It’s been a long time since my last post here so let me bring you up to date.
In early September wife Marty and I traveled back to Oregon for what was supposed to be a 4-week stay. We had some administrative things to deal with but my main task was to help a client with a huge software conversion project. Sandwiched into the middle of my stay was a scheduled 4-day trip back to Joliet, IL for my 46th high school reunion. Marty returned to La Paz in early October but my stay was extended 3 weeks at my client’s request. We are now both in La Paz and in the middle of a move! While I was busy in Oregon, Marty found us a new house just 4 blocks from the beach and we’re excited about all the extra space we’ll have in our 3-bedroom, 3-bath house. Our new office/studio is going to be AWESOME!
Since I put this blog on hiatus last June I’ve become very active on Facebook, so I’ll be moving all my Morning Coffee activity over there and deactivating this blog for the foreseeable future. Please visit me at http://www.facebook.com/BajaDude. If you’re squimish about joining Facebook, you should know that you are only required to provide minimal information to set up an account and you don’t EVER have to post anything if you don’t want to. Again, that link is:
http://www.facebook.com/BajaDude
(if you are taken to a mostly blank page, click the blue Facebook box)
See you on the other side!
This morning’s big surprise in La Paz was the first real rainfall of 2010 – a whopping 1 millimeter accumulated over a 2 hour period! For those of you who live where rainfall is often measured in inches per hour, our “downpour” this morning translates to about 0.02 (2/100) inches per hour, so we probably don’t need to worry about flash flooding just yet.
According to the Washington Post, Facebook signed up its 500 millionth user last week, a mere 6 years after the site was launched. There are now more people on Facebook than live in the United States, Canada and Mexico combined!
Environmentalist Andy Brandy Casagrande wrote a little ballad aptly titled The Great White Shark Song to raise awareness of Great White shark conservation and he decided the best way to promote it would be to sing it directly to one of the fearsome underwater beasts — without using a cage!
More than 6,000 bottles of sparkling wine were pulled from the deep by divers this week after aging for a year more than 200 feet below the surface off the coast of Chiavari, Italy. The winemakers have dubbed the vintage “Abyss” and they believe the gentle rocking caused by the local currents and the natural temperature changes of the water have enhanced the wine’s fruity taste.




I’ve been blogging here since mid-March but beginning today I’m switching to an abbreviated summer schedule. Instead of daily blogs, I’ll post news and information irregularly but 
In the United States, Memorial Day is a day set aside to honor those men and women who died while in military service. Now it’s a federal holiday and it ocurrs on the last Monday in May but it was originally called Decoration Day and it was established on May 30, 1868 to commemorate the fallen soldiers of the American Civil War.

Yesterday (May 24, 2010) was a monumental day, of sorts, around my house. It started with yet another trip to the local immigration office to find out what was wrong with our visa renewal application 

A new machine has been ordered and, thanks to friends at
Nobody dislikes government red tape more than me and it seems that I now live at the center of the bureaucratic universe – Mexico! As an example, let me describe the process we’re currently going through to renew our Mexican FM3 visas for another year.
We went home, completed the online registration, printed the necessary documents and trudged back down to immigration the next day where our packets, including the manila folders that we must provide, were accepted and stamped with a smile. Since Mexican federal law now prohibits local offices from handling cash (that’s a
Our immigration status is currently unknown, since our initial visa expired on May 13th and it’s now May 18th. The immigration clerk assured us that “No hay problema” because we’re “in the computer” – that’s the same computer that forgot to tell us about the photos and the form!
I used to read a lot. It started when I discovered the huge library my first days as a freshman in high school. For some unexplained reason I happened to pick up a book about deep sea diving (aka helmet diving) and soon I had read every book in the library on the subject, both fiction and non-fiction. When there were no more diving books to read, I moved on to another subject but it didn’t take me long to discover the science fiction section and soon Asimov, Barr, Clark, Dick, Heinlein and others were some of my closest “friends” at school. The list continued to grow as I read through high school and during a 4-year hitch in the Air Force.
It seems that we’ve fallen into an electronics vortex lately – my 4-year-old Dell laptop started acting up last Saturday and on Tuesday it finally failed for good. I took it to a local repair shop Wednesday and they tried a fix, but it didn’t work and the replacement video card is about $300 on eBay – way too much money to put into an old laptop. I’ll have a new unit brought down the next time our landlord makes a trip to Newport Beach, but that won’t be for at least a month. In the mean time, I’m using an old “beater” laptop for email during the day and I’m using Marty’s laptop at night for my “production” work. It’s a pain, but I’ll get by until my new system arrives.




You may not find this event on your calendar, but it’s been on ours for several months. Tomorrow our granddaughter, Mariana, arrives from the Mexican mainland to spend a week with us. She will also celebrate her 4th birthday while she’s here, so it will be a festive week. I mention this because all the activity at our house may impact my daily blogging. In fact, the temporary addition of 4 adults, a granddaughter and a dog to our household may make it totally impossible to blog some days but I’m sure you will understand. Regardless of what happens next week, I’ll be back on schedule beginning May 10th.
As a (retired?) computer consultant, it’s my job to live on the “bleeding edge” when it comes to software because my clients expect me to figure out where the pot-holes and road blocks are before they get there. Even though my early experiences with Vista weren’t very good, I made the switch more than two years ago so I would be prepared to field questions. I began experimenting (on an extra hard drive) with pre-release versions of Windows 7 about a year ago and I just recently committed my day-to-day computing to Microsoft’s newest desktop operating system. So far, I’m impressed.




We have some new friends here in La Paz and they’ve come up with a novel way to use technology to help people learn Spanish. Se Habla…La Paz has been providing immersion-type Spanish language instruction in La Paz since 1999 and their small, personalized classes have been very successful. Like most businesses in southern Baja that depend on travelers and tourism, Se Habla has been impacted by all the bad press relating to drug violence and the H1N1 flu but they are now “reaching out” to clients in a unique new way. Using Internet-based SKYPE multimedia technology, instructors at Se Habla can now provide the same, high-quality, personalized training to students who can’t – or won’t – travel to La Paz.
As a resident of La Paz myself, I still recommend the immersion program because the folks at Se Habla incorporate cultural presentations and community events into their onsite program. Plus, you get to experience Mexico and the Mexican life style first hand. La Paz is a beautiful, safe city with a 400-year history and an incredible bay-front downtown area that’s unlike any place I’ve ever been. However, if you can’t get here in person, Se Habla’s online program is the next best thing. Check them out at
Today I’m going to take on the U.S. Census Bureau and the census process in general. I’m doing this because I just discovered that I won’t be counted in 2010 – in fact it’s against the law for me to be counted and I’m mad about it!
Maybe expats aren’t counted because there aren’t that many of us and so who cares. Well, one estimate I read states that in 2009 there were between 8 and 9 million Americans living abroad and the escalating exodus due to rising health care costs could push that number to 10 million by the end of 2010. That’s like forgetting to count Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and Philadelphia!