MANZANILLO•SUN

Your guide to Manzanillo, Mexico

MANZANILLO, COLIMA

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Serving the Manzanillo community
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Welcome to Manzanillo

Manzanillo, Colima Mexico

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A quiet, peaceful and safe town, Manzanillo is home to about 125,000 Mexican nationals and probably 10,000 ex-pats escaping the harsh reality of northern winters. It is not a designated resort destination in the eyes of the Mexican Government which selects various areas, like Nuevo Vallarta, Ixtapa & Cancun, then develops these towns specifically for tourism.  Beautiful and natural places like Manzanillo and the Costa Alegre to the north grow in spite of their efforts.





Manzanillo has just a few major hotels which specialize as all- in-one resorts, and dozens of smaller hotels or bungalow complexes where people can rent for several months at a time at extremely good rates. Recently many condominium developments have been started as previous holidaymakers decide to make the major move towards calling Manzanillo home, for greater parts of the year. Suitable housing and accommodation to purchase were in short supply as they had been owned by Mexican families for many years, passing down from father to son for generations and not available on the general housing market.
 

Manzanillo Average Temperatures

  Jan   Feb   Mar   Apr   May   Jun   Jul   Aug   Sep   Oct   Nov   Dec
Avg High - F 81   79   78   79   81   85   86   86   85   85   84   81
Avg High - C 27   26   26   26   27   29   30   30   29   29   29   27
Avg Low - F 66   65   65   67   70 75   75   75   75   74   71   68
Avg Low - C 19   18   18   19   21   24   24   24   24   23   22   20


The weather is extremely pleasant, maintaining an average daytime temperature in the low 80’s in the winter time and high 80’s in the summer and rainy season. The main difference in the seasons is that during the rainy season, June to November, the humidity climbs noticeably and can become quite uncomfortable at times. The hurricane season stretches from June to the end of October.


The principal tourist season is from December through to Easter. At both Christmas and Easter, Mexicans who live inland, swarm to the coastal resorts making  accommodation both hard to find and much more expensive. 

This is far from a shopping mecca although several large American outlets have moved here in the past few years. There is now a Wal-Mart, Starbucks, Office Max, Office Depot, KFC, Burger King, Subway plus a Dairy Queen is now open. There are rumors that a Sam’s Club is coming, but there has been no concrete evidence of that to date. However in Colima, only an hour drive away, there are several Malls with different shopping selections, Sears, a Sam’s Club and a Home Depot open.

Hospitals are plentiful here, both social security and private, and good care can be found in both. Health care workers, for the most part, rarely speak English fluently although there always seems to be someone available who will do their best to help you, Costs are very reasonable, with doctors’ fees about $25 and visits to specialists costing about $40. Most specialties are covered locally but Colima is close and Guadalajara is only 4 hours away if more attention is required. Dental and optical services are also available, usually at much cheaper costs than in Canada or the USA.

Access by land, air or sea is easy, there are flights daily during the winter season and weekly in the summer from many US cities.  The Port Authorities are on duty year round and the roads in Mexico are generally very good on the highways. There are toll roads connecting most cities, which are mostly well maintained (there are always exceptions) but they are fairly expensive, although much safer than using the free roads which can add many miles to the route. It is, however, a rule that should be adhered to  "DO NOT DRIVE IN HOURS OF DARKNESS", either early morning or after dusk. Many reasons include wandering cattle, wandering people, wandering bicycles, wandering bandits.
 

| 12.02.2008 | back to Main Page | Print |

Time Zone

Central Time

Manzanillo is on Central Standard Time, six hours earlier than Greenwich Mean Time during standard time, or five hours during daylight savings time. In Mexico, daylight savings time begins on the first Sunday of April, and ends on the last Sunday of October.

Using Dollars in Manzanillo

Canadian or US

Pesos, or credit cards for that matter, would probably be a better way to pay for the things you are going to buy in Manzanillo. The larger hotels and higher-end shops do accept US dollars, but your exchange rate may be less than the market rate.  If you do use dollars in a smaller shop, they more than likely won't have change for anything larger than a $20 bill, unless the change is in pesos.

US Newspapers

English papers

US newspapers are tough to come by in Manzanillo, even at the larger hotels catering to international tourists. An English language newspaper the Guadalajara Reporter is only available weekly.

Internet Cafes

plentiful

Internet Cafes in Manzanillo and surrounding areas can be found in the downtown and on Santiago Peninsula. Rates at a cafe run from $15 to $20 pesos per hour.

Wireless Internet

available

Wireless Internet is available in most major hotels, and cafe's or restaurants.   Internet is not available at Manzanillo Bus depot, but is at most other city bus depots