Nomadico

Size of Africa/Office Mandate Realities/Cheaper Mexico Flights

Nomadico issue #174

The Real Size of Africa

For reasons that would take too long to go into here, maps and globes often distort the size of some regions and make others seem smaller than they really are. As this graphic points out, it’s hard to fathom how huge the continent of Africa is until we see a visualization like this that overlays other countries onto it. You can fit China, the USA, India, and Iran on it like puzzle pieces and still have room for 21 more countries, including laying Turkey on top of Madagascar.

Headlines vs. Reality in Return-to-Office Mandates

The big companies forcing people back into the office are facing incredible headwinds, with widespread flouting of the rules and A-players testing how blatantly they can ignore the mandates while shopping for a new gig. Among the stats on this page: “While required office time increased by 12% from 2024 to 2025, actual office attendance only increased by 1-3%.” If you’re facing this kind of situation, see this list of 15 companies that are fully remote, though it’s just a start. There are plenty more with hundreds of employees. Try DynamiteJobs.com where there are zero listings that involve key cards, commutes, or cubicles.

Cheap Flight Hack for Mexico

From many destinations you can get a cheaper flight to where you’re going in Mexico if you are willing to fly to Cancun first and change airlines. That’s because the two largest Mexican budget airlines, Volaris and Viva Aerobus, fly from Cancun direct to dozens of other cities. Breeze Airways in the USA just added four weekly flights to Cancun and direct British service from Virgin Atlantic returns this month. This is on top of bargain flights from the likes of Frontier, Sun Country, Westjet, Flair, Wingo, and (for now anyway) Spirit. According to DirectFlights.com, “There are 124 airports with direct flights to Cancun from 27 different countries and 37 U.S. states.”

A Bad Week for Tight Layovers

Even though one party controls all three branches of the U.S. government, they’re not too keen on actually governing, so the whole federal system shut down at midnight on October 1 and isn’t paying its bills. Government workers do a lot of airport work and if this goes on for more than a day or two, expect increasingly frequent delays, long security lines, and flight troubles. (And this will not be a good time to argue with that TSA agent about the size of your liquids…)


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10/9/25
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