I live in Bacong, 22k/month and it is quiet here,, we also have a backup generator and fast internet. I live 100 meters from the beach and in my book all are priceless. Thanks Alma!
Are you using starlink? If so have you had any issues? For my work internet access is critical and non negotiable. I was thinking of building my own solar setup and using starlink for internet.
Thanks for the honest review of your place in the Philippines. I could not live in the Philippines for all the reason you mention, and I could think of many more reasons, but you did cover the bulk of the reasons most Americans would not be happy there.
I love Dumaguete and my home is on the outskirts of town or as i like to say in the jungle. To many times I have listened to foreigners complain that there is no bar life and hopping party district in Dumaguete and I always tell them if that's what your looking for Cebu or Manila may be better for them. Many people move to the Philippines every year thinking that it will solve all their problems and sometimes it may but many end up leaving realizing there problems just followed them here. To many people leave their country and then complain that Dumaguete isn't like were they came from, just sounds like those folks cannot be happy anywhere to me. Thanks for putting the information out there so people know what to expect.
The "out of stock" for prescriptions is horrifying to hear. Anyone who is on blood pressure lowering medications could end up dead or have a stroke if they can't get their medications refilled in time. Maybe Thailand won't have such a big problem with this issue and might be a better alternative retirement location for those who might have concerns about this.
I live in a small Brazilian city and never had issues with medicine refills, water being shut off and only 3 brownouts this year with 2 understandable reasons: A ⛵ mast hit one of the powerlines ( fixed 4 hours later ) and we literally had the storm of the century here ( out for 2 days ). The 3rd one I'm not sure what happened but only lasted 3 hours.
You should build up a stash or 3-6 month supply or important meds and get refills when you get down to you 3+ month supply. Not that hard to do with a little planning
These things you talk about, goes for practically all rural areas here in Philippines. I live (for 7 years) up in the hills, cebu island near Dalaguete. Same things: Water, Phone signal, brown out noise, all of it. Internet was really bad, until i got Starlink. I like it this way, we build our house here, after living in a subdivision near Angeles. This is different, but a lot better for us. Fresh air, friendly neighbors (not close to us) peace and "quiet". Dogs sure, Roosters not so much around us, karaoke when there's party and so on. All in all i am very happy for living in a place like thins
I agree 100%. I (the family)have a seaside home, a mountain home, and a condo in Cavite. Each have their own sounds and smells, but each makes me feel at home.
TIP>> Don’t automatically assume that because you have a prescription in the US that you need to go to a doctor in the Philippines to get it renewed. Some meds like my Atenolol or Tenormin (common meds for high blood-pressure) do NOT require a prescription. Just go to Rose Pharmacy or Mercury Drug and get however many tablets you need of whatever strength you need. I did that at Ayala Mall in Cebu City for 3 years. Never had to see a doctor or show a prescription.
@@lindawilson795 Since 1999, I have been forced to see a doctor and get checked for high blood pressure, before he would re-prescribe my bp med. For all that time it was the same outcome… renewal of the same prescription for 34 years. I think it’s a safe bet that I can go get my meds without seeing a doctor before I go to the pharmacy to buy more of the same.
I live in Panglao Bohol and visited Dumaguete a few months past. I was surprised at all the antiquated trikes and Habal Habals operating and absence of traffic lights or controls compared to Panglao. I posit that the increased congestion and pollution as a result is part of the reason why Dumaguete citizens seem generally unfriendly and unhappy. I couldn't get back to Bohol soon enough.
Don't burn yard waste, neither food waste. Mulch it, mix it with rotten food and dirt. It grows the best tomatoes and corn. Even a smal garden can handle a yearly recycling regime.
I live in subic bay freeport, the old navy base. Very quiet no livestock allowed, no roosters , chickens. No trikes allowed or jeepneys . Rare brownouts and potable water. We have two puregolds , one has a selection of united states products. Two royal markets which has good selection of united states products . Ayala mall and we are next to olongapo which has two sm malls. Olongapo barreto has entertainment area , we are close to many beaches. We have traffic control stop lights and signs which are patrolled by sbma police . We have security and twice a week garbage pickup. Less than a hour drive to Angeles and san Fernando for additional shopping and entertainment. We have private hospitals and a public one . Medical city clark is less than a hour away. Love this area for living .
@damncars2618 I am also in Binictican heights love the peace and quiet safe streets to walk on . Can be expensive if you rent one of the large spider homes . If you buy a long term lease then that lessens the cost
Finally after 500 vlogs a Philippines vlogger expats finally admits the air pollution in Dumaguete city. It's a toxic unhealthy place. Finally we hear the truth for once. Briefly.
Even if it isn't coming from vehicles, almost anywhere there are a lot of people, you'll be putting up with burning of garbage. Which in some ways is worse because everything seems to get burned, plastic included. Not all the time of course, but many places I was in, at least once a day for a short time you might smell burning plastic.
@@listerine414 i don't know if you're kidding or not i spend a weekend there and we went up in the valencia mountains and we came down in the city i'm not in the best to shape but the atmosphere didn't have any bother on me i don't know the UV ratings not good over here
Very very good. I've just started binge watching Dumaguete life. I'm in Australia with absolutely no ties holding me back. So much to research. I'll come for a look around. Cheers 🍻
G'day Dwayne, I'm a Canberra boy. Don't be put off by complainers. Duma is the best there is here in PI and it is growing and always improving. You can easily rent here for less than $500 AUD/mo or buy land and build 100 sqm for under $100k. If you do build, it will sell for double what it cost you - true! You can't do that in any big Philippine cities. Who knew there might be rural noises when you live next to farms? Or that water supplied for $2 a month might go off sometimes = rent a place with a water tank. I put 25,000 to 40,000 liter tanks in the houses I have built and I've never been short of water.
@pauldanielando thanks mate , that's great info. I'll come over for a month and slow travel look around. It looks pretty good with lots to do. Just got to avoid the gold digging fems. Cheers
Dumaguete is like any other city in the fact that there are nice parts and not so nice parts to live in. The trick is to take your time and explore and find the place that you like best. Don’t rush the process and even explore places outside the city limits. If you’re new here, do not sign a long term lease because you may find something better after you’ve been here a couple of months.
Brown outs - noise from dogs roosters mufflers karaoke (!) - traffic & smog - heat - getting $ from the US (!) - renew tourist visa every 2 months (now) - long delays and lines for EVERYTHING !!! - - - Other than ALL THAT - (?) - it's paradise ! 🤗
Yep, you’re correct. But I love it. 🥰 I find driving in the Philippines is actually enjoyable. You just need to understand the driving code. 😊 If you are experiencing lots of brownouts and require internet access then you should install some solar panels, inverter and batteries. It’s always sunny in the Philippines. Worried about drinking water? Get a small water distiller. They make clean drinking water 24/7. Do you wanna live a western lifestyle? Learn how to adapt, life in the Philippines is awesome. 🥰😀😊
We can’t wait to be back. I’ve been counting down the days daily. 😊 we have a small cement house located 5 minutes outside Dumaguete in a gated community. It’s two story house. I just finished having insulation installed in the roof space to block out the heat from the metal roof. I use 1 small AC unit upstairs that keeps the entire house cool. Feels like a refrigerator inside. 🥶
I find i hard to believe that hermits want to live in the Philippines, a nation of 106 million citizens. Night-life is for me, to heck with living out in the sticks or hiking in this heat, you'll have to purchase of vehicle if you prefer remote, so are sure you want to drive here and so how's that cheaper, so no need for a vehicle if you live near a major city.
Don’t come to calamba city unless you like over crowded, dirty with trash thrown on the ground everywhere, people burning trash, dogs and cats running loose, dogs barking and roosters crowing. Motorcycles with open pipes and more motorcycles then any other place then Manila. People walking in the roads instead of the sidewalks ( when there are sidewalks) poor internet service, people selling fish, corn etc walking at 6am yelling at the top of their lungs or ringing a bell to let you know they are here. Beggars every where. Traffic is horrible and what should only take 10 minutes takes over an hour. No parking anywhere. I’m sure I could list more if needed
No one mentions the general ugliness. Your eyes cannot rest on a single well made thing. Buildings are thrown together from scrap , powerlines look like they survived a hurricane , advertising everywhere without restrictions etc etc
@@alfredopampanga9356 i agree and i am glad to announce i have moved from the dump and now im living out of calmba city and only drive through there if i have to. I am in a great area now. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Buy a battery backup (upc) and connect your internet to. They only cost about $100 and they connect to a regular wall receptacle and charge constantly while your regular power is on. When you lose power your internet modem will continue to work for maybe 10-12 hrs will your power is out.
You are correct my friend I have been using solar generators and solar panels also and they are really good against power outages.. I just do not understand why more people do not invest in them especially in the Philippines and the dumaguete area.. actually if the TH-camrs would use them they would never be without power to do their TH-cam work..😮😊
@@daysoff4ever you are correct my friend.. to get a real good one it is more like $1500 or $2,000 and it can run several appliances at one time and can be recharged buy solar panels or a wall socket or a gasoline generator.. I would think every TH-camr would have one so they would not ever be without power.. everyone should do their own research and purchase the one they need.. Amazon has free delivery to the Philippines for orders over $50 and also I have seen them on the Philippine mail-order companies like shein and others..👍👍
The water situation scares me a little bit. I understand not drinking the tap water, but - if you go to the outdoor market to buy fruits and produce, for example, is it washed/rinsed in tap water? If it is, seems like you can't eat it! Or if you get soup in a restaurant, do you have to ask what kind of water they used to make it? I don't think soups get hot enough to kill germs. If you order a soft drink in a restaurant, do you have to ask if they made the ice with tap water? Or how about coffee? That's a lot to worry about
I don’t drink the tap water but after awhile being here, your body adjusts to like washing your vegetables with tap water. I still use mineral water if we make soup. It is unavoidable, no matter how careful you are about the water you drink, you will get Montazuma revenge until your body adjusts.
Nobody is going to buy drinking water for cooking and washing dishes - of course they use grey water for everything. And they add water to the soup through the day. Nobody ever washes anything at the market there is no water there. Coffee machines are all run on grey water they have a filter insider but nobody ever changes the filter. The same thing with air cons they never service or clean it. If you rent a condo or house the first thing you need to do is clean the air filter or you get sick 🤢. They have two types of ice every one is using grey ice but you can buy clean ice at seven eleven though it is always out of stock And the drinking water in large blue jugs is not always safe to drink because they don't service the equipment. You should ask rich philippino families in your area where they buy water and buy there too. Also wear a mask when going outside - diesel fumes will develop breathing problems after some times. One third of philippino population have respiratory deases because air con filter and traffic fumes. GLTY stay safe.
Rent a car or a motorcycle and go up in the mountains of Valencia and Sibulan.. you will find a cheap place to live with all of the peace and quiet you want.. it is very cool up there and you will not need an air conditioner at night and sometimes not during the day either.. "Seek and ye shall find" anybody can have anything they want as long as they have patience and persistence..
If you have a UPS and/or solar generator it solves the power issue and you don’t have to worry about losing data when the power either fluctuates or goes off. Also, if you use cell data/hot spot you can still be online during most power outages or just use Starlink all the time. We had the power off for more than 12 hours last month and we were fine. 4 cell phones, 2 laptops and a smart tv all using my mobile hotspot. As for noise 😂 it’s the Phil’s! Very few places are quiet lol 😅
I've travelled to over 70 of the world's best countries over my lifetime for weeks and months at a time in each of them. All of Asia is noisy, stray dogs and cows are common, markets are crowded, and power and water can be unreliable. The Philippines should lose no points for any of those things. Celebrate the fact people are not constantly beeping horns as they drive here - they do that in most other countries. It is up to you to rent or build a house with water tanks in a quiet spot and put a generator or battery in place to keep it all going. I pay $2 a month for water and $200 a year for taxes on a 4 bedroom house - I am not going to complain if the water or power is discontinuous. Nor am I going to move to Manila with 27 million other people in the hope it will be better there. How could it be? I have lived in Canada, Australia, UK, US where you can be paying hundreds a month for each of these: local Govt taxes, sewage, water, electricity..... and you still get trash in the streets, violent crime, rare power, water and internet outages. I'd rather pay a lot less here and shrug off any disappointments.
Had plans for Duma but it seems to have changed a lot in the last 2 years. I ended up in Palo, on Leyte. I have a 2 bedroom home for much cheaper than the prices I have seen around Duma and it is in a gated community. So far I am very happy. We also have low water pressure ( almost none ) from 6am to 6pm but my electric has not gone off once yet. Wifi is good but cable is not
Hey Mike, I prefer Valencia but still close Dumaguete City to get what i need. But I definitely need some quietness. There’s no doubt about it. The street noise can be very loud in the city. Keep up the good work, brother 🙌 still looking forward to meeting you soon.
More likely no need blood pressure meds anymore in no time because expats that move in Philippines usually gets their pressure normal. Unless they look for stress, lol!
I live in California and go to Dumaguete twice a year. It s my favorite part of the Philippines. A decent size city with a relaxed pace of life and things to do there and nearby
You should recommend the Palengkes of Dumaguete great selections of fresh fish, scallops, chicken, pork and beef. These are great wet markets. The babby back ribs they just cut right from the baboy (pig). Prices are more reasonable too. The vendors speak English too. We go to the city market all the time in the Cavite province. Landers & Costo are very expensive because of value added taxes and duties. Better to stick with locally made items, more affordable and which are many and enjoyable to eat.
I've been to the Philippines and i prefer where i'm living in Spain, Valencia, the living environment is much better, there in the Philippines too much noise, traffic problems, contamination, too much pollution in the air, and yes tap water is another problem, internet connection is not good in general.
@@richardfox2865 You're welcome, i'm good and lucky but i can see many people that have lost a lot or everything, there are some real dramas here, thanks for your support 🤗👍
Dumaguete has too much drama, too many expats, and is too expensive. I live partially in the sticks; there's a few dogs and a few roosters but they are not an issue. We live on the edge of a developed city and have access to all the amenities we need. Manila itself is only a couple of hours drive away. I've been here 4 years and have only experienced one, brief, brown-out but that was during a typhoon.
@@mikesphilippineretirement mark Thorton only drama for me put down america every interview why would any one want to live america if you listen to his nonsense😂.
Hi Mike, I finally arrived to the Philippines, now in Cebu but in time maybe a month I would love to meet you, and others ( Paul the dog and baby Mae, Gio, etc) love all the great information you and Janice provide. 😊 Dave1
I live just outside of Bayawan city proper ( othe side of Negros Oriental) and its just the right size town ( not city) for having everything you need basically... Several hospitals, lg puregold grocery store/ mall, lots of pharmacies, big market, schools for the kids, hardware stores, furniture etc etc.... not nearly as much as Dumagete, but pretty much everything you'll need basically... Its small enough to get anywhere in just 5-10 minutes and not nearly as crowded as in Dumagete... The beach is pretty good and a number of things to do in nature in a 30 min or so radius... Im not into restraunts and nightlight so that's not a problem for me here 😊
I've lived in the PH for over 12 years here in Valencia for the last 7. So on the noise issue you missed, one of the biggest ones, Karaoke and LOUD music for some reason Filipinos think that if someone can't sing it will sound better at a volume level that can be heard on other islands. Filipinos are among the least considerate of the world. I've lived in a number of countries and nowhere was this the problem it is here in the PH. Also on the no muffler thing the kids thing they get more power out of their tiny engines if they take off or gut the muffler. Of course the opposite it true. They also turn off the lights at night for the same reason, they think that it gives them more power and saves gas if you ride with the lights off. Up here in Apolong you can drink the water but we have lots of water shortages, here it is gravity fed so it's not a pumping issue. They probably lose as much as 20% of the water from leaks. Power outages are VERY common and while the announced black outs are annoying but we get breaks in power all the time for a few minutes to hours. We have PLDT internet and it is hit or miss on reliability asap we will be going to Starlink. Traffic is a free-for-all but parking is the issue. I use Silliman Hospital and they are pretty good and reasonably priced. I was in Holy Child after a motorcycle incident with 2 broken ribs and a punctured lung in for a week and the cost was like 25kp. There are a lot of drugs that simply don't exist here that are common in the US. For the trash I had a raised platform built for the immediate neighbours so we put the trash out the night before with no dog problems. You can get the high quality food in Duma at places like Belcres and they have Australian beef in Robinson but it is very expensive. I have a great group of expat friends here and had a great group when I lived in Taygaytay but I would say that overall maybe 1 in 10 expats are worth knowing, so many just want to complain about everything. Take care
Dumaguete is Philippines lite. Positive for new expats. Many girls here have had many foreigner boyfriends before. Negative for all expats. If ur older than 60 -better to fly in a Filipina from another province.
I see a lot more foreign expats, from everywhere, in Pampanga (Angeles City/San Fernando) than I did in Dumaguete. No matter where I go (malls, restaurants, etc), it seems like I always see a fair percentage of expats. Koreans and Chinese are a bit more difficult to differentiate from westerners, but occasionally I can tell. I think you notice the Vloggers in Dumaguete more than you would here, because you know so many of them? Here, there's not much of a "community" of Vloggers; they all seem to be doing their own thing. Good points, Kuya Mike 👍
A lot of good honest content here. I just want to comment because there's always guys no matter what the issue is someone's talking about their life and the place they live is just rosey paradise. For most that is just not the case. I will say though, if you have enough money you can overcome and stay above most of the negatives talked about. Brownouts? Pay thousands of dollars for solar systems. Traffic? Pay someone to manage all of your bills and requirements. Roosters and dogs? You can move into high end gated communities. So I guess for the average Joe who's just going to get by on SS or smaller pension, you are going to have to navigate all the perils talked about here. 😉
I've been to Dumaguete... too many people for a small town. Pollution, power, noise, traffic and water problems make it worse. Seems "the budget" is a concern there. You get what you pay for.
Hi 👋 Mike. Thanks for another great video and for your candid thoughts, observations and your personal experiences in living in Dumaguete. From what I've heard from you and from others,..that will help me decide where to live in the Philippines,..but definitely I would love to visit Dumaguete if anything,.and maybe even live on the "outskirts" or provinces of Dumaguete. Take care and keep up the great work Mike.
I live two hours from dumaguete. Sorry about the motorcycle noise but my bike is 900cc it's going to have presence in the city. The reverb from buildings too close on both sides of the narrow roads amplifies all vehicle noise.
On motorcycle noise it's big truck syndrome and it occurs here in the USA. There's just less motorcycles... A lot of bikers meet up here in downtown Nashville and these are Japanese not Harleys. For power needs consider a battery generator. For AC and fridge it gets expensive, but for routers and computers etc... there are lots of options.
An alternative to going to Bacolod for those who don't drive. Take ferry to Cebu. You arrive at Cebu early morning. Shop then take bus to ferry close to Dumaguete. Amlan or Sibulan. You slept on the ferry going to Cebu then it's 5 or 6 hours back by bus.
@mikesphilippineretirement about the same as bacolod round trip with the bonus of sleeping on the way on the ferry. I went to Cebu to renew my passport, went to S&R and took the bus and short ferry. Was 18 hours round trip and I slept 6 hours of that comfy on the ferry. I'd do the Bacolod trip too just to see the sights too though
I've lived in the Phils over 9 years mostly in metro-Manila, but I also travel and spent months at a time in many places: Cebu, Iloilo, Leyte, Samar, Batangas, Zamboanga City etc. and last year in Dumaguette for several months. Your right, the roosters in the morning are a massive problem, so is the constant burning of garbage and other things there - the worst I've seen in the country. Also, pitiful internet... But brown outs were much worse in Iloilo April-June.... it's why I left...Good video Buckeye, but ROLL TIDE brother...
I pray hard that the government will do something about the infrastructure because Dumaguete has tons of potentials. That's where they will start solving the problems if they do that. Roads and traffic lights makes a big difference
In regards to drinking water... are there areas where you can drill your own well (by professional drilling company of course - and deep) and get clean drinking water?
so when you have these brownouts, if you had a backup generator for your computer and router, would you then be able to get internet? or does the brownout take the interenet down for the whole area?
Wrong...Iloilo is a very clean city with almost no traffic other than in or near the Plaza's which I don't frequent too much. Stay away from those areas from 7-9am and 4-6pm and you ride/drive freely.....I can ride my bike from my condo to the bike trails and river walk esplanade and ride for more than 2 hours with almost no traffic to deal with other than crossing from one bridge to another. There have only been 4 brownouts in the 8.5 months I have been here and two of them were scheduled......the longest power outage was 1.5 days.....but the condo I am in as all condos here have backup generators that come on in 3-5 seconds. All the malls have the same and don't miss a beat. There is no visible trash on the roads or sidewalks....and they do have sidewalks here....along with very wide roads on all the major thoroughfares. I love Iloilo other than the rents are higher than they should be for the condos (house rentals are very comparable to anywhere else (15-40K for nice houses.....I prefer the convenience of the condo life so far) Get outside of town and it is beautiful mountain areas and beaches too. 5 hours ride to Boracay....Guimaras Island is a 15 minute ferry ride from downtown Iloilo and it has many nice white sand beaches and few tourists and no traffic. Dumaguete is a slum compared to Iloilo......but for sure Valencia, Bacong, and Dauin or anywhere in that area outside of Dumaguete is peaceful and beautiful. The view from the mountains above Dumaguete (I rode my motorcycle from Bacolod south) is spectacular.
Mike, I'm moving into Dumaguete in early December, I was thinking of finding a single story house outside of city limits, most likely heading northwest up the coast but not to far. I need my internet access and food markets as the most important.
I shipped a 12 to 120v power inverter and my fil products router can be run on 100v-240v. By the way, I'm using it right now. In Dauin Philippines Not sure if I can get a power inverter for Philippines 12v - 220v
My iPhone dB app shows 32dB at 10PM at my home in a gated 55 community in Florida. When in the PH, I found one needs to stay on the 15th floor or above when staying in a city. On floor 10, one will still hear traffic noise as well as dogs barking. Once you get to the 20th floor the noise level is a 64dB vs 70dB on the 10th floor. On floor 40 you are at 58dB which is really quite for a city. Unfortunately, the only places you will find sky scrappers are in Manila, and Cebu in areas like Rockwell and BGC. We will be staying on the floor 42 at Park Suites BGC this December so will check the dB level during the day and at night. Oh ya and you forgot about those noisy roasters which thankfully are banned in BGC and Rockwell Manila.
Well, with the exception of the glorious roosters I could say the very same thing about my home town of Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. Matter in fact i just spoke about the nightly noise level with the janitor of my townhouse area and he complained a lot about it, too. He is Filipino! There is nothing better then being woken up at 2:00 in the morning because the neighbor goes on a joyride with his Harley-Davidson after shift or decides to wash his car, drive way, the road or whatever shit with his pressure washer etc.
Dogs, Roosters, everywhere in the P.I. That's why My Wife bangs the pans, at News Year. Never been to Dum but from what you showed it looked very clean.
Good review Mike. I spent a little time in Duma never liked the place there are so many better options just exploring around the country. I never connect with expats I find them very interesting there is a heap of low life failures that live here so be very careful
Was there last year, its a good place to visit, wish they would do something about the smell on the boulevard. I prefer Cebu, but will definetly visit Dumaguete again.
Hi Mike , I live in Bacolod and I’ll just say Landers is not that great . Prices are high and the steaks are tough, the best thing about landers is the pizza in the food court. You can find some items that you are missing in large quantities but for me it’s to much to use in a reasonable time. S & R is a bit better on prices and product but still quite expensive I’m not sure it’s worth the trip maybe for some but I’m planning to move to Dumaguete and I don’t think I’ll be coming back to this nasty city for shopping.
I didn't realize there was a curfew in Dumaguete I just got back from the Philippines for the first time I was walking around the Boulevard at 4am without a problem, do the Police just tell you go home if they see you?
If there is a curfew, it’s not enforced much. Just go to NorthPoint at 2am and see all the people hanging out at the seawall. Everyone is just having a fun time.
Mike, what's a decent recommend area in the Philippines to live? How is Bacolod area. No Manila, sebu but somewhat quiet. I'm retired military and wishing to move
@@mikesphilippineretirement well that is one good thing about Amazon in USA they have electronic boxes around that you can pick up your deliveries from rather than waiting at your house.
Refilling prescriptions is the same in the U.S. I just had a prescription refilled. They were out. Gave me 10 pills of 90. When I got the remainder filled they gave me 80 pills instead of 90.
The exact change thing is so annoying! I went to get a ferry ride from Cebu to Nasipit, and went to by my ticket around 3pm. The ticket place had been open for hours by that point, and I had waited in a line for over an hour. Then, when I went to pay, they wanted me to pay with exact change. If EVERYONE in front of me was paying with exact change, how do they not have any to make change with?!? It's laziness. They don't want to expend a single iota of effort to make change, and expect all customers to have exact change to pay with.
IMHO..Dumaguete is way over crowed with people like most PH cities...Also as you said like most cities there,Noise Pollution-roosters,horns,loud mufflers,2 cycle engines,loud music and the list goes on...Yes the door hit in me in the ass on the way out...
I live in England near the sea and we have LOUD seagulls squawking all day especially in the mornings. I would swap for roosters crowing anytime- much more melodious than seagulls!😂
You should swap the climate in UK for tropical Philippines for sure. I lived more than 50 years with cold and snow. This is nice. It takes quite some years to get bored of beautiful warm beaches and coconut palms.
Hi Mike. The internet goes out when there's a brown out? What happened to batteries in the cell phones and laptops? Or is the problem at the internet service provider end, when the electricity goes out?
Thank you for a good video! Its a lot of interessting nice things youre talking about! I will probably find a home in Dumaguete for 2025/2026 and looking forward to it! Its a small but nice City, i like the Quantity and Quality of the Restaurants in the City, also the Why Not place is pretty good for a few beers and play som pool, sing Karaoke. But for sure the City is not for everyone!
We will still go and see dumaguete because silliman university is one of the prestigious school in the whole Philippines. If it wont work, Iloilo is our choice.
I live in Bacong, 22k/month and it is quiet here,, we also have a backup generator and fast internet. I live 100 meters from the beach and in my book all are priceless. Thanks Alma!
Thanks for sharing Alma does a great job
Are you using starlink? If so have you had any issues? For my work internet access is critical and non negotiable. I was thinking of building my own solar setup and using starlink for internet.
Alma seems great!!! Bacong is our favorite too.
I highly agree on Bacong and Dauin area for snorkeling/scuba....Apo Island was beautiful. Mike's Dive Resort was great.
That's not Dumaguete ?
Thanks for the honest review of your place in the Philippines. I could not live in the Philippines for all the reason you mention, and I could think of many more reasons, but you did cover the bulk of the reasons most Americans would not be happy there.
welcome Bruce
Thank's for your honest assessment, Mike. The noise drove me away. It was absurd and beyond endurance.
I love Dumaguete and my home is on the outskirts of town or as i like to say in the jungle. To many times I have listened to foreigners complain that there is no bar life and hopping party district in Dumaguete and I always tell them if that's what your looking for Cebu or Manila may be better for them. Many people move to the Philippines every year thinking that it will solve all their problems and sometimes it may but many end up leaving realizing there problems just followed them here. To many people leave their country and then complain that Dumaguete isn't like were they came from, just sounds like those folks cannot be happy anywhere to me. Thanks for putting the information out there so people know what to expect.
thanks for sharing
Good topic! Everyplace has their own pro and cons about living there. You just have to decide what’s important and what you can deal with.
so true Mikeyyyy_L
The "out of stock" for prescriptions is horrifying to hear. Anyone who is on blood pressure lowering medications could end up dead or have a stroke if they can't get their medications refilled in time. Maybe Thailand won't have such a big problem with this issue and might be a better alternative retirement location for those who might have concerns about this.
storages in many places in the world
I live in a small Brazilian city and never had issues with medicine refills, water being shut off and only 3 brownouts this year with 2 understandable reasons: A ⛵ mast hit one of the powerlines ( fixed 4 hours later ) and we literally had the storm of the century here ( out for 2 days ).
The 3rd one I'm not sure what happened but only lasted 3 hours.
Thailand's mrducdl infrastructure and medhcdl services, efficiency of staff and process are top notch, even compared to the U.S.
Medical services in Thailand I mean
You should build up a stash or 3-6 month supply or important meds and get refills when you get down to you 3+ month supply. Not that hard to do with a little planning
Great video - no bs, just straight down the information
These things you talk about, goes for practically all rural areas here in Philippines. I live (for 7 years) up in the hills, cebu island near Dalaguete. Same things: Water, Phone signal, brown out noise, all of it. Internet was really bad, until i got Starlink. I like it this way, we build our house here, after living in a subdivision near Angeles. This is different, but a lot better for us. Fresh air, friendly neighbors (not close to us) peace and "quiet". Dogs sure, Roosters not so much around us, karaoke when there's party and so on. All in all i am very happy for living in a place like thins
I agree 100%. I (the family)have a seaside home, a mountain home, and a condo in Cavite. Each have their own sounds and smells, but each makes me feel at home.
TIP>> Don’t automatically assume that because you have a prescription in the US that you need to go to a doctor in the Philippines to get it renewed. Some meds like my Atenolol or Tenormin (common meds for high blood-pressure) do NOT require a prescription. Just go to Rose Pharmacy or Mercury Drug and get however many tablets you need of whatever strength you need. I did that at Ayala Mall in Cebu City for 3 years. Never had to see a doctor or show a prescription.
Hope your doctor monitored you. ❤
@@lindawilson795 Since 1999, I have been forced to see a doctor and get checked for high blood pressure, before he would re-prescribe my bp med. For all that time it was the same outcome… renewal of the same prescription for 34 years. I think it’s a safe bet that I can go get my meds without seeing a doctor before I go to the pharmacy to buy more of the same.
I live in Panglao Bohol and visited Dumaguete a few months past. I was surprised at all the antiquated trikes and Habal Habals operating and absence of traffic lights or controls compared to Panglao. I posit that the increased congestion and pollution as a result is part of the reason why Dumaguete citizens seem generally unfriendly and unhappy. I couldn't get back to Bohol soon enough.
Thanks for sharing
Don't burn yard waste, neither food waste. Mulch it, mix it with rotten food and dirt. It grows the best tomatoes and corn. Even a smal garden can handle a yearly recycling regime.
Good Show. Enjoyed it. My wife is from near ILOILO. I go to the Philippines. Thanks for all the info. :)
I live in subic bay freeport, the old navy base. Very quiet no livestock allowed, no roosters , chickens. No trikes allowed or jeepneys . Rare brownouts and potable water. We have two puregolds , one has a selection of united states products. Two royal markets which has good selection of united states products . Ayala mall and we are next to olongapo which has two sm malls. Olongapo barreto has entertainment area , we are close to many beaches. We have traffic control stop lights and signs which are patrolled by sbma police . We have security and twice a week garbage pickup. Less than a hour drive to Angeles and san Fernando for additional shopping and entertainment. We have private hospitals and a public one . Medical city clark is less than a hour away. Love this area for living .
thank you for sharing
@@testerone5390 is the air clean there ?
@listerine414 pretty much for the Philippines. Breeze from bay keeps things pretty clear
I was in SBMA for a year. I'm in Binictican Heights SBFZ now. Love it here. But not cheap... you get what you pay for.
@damncars2618 I am also in Binictican heights love the peace and quiet safe streets to walk on . Can be expensive if you rent one of the large spider homes .
If you buy a long term lease then that lessens the cost
Finally after 500 vlogs a Philippines vlogger expats finally admits the air pollution in Dumaguete city. It's a toxic unhealthy place. Finally we hear the truth for once. Briefly.
Even if it isn't coming from vehicles, almost anywhere there are a lot of people, you'll be putting up with burning of garbage. Which in some ways is worse because everything seems to get burned, plastic included. Not all the time of course, but many places I was in, at least once a day for a short time you might smell burning plastic.
@@listerine414 i don't know if you're kidding or not i spend a weekend there and we went up in the valencia mountains and we came down in the city i'm not in the best to shape but the atmosphere didn't have any bother on me i don't know the UV ratings not good over here
Very very good.
I've just started binge watching Dumaguete life. I'm in Australia with absolutely no ties holding me back. So much to research. I'll come for a look around.
Cheers 🍻
G'day Dwayne, I'm a Canberra boy. Don't be put off by complainers. Duma is the best there is here in PI and it is growing and always improving. You can easily rent here for less than $500 AUD/mo or buy land and build 100 sqm for under $100k. If you do build, it will sell for double what it cost you - true! You can't do that in any big Philippine cities. Who knew there might be rural noises when you live next to farms? Or that water supplied for $2 a month might go off sometimes = rent a place with a water tank. I put 25,000 to 40,000 liter tanks in the houses I have built and I've never been short of water.
@pauldanielando thanks mate , that's great info. I'll come over for a month and slow travel look around.
It looks pretty good with lots to do. Just got to avoid the gold digging fems.
Cheers
Dumaguete is like any other city in the fact that there are nice parts and not so nice parts to live in. The trick is to take your time and explore and find the place that you like best. Don’t rush the process and even explore places outside the city limits. If you’re new here, do not sign a long term lease because you may find something better after you’ve been here a couple of months.
Thanks for sharing
Brown outs - noise from dogs roosters mufflers karaoke (!) - traffic & smog - heat - getting $ from the US (!) - renew tourist visa every 2 months (now) - long delays and lines for EVERYTHING !!! - - - Other than ALL THAT - (?) - it's paradise ! 🤗
I love it here
Yep, you’re correct. But I love it. 🥰 I find driving in the Philippines is actually enjoyable. You just need to understand the driving code. 😊
If you are experiencing lots of brownouts and require internet access then you should install some solar panels, inverter and batteries. It’s always sunny in the Philippines.
Worried about drinking water? Get a small water distiller. They make clean drinking water 24/7.
Do you wanna live a western lifestyle? Learn how to adapt, life in the Philippines is awesome. 🥰😀😊
Janet and I call Dumaguete home
We can’t wait to be back. I’ve been counting down the days daily. 😊 we have a small cement house located 5 minutes outside Dumaguete in a gated community. It’s two story house. I just finished having insulation installed in the roof space to block out the heat from the metal roof. I use 1 small AC unit upstairs that keeps the entire house cool. Feels like a refrigerator inside. 🥶
@@willemandree1424can you give the model and hp of your AC?
'LLG MODEL
HS - 18ISY
(HSN18ISY / HSU18ISY)
SPLIT TYPE ROOM AIR CONDITIONER
PHASE 10
60 Hz
VOLTAGE 230 V~
COOLING (T1)
@@willemandree1424 thank you thank you thank you fine sir 😊
I find i hard to believe that hermits want to live in the Philippines, a nation of 106 million citizens. Night-life is for me, to heck with living out in the sticks or hiking in this heat, you'll have to purchase of vehicle if you prefer remote, so are sure you want to drive here and so how's that cheaper, so no need for a vehicle if you live near a major city.
Dumaguete is not for everyone
To each his own. One man's meat is another man's poison. 😊
80% of the 7000 islands are not populated. Plenty of opportunities for serious hermits.
Up to 114 million today. :)
Don’t come to calamba city unless you like over crowded, dirty with trash thrown on the ground everywhere, people burning trash, dogs and cats running loose, dogs barking and roosters crowing. Motorcycles with open pipes and more motorcycles then any other place then Manila. People walking in the roads instead of the sidewalks ( when there are sidewalks) poor internet service, people selling fish, corn etc walking at 6am yelling at the top of their lungs or ringing a bell to let you know they are here. Beggars every where. Traffic is horrible and what should only take 10 minutes takes over an hour. No parking anywhere. I’m sure I could list more if needed
No one mentions the general ugliness. Your eyes cannot rest on a single well made thing. Buildings are thrown together from scrap , powerlines look like they survived a hurricane , advertising everywhere without restrictions etc etc
@@alfredopampanga9356 i agree and i am glad to announce i have moved from the dump and now im living out of calmba city and only drive through there if i have to. I am in a great area now. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@ i would think CARAPa city is more appropriate
Buy a battery backup (upc) and connect your internet to. They only cost about $100 and they connect to a regular wall receptacle and charge constantly while your regular power is on. When you lose power your internet modem will continue to work for maybe 10-12 hrs will your power is out.
thanks for the info
You are correct my friend I have been using solar generators and solar panels also and they are really good against power outages.. I just do not understand why more people do not invest in them especially in the Philippines and the dumaguete area.. actually if the TH-camrs would use them they would never be without power to do their TH-cam work..😮😊
Nope- 100.00 for 10-12 hours backup LOL More like 500.00- for that size unit.
@@daysoff4ever you are correct my friend.. to get a real good one it is more like $1500 or $2,000 and it can run several appliances at one time and can be recharged buy solar panels or a wall socket or a gasoline generator.. I would think every TH-camr would have one so they would not ever be without power.. everyone should do their own research and purchase the one they need.. Amazon has free delivery to the Philippines for orders over $50 and also I have seen them on the Philippine mail-order companies like shein and others..👍👍
@@daysoff4ever what is the brand name and where can I get one? Thanks 👍
The water situation scares me a little bit. I understand not drinking the tap water, but - if you go to the outdoor market to buy fruits and produce, for example, is it washed/rinsed in tap water? If it is, seems like you can't eat it! Or if you get soup in a restaurant, do you have to ask what kind of water they used to make it? I don't think soups get hot enough to kill germs. If you order a soft drink in a restaurant, do you have to ask if they made the ice with tap water? Or how about coffee? That's a lot to worry about
hmmm soup is cooked. To much worry
I don’t drink the tap water but after awhile being here, your body adjusts to like washing your vegetables with tap water. I still use mineral water if we make soup. It is unavoidable, no matter how careful you are about the water you drink, you will get Montazuma revenge until your body adjusts.
Nobody is going to buy drinking water for cooking and washing dishes - of course they use grey water for everything. And they add water to the soup through the day. Nobody ever washes anything at the market there is no water there.
Coffee machines are all run on grey water they have a filter insider but nobody ever changes the filter.
The same thing with air cons they never service or clean it. If you rent a condo or house the first thing you need to do is clean the air filter or you get sick 🤢.
They have two types of ice every one is using grey ice but you can buy clean ice at seven eleven though it is always out of stock
And the drinking water in large blue jugs is not always safe to drink because they don't service the equipment. You should ask rich philippino families in your area where they buy water and buy there too. Also wear a mask when going outside - diesel fumes will develop breathing problems after some times. One third of philippino population have respiratory deases because air con filter and traffic fumes.
GLTY stay safe.
i suggest you stay safe in your house
keep it up mike. good job
Thanks 👍
Very informative. Thanks, Mike...Jim
Glad it was helpful!
I need peace and quiet. That for me is not negotiable.
thanks for sharing
@@Raadaaem don’t go to Philippines then it’s noisy everywhere even in street they have big stereo system flat out
Rent a car or a motorcycle and go up in the mountains of Valencia and Sibulan.. you will find a cheap place to live with all of the peace and quiet you want.. it is very cool up there and you will not need an air conditioner at night and sometimes not during the day either..
"Seek and ye shall find" anybody can have anything they want as long as they have patience and persistence..
If you have a UPS and/or solar generator it solves the power issue and you don’t have to worry about losing data when the power either fluctuates or goes off.
Also, if you use cell data/hot spot you can still be online during most power outages or just use Starlink all the time.
We had the power off for more than 12 hours last month and we were fine.
4 cell phones, 2 laptops and a smart tv all using my mobile hotspot.
As for noise 😂 it’s the Phil’s!
Very few places are quiet lol 😅
How you know the water in the 5 gallon jugs is not from a tap somewhere?
you don't
Best way to tell is to rate your sickness and diarrhea on a 1-10 scale. If over 2, find another supplier.
You can’t always get what you want. You get what you need……😇👍
I've travelled to over 70 of the world's best countries over my lifetime for weeks and months at a time in each of them. All of Asia is noisy, stray dogs and cows are common, markets are crowded, and power and water can be unreliable. The Philippines should lose no points for any of those things. Celebrate the fact people are not constantly beeping horns as they drive here - they do that in most other countries. It is up to you to rent or build a house with water tanks in a quiet spot and put a generator or battery in place to keep it all going. I pay $2 a month for water and $200 a year for taxes on a 4 bedroom house - I am not going to complain if the water or power is discontinuous. Nor am I going to move to Manila with 27 million other people in the hope it will be better there. How could it be?
I have lived in Canada, Australia, UK, US where you can be paying hundreds a month for each of these: local Govt taxes, sewage, water, electricity..... and you still get trash in the streets, violent crime, rare power, water and internet outages. I'd rather pay a lot less here and shrug off any disappointments.
I enjoyed this video ... thanks for posting it.
Had plans for Duma but it seems to have changed a lot in the last 2 years. I ended up in Palo, on Leyte.
I have a 2 bedroom home for much cheaper than the prices I have seen around Duma and it is in a gated community. So far I am very happy. We also have low water pressure ( almost none ) from 6am to 6pm but my electric has not gone off once yet. Wifi is good but cable is not
Thanks for sharing
Hey Mike, I prefer Valencia but still close Dumaguete City to get what i need.
But I definitely need some quietness. There’s no doubt about it. The street noise can be very loud in the city.
Keep up the good work, brother 🙌 still looking forward to meeting you soon.
See you soon Michael
More likely no need blood pressure meds anymore in no time because expats that move in Philippines usually gets their pressure normal. Unless they look for stress, lol!
I live in California and go to Dumaguete twice a year. It s my favorite part of the Philippines. A decent size city with a relaxed pace of life and things to do there and nearby
We enjoy Dumaguete and we call it home
You should recommend the Palengkes of Dumaguete great selections of fresh fish, scallops, chicken, pork and beef. These are great wet markets. The babby back ribs they just cut right from the baboy (pig). Prices are more reasonable too. The vendors speak English too. We go to the city market all the time in the Cavite province.
Landers & Costo are very expensive because of value added taxes and duties.
Better to stick with locally made items, more affordable and which are many and enjoyable to eat.
Janet did a video from Palengkes Market
Always upsides and downsides in any place u want to live. It’s always a compromise. 😊
Totally agree
Good overview of the pros and cons of life here in Dumaguete
thanks
I've been to the Philippines and i prefer where i'm living in Spain, Valencia, the living environment is much better, there in the Philippines too much noise, traffic problems, contamination, too much pollution in the air, and yes tap water is another problem, internet connection is not good in general.
How does the cost of living compare though?
@richardfox2865 Yes, i'm good, thank you 👍
@@richardfox2865 You're welcome, i'm good and lucky but i can see many people that have lost a lot or everything, there are some real dramas here, thanks for your support 🤗👍
Can a 66 year old foreigner date a 20 year old Spanish lady?
@vidong1704 If he pays enough i guess he could date some young spanish, because some young women here are looking for a "sugar daddy".
Dumaguete has too much drama, too many expats, and is too expensive. I live partially in the sticks; there's a few dogs and a few roosters but they are not an issue. We live on the edge of a developed city and have access to all the amenities we need. Manila itself is only a couple of hours drive away. I've been here 4 years and have only experienced one, brief, brown-out but that was during a typhoon.
what Drama?
@@mikesphilippineretirement Plenty.
name 3 drama issues or your just talking shit
@@mikesphilippineretirement mark Thorton only drama for me put down america every interview why would any one want to live america if you listen to his nonsense😂.
Trike rides are 40 pesos I was there during Christmas.
Great information. 🎉❤❤
Thanks for watching!
Really nice rundown on things to consider in making a decision to settle there.
thank you
Hi Mike, I finally arrived to the Philippines, now in Cebu but in time maybe a month I would love to meet you, and others ( Paul the dog and baby Mae, Gio, etc) love all the great information you and Janice provide. 😊
Dave1
have fun in the Philippines
I live just outside of Bayawan city proper ( othe side of Negros Oriental) and its just the right size town ( not city) for having everything you need basically... Several hospitals, lg puregold grocery store/ mall, lots of pharmacies, big market, schools for the kids, hardware stores, furniture etc etc.... not nearly as much as Dumagete, but pretty much everything you'll need basically... Its small enough to get anywhere in just 5-10 minutes and not nearly as crowded as in Dumagete... The beach is pretty good and a number of things to do in nature in a 30 min or so radius... Im not into restraunts and nightlight so that's not a problem for me here 😊
Hospitals not so good in Bayawan. Lack of places to eat and no good coffee shops.
@@mikesphilippineretirement
Coffee and eating out is why people need hospitals and doctors.
I've lived in the PH for over 12 years here in Valencia for the last 7.
So on the noise issue you missed, one of the biggest ones, Karaoke and LOUD music for some reason Filipinos think that if someone can't sing it will sound better at a volume level that can be heard on other islands. Filipinos are among the least considerate of the world. I've lived in a number of countries and nowhere was this the problem it is here in the PH.
Also on the no muffler thing the kids thing they get more power out of their tiny engines if they take off or gut the muffler. Of course the opposite it true. They also turn off the lights at night for the same reason, they think that it gives them more power and saves gas if you ride with the lights off.
Up here in Apolong you can drink the water but we have lots of water shortages, here it is gravity fed so it's not a pumping issue. They probably lose as much as 20% of the water from leaks.
Power outages are VERY common and while the announced black outs are annoying but we get breaks in power all the time for a few minutes to hours.
We have PLDT internet and it is hit or miss on reliability asap we will be going to Starlink.
Traffic is a free-for-all but parking is the issue. I use Silliman Hospital and they are pretty good and reasonably priced. I was in Holy Child after a motorcycle incident with 2 broken ribs and a punctured lung in for a week and the cost was like 25kp. There are a lot of drugs that simply don't exist here that are common in the US.
For the trash I had a raised platform built for the immediate neighbours so we put the trash out the night before with no dog problems.
You can get the high quality food in Duma at places like Belcres and they have Australian beef in Robinson but it is very expensive.
I have a great group of expat friends here and had a great group when I lived in Taygaytay but I would say that overall maybe 1 in 10 expats are worth knowing, so many just want to complain about everything.
Take care
Dumaguete is Philippines lite. Positive for new expats. Many girls here have had many foreigner boyfriends before. Negative for all expats. If ur older than 60 -better to fly in a Filipina from another province.
thanks for sharing
I see a lot more foreign expats, from everywhere, in Pampanga (Angeles City/San Fernando) than I did in Dumaguete. No matter where I go (malls, restaurants, etc), it seems like I always see a fair percentage of expats. Koreans and Chinese are a bit more difficult to differentiate from westerners, but occasionally I can tell.
I think you notice the Vloggers in Dumaguete more than you would here, because you know so many of them? Here, there's not much of a "community" of Vloggers; they all seem to be doing their own thing.
Good points, Kuya Mike 👍
Thanks for sharing Jerry
A lot of good honest content here. I just want to comment because there's always guys no matter what the issue is someone's talking about their life and the place they live is just rosey paradise. For most that is just not the case. I will say though, if you have enough money you can overcome and stay above most of the negatives talked about. Brownouts? Pay thousands of dollars for solar systems. Traffic? Pay someone to manage all of your bills and requirements. Roosters and dogs? You can move into high end gated communities. So I guess for the average Joe who's just going to get by on SS or smaller pension, you are going to have to navigate all the perils talked about here. 😉
Even the "bad things" video make me want to visit. I'm early to bed, early to rise, and love cafes.
Hello Mike. God bless you and your sweet wife Janet. From Kuya Bear 🐻
Thanks so much
I've been to Dumaguete... too many people for a small town. Pollution, power, noise, traffic and water problems make it worse. Seems "the budget" is a concern there. You get what you pay for.
you need a bigger budget here than most towns
Hi 👋 Mike.
Thanks for another great video and for your candid thoughts, observations and your personal experiences in living in Dumaguete.
From what I've heard from you and from others,..that will help me decide where to live in the Philippines,..but definitely I would love to visit Dumaguete if anything,.and maybe even live on the "outskirts" or provinces of Dumaguete.
Take care and keep up the great work Mike.
thank you
I live two hours from dumaguete. Sorry about the motorcycle noise but my bike is 900cc it's going to have presence in the city. The reverb from buildings too close on both sides of the narrow roads amplifies all vehicle noise.
Very nice!
Hello! Can you tell the difference between bottled and city tap water? Is there any certification given to a water provider there?
On motorcycle noise it's big truck syndrome and it occurs here in the USA. There's just less motorcycles... A lot of bikers meet up here in downtown Nashville and these are Japanese not Harleys. For power needs consider a battery generator. For AC and fridge it gets expensive, but for routers and computers etc... there are lots of options.
An alternative to going to Bacolod for those who don't drive. Take ferry to Cebu. You arrive at Cebu early morning. Shop then take bus to ferry close to Dumaguete. Amlan or Sibulan. You slept on the ferry going to Cebu then it's 5 or 6 hours back by bus.
That is a long ass way to go
@mikesphilippineretirement about the same as bacolod round trip with the bonus of sleeping on the way on the ferry. I went to Cebu to renew my passport, went to S&R and took the bus and short ferry. Was 18 hours round trip and I slept 6 hours of that comfy on the ferry. I'd do the Bacolod trip too just to see the sights too though
I've lived in the Phils over 9 years mostly in metro-Manila, but I also travel and spent months at a time in many places: Cebu, Iloilo, Leyte, Samar, Batangas, Zamboanga City etc. and last year in Dumaguette for several months. Your right, the roosters in the morning are a massive problem, so is the constant burning of garbage and other things there - the worst I've seen in the country. Also, pitiful internet... But brown outs were much worse in Iloilo April-June.... it's why I left...Good video Buckeye, but ROLL TIDE brother...
I pray hard that the government will do something about the infrastructure because Dumaguete has tons of potentials. That's where they will start solving the problems if they do that. Roads and traffic lights makes a big difference
we all hope
In regards to drinking water... are there areas where you can drill your own well (by professional drilling company of course - and deep) and get clean drinking water?
not doing that just to get a glass of water
Hello everyone
I drank the tap water there a few years back.... and had the shites lol - lesson learned.
informative segment Mike.
thanks Walt
Interesting info. Thanks.
welcome
so when you have these brownouts, if you had a backup generator for your computer and router, would you then be able to get internet? or does the brownout take the interenet down for the whole area?
no
Mike you just described almost any city in the Philippines.
maybe
Wrong...Iloilo is a very clean city with almost no traffic other than in or near the Plaza's which I don't frequent too much. Stay away from those areas from 7-9am and 4-6pm and you ride/drive freely.....I can ride my bike from my condo to the bike trails and river walk esplanade and ride for more than 2 hours with almost no traffic to deal with other than crossing from one bridge to another. There have only been 4 brownouts in the 8.5 months I have been here and two of them were scheduled......the longest power outage was 1.5 days.....but the condo I am in as all condos here have backup generators that come on in 3-5 seconds. All the malls have the same and don't miss a beat. There is no visible trash on the roads or sidewalks....and they do have sidewalks here....along with very wide roads on all the major thoroughfares. I love Iloilo other than the rents are higher than they should be for the condos (house rentals are very comparable to anywhere else (15-40K for nice houses.....I prefer the convenience of the condo life so far) Get outside of town and it is beautiful mountain areas and beaches too. 5 hours ride to Boracay....Guimaras Island is a 15 minute ferry ride from downtown Iloilo and it has many nice white sand beaches and few tourists and no traffic. Dumaguete is a slum compared to Iloilo......but for sure Valencia, Bacong, and Dauin or anywhere in that area outside of Dumaguete is peaceful and beautiful. The view from the mountains above Dumaguete (I rode my motorcycle from Bacolod south) is spectacular.
well Duma is evolving. hope it retains its small town ambiance.
Yes rooster's and dogs barking in the province but not in subdivisions in Makati or BGC it's quiet gated subdivisions
lots of noise in BGC
Mike, Dumaguete is a place that I will consider, but I first want to check out Cebu.
First place should be Cebu and then start to explore the country
I enjoyed my time in Dumaguete/Valencia. Had a few brown outs. I do enjoy the waterfront. I think more pro’s than con’s.
Thanks for sharing
Mike, I'm moving into Dumaguete in early December, I was thinking of finding a single story house outside of city limits, most likely heading northwest up the coast but not to far. I need my internet access and food markets as the most important.
good luck find your new home
I shipped a 12 to 120v power inverter and my fil products router can be run on 100v-240v.
By the way, I'm using it right now. In Dauin Philippines
Not sure if I can get a power inverter for Philippines
12v - 220v
My iPhone dB app shows 32dB at 10PM at my home in a gated 55 community in Florida. When in the PH, I found one needs to stay on the 15th floor or above when staying in a city. On floor 10, one will still hear traffic noise as well as dogs barking. Once you get to the 20th floor the noise level is a 64dB vs 70dB on the 10th floor. On floor 40 you are at 58dB which is really quite for a city. Unfortunately, the only places you will find sky scrappers are in Manila, and Cebu in areas like Rockwell and BGC. We will be staying on the floor 42 at Park Suites BGC this December so will check the dB level during the day and at night. Oh ya and you forgot about those noisy roasters which thankfully are banned in BGC and Rockwell Manila.
thanks for sharing
Well, with the exception of the glorious roosters I could say the very same thing about my home town of Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. Matter in fact i just spoke about the nightly noise level with the janitor of my townhouse area and he complained a lot about it, too. He is Filipino! There is nothing better then being woken up at 2:00 in the morning because the neighbor goes on a joyride with his Harley-Davidson after shift or decides to wash his car, drive way, the road or whatever shit with his pressure washer etc.
thanks for sharing
It's a great place to live if your poor and and lazy THAT WHY IM HERE a person has to adapt
I'm not poor or lazy and I like it here in Dumaguete
@@mikesphilippineretirement I also like the outskirts of dumaguete
Honestly details thanks
welcome
Reminds me when I took a ferry from dumaguete to bohol a guy had a rooster at the terminal that wouldn’t shut up.
hahaha that is funny
@@mikesphilippineretirementHe made sure he doesn't miss the rooster sounds while on the boat.😅
Dogs, Roosters, everywhere in the P.I. That's why My Wife bangs the pans, at News Year. Never been to Dum but from what you showed it looked very clean.
We love it here
@@mikesphilippineretirement I have no regrets.
Good review Mike. I spent a little time in Duma never liked the place there are so many better options just exploring around the country. I never connect with expats I find them very interesting there is a heap of low life failures that live here so be very careful
most exoats are very good people
Was there last year, its a good place to visit, wish they would do something about the smell on the boulevard. I prefer Cebu, but will definetly visit Dumaguete again.
Thanks for sharing
Don’t burn your yard trash. Turn them into compost instead for your garden. Include kitchen scrape like fruit, veggie peelings etc.
Thanks for the tips!
Hi Mike , I live in Bacolod and I’ll just say Landers is not that great . Prices are high and the steaks are tough, the best thing about landers is the pizza in the food court. You can find some items that you are missing in large quantities but for me it’s to much to use in a reasonable time. S & R is a bit better on prices and product but still quite expensive I’m not sure it’s worth the trip maybe for some but I’m planning to move to Dumaguete and I don’t think I’ll be coming back to this nasty city for shopping.
Nice video 📸
Thanks for visiting
I didn't realize there was a curfew in Dumaguete I just got back from the Philippines for the first time I was walking around the Boulevard at 4am without a problem, do the Police just tell you go home if they see you?
4am is start of a new day not the end of a day.
If there is a curfew, it’s not enforced much. Just go to NorthPoint at 2am and see all the people hanging out at the seawall. Everyone is just having a fun time.
very honest helpfull info
welcome
Mike, what's a decent recommend area in the Philippines to live? How is Bacolod area. No Manila, sebu but somewhat quiet. I'm retired military and wishing to move
Mike if you had a lot of deliveries wouldn’t it be easier to have a P.O. Box or do these delivery services allow you to pickup at their office?
we do not have a lot 3 a month maybe we just deal with it
@@mikesphilippineretirement well that is one good thing about Amazon in USA they have electronic boxes around that you can pick up your deliveries from rather than waiting at your house.
Refilling prescriptions is the same in the U.S. I just had a prescription refilled. They were out. Gave me 10 pills of 90. When I got the remainder filled they gave me 80 pills instead of 90.
thanks for sharing
I live in Bacong. The biggest problem for me is the trash everywhere. Human waste and plastic trash is absolutely everywhere.
That’s one reason I prefer Thailand. No trash no noise.
@@tombkk1322And Thailand has culture.
The exact change thing is so annoying!
I went to get a ferry ride from Cebu to Nasipit, and went to by my ticket around 3pm. The ticket place had been open for hours by that point, and I had waited in a line for over an hour. Then, when I went to pay, they wanted me to pay with exact change.
If EVERYONE in front of me was paying with exact change, how do they not have any to make change with?!?
It's laziness. They don't want to expend a single iota of effort to make change, and expect all customers to have exact change to pay with.
thanks for sharing
Thanks for the medicine info.
welcome
How about Karaoke singing in bars or restaurants?
Does Dumaquete have any??
of course
IMHO..Dumaguete is way over crowed with people like most PH cities...Also as you said like most cities there,Noise Pollution-roosters,horns,loud mufflers,2 cycle engines,loud music and the list goes on...Yes the door hit in me in the ass on the way out...
see you!!
I live in England near the sea and we have LOUD seagulls squawking all day especially in the mornings. I would swap for roosters crowing anytime- much more melodious than seagulls!😂
Interesting!
You should swap the climate in UK for tropical Philippines for sure. I lived more than 50 years with cold and snow. This is nice. It takes quite some years to get bored of beautiful warm beaches and coconut palms.
@@davidmadison1087 I plan to. I'm going to retire in Davao city. 😁
Welcome to Asia, same issues in India
yes sir
Same issues in Mexico.
Hi Mike. The internet goes out when there's a brown out? What happened to batteries in the cell phones and laptops? Or is the problem at the internet service provider end, when the electricity goes out?
my modem is plugged in and no power is goes off. No problems with phone or pc
2 cycle motorbikes and roosters - Power issues - Stray dogs deal-breaker for me
Those 5 gallon containers are mineral water. I need purified water
That I do not have
Thank you for a good video! Its a lot of interessting nice things youre talking about! I will probably find a home in Dumaguete for 2025/2026 and looking forward to it! Its a small but nice City, i like the Quantity and Quality of the Restaurants in the City, also the Why Not place is pretty good for a few beers and play som pool, sing Karaoke.
But for sure the City is not for everyone!
Thanks for sharing
Thank you Mike... this is good to know. You do a good job and no drama.
thanks Michael
We will still go and see dumaguete because silliman university is one of the prestigious school in the whole Philippines. If it wont work, Iloilo is our choice.
both are good cities
Just listened to Gio on the same topics but from opposite viewpoints
thanks
Roosters and dogs, I can sleep thru. Videoke, not so much😢
hahaha did not want to talk about that