BajaBad
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Do you EVER have to get a car permit in Baja?
I spent an hour searching through archives... lots of good threads but cannot find an answer to what is most likely a simple question (for someone
else!).
I know Baja is a Free TZ - and you do not have to get a permit (and post bond) like on the mainland... but ..... is this only for a six-month stay
with a tourist visa?? If you live in Baja and have an FM-2 or FM-3 do you have to register your car (where?) and get a permit or not???
Do you have to get a Mexican drivers license after six-months, or never??
Haven't owned a car in Baja - can ya tell.
Any info much appreciated!
BajaBad
www.vivalabaja.com
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DENNIS
Platinum Nomad
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No car permits or posted bonds, as you know them on the mainland, in Baja.
Living in Baja with an FM3/2, you can still have a stateside registered car with current registration in which case you need a stateside drivers
license. You will only need a Mexican license if you drive a Mexico plated car.
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BajaBad
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Is clear now - just need to be sure had the correct info! Thanks a ton Dennis
Is there any reason someone would want to 'register' or license their U.S. auto in Baja? If they do, is it an import process that basically turns the
car into a 'mexican' auto that can not then go back across the border into the U.S.? Someone I knew did this for some reason (yes, very vague and
sorry but it has been awhile!), maybe to just dissolve all U.S. assets, etc, and use only their Mexican driver's license, etc.?
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bajaguy
Elite Nomad
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Location: Carson City, NV/Ensenada - Baja Country Club
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Mood: must be 5 O'clock somewhere in Baja
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BajaBad..... just a little info for your web site and blog......
it's "Baja", not...... "the Baja"
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BajaBad
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You are correct - I use it casually, not meaning to offend. I clarify clearly in book - but appreciate the feedback... wish when I had originally posted about the title (yikes, don't want to go
there again) somone had mentioned Viva Baja (other site by a nomad with a lot of good info, trip reports etc.)- would ha ve probably changed my title
to something different but no matter now.
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lizard lips
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Don't worry about Bajaguy. He gets really cranky in his old age!
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Hook
Elite Nomad
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What's so all fired bad about referring to it as the Baja? It's a slang term. No one is using it on a map or in a dictionary.
Is calling the Sierra Nevada "the Sierras" also so wrong? The Rockies? The City?
It's almost a term of endearment to me that touches on it's rough nature; almost an adjective instead of just a noun. Part Baja, part bajada.
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bajalou
Ultra Nomad
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Quote: | Originally posted by BajaBad
Is clear now - just need to be sure had the correct info! Thanks a ton Dennis
Is there any reason someone would want to 'register' or license their U.S. auto in Baja? If they do, is it an import process that basically turns the
car into a 'mexican' auto that can not then go back across the border into the U.S.? Someone I knew did this for some reason (yes, very vague and
sorry but it has been awhile!), maybe to just dissolve all U.S. assets, etc, and use only their Mexican driver's license, etc.?
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Mexican plated cars regularly cross into the USA.
No Bad Days
\"Never argue with an idiot. People watching may not be able to tell the difference\"
\"The trouble with doing nothing is - how do I know when I\'m done?\"
Nomad Baja Interactive map
And in the San Felipe area - check out Valle Chico area
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Hook
Elite Nomad
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Quote: | Originally posted by BajaBad
Is clear now - just need to be sure had the correct info! Thanks a ton Dennis
Is there any reason someone would want to 'register' or license their U.S. auto in Baja? If they do, is it an import process that basically turns the
car into a 'mexican' auto that can not then go back across the border into the U.S.? Someone I knew did this for some reason (yes, very vague and
sorry but it has been awhile!), maybe to just dissolve all U.S. assets, etc, and use only their Mexican driver's license, etc.?
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I think the Americans who do import their cars either have no plans on ever returning OR, more commonly, they are trying to rid themselves of needing
to keep US insurance, US smog regulations, US driver's licensing, etc.
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sylens
Senior Nomad
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Quote: | Originally posted by Hook
What's so all fired bad about referring to it as the Baja? It's a slang term. No one is using it on a map or in a dictionary.
Is calling the Sierra Nevada "the Sierras" also so wrong? The Rockies? The City?
It's almost a term of endearment to me that touches on it's rough nature; almost an adjective instead of just a noun. Part Baja, part bajada.
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this has all been hashed out before, but at the risk of adding to the redundancy, i'll reiterate the problem some of us have with the phrase, which
sounds like fingernails on a chalkboard to some who are bilingual. (bilingual)
the sierras, the city, the rockies, are all fine, because "the" precedes nouns. baja, in contrast, is an adjective that is modifying california. you
wouldn't (translating) call it "the lower," would you?
that would be similar to shortening west virginia to "the west" or north carolina to "the north."
just as "frisco" does not bother some and drives others nuts, "the baja" is fine for some and anathema to others.
ain't you glad you asked
lili
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Hook
Elite Nomad
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Well, no one ever said slang had to make sense............it's ability to communicate quickly or colorfully is usually the reason it's created.
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DENNIS
Platinum Nomad
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Quote: | Originally posted by sylens
at the risk of adding to the redundancy, i'll reiterate |
A reiterated redundancy would of course be repeatedly redundant.
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sylens
Senior Nomad
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Quote: | Originally posted by DENNIS
Quote: | Originally posted by sylens
at the risk of adding to the redundancy, i'll reiterate |
A reiterated redundancy would of course be repeatedly redundant. |
and, if i may say, reduntantly repeated
lili
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Hook
Elite Nomad
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And if it hadnt been redundantly repeated, I would never have seen the original argument against The Baja............which does have some semantic
merit.
And for that I thank you, Yes, I thank you. Thank you.
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