de fuir l'hiver pour vivre sous la pluie ou avec des vents de 40 km/h ou plus),
- l'attitude de la population locale envers les blancs (les Québécois sont si gentils, pourquoi aller se faire chier parmi des gens désagréables)
- la facilité / pour revenir au Québec si nécessaire.
- GPWA: Best country to live as a gambling affiliate?
- Guys Nightlife: The 10 Best Travel Destinations For Single Guys
- Gouvernement du Canada: Conseils aux voyageurs et avertissements
- Nomad Junkies: Digital Nomad : l’équipement qu’il te faut pour travailler de n’importe où
- Numbeo: Cost of Living
- Expatistan: Cost of Living
- NomadList (12,000 nomades numériques évaluent villes et pays)
- World Data Info
- Wiki: Liste des pays par PIB (PPA) par habitant
- Wiki: List of countries by GDP (nominal) per capita
- Wiki: List of countries by GDP (nominal)
- Wiki: Liste des pays par IDH
- Wiki: Rapport mondial sur le bonheur
- Countries by IQ - Average IQ by Country 2020
- CIA World Factbook
- Banque Mondiale / Données
- World Weather and Climate Information
- Do you need visa?
- Transparency International: Corruption Perceptions Index 2015
- Statistiques Mondiales
- World Tourism Rankings
- Indice de Paix Mondial
- OSAC Crime and Safety Reports-All countries
- Travel.state.gov > Passports & International Travel > Country Information
- List of countries by HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate (Wiki EN)
- Taux d'homicide volontaire par pays (Wikipédia EN)
- United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime: Global study on homicide 2013
- Guide to the Safest and Most Dangerous Caribbean Islands
- Wiki: List of countries by traffic-related death rate
- World Ranking of countries by their average IQ
- World Press Freedom Index (Reporters Without Borders)
- Ranking Web of Hospitals *
- Newsweek: The world's best hospitals 2022
- Peace Level: U.N. Fragile State Index (FFP)
- La pollution de l'air dans le monde: Indice de qualité de l'air en temps réel
- Meteoblue: Air quality and pollen
- Air Pollution in the World: Real-time Air Quality Index Visual Map
- Cities: Mercer Quality of Living Survey
- List of cities by murder rate
- Where are world's deadliest major cities?
- United States cities by crime rate (100,000–250,000)
- The best cities in the world for environment and infrastructure
- ONU: Statistiques Internationales sur le Crime et la Justice
- CIA / The World Factbook
- Taux de chômage par pays
- Internet World Stats
- Social Watch: poverty eradication and gender justice
- The Global Gender Gap Report
- Height Chart of Men and Women in Different Countries
- Average Female Height by country
- Average male height by country
- Wiki: List of average human height worldwide
- Elevation Map
- Nation Master: Number of robberies recorded by police
- 11 Countries With the Highest Rates of Kidnapping in the World
- The Places You’re Most Likely to Get Kidnapped
- Crime > Kidnappings: Countries Compared
- 100 Countries and Their Prostitution Policies
- La plage à longueur d'année
- Let's go (guide de voyage étudiant)
- Expat Exchange Forum
- L’hiver dans le Sud n’a pas que du bon
- Quora: I’ve noticed that native Spanish speakers speak louder in both Spanish and English than native English speakers. Is this a cultural difference? If so, how does this differ between different Spanish speaking countries?
- Grèce
- Turquie
- Italie
- Allemagne
- Espagne
- Chine
- Russie
- Etats-Unis
- Grande-Bretagne
- France
- Canada
- Vietnam
- Colombie
- Oman
- Costa-rica
- Bahreïn
- Cambodge
- Mexique
- Taiwan
- Portugal
Do Key West and the Florida Keys feel different from the rest of Florida?
Absolutely!
The Keys have a Caribbean, tropical vibe unlike anywhere else in Florida. And the farther south (or actually west) you get, the funkier and more exotic it feels. And of course, Key West has a whole different feel than the rest of the Keys.
It’s a laid back, easy come easy go town with big city amenities packed onto a 4 x 1.5 mile island. You can party as much or as little as you want and unless, you’re causing problems, no one bothers you. Key West has more bars and more churches per capita than any other city of its size in the state.
The Keys are America’s Caribbean, where you don’t need a passport, we speak English (well, most of us), use the U.S. dollar and you can feel safe wandering wherever you feel like exploring. And best of all, you can drive here on one of the most scenic highways in the country.
- 2.78 homicides par année par 100,000 h
- voyage. gc. ca/ destinations/ martinique
- Pourquoi la Martinique est la région française qui perd le plus d’habitants ?
- La Martinique est la championne des pique-niques sur la plage, des dégustations de Ti-punch les pieds dans l’eau. C’est une ambiance paisible et joyeuse. De plus, les Martiniquais sont réputés pour leur accueil sympathique. On ne peut pas dire le contraire des Guadeloupéens ; cependant, l’archipel est le terrain d’un mouvement autonomiste parfois moins accueillant.
- Globalement, nous avons été bien accueillis sur les deux îles. Cependant, en Guadeloupe, nous qualifierons l’accueil de « neutre », ni mauvais, ni excellent. Tandis que les martiniquais ont été plus chaleureux et sympathiques, aussi sans doute parce nous étions avec notre fille. Mais la Martinique est en effet réputée pour son accueil plus sympathique.
- Le taux de criminalité est faible en Martinique. La petite délinquance constitue la menace la plus importante.
Guadeloupe:
- 5.8 homicides par an par tranche de 100,000 habitants
- Journal de Montréal: Trop de bonheur au mètre carré en Guadeloupe
- 5.93 homicides par an par tranche de 100,000 habitants
- 12 meilleurs endroits aux Caraïbes pour les retraités
- WhereWhenHow (Turks and Caicos)
- Health care for emergencies in Turks and Caicos
It has been three months of mayhem in Sosua, in the Dominican Republic. It’s where I decided to start my global adventure for one simple reason: it’s the cheapest place to live in the Caribbean.
https://singleman-mag.com/sex-capitals-of-the-world-sosua-dominican-republic/
Belize:
- 5 Best Caribbean Islands to Live On… and 2 to Avoid
- Trip Advisor: Ambergris Caye
- Ambergris Caye
- Visa requirements
- Is Ambergris Caye Safe?
Malte:
- Wiki FR: Santa Cruz de Tenerife
- Quora: What is it like to live in the Canary Islands?
- The Guardian: The five best places to live in the world, and why
- Profil psychologique des habitants des Canaries (en espagnol)
- The telegraph: The Canary Islands – but not as you know them
- Professeurs d'espagnol à Santa Cruz de Tenerife
- Expat .com: Finding work in the Canary Islands
- Numbeo: Cost of Living Comparison Between Montreal and Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
- Wiki Sex Guide: Canary Islands
- Roosh V Forum- Data sheet - Tenerife, Canary Islands
- La Presse: Îles Canaries: de la plage à la lune
- Guys Nightlife: Finding Girls For Sex In Tenerife, Canary Islands
Thaïlande:
- Finally: The Truth About Air Pollution in Thailand
- OSAC: Thailand 2015 Crime and Safety Report: Bangkok
- OSAC / Thailand 2016 Crime & Safety Report: Chiang Mai
- Travel.state.gov > Passports & International Travel > Country Information > Thailand
- World Health Organization : Strengthening Road Safety in Thailand
- A Guide to Living in Chiang Mai
- Huay Kaew Residences (Chiang Mai)
- Thailand 2016 Crime & Safety Report: Chiang Mai
- Why live in Chiang Mai? The home of Expats & Digital Nomads
- Doi Inthanon (parc national près de Chiang Mai, plus haut sommet de Thaïlande, bungalows)
- Coco01Free
- Thai Visa the Nation: Koh Samui air quality
- The Cottage Samui (bungalows individuels sur Samui)
- Khao Takiab (juste à côté (4 km) de Hua Hin)
- Bangkok: Bang Kachao (le poumon de Bangkok à 10 min du centre-ville)
- Province de Loei (Issan, à la frontière du Laos)
- Bang Saphan Noi (ville de Antoine et Victor Pinto, champions de Muay Thai)
- I Premium (Appartements à Bangkok)
- Nonsi Residence (Appartements à Bangkok)
- Hua Hin ( Forum BA: Hua Hin could be good, especially when they have the faster train from Bangkok and if they get the ferry to Pattaya running again. Hua Hin also has a small airport that does cheap flights to KL. Un autre répond: Hua Hin has a good expat community, lots of shops and restaurants , some mongering opportunities and is more laid back than most places.)
- Philippines Expat Forum
- Philippine Primer: Dumaguete City Recognized as Best Place to Retire in the Philippines for 2018
- Huffpost: 10 Reasons to visit or live in Dumaguete, the Philippines
- Air-quality: Dumaguete
- Forbes: The 7 Best Places To Retire Around The World
- Wiki En: Dumaguete
- Trip Advisor: Ways to get to Cebu City from Dumaguete?
- Trip Advisor: Dumaguete Safety
- PA: Dumaguete: Any Floating Bars?
- Escape from America: Dumaguete City, Philippines
- Inquirer: Fort Bonifacio, You welcomed 2017 inhaling ‘extremely dangerous’ air, says DENR
- The 10 Best Places To Live in The Philippines
- Trip Advisor: Living in cebu
- Quora: In which countries is it easy for a foreigner to find a girlfriend?
- Quora: What is life like in the Philippines?
- Quora: What is wrong with the Philippines?
- Quora: Is tIhe Philippines safe to visit?
- Quora: Why do tourists visit the Philippines?
- Quora: What are some things to avoid doing when visiting the Philippines?
- Quora: Is life hard in the Philippines?
- Quora: How do non-Filipinos feel about Philippine culture (people, food, places, etc.)?
- Quora: What is your honest opinion about the Philippines and Filipino people?
- Quora: Why is the Philippines poor?
- Quora: What were your impressions of visiting the Philippines?
- Quora: Is it hard to live in the Philippines?
- Quora: What are the typical living conditions in the Philippines?
- Quora: What do you think of Filipino people?
- Quora: Where do most expats in the Philippines live?
- Quora: What is it like to be an expat in the Philippines?
- OSAC: Philippines 2016 Crime & Safety Report
- Philippines Addict: Basic Common Scam Tactics In The Philippines
- Philippines Addict: Philippines Raids Scams Scumbags And Things To Watch Out For
- Louer et acheter des propriétés aux Philippines A
- Louer et acheter des propriétés aux Philippines B
- Expat Philippines: 6 Best Places to Live in The Philippines
- Pinoy Life: 8 Classic Filipino Traits and Characteristics
- Is Cebu City an alternative to Manila?
- Top 5 of Cebu’s Best Place to Retire
- Canadians kidnapped in the Philippines: Here’s what you need to know
- Canadian abducted in the Philippines was in search of paradise
- Philippines under pressure to find group that beheaded Canadian John Ridsde
- Retired US Marine and daughter kidnapped in Tagaytay Philippines
- Terrorism in the Philippines: places you should avoid
- Crime against foreigners in the Philippines
- OSAC Philippines
- CRIMES AND MURDER INVOLVING FOREIGNERS IN THE PHILIPPINES
- PhilStar Global: 5 Philippine cities among 10 safest in Southeast Asia
- Wiki En: Bonifacio Global City
- The Masculine Traveler: The Boss’s Guide To Women In Manila, Philippines (BGC)
- 8 Reasons why Bonifacio Global City Stays So Clean
- PI At Night: Why is Bonifacio Global City So neat
- Boracay Compass
- PI At Night: 13 Days in New Boracay
- Philippines Statistics Authority: Education equality in the Philippines
_____________
LINH DINH • SEPTEMBER 4, 2019 :
What are the challenges of living where you are as a foreigner?
Yes, the Philippines is a 2nd world country. It does not have the newest of everything. “Time” is not their master, “tomorrow” (if you are lucky) is better than today.
I am on a rural line. Up until recently we would have an electric blackout two or three times a week, for hours at a time. Recently it is only a few times a month, sometimes for a short time, and sometimes for half a day, occasionally for the whole day.
Roads may be closed with no warnings. Water can stop with no warning. Electricity can stop with no warning. The doctor may decide not to come in for the day. Some products way not be available for a month or ??. Parades may block the road and slow things to a stop.
I am in the central Visayas, Negros Oriental Island, in a city called Dumaguete City. It is rated as the best city for foreigners because it has six universities and lots of colleges so most people speak English. With all the education and training here a great number of its people through the years have managed to get off shore worker jobs and the families here appreciate foreigners. Those who return from off shore are broad minded. With lots of students and educators, it is a friendly place. Traffic is reasonable and not yet a shit-hole like Cebu and Manila.
The Americans I meet every day for coffee, in general are OK, but the ignorant and prejudiced ones whine and complain about everything all the time. Our city here has no traffic lights, no stop signs, people drive on the wrong side of the road, they drive on the sidewalks, they park anywhere, halfway into the road is not a problem. Vehicle lights at night are not required. Seven people on a motorbike-taxi is how people get to out-of-the-way places. Coming into town, it is regular to see a pig or a goat across the saddle, or 20 chickens tied on, all on their way to market.
Driving here is a choreography. It has to be, with no traffic lights and no stop signs. Once one learns the steps it is a snap. To a new American it is hell on earth, because they do not read the raised eyebrow, or a subtle change of a few degrees indicating where the other must go, a very slight slowdown or speed up, which tells the opposite number what to do. Pedestrians by law have the right of way. They just walk out. Once again, the vehicles and the pedestrian have a body language, they will just walk across right in the middle of a stream of traffic, each knowing where to go.
Some years back they passed laws for motorbike helmets. That lasted about a week. Every now and then they will have a blitz on them. Lasts about half a day. Coming into town occasionally there will be a whole crowd of motorbikes stopped next to the road. That means check point.
Half have no helmets and the other half have not registered their motorbikes for a few years or do not have a driver’s license. They wait an hour, the cops lose interest and life returns to normal.
Road rage is not a good thing for a foreigner. It could end up with a machete to the head or a bullet in the back.
I’ve driven a motorbike for 10 years, never a scratch! You just learn the choreography of traffic chaos.
Most of the police here have a four-year degree in criminology. They are intelligent and empathetic.
The police are very polite. Just a little different from what I was used to.
Capital and serious crimes here are not crimes against the state and if nobody lays a charge, no crime has been committed. This is an interesting freedom to live with, as opposed to goons wanting to catch everybody all the time for something.
The secondary spinoff of this freedom from the state, is that the police themselves will try to fix a problem right on the spot. A cop could say to a “criminal,” “Give that man back the pig you stole from him, and give him $20. Don’t do that again.”
Because the state here is not trying to “catch” everybody all the time, weeks can go by without seeing a policeman in the city or on the highway. Things here work just fine.
For people who understand the dance steps it is the freest place they have ever lived.
Americans who do not understand the dance have more than enough to complain about.
Since the “Recession” in 2008, the Chinese have poured billions in here and every day it is beginning to progress to the same insanity as North America. Prices have risen exponentially. My chosen toothpaste was P95 last week. Today it’s P130.
The fast food chains have all arrived. There are ten watering holes on any block and prices are cheap. The hospitals are getting steadily better, and 1/100th the price of the US.
The people are exceptionally polite and friendly.
- Commentaire You Tube: I Love Agadir. Beautiful Location. Nice People. Always Sunny.
- Commentaire You Tube: Une grande partie de agadiris maîtrisent très bien le français, et même mieux que mes compatriotes. Ils sont accueillants, respectueux, chaleureux, ne font pas des réflexions mal placées comme la plupart des français.
- Commentaire You Tube: Im moroccan ...i consider agadir one of the best cities in morocco...especially the weather besides people there are very kind and peacefull
- Commentaire You Tube: I think that agadir is a very nice place with friendly people, nice beaches, good food. Maybe one day agadir will be as it was in the 90s. I will still come back to agadir, just because of the very friendly people. ❤️
- The Three Best Cities to Live in Vietnam
- OSAC / Vietnam 2016 Crime & Safety Report: Ho Chi Minh City
- Single Mans's Paradise: Vung Tau, Vietnam – Location Review ***
- Da Lat, Vietnam – Location Review
- Nomad List: Nha Trang
- Nha Trang, Vietnam – Location Review
- Nha Trang, Vietnam – Da, Da, Da!
- Français et anglais
- Coût de la vie 35% plus bas
- Salaires 7 fois plus bas
- PIB per capita 4 X moins élevé qu'à Montréal
- Taux d'homicide de 2.92 par année par 100,000 habitants
- Ami chez Sodoma m'a dit que les gens de l'île Maurice étaient très sympathiques
- Danseuse/maquilleuse chez Super S était très sympathique
- Indienne rencontrée à la Biblio, aussi
- Mauritiens chez Krishna sont OK
- Coût de la vie semblable à celui de Montréal
- Salaires et PIB per capita deux fois moins élevé à qu'à Montréal
- Taux de chômage de 30% et 60% chez les jeunes
- Climat pluvieux de janvier à mars, meilleure température de juin à novembre
- Forum Expat / Mexique
- You Tube/Tangerine Travels: série de vidéos sur le Yucatan
- Five safest places in Mexico for travelers
- US Department of State: Mexico Travel Warning
- List of Mexican states by homicides
- Tasa de Homicidios por ciudades
- Mexican Real Estate FAQs
- 11 Things You Must Accept Living as an Expat in Mexico
- Mérida (Yucatan) Wikipédia FR
- Merida Mexico Best Retire Cheap Paradise
- Mérida, 4ème ville la plus tendance au monde selon Lonely Planet !
- The Facts About Safety in Yucatán
- Statistics back up Merida’s reputation as Mexico’s safest major city
- Yucatan: Low Violent Crime Rates Prevail
- OSAC/Mexico 2016 Crime & Safety Report: Merida
- People of the Yucatan
- Numbeo: Crime in Merida, Mexico
- You Tube: 12 Reasons why MERIDA, MEXICO is AWESOME
- Progreso (Yucatan) Wikipédia EN
- Le Soleil: Isla Holbox au Mexique: l'île aux p'tits bonheurs
- Queretaro (Queretaro) Wikipédia FR
- Queretaro-Montreal Cost of Living Numbeo
- Température à Queretaro
- Climat-Data: Queretaro
- Queretaro: Annonces classées (appartements)
- Queretaro: Immobilier
- Queretaro: Résidentiel à louer
- Diaro de Queretaro (Journal local)
- Roosh V Forum / Main / Travel v / Queretaro, Mexico: Data Sheet
- Querétaro : rivale ou alliée mexicaine du Québec ?
- ISG: Queretaro City
- Puebla State Wikipédia (EN)
- Tehuacán (Puebla)Wikipédia (EN)
- Tehuacán (Encyclopaedia Britannica)
- El Mundo Tehuacan (Journal local)
- OSAC / Costa Rica 2016 Crime & Safety Report
- The Ethnic Make Up and Character of Costa Rican People
- The Costa Ricans
- Voyages / Gouvernement du Canada: Chili
- OSAC: Chile 2017 Crime & Safety Report
- Chile 2016 Crime & Safety Report
- Numbeo / Cost of Living: Arica vs Montréal
- List of cities in Chile
- Liste des volcans du Chili
- Air Pollution in Chile: Real-time Air Quality Index Visual Map
- Arica, Chile, in a Nutshell
- Expat Guide to Living in Chile
- Wikitravel: Arica
- Expat Exchange Forum: Chile
- ARICA - LA VILLE DE L’ÉTERNEL PRINTEMPS
- Hostels peu dispendieux à Arica
- Paul in South America Ch 2 ARICA CHILE (You Tube)
- Chile: Inequality, Incarceration, and Drug Smuggling
- Price Travel: Arica, Chile
- Roosh V Forum: what do u guys think about chile?
Aucun commentaire:
Publier un commentaire
Remarque : Seuls les membres de ce blogue sont autorisés à publier des commentaires.