• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Exploring Uruguay

Expat & Travel Resource Guide

  • Blog
  • Cool Stuff
    • Uruguay Facts
    • Days of the Week In Spanish
    • Chart of Spanish Numbers
    • English to Uruguayan Spanish Translations for Herbs and Spices
    • Speciality Food Stores in Montevideo
    • Montevideo Ferias: Open Air Markets in Uruguay
  • Travel Information
    • Uruguay Featured Hotels
    • Carrasco International Airport Taxi Service
    • Airports In Uruguay
  • Expat Information
    • Uruguay Internet Service Providers
  • About
    • Disclosure
    • Privacy

living in uruguay

Share Your Experiences with Exploring Uruguay

January 20, 2010 by Brian

Sunset

Are you interested in sharing your experiences with Exploring Uruguay? If so, submit your story to us and you could be selected as a guest blogger for the Exploring Uruguay Blog.

Some questions to consider when writing your story:

  • Where are you from originally?
  • What brought you to Uruguay?
  • How long have you been in Uruguay?
  • What part of Uruguay do you live in?
  • What is your favorite thing about living in Uruguay?
  • What advice do you have to share with people considering a move to Uruguay?

We also welcome well-written restaurant reviews, attraction reviews and other articles that would be helpful for our readers. Pictures, especially for restaurant reviews, are helpful. If you have some you'd like us to consider for your article, let us know when you send us your submission.

To submit your story, click here, fill out your contact information and submit your story to us for review.

After we review your submission, we’ll contact you with any questions about your story and let you know if it has been accepted for publication.

The readers of the Exploring Uruguay Blog thank you in advance for your contributions!



Filed Under: Uruguay Blogs Tagged With: living in uruguay, uruguay blog

8 Months Later: Reflections on Living in Uruguay

January 13, 2010 by Brian

Bcz2

Chrystal’s Perspective:

Well, we’ve been in Uruguay for eight months now. The time has really flown by. In our four-month update, I wasn’t yet feeling too much homesickness. I think that started hitting me around six months in. I think the first six months were the honeymoon period, and then daily life set in once we were truly settled into a routine here.

For the most part, I love living in Uruguay, but there are definitely some things that I’m beginning to miss about the US.

I miss being able to go to the store and get anything that I want. Things that I took for granted like sea salt, coconut oil, agave nectar, hot sauce, etc. There are some of these more “unusual” things available in Uruguay, but either it’s a trek to get to the one store that carries them or the price is completely unreasonable.

Even though I very seldom drank soda in the US (we avoid high fructose corn syrup as much as possible), it would be nice to have a soda choice other than Coke, Pepsi, 7-Up, Sprite and Orange Fanta.

I miss being in a place where people know how to drive, or least know how to follow the rules of the road. It’s perfectly acceptable to need to be cautious when crossing the street. But when you have to watch yourself even on the sidewalk so you don’t get hit by a motorcycle delivery driver… that’s a little much.

I miss being around other English-speaking people. We have plenty of friends who are English-speaking expats (and native Uruguayans who speak English), so it’s not like we never speak English.

But it’s the simple things like conversing with the cashier at the market, or the waitress at the restaurant, or the other pregnant woman sitting next to me in the waiting room at the doctor’s office. Something I never even thought about before moving here.

And, of course, I miss my family. I think it was hardest especially around the holidays when it would have been so much fun to watch Zoë play with her cousins. This is the longest I have ever been away from family, and the first time for the holidays, so it’s a big change.

Some other things I miss:

  • True high-speed Internet. It’s not horrible here, but it’s not great either (this is mainly a factor since we work on the Internet).
  • Stores that have their hours posted – it seems stores open and close when they feel like it for the most part.
  • Shopping online without paying eye gouging shipping costs.
  • Screens on the windows and sliding glass doors – no one seems to have them here! Not fun trying to keep the bugs out.
  • Taco shops. Yes, we can cook great Mexican food, but there’s nothing like a Carne Asada burrito from the local taco shop.
  • Access to a lot of toddler-friendly activities.
  • Being able to go get my hair cut without worrying about ending up with an Uruguayan mullet (I haven’t had my hair cut since we moved here).
  • My monthly “me” time,” complete with coffee from Starbucks and a European Spa Pedicure.
  • The wide range of live music options available in San Diego.

However, there are plenty of things I appreciate about living in Uruguay. I appreciate the general kindness of people. Of course there is always the bad apple here or there, but people seem more willing to help you out here than in the US.

I appreciate all of the wonderful people who have come into our lives as a result of this move. We’ve had the fortune of meeting people from all around the world, which is such a wonderful, eye-opening experience.

I appreciate the relaxed lifestyle… the fact that there isn’t much of a rush to get anything done by a certain time (although that can be a challenge sometimes as well). Enjoying life, rather than working, seems to be the number one priority here.

I enjoy the fact that I don’t have to get into a car to do the simplest thing like picking up some milk at the store. All we have to do is get in the elevator, go downstairs, cross the street and we’re at the market. The fact that everything is so close and accessible has really helped us live a less sedentary life.

I love the fact that I’m not tethered to a cell phone. It’s a freeing feeling. And, I used to have a headache on the right side of my head frequently (the side I would talk on). Now, I don’t get those headaches anymore. Hmm.

I appreciate the fact that nothing seems to go to waste here. Soda and beer bottles are collected at the market to be returned to the factory so they can be reused. Anything that can be recycled or reused is “reclaimed” from the dumpsters by men (and families) driving horse carriages, who scour the city for anything of value. I even find that we reuse things a lot more now than we ever did. When buying things at the market, I even consider whether I could re-use the container… not something I would’ve ever done before.

I truly appreciate the life lessons I have learned by selling off all of our material possessions and moving to the other side of the globe. It has really taught me what is important in life, and the difference between and a want and a need. I never want to live a consumerist, materialistic lifestyle again.

A few other things I appreciate about living in Uruguay:

  • Affordable health care.
  • Parks built in every place where one could possibly fit.
  • Grass-fed beef (if you haven’t seen Food, Inc., watch it).
  • Farm fresh eggs (literally picked up off the ground the day we buy them).
  • Cheap taxis (even if I’m gripping my seat because of the erratic driving).
  • The ticket system most places have so you always know when it’s your turn, and no one can cut in front of you.
  • Watching Zoë learn two languages simultaneously.
  • Soon… the inexpensive, but good wine.
  • The new adventures that await us each day.

Well, I could go on and on, or I could just break it down this way. There are ups and downs to living in Uruguay. Nothing is perfect here, but nothing was perfect in the US either. It’s all about accepting the challenges and appreciating the gifts that this life changing experience has brought into our lives.

Bcz1  

Brian's Perspective:

We’ve been living Uruguay for 8 months now. My opinion of Uruguay has definitely changed since we’ve been here. I’m going to start off with the 2 things that bother me.

The poverty here is disheartening. We live on the 9th floor of an apartment here in Pocitos and looking down below we get a good view of everything.  Across the street from us is a dumpster and I can’t count how many times a day people go digging through it.

People digging through dumpsters to get stuff that can be recycled so they can make money doesn’t bother me.  Watching children dig through dumpsters for food does.

We have a garbage chute which we place most of our garbage down; but for larger items I take them out to the dumpster. I have to be careful when I open the dumpster and throw stuff in not to hit people inside of it. 

One instance that really stands out in front of me is I opened up the dumpster and was in mid motion to throw a heavy bag with broken glass in it and almost hit a little boy.  The boy couldn’t have been over 5 or 6 years old…  He was eating a black banana rind…

I was able to stop the bag from hitting the boy… And out of nowhere his mother who was 5’ and skin and bones came running around the side of the dumpster screaming at me (probably because she thought I was going to hit her child with the bag.) I put my hand up and told her “callete” (shut up) and I gave her a couple of hundred pesos I had in my pocket and told her “es para el comer” (it’s for him to eat.)  She went from rage to crying and thanking me instantly…

There’s a sister and brother who are about 10 and 7ish…  They hang out at night around the restaurants in the neighborhood begging for spare change.  The first time I saw this, I thought (I’m sure their parents are around the corner putting them up to begging)… but, here’s 20 pesos anyway.  I was picking up food to take it back to our apartment… When I got the food back to our apartment, I realized I needed to run to the little market across the street…  That’s when I saw the 2 kids in the market with a handful of change trying to decide what to buy to eat.  I gave them 500 pesos so they could eat well that night… and I help them out every time I see them. 

The sad part is… these aren’t isolated incidents.  The part that is even worse (in my opinion) is how dismissive and mean so many people are when they are walking by.  I understand you can’t help everyone…  But when a child is asking for spare change for food and I watch people yell at them to get them away and call them “planchas”, it enrages me… they’re just kids.  If you can’t or won’t help them, say “I’m sorry but not today.”

For Uruguay being so accepting of other people; a lot are not very tolerant of their own.

The other thing that bothers me about Uruguay on a much lesser scale is people littering. People tend to throw a lot of trash on the sidewalks and in the streets.  And they don’t pick up after their dogs. Not picking up after their dogs is a lot worse than throwing a cup or food wrapper from McDonalds on the sidewalk…  I’d much rather step on a wrapper than the other.  But still, there are dumpsters on pretty much every street corner and plastic bags are abundant here.

Now on a lighter side…  People here have been great to us.  We’ve gotten to know the local shopkeepers, service people and other people who live around us.  There are a lot of good hardworking people here who bust their ass all day and are proud of the work they’ve done.  They don’t bitch or complain about it… they just do it…  And at the end of the day they enjoy a beer or a bowl and more importantly… enjoy life.

My Spanish has improved drastically since we arrived.  I can have a conversation in Spanish.  I still have trouble with pronunciation and confusing tenses, but I try to have as many conversations in Spanish as I can.  I have conversations with our porter Lillian…  we’ve come to an understanding…  Zoë absolutely loves her; but loves her daughter even more.

The city has started to come alive with summer being here.  The fireworks and celebration at Christmas and New Years was completely amazing.  I’m looking forward to Carnival.  Kaylee will be arriving at the beginning of Carnival and I know Zoë will have a great time with it.  Everyone we’ve talked to said that Carnival in Uruguay goes on for an entire month and it’s the biggest and best Carnival in the world…  Modesty was left out.

We’ve got out of the city more… and can attest that the transportation system here is a million times better than the transportation system in Southern California…  The buses here are more comfortable than seats on an airplane… 

The Rambla is an amazing feature of the city all on it’s own.  The Rambla is a boardwalk that runs along the coast around Montevideo…  It’s not uncommon to see hundreds of people out there every day in the late afternoon enjoying and sharing their mate (tea which I just can’t seem to get the taste for)… or sharing a beer (they come in liters here)…  The Rambla is as much as a part of culture here as anything… 

The beach here in Pocitos fills up during the week and is a sea of people on the weekend…  The city is slow right now, because to our understanding this is holiday time and everyone has left the city…   I was out in Centro yesterday and you could have fooled me… 

When it’s below 80F people here seem to be covered to their neck trying to stay warm…  But since it’s warmed up; I have seen a lot of skin…  I’m not a fan of seeing dudes in speedos… Women here don’t seem to be as modest as they are in the US… 

I’m happy summer is here… I’m happy it’s warm…  All in all our experience here in Uruguay has been great…  The 2 things that have made our stay here amazing is; the people we’ve met from here and around the world… and the freedoms in the country that are unheard of in the US.

We’ve made some new friends from south of the equator, but also from the other side of the world…  Our new friends from New Zealand are really great people…  New Zealand is now on the map of one of the places we will go to visit.  There are some great North Americans who are here and are wonderful and knowing them has improved our lives… Some of our Canadian friends are heading to the US (the lives of the people they meet in the US will improve)… Our favorite Mormons are heading to Thailand; I’m excited for them… what an adventure… And, our friend Ceci is just an all around amazing person

The long and short of it is… I’m glad we came here…



Filed Under: Culture Tagged With: living in uruguay

4 Months Later: Reflections on Living in Uruguay

September 21, 2009 by Brian

Brian’s Perspective:

So we’ve been living in Uruguay for just over 4 months now. We’ve had several people ask us about our views of Uruguay now that we’ve been here and it’s a little more than a first impression.

From my perspective, Uruguay has surpassed my expectations from anything that I could have imagined. There is very little on the web about Uruguay. We came here blind. Meaning, we never visited, we just took the information we had in hand and moved here.

The city of Montevideo is beautiful. From the parts of the US I’ve lived in, you never see architecture like you do here. There are some amazingly beautiful old buildings. There are some run down areas too.  The sidewalks may not be even, but they carry a lot of character… being that every tile was hand laid.

The city is very modern from what I was expecting. There are buses and taxis everywhere. You can buy a lot of US goods down here… It’s very cosmopolitan. It’s funny that you see a lot of TV stars from the US on advertisements down here… Jack from Lost advertising cologne… The hot Desperate Housewives chick advertising hair products, it’s kind of random.

The malls here are just like the malls in the US, except the food courts here tend to have better restaurants… but they do have McDonald’s and Burger King here, they are a plague on the world.

The movie theaters play the same movies that are being played in the US, except it’s a fraction of the price to attend a movie in Uruguay (U$S 5 or less for a matinee).

The bars here are similar to the bars in the US, except they are college town prices… A beer may be U$S 4, but it’s a liter of beer… I have yet to see Captain Morgan in Uruguay, but hey… no worries.

One huge difference is that bars don’t close in Montevideo until the last person leaves… It’s amazing how you can lose track of time.  It’s kind of funny to be drinking and having a good time, then look out the window and see that it’s sunny outside.

The great thing is, smoking isn’t allowed in most bars here… Well, it’s not allowed in any bars, but there are still bars that people smoke in… The game of pool is played differently here, I’ve played several times, but can’t keep track of the rules… even though slop trumps about everything, I can’t seem to win.

Montevideo is only about 1.5 million people, but it feels a lot smaller.  Not because it is, but because all of the people here are very warm and welcoming. We have met a ton of absolutely wonderful people since we have arrived in Uruguay. Actually, there is a lot of city crammed into a small area here… It’s no more than a U$S 5-6 cab ride from one side of Montevideo to the other.

What I’ve found out about the Uruguayans I’ve met since I’ve been here is… they are some of the most genuine people I’ve met.  Living all up and down the west coast of the US, if I learned anything it was… If someone is nice to you, it’s because they want something. If you trust someone, they will take advantage of you.

Uruguayans (for the most part) remind me of people from my hometown of Richmond, Missouri, USA (population just under 6K). Just like in my hometown, there have been a couple of bad apples we’ve run across, but it’s not the norm. Also like in my hometown, people here in our neighborhood get to know the regulars and everybody knows everybody.

There are expats here… We hang out with some of them… I really like all of the Canadian expats I’ve met… Canadians are just rad people in general, ey… We don’t focus our lives around hanging out with people from the north… It’s good to have some interaction, but we like hanging out with Uruguayans… It also helps with our language.

Spanish here is different…  Any Uruguayan will tell you it’s the best and most proper Spanish in the whole world. But it’s difficult.  Understanding it is becoming easier, they speak it at 100mph… I find my favorite phrase to be “por favor hable mas lento” (please speak slower).

When the language is slowed down, I get the majority of what people are saying. But when it comes to me speaking Spanish… I think I say it right, and then they look at me like I’m an idiot.

Our friends Ali and Gerardo have been great in helping us learn how to say things properly… But it’s difficult with the rise and fall of the language and not stressing every syllable… I can have basic conversations, but nothing substantial yet… Give me 6 more months; I’ll have this language down.

Note to my porters: When you shut the doors to the elevator and I start to go up; I do hear and understand what you are saying… It’s not nice…

There is petty crime here. It’s strange to see bars on the windows of every place… everywhere… When we first arrived in Uruguay, it took a little getting used to. But it’s not even something I notice anymore…  We rarely see or hear cops with their lights and sirens on.  We hear the occasional ambulance… But, it’s nothing compared to the sirens we would hear in San Diego.

One thing I do notice is the poverty. It’s not like the poverty in the US.  There are people who ride around on their horse and buggies and dumpster dive in every dumpster… They collect all of the recyclables and whatever else can fetch some cash. If there’s food that’s edible, they eat that too. A lot of them have their kids with them. We live in a very nice neighborhood… but I see kids eating out of dumpsters… It’s sad, but it is what it is.

We moved down at the beginning of winter.  One thing I learned… When you move from the Northern Hemisphere to the Southern Hemisphere at the end of winter… you get a year of winter… From what we’ve been told, this has been an unusually cold winter (so much for global warming), but it really hasn’t been that bad… No ice, snow, sleet, hail or freezing rain… It’s actually only snowed in Uruguay 7 times in the past 100 years. Tornados, hurricanes and earthquakes are unheard of here. There’s only been 1 hurricane in recorded history.  The winter in Uruguay is just like the winter in San Diego, but it’s about 10-15 degrees colder. But, it’s still winter.

I definitely like the countryside a lot better than the city. We are definitely looking forward to our new baby getting here so we can bounce out of the city. We are either going to move East along the coast towards Piriapolis or East of Punta del Este… or to the interior…  We’ll figure it out when the time comes.

This is the first time I’ve lived in an apartment that was taller than 2 stories (we live on the 9th floor). And it’s been years since I’ve lived in an apartment, but I do like having a porter. Luckily the majority of buildings here are made of concrete and brick, so we don’t have very much neighbor noise… but there is street noise.

Where we live, everything we could possibly need is within a 5-block radius. The park, feria, grocery store, mall, dry cleaners, laundry, butcher, ice cream shop, pharmacy, hardware stores, photo shop, sporting goods stores, banks, restaurants, “clubs” gyms, tennis courts, beach and pretty much everything else you can think of…

Chrystal absolutely hates it when I jump up and down in the elevator, but Zoë absolutely loves it… Yes, my daughter has me wrapped… I jump up and down like it’s the cool thing to do.

My view and perspective of Uruguay since I arrived has gotten better.  If you’ve been reading our blogs, you know I was back in the US for a quick bout about a month ago. Through all of the haze (smog), the rules and just overall feel of the US… I’m glad to call Uruguay my new home.

Chrystal’s Perspective:

Well, we’ve officially been living in Uruguay for four months now. The time has flown by so fast! But, I guess that’s a good thing because it means I’m acclimating to life here.

Living in Uruguay is quite different from living in San Diego. Before now, I had never lived outside of Southern California. I had traveled around the US and outside the country, but never for longer than 6 weeks. So it has been very interesting to observe and reflect on the cultural and lifestyle differences and how it affects me.

I think my opinion to this point has really been shaped by the fact that I have been pregnant pretty much the whole time we’ve been here. Being pregnant seems to limit (or at least alter) your experiences to some extent. But, I have plenty of time to experience all that Uruguay has to offer.

Overall, I really like Uruguay and I am very pleased with what I have experienced so far. I have tried my best to embrace the culture, and I think that has made my acclimation to life here a little easier. I think if you resist too much, or you try really hard to compare everything to how your former life was, you’re cheating yourself out of the real experience of living abroad.

Not speaking the language fluently has been my biggest barrier to fully embracing life here. I know enough to get around – to go to the market or feria, to order my meals or to take a taxi. But, I’m not fluent enough to have a conversation with a non-English speaking native. Fortunately (and unfortunately), a lot of people do speak English here, so there is plenty of opportunity for social interaction.

The people here are extremely friendly and helpful, and more genuine than I could have imagined. We always talk about how if someone is nice to you in the States, you better wonder what they want from you. It’s not like that here. People are genuinely friendly and helpful because that’s who they are. They don’t want anything in return. It’s refreshing.

For a capital city, Montevideo is very nice. I’ve never lived in a big city before now. Although San Diego has an impressive population, it’s pretty spread out and you don’t feel too much like you’re living on top of one another, for the most part. It’s a big city with a small town feel. Since over half of the country’s population lives in Montevideo, you definitely get the big city feel here (of course not compared to cities like New York or Buenos Aires).

One thing I do like about the city’s layout is that everywhere there is space for a park, a park is built even if it’s a tiny little park with a small patch of grass and one bench. There’s a big park with a playground only two blocks away from our apartment. It’s great because we can  walk over any time. Zoë loves it – she is such social butterfly. She just loves being around the other kids. It took me a bit to adjust to the fact that safety standards on the playground equipment aren’t as high here. But, she has fun and it’s plenty safe enough, so we love going over there often (when it’s not raining).

Our apartment is on one of the main streets in Pocitos, so I can hear traffic (and blaring car horns) all day from our living room. And, if it’s a warm day out, the gym across the street (gyms are aptly called “clubs” in Uruguay) opens it’s windows and we get serenaded with a strange assortment of music ranging from techno to Britney Spears to Michael Jackson blaring out of the “club’s” windows. So, if we had it to do again, I think we may have selected an apartment on a quieter street.

In general, there are a lot of people everywhere and people drive like maniacs. For such a laid back, relaxed people, you wouldn’t know it from the driving style here. I have never experienced anything like it. I would just assume walk 2 miles before getting in a taxi. But that’s okay. I love the fact that I can walk to pretty much anywhere I need to go. The only place I regularly take a taxi is to my prenatal doctor’s appointments.

Speaking of which, I have found the medical care to be just as good as it was in San Diego so far. They don’t keep you sitting around waiting all day for your appointment and it seems like the doctor isn’t in a rush to get you out the door once you’re in either. If you need a test (like an ultrasound), they see you in a reasonable time. I never feel like I’m going to need to spend an entire day at the hospital for something minor like I did in San Diego. I hope that this impression continues when Kaylee is born.

Even though I have enjoyed the experience of living in a capital city, I’m really looking forward to moving out of Montevideo once Kaylee is born. Whether it’s down the coast toward Piriapolis or to the interior of the country, it will be nice to live somewhere a little quieter and slower, since that was the intent of leaving the States in the first place.

I love being able to get our fruits and vegetables at the feria. In San Diego, it would’ve been necessary to get in the car and drive to the farmer’s market. It’s nice to be able to walk a block and half and have everything we need right there. However, I think I’m going to love when we can have our own garden, and grow our own fruits and vegetables, even better.

Living in Uruguay, I’ve really come to enjoy the art of cooking from scratch even more than I already did. It came as a necessity since you can’t buy a lot of prepared or processed foods here like you can in the States. I consider that a good thing. We don’t need to be putting that processed junk into our bodies. I’ve actually never felt better.

Even though I love it here, I am definitely homesick at times. This is the longest I have ever been away from my family (my entire family lives in San Diego – parents, siblings, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, niece, nephew… you get the picture). That has definitely been hard on me. Especially since most of my family isn’t very supportive of our move.

But, I have to do what’s best for me. And right now, that’s living in Uruguay. Hopefully my family will come around. Several family members are talking about coming to visit once Kaylee is born. So, hopefully once they see that Montevideo is an urban, modern city (with an old time charm), they’ll realize that I’m really not living in a mud hut in some obscure African country drinking Kool Aid. ☺

But seriously, I do miss my family at times and that has been the hardest transition for me. However, I know that I couldn’t live the same lifestyle in the US that we are living in Uruguay. And this is the lifestyle I want to live.

Filed Under: Culture, Family Tagged With: living in uruguay, montevideo, piriapolis, uruguay

Primary Sidebar

Blog Topics

Copyright © 2026 · News Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in