On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 17:25:47 -0700, "Technobarbarian"
<Technobarbarian-ztopzpam@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>"Hatunen" <hatunen@cox.net> wrote in message
>news:av2v04p82avn4s3iqt9245nmitmnkgbevo@4ax.com...
>> On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 10:57:54 -0700, "Technobarbarian"
>> <Technobarbarian-ztopzpam@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>"Hatunen" <hatunen@cox.net> wrote in message
>>>news:2ljt04pgqgsb2m01t14msa2dj4g3k04ju6@4ax.com...
>>>> On Tue, 22 Apr 2008 20:44:14 -0700, "Technobarbarian"
>>>> <Technobarbarian-ztopzpam@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>"Hatunen" <hatunen@cox.net> wrote in message
>>>>>news:bh8s04pfmkpc1rghbtm4kj3pablfdldh67@4ax.com...
>>>>>
>>>>>> Cool. But do check on the Tourist Card (not mentioned on that web
>>>>>> site): http://www.mexonline.com/visamex.htm
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The 72-hour requirement is stated a bit ambiguously, but the card
>>>>>> is required, even in the border zone. On the other hand, you are
>>>>>> quite unlikely to be detected without one if don't encounter any
>>>>>> internal check points.
>>>>>
>>>>> I don't know where you're getting your information, but there is NO
>>>>>requirement for a tourist card in the border zone, which includes
>>>>>Ensenada.
>>>>>
>>>>>http://studenttravel.about.com/od/mexicostudenttravel/f/mexico_visa.htm
>>>
>>> So, ok, I did a bit more digging. Online I can find support for your
>>>version and support for my version. As a technical matter you might be
>>>right. As a practical matter no one gets an FMT for the border zone.
>>>Here's
>>>the thing: The tourist card has to be stamped at an entry point.
>>
>> Huh? Nobody stamped our FMTs when we entered Mexico on our recent
>> trip down to Guaymas.
>
> If they didn't the procedure has changed in the last year. You can get
>an FMT form at the Sonora tourism office in Tucson, but the last time I got
>one there they couldn't stamp it.
There is no logner a Sonoran tourist office in Tucson.
>That was done at the little office at the 21km checkpoint.
Which, as noted before, I would not take as an entry point ot
Mexico; the entry point would be at the downtown crossing or the
Mariposa crossing.
> They couldn't have, because we didn't have
>> them yet. We go our FMTs at the south end of the border zone. You
>> cna drive across the border, park, and get your FMTs there at the
>> border, tough.
>>
>>>When you
>>>drive in this has to be done before you can get the FMT validated at a
>>>bank.
>>>The OP isn't going to see an entry point. The entry points are on the
>>>south
>>>side of the border zone and at airports.
>>
>> Oh. Ambiguity alert. The "entry point" is at the actual border.
>> The things at the south edge of the frontier zone are
>> checkpoints.
>
> Actually not, but I'm not going to argue semantics.
To me, an "entry point" is where you enter the country, not some
internal check point. To say other wise would be saying that when
I went down into Nogales Sonora last week I didn't enter Mexico.
You can skip the semantic argument, but if you want to avoid
misunderstanding I think it should be clear what you mean.
>>
>>>Take here locally in Southern AZ
>>>for example. If I wanted to get a tourist card to stay in Nogales Sonora I
>>>would have to drive down to the 21km checkpoint on the south side of the
>>>border zone to get it stamped and then return to Nogales.
>>
>> No you wouldn't. I'm almost certain you can get FMTs at the
>> downtown Nogales crossing.
>
> You might be able to get the form, but they won't be able to stamp it
>there.
The stamp is done at a bank, and the office I saw that seems to
be the permit office had a bank next door. Next time I go to
Nogie I'll check.
>> You could be in deep doo-doo if for some reason the Mexicans
>> discover you hadn't turned in the card, though. How they would
>> find out baffles me, though, unless you said something stupid.
>
> LOL, I don't know anyone who returns them except at airports. If you
>fail to get an FMT and get caught the worst the "deep doo-doo" gets is a $40
>fine. I know an idiot online who didn't get his FMT validated at a bank
>because he didn't understand the instructions and then got all panicked and
>caused a scene on his way out of Mexico--otherwise they would have never
>noticed him. The authorities scolded him for being an idiot, took his name
>and address, told him they would send instructions for straightening it
>out--and that was the last he heard of it.
>>
>> Thirty some years ago there was a flap here because a UofA
>> professor had failed to turn in his car permit at Nogales when
>> returning to the USA. He called the Mexican consul here in Tucson
>> and asked what to do about it. The consul suggested he simply go
>> down and turn it in. The damn fool drove across the line into
>> Sonora, did a U-turn and drove back to the crossing. He handed in
>> the permit and apologized and explained that no one had asked for
>> it before. So the Mexicans impounded his car!
>>
>> I myaelf had recently returned from Rocky Point and at Gringo
>> Pass had waited for a Mexican official to come out and take my
>> permit (we needed them back then). No one came so I drove home.
>> On seeing that story in the newspaper I was kind of worried until
>> I realized that at that time the Mexicans had no way of tracking
>> this sort of thing.
>
> You are talking about two--actually three--different things and they
>*do* keep track of temporary import permits. If you don't return the
>temporary import permit it causes problems.
Not for me, it didn't.
>For one thing they will not
>issue two permits to one person at the same time. If you don't return the
>old temporary import permit they will require you to pay the duty on the car
>as if you had imported it into Mexico before they will give you another
>temporary import permit. This can run up to $400.
At the time in question that obviously wasn't true, since I
re-entered Mexico a number of times thereafter. I reckon, though,
that these days even the mexicans have computer systems.
> Several years ago my girlfriend and I drove across Texas to Matamoros
>Mexico in a motorhome we had purchased to tour Mexico with. She had a
>vehicle at home with a temporary import permit on it. At that time we were
>spending so much time in Mexico that we never returned a temporary import
>permit until it expired. The motorhome was in her name. She couldn't get a
>temporary import permit for the motorhome until she cleared the temporary
>import permit on the vehicle sitting in Tucson. Reasoning that the Mexican
>beauracracy isn't particularly well organized we went to a second entry
>point and managed to get a temporary import permit on the motorhome, but we
>have asked at other entry points and been told that they would not issue a
>second permit until the first one was cleared.
Did you notice that my incident was at the time of the
professor's incident, which was thirty-odd years ago? You reckon
things might be diffrerent today?
--
************* DAVE HATUNEN (hatunen@cox.net) *************
* Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow *
* My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps *