Barber goes on the road and keeps working during pandemic

The coronavirus pandemic closed one door for a 27-year-old Mexico City barber but opened another – that of a Volkswagen Kombi.

Calixto, as the barber is known, found himself unemployed at the start of the pandemic because the barber shops where he worked were forced to close.

Soon after, while watching videos of people who had turned vans into homes, he got the idea of taking his haircutting skills on the road.

To make his idea reality, Calixto sold some of his possessions and used the proceeds to buy a 1985 VW Kombi, which he converted into a mobile barber shop.

He then started offering hair appointments across the capital’s south side right outside customers’ homes, a strategy that proved successful given that so many people were sheltering in place.

Calixto the barber at work in his VW van.
Calixto the barber at work in his VW van.

Calixto only ever has one customer at a time in his Kombi, reducing the risk of coronavirus transmission, and follows a range of other health measures to prevent the virus’s spread.

In addition to supporting himself, the barber has used some of his earnings to buy essentials for people struggling to get by during the tough economic times precipitated by the pandemic.

Calixto and his kombi – known as the CalixCombi – have built up quite a following on social media. The CalixCombi Instagram account has almost 7,000 followers and its Facebook page has just under 2,000.

“Original concept and very good service, highly recommended,” one happy customer wrote on Facebook. “For a great cut don’t hesitate to contact Calixto and the CalixCombi,” said another.

With reports from El Universal 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

MND Local: San Miguel de Allende news roundup

0
A new Waldorf Astoria property is being built San Miguel de Allende, and the city's university just got a new viticultural lab.

Fish fraud on the rise: Over one-third of seafood sold in Mexico isn’t what it claims to be

7
A new report by the globally respected ocean conservation group Oceana found that 38% of 1,262 fish and seafood samples collected in restaurants and markets in the 10 largest Mexican cities were mislabeled or sold fraudulently — nearly double the global average.

Was someone really trying to tan on the National Palace?

0
A viral video taken from Mexico City's Zócalo, which faces the National Palace, showed a young woman sitting near a palace window with her bare legs outstretched. Was she for real?
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity