Bus Across Mexico Hits 15th Spot On Kindle Best Seller List!

Mexico Bus Schedules
Different names for payday loans Vitel Payday Complete honesty in dealings

site contributor

Bus Across Mexico, The Book On Mexico Bus Travel™, can save you time and money.

It’s bargain priced at $4.99 for the Kindle. If you don’t have a Kindle, Amazon has a free download of a Kindle reader for your iPhone, iPod, iPad, Blackberry, Android devices, PC and Mac.

Get your Kindle book now at
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004G091GE
This is the only guide that takes the mystery out of the Mexico bus system. Instead of paying for an expensive rental car (where will you park it), or wasting time in airport security lines, you can hop on buses to Puerto Vallarta, Cancun, Oaxaca, San Miguel de Allende, and many other places across Mexico.

The bus system, largest in the world with almost 800 bus companies, is the Mexico’s favorite form of transportation. That’s because Mexico does not have an interstate highway system like the U.S., or a Eurail train system like Europe.

Many Mexico business executives (yes, there are some millionaires down there) will leave their luxury cars at home and use an overnight bus for distant conferences. The bus system is Mexico’s favorite form of transportation because of the lack of a super highway system, and the high cost of air travel (taxes will almost double the air fare).

Mexicans use the extensive bus system to get to outlying markets because the frequent buses are cheap.

But most tourists are unaware of Mexico’s bus system. That’s because the major guidebooks have little bus information and instead focus on air travel and expensive rental cars. Even the major bus companies offer scanty information about their services.

Did you know that the major bus companies offer packages that include transportation and hotels, just like the airlines?

Bus Across Mexico peels back the layers of confusion and mis-information about bus travel so you can use buses to get into every nook and cranny of the country.

This information will save you time and money on your Mexico vacation.

Here are some of the need-to-know things you can use from your first day in Mexico:

- The differences in the available classes of bus service. Mexico has 5 bus classes, ranging from executive class with airline business class seats and free refreshments, to the lowly VW vans scurrying through village streets. Bus Across Mexico solve your problem of which bus to choose.

- Mexico maps to guide you across the regions and cities. Included are maps of Mexico City, San Miguel de Allende, the Yucatan, Oaxaca, Puerto Vallarta, Queretaro, Mazatlan, and many others.

- Bus Across Mexico is the only guide with route maps for the major bus companies, including Primera Plus, Elite, Turistar, Pullman, Omnibus de Mexico, ADO, Herradura de Plata, Futura, Tufesa, Transportes del Norte, and others. There are also local bus routes for Puerto Vallarta, Mazatlan, Cancun, and several other cities.

- Pronunciation guide for cities and towns. This will help you in purchasing your bus tickets.

Did you know Mexico has the largest market in North America, including the United States and Canada?
Bus Across Mexico has several pages devoted to local markets where you can get bargain prices on native crafts. Markets are listed state by state all across Mexico

Get your Kindle copy at
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004G091GE

Amazon also has the paperback edition.

real mexico bus travel experiences

From around the web check out these bus travel experiences in Mexico.

  • travel journal « no room for hipsters

    First, we learned it takes 30 hours to cross Mexico by bus and that, on the ADO line, you can get off twice. You should make the stops count, and next time we’ll stop longer than 2 hours in Vera Cruz. We could have got off more than …

    http://noroomforhipsters.wordpress.com/

  • Bus2Antarctica: Oh Mexico – Intelligent Travel Blog

    And that, my friends, is how a 23-hour bus ride turned into something like a 48-hour bus ride. I confess that I rode the entire length of Mexico in one fell swoop, which is probably some sort of travel sin, but let me assure you, …

    http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/intelligenttravel/2008/10/strange-planet-water-to-wine.html

  • My Mexico (and Yours): Mexican Bus Ride

    It should be noted that since I went from Veracruz to Merida by train as a boy, almost all rail travel has ceased in Mexico, the two exceptions being the Copper Canyon trip and the “Tequila Express” out of of Guadalajara, …

    http://mymexicoandyours.blogspot.com/

  • Get on the bus!

    Taking the bus is not a very big deal, but considering how popular bus travel is here in Mexico, I thought it might make for an interesting blog topic. I have never taken a Greyhound or other bus in the US I know people who have, …

    http://sloaneandpuffy.com/

  • Free riding the roads of Mexico : Mexico Travel

    On the road, the most intimidating of these drivers is the long distance bus driver who, I am sure, classifies himself somewhat of a pilot, lower in actual altitude but elevated in attitude. However once it gets its steam up, the bus …

    http://www.mexconnect.com/?q=Save+Us+From+Berlusconi

  • Bus Adventures Story: Tomahawk in Hermosillo Mexico | digihitch.com

    Travel Story in Bus Adventures from Mexico submitted by pathfindertom. Original and reprinted stories about hitchhiking, backpacking and road culture.

    http://www.digihitch.com/

  • Pole Saws » A Guide to Cancun and the Riviera Maya, Mexico

    Best coaches when I was there were plush tour bus travel more ADO. Really niceThe buses, which cost more but worth it. If you are making calls in Mexico, and buy a phone card from any phone. Can be used to call internationally. …

    http://polesaws.ndesignsblog.com/

  • Indiana Shaw & the temples of Palenque – Palenque, Mexico Travel Blog

    The adventure to Palenque started on Wednesday morning when I said Adios to my Mexican family and headed to the market to pick up my jeans (80c for a patched up behind…), then hopped in a taxi and headed for the bus station. …

    http://www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-entries/sandgroper/1/1261595283/tpod.html

  • Vanes sa Barrington: Mexico 2: Taxco

    When I was in Mexico in January, I stayed in Cuernavaca pretty much the whole time studying Spanish during the week. The weekends were mostly free for day trips and wandering around the city. One day I took a bus…

    http://vanessabarrington.typepad.com/vanessa_barrington/

  • Erin and Owen’s Ultimate Adventure: Mexican Busses…From the …

    This will save you about an hour of travel time, and money. The fare cost $30 pesos per person (about $3canadian) and the taxi from San Antonio to San Agustinillo cost $50 pesos. Some notes on bus travel in Mexico: …

    http://erin-owen.blogspot.com/

  • Last Day – Teotihuacan, Mexico Travel Blog

    Whatever the description we made our way with some small level of faffing, by public bus, the 25 miles north of Mexico City to the vast ruins of Teotihuacan, snubbing the hostels 50 dollar trip and saving ourselves 45 dollars each in …

    http://www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-entries/jeznkez/3/1256666423/tpod.html

  • Bus2Antarctica: Border Crossing – Intelligent Travel Blog

    All the other passengers were asleep but I jumped off the bus to stretch and have a look around. What I saw were the still-burning coals of a fire, and a tiny food stand where my Mexican bus driver was getting something to drink. …

    http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/intelligenttravel/

  • The Road Less Traveled: Connecting the Dots

    We now have bus passes and no longer have to frantically search for change for the bus. Last year when we were in Cuenca we did most of our food shopping at SuperMaxi. Now we use SuperMaxi for canned goods, staples and items we can’t find … We ended up spending the evening talking with a Canadian couple who lived in Mexico and who were renting in Cuenca for a month. It was very interesting to compare living in Mexico to living in Ecuador. They have lived in Mexico for …

    http://adventureyes.blogspot.com/

  • Mexico City & San Miguel de Allende

    Wow bus travel in Mexico is way cool and feels very secure. We get our security check for our onboard luggage and our luggage underneath is tagged and we are given corresponding numbered tickets to cross check them with for collection …

    http://www.travelblog.org/

  • Local bus routes in San Miguel de Allende.

    local bus routes in San Miguel de Allende


    R-1 San Martin – Adolfo Lopes Mateos
    san-martin_adolfo-lopes-mateos

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    12 – Las Monjas
    13 – San Antonio Abad
    14 – Puente de Guanajuato
    15 – Arevalo
    16 – Purisima
    17 – El Rastro
    18 – Central de Autobuses
    19 – Entonque del Encuentro – (Connection to R-2 R-3 R-10)
    20 – Estacion del Ferrocarril
    22 – Mercado de San Juan de Dios
    23 – El Parian
    24 – Garibaldi
    25 – DIF
    26 – Piedra Parada
    27 – Plazuela San Felipe
    28 – Plazuela Zaragoza – (Connection to R-4 R-5 R-6 R-7 R-8 R-9)
    29 – Amado Nervo
    30 – Punete del Burro
    31 – El Porton
    32 – Mercado de Artesanias
    36 – Juan de Dios Peza
    61 – Alamedas – (Connection to R-3)
    62 – Fray Pedro de Gante
    64 – Calle Guadalupe
    65 – La Cruz


    R-2 CBTIS – UTNG
    cbtis_utng

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    4 – El Pipila – (Connection to R-6 R-10)
    14 – Puente de Guanajuato
    15 – Arevalo
    16 – Purisima
    17 – El Rastro
    18 – Central de Autobuses
    19 – Entonque del Encuentro – (Connection to R-1 R-3 R-10)
    22 – Mercado de San Juan de Dios
    23 – El Parian
    24 – Garibaldi
    29 – Amado Nervo
    30 – Punete del Burro
    31 – El Porton
    33 – Colegio Militar
    34 – Fabrica la Aurora
    35 – Infonavit Allende
    36 – Juan de Dios Peza
    37 – Edificio Administrativo MPA
    38 – Ministerio Publico
    39 – Juzgados
    40 – Placita
    41 – Infonavit La Luz
    42 – Jose Landeta
    44 – Glorieta Allende – (Connection to R-7 R-8 R-9)
    54 – La luciernaga
    55 – Hacienda El Caracol
    56 – Las Canteras
    57 – La Paloma
    58 – Infonavit Malanquin
    68 – Nueva Pantoja
    69 – UTNG


    R-3 Insurgentes – UTNG
    insurgentes_utng

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    4 – El Pipila – (Connection to R-6 R-10)
    19 – Entonque del Encuentro – (Connection to R-1 R-2 R-10)
    35 – Infonavit Allende
    37 – Edificio Administrativo MPA
    38 – Ministerio Publico
    39 – Juzgados
    40 – Placita
    41 – Infonavit La Luz
    42 – Jose Landeta
    44 – Glorieta Allende – (Connection to R-7 R-8 R-9)
    54 – La luciernaga
    55 – Hacienda El Caracol
    56 – Las Canteras
    57 – La Paloma
    58 – Infonavit Malanquin
    59 – Colosio
    60 – Providencia
    61 – Alamedas – (Connection to R-1)
    62 – Fray Pedro de Gante
    63 – Las Ventanas
    68 – Nueva Pantoja
    69 – UTNG


    R-4 Luis Donaldo Colosio – San Antonio
    Luis-Donaldo_Colosio-San-Antonio

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    8 – Stirling Dikinson – (Connection to R-6)
    9 – El Cardo
    10 – Instituto Allende
    11 – La Aldea
    12 – Las Monjas
    13 – San Antonio Abad
    14 – Puente de Guanajuato
    15 – Arevalo
    21 – San Juan de Dios
    22 – Mercado de San Juan de Dios
    23 – El Parian
    25 – DIF
    26 – Piedra Parada
    27 – Plazuela San Felipe
    28 – Plazuela Zaragoza – (Connection to R-1 R-5 R-6 R-7 R-8 R-9)
    59 – Colosio – (Connection to R-3)
    66 – 28 de Abril
    67 – Sabino
    68 – Nueva Pantoja


    R-5 Malanquin – Centro
    malanquin_centro

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    12 – Las Monjas
    13 – San Antonio Abad
    14 – Puente de Guanajuato
    15 – Arevalo
    16 – Purisima
    17 – El Rastro
    18 – Central de Autobuses
    19 – Entonque del Encuentro – (Connection to R-2 R-3 R-10)
    22 – Mercado de San Juan de Dios
    23 – El Parian
    25 – DIF
    26 – Piedra Parada
    27 – Plazuela San Felipe
    28 – Plazuela Zaragoza – (Connection to R-1 R-4 R-6 R-7 R-8 R-9)
    58 – Infonavit Malanquin – (Connection to R-2 R-3)


    R-6 San Luis Rey – Ejido Don Diego
    San-Luis-Rey_Ejido-de-Don-Diego

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    1 – Los Frayles
    2 – Unidad Deportiva
    3 – Centro de Salud
    4 – El Pipila – (Connection to R-2 R-3)
    5 – Torres Landa
    6 – Panteon Guadalupe
    7 – 5 de Mayo
    8 – Stirling Dikinson
    9 – El Cardo
    10 – Instituto Allende – (Connection to R-4)
    11 – La Aldea
    12 – Las Monjas – (Connection to R-1 R-10)
    21 – San Juan de Dios
    25 – DIF
    26 – Piedra Parada
    27 – Plazuela San Felipe
    28 – Plazuela Zaragoza – (Connection to R-1 R-4 R-5 R-7 R-8 R-9)
    31 – El Porton
    32 – Mercado de Artesanias
    33 – Colegio Militar
    34 – Fabrica la Aurora – (Connection to R-3)
    35 – Infonavit Allende


    R-7 Allende – Jardines II
    Allende Jardines

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    7 – 5 de Mayo
    8 – Stirling Dikinson
    9 – El Cardo
    10 – Instituto Allende – (Connection to R-4)
    11 – La Aldea
    12 – Las Monjas – (Connection to R-1 R-10)
    21 – San Juan de Dios
    25 – DIF
    26 – Piedra Parada
    27 – Plazuela San Felipe
    28 – Plazuela Zaragoza – (Connection to R-1 R-4 R-5 R-6 R-8 R-9)
    37 – Edificio Administrativo MPA
    38 – Ministerio Publico
    39 – Juzgados
    40 – Placita
    41 – Infonavit La Luz
    42 – Jose Landeta
    44 – Glorieta Allende – (Connection to R-2 R-3)
    45 – Arco del Atascadero
    46 – Barrio de la Palmita
    47 – Mexico Creo Ti
    48 – El Cedro
    49 – Mirador
    50 – La Ermita
    51 – Santo Domingo
    52 – Murillo
    53 – Plaza Civica – (Connection to R-1 R-4 R-5 R-6 R-8 R-9)
    57 – La Paloma


    R-8 UTNG – Centro
    utng_centro

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    37 – Edificio Administrativo MPA
    38 – Ministerio Publico
    39 – Juzgados
    40 – Placita
    41 – Infonavit La Luz
    42 – Jose Landeta
    43 – Hospital general
    44 – Glorieta Allende – (Connection to R-2 R-3)
    45 – Arco del Atascadero
    46 – Barrio de la Palmita
    47 – Mexico Creo Ti
    48 – El Cedro
    49 – Mirador
    50 – La Ermita
    51 – Santo Domingo
    52 – Murillo
    53 – Plaza Civica – (Connection to R-1 R-4 R-5 R-6 R-7 R-9)
    69 – UTNG


    R-9 Jardiens II – Centro
    jardiens_centro

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    37 – Edificio Administrativo MPA
    38 – Ministerio Publico
    39 – Juzgados
    40 – Placita
    41 – Infonavit La Luz
    42 – Jose Landeta
    44 – Glorieta Allende – (Connection to R-2 R-3)
    45 – Arco del Atascadero
    46 – Barrio de la Palmita
    47 – Mexico Creo Ti
    48 – El Cedro
    49 – Mirador
    50 – La Ermita
    51 – Santo Domingo
    52 – Murillo
    53 – Plaza Civica – (Connection to R-1 R-4 R-5 R-6 R-7 R-8)


    R-10 Malanquin – Centro
    malanquin_centro2

    Nombre de Parada (bus stop name)

    4 – El Pipila – (Connection to R-2 R-3 R-6)
    5 – Torres Landa
    6 – Panteon Guadalupe
    7 – 5 de Mayo
    8 – Stirling Dikinson
    9 – El Cardo
    10 – Instituto Allende – (Connection to R-4)
    11 – La Aldea
    12 – Las Monjas
    13 – San Antonio Abad
    14 – Puente de Guanajuato – (Connection to R-2)
    15 – Arevalo
    16 – Purisima
    17 – El Rastro
    18 – Central de Autobuses
    19 – Entonque del Encuentro – (Connection to R-1 R-2 R-3 R-5)
    58 – Infonavit Malanquin


    Sun and Sand in the Yucatan and Belize


    This year we scheduled our trips so that we would be in Ottawa over Christmas and early January to await the birth of a new grandson. Roman Auerbach was born January 6, 2007 to our daughter Erica and Andrew Auerbach. We stayed around for a few weeks to help out with the new baby and his big brother Atticus, then we took off for seven weeks in the warmer climates of Mexico and Belize. The plan was to take advantage of the good airfares to Cancun and re-explore the Yucatan and Belize. As the saying goes, the best laid plans of mice and men often go awry.

    Puerto Morelos Leaning Lighthouse

    Puerto Morelos Leaning Lighthouse

    We were at the Ottawa airport at 5 AM on February 8, 2007 ready to check into our 7 AM Delta Airlines flight to Cancun via Atlanta. The check-in clerk seemed a bit perplexed by our reservation and called over another employee. We were told the reservation had been cancelled. We were shocked. We had found a great rate from a reseller on the internet and had the printout with all the information. Something about a duplicate reservation, causing a cancellation was mentioned but we had never been notified. Ray had mentioned that the charge had never gone through on our credit card, but we had not been concerned. At least one of our previous trips had not been charged until after we had departed. We should have checked our reservation more closely but we didn’t.

    What were our options? Delta told us there were seats on both planes and but the price, including taxes was $1900 each! That was too rich for our pockets. We said no thank you and left. Our next call was to the Air Canada reservation desk in the airport. They could give us flights to Cancun leaving at 8 AM via Toronto and the price was a total of about $1000 each. That sounded great, although it was somewhat more than our “bargain” fare we thought we had bought. As well, we had $200 vouchers from Air Canada that we had received as an incentive for agreeing to be bumped on our return flight from Calgary just a few days before. We took their offer and off we went. The lesson we learned is that when you reserve with a reseller over the internet, always look for the ticket number as well as the reservation number on your notification and confirm with the airline that they have your reservation.

    Sian Kaan Laguna

    Sian Kaan Laguna

    We started our trip this year in Puerto Morelos, then returned for the last five days before flying home. This was a favourite beach destination last year and we liked it even better this year. Puerto Morelos is only 30 km south of Cancun but it has not experienced the over-development of Cancun. It is a thriving fishing village with a beautiful, clean white coral sand beach and the protected coral reef 600 M offshore. Even more appealing to us was the discovery of small underwater coral mounds and a small cenote sinkhole just a short distance from the shore. We had brought masks and snorkels with us this year but we didn’t even need fins to gaze at all the colourful fish. There were lots of lazy barracuda, sting rays and even a turtle close to shore. We stayed in a small hotel a few blocks from the beach, took long walks on the beach and sampled many of the good restaurants that surround the main plaza in town. We even visited a Botanical Gardens started by Dr Alfredo Barrera where we walked the 3 km of trails built around collections of native trees and plants, plus reconstructions of a Chicle workers’ camp and an old Mayan house. We are surprised that most Yucatan tourists would choose to go to Cancun or Playa del Carmen rather than Puerto Morelos. On the other hand that undiscovered quality is part of its charm.

    Isla Mujeres was a new destination this year. We travelled by bus to Cancun where we took a ferry to the island. The main town is lined with restaurants and souvenir shops, quite different from Puerto Morelos. It took a few days for us to get used to the crowds and to enjoy its charms. Our first choice of accommodation did not work well. Our clue that we were in the wrong place came when we were issued tickets for a free drink at their beach bar, which was only open from 11 PM to 3 AM. We changed the next day after enduring the loud throbbing beat of the music until early in the morning. Luckily we found a better place for the same price in town.

    The best beach, small Playa Norte, was lined with rental chairs and large mattresses that were filled with basking tourists. We never did reach water over our head but the water was pleasant and relaxing. We took a snorkel trip to see the fish swim around the reef just offshore. The current was quite strong so we just floated along until the boat picked us up again. In one area we floated over bell-shaped concrete forms that act as an artificial reef and provide safe homes for the fish. The concrete forms also provide some protection from the hurricanes that sweep along the coast.

    Isla Mujeres is in its prime in the evening. Streets are closed to cars and strolling musicians entertain in front of the restaurants and bars. The entire population of the island turned out the weekend we visited to see the annual Carnival celebrations. Dance groups, from small children to adults, dressed in elaborate costumes and performed well practised Mardi Gras dances.

    Whenever we travel we try to use our timeshare exchange and treat ourselves to a little luxury for a week. This year we were booked into the Mayan Palace on the Mayan Riviera between Puerto Morelos and Playa del Carmen. We arrived laden with groceries purchased in Cancun as we were to have a one-bedroom suite with full kitchen. We spent the week lounging by the huge pool complex or on the beach, taking long walks down the beach and just relaxing. We did take a shuttle bus one day to replenish groceries and visit Playa del Carmen. Playa is a bigger and more expensive than Isla Mujeres with even more tourists, but the beach is nice. We had a nice lunch in a beach restaurant but were glad to say goodbye at the end of the day.

    Making our way down the Yucatan coast, we stopped in Tulum, intending just to overnight, but ended up visiting the first time for three days and on our way back to Cancun, we stayed for five more days. This year we stayed in town at Rancho Tranquilo. Extensive renovations have been carried out over the past year and the guests and owners are very friendly. The rate for our simple thatched roof cabaña included breakfast and there was an inexpensive shuttle bus ride to beach.

    Sian Kaan Muyil Temple

    Sian Kaan Muyil Temple

    We took an excursion to the UNESCO site, Sian Ka’an Biosphere Reserve, 5000 sq km of tropical jungle, marsh, mangroves and lakes on the coast. The local Mayans have formed a co-operative to show visitors their home territory. We visited just a small section at its northern tip and were amazed at its variety. We visited the archaeological site Muyil, which dates from 300 BC and once housed 55,000 people, but was abandoned in the 17th C. There were three pyramids uncovered, one had a concave top which when filled with water acted as a mirror to chart the skies. We walked through the jungle to the shore of a broad lake surrounded by marshland and piled into motor boats. We crossed the lake and followed a narrow canal built by the Mayans to connect to a second lake. We crossed the second lake and entered a narrow river. This was a major trading route linking the Mayans to the ocean. We stopped at a wharf built next to a small Mayan temple. We donned life jackets, upside down like a diaper, to float nearly two km down the river. The river was shallow but the current was swift enough that we didn’t need to swim at all, just enjoy the scenery. The boats picked us up and we returned to the lakeside where we were fed a typical Mayan lunch of empanadas and tamales. Then it was on to our last activity, a swim in the clear blue water of Chrystal Cenote. The Yucatan peninsula is a porous limestone shelf, riddled with fresh water filled limestone sinkholes called cenotes. Even the two lakes we had crossed were cenotes. We used our snorkels to see tiny fish swimming near underground tree roots. We got back to Rancho Tranquilo in time for supper, tired but satisfied with our day.

    Laguna Bacalar, near the Belize border, was recommended as a peaceful stop. The bus we took seemed to be labouring as it rolled down the highway. The driver stopped to find out what was wrong then drove to the nearest Mayan home. The driver filled the radiator of the bus with water from a well, one of many connected to underground cenotes and conveniently located next to the road. We made it to our destination. We stayed in Hotel Laguna, a slightly tired hotel but nice place on the shores of the beautiful tourquoise waters. We were within walking distance of Cenote Azul with its pleasant restaurant. The cenote was good for swimming but we couldn’t see very far due to the depth of the waters. We asked a couple from BC who was visiting the cenote how long they had been in Mexico. They hesitated then admitted they left home in August 2004 and have been exploring Mexico and Belize in their RV ever since. We aren’t prepared to be away from home that long yet!

    The Belize border is about 50 km from Laguna Bacalar. We planned to take a taxi to the town of Bacalar, 5 km from the hotel, then catch a bus to Chetumal, where we would transfer to a Belize-bound bus. In my rusty Spanish I asked the hotel clerk to call a taxi to take us into town. We no sooner appeared with our bags than the taxi was there. I established how much the trip would cost, which is what you do when there is no meter. It seemed a bit higher than I expected but the driver assured me that 50 pesos (USD5) was the going rate. When we reached the highway, the driver headed towards Chetumal instead of the bus stop in town. We were confused until we realized he was taking us all the way to Chetumal, a half hour drive! We truly had a bargain ride. It sometimes pays not to have a full understanding of the language.

    We got a bus going straight to the town of Orange Walk Belize and were on our way. The border is a nuisance but it just involves standing in line to get our passports stamped and paying 100 pesos each to leave Mexico. A group of Mennonites, dressed in traditional clothing, was on our bus and one of the men asked us where we were from. He said he was part of the “plain people” from Missouri on their way to visit a Mennonite Colony near Belmopan, the Belize capital. He had been in Belize several times on missions organized by his church. Belize has many thriving Mennonite colonies. They comprise just 5% of the Belizeans but produce 65% of the agriculture in Belize. Belize has recently declared that the Mennonites must pay taxes. This has prompted some of the families to leave Belize as they traditionally pay no taxes and receive nothing from the government, taking care of their own social and medical needs. Belize is worried that if more leave their agriculture would be in serious trouble.

    Orange Walk is a small agricultural town on the New River. We had come to take a tour on the river to visit the Mayan ruins of Lamanai. We stayed at the Lamanai Riverside Retreat, which sounds more impressive than it is. Situated on the bank of the New River, there is a popular restaurant and three simple rooms. The owner Raul and his family of nine children run the place. Raul beckoned us over to see Bob the crocodile cruising up to see if his favourite snack of chicken skin was being served. Raul has made a hobby of tagging the crocs. He and a friend drive a motor boat up the river until they spy a croc. The driver leaves the motor running to distract the croc. Raul jumps into the river and loops a wire snare around the snout of the croc and attaches a tag to the tail. So far he has emerged unscathed but I wouldn’t recommend this sport to anyone.

    Our tour to Lamanai was well organized. We motored up the river for about two hours while our guide Gilberto pointed out the many water birds, crocs and lizards basking on the shores. We passed by the Mennonite community of Shipyard and small boats with men fishing for supper. Sugarcane is the main crop in this area and we passed a small rum distillery and a Sugar refinery. Trucks filled with cane line the road to the refinery and the sugar refinery runs full tilt from December to June processing the cane. The evening before tugboats had passed the Lamanai Resort towing three barges full of refined sugar. This happens twice daily.

    Lamanai, which means submerged crocodile in Mayan, was occupied as early as 1500 BC and grew into a major ceremonial center with immense temples earlier than most other sites. Like the other Mayan centers, the coming of the Spanish in the 17th C spelled their doom and Lamanai reverted to the jungle. The British completed the rout of the Mayans by chasing out those who had survived plagues of measels and smallpox in order to clear the forests and plant sugar cane further decimated the Mayans. The site remained hidden until it was excavated by the University of Toronto archaeologist David Pendergast from1970 to 1983. Only five of over 700 temples have been excavated but those that have are impressive. Gilberto led us past several, explaining the history of the area as well as pointing out the many medicinal plants growing everywhere. Near the Jaguar temple we heard the unmistakable sound of a band of Howler monkeys. We watched from the ground as they called to one another for quite some time. You can’t go to a temple area without climbing at least one to get the view and the High Temple, the tallest pre-classical temple in Belize at 33 M, did provide a good vista.

    San Ignacio (Cayo) is in the mountains near the Guatemala border. Once again we lucked out with a taxi ride. We arrive on the bus in Belize City ready to transfer to another bus travelling to Cayo. After refusing several offers of taxi rides, one driver explained that he had driven from Cayo to the Belize airport in the morning and was willing to bargain for a return fare to Cayo. It was a done deal and a lot quicker than the local bus that stops for whoever flags it down. The driver was promoting Windy Hill Resort in Cayo. We had planned to stay at a less expensive hotel in town, but when we couldn’t get a reservation, we agreed to stay at Windy Hill. It really was a very nice place, the only disadvantage besides being a little above our meagre budget was the distance from the town. We did enjoy our brief stay. Our cabin with a hammock on the balcony was comfortable, the service and food in the restaurant was good and the pool, set in lovely gardens, was more than inviting. We almost regretted moving into town, but we didn’t have a car and the taxi ride to town was expensive.

    In Cayo we arranged a day tour to visit the Mountain Pine Ridge area. A local guide, Sam, drove a couple from Toronto and us into the forest, which years ago had many mahogany trees, but few are left today. Sam told us he had been a chicle worker for a year in his youth. The workers climbed the chicle trees slashing the bark as they went and collecting the sap in bags at the bottom of the tree. The sap was combined with water and boiled until it was the right consistency to be used as the base for chewing gum (remember Chiclets?). This was an important source of income from the 1920s until the invention of artificial gum. Much of the forest has been replanted with pine but it didn’t look very healthy. The pine beetle devastated the area and bare trunks littered the hilltops. It will take many more years until the forest regenerates. We came to visit a few of the caves. Rio Frio Cave, a huge gaping cave carved out by a river that still flows through it, was the first. We were surprised to see several armed military personnel lounging around the approach to the cave. Sam explained that there had been a rash of robberies of tourists in the area a year ago and this was the government’s solution to the problem. We visited the small hidden Jaws Cave. Sam gave us headlamps and we crawled into a room full of stalactites and stalagmites. By the time we emerged it was raining gently and the temperature had dropped enough to prevent us from swimming in the pools of our next stop, the Thousand Foot Falls. We ate our box lunch there, admired the view from afar and drove on to more waterfalls on the River On. We made our last stop at the secluded Five Sisters Resort, next to a series of waterfalls of the same name. The resort guests are not all capable of climbing the steep pathway to the falls so there is a convenient funicular to transport guests. It was still rainy so we just admired the view from the balcony.

    The prettiest drive in Belize is the Hummingbird Highway between Belmopan, the inland Belize capital and Dangriga on the coast. The road winds through a narrow jungle valley with orange groves rising to green hills on either side. We stayed in the Garifuna village of Dangriga overnight on our way to Tobacco Caye. The Garifuna are descendants of African slaves, with a little South American indigenous mixed in for good measure. They were transported originally to St Vincent in the Caribbean and subsequently sent by the British from one island to another until they settled in southern Belize in the early 19th C. If you ask any Garifuna, they will tell you they speak three languages, Garifuna, Creole and English, the official language of Belize. We could understand some of the Creole but Garifuna was unintelligible to us. Sunday morning is the time for families to attend church in Dangriga. Choir members carried their long robes and hymnals and women, some dressed in a long flowered dress reminiscent of the Africans we saw last fall, passed us on their way to church.

    Tobacco Caye, a 40 minute motor boat ride from Dangriga, was just as nice as we had remembered from our visit two years ago. It is still a very quiet, simple tiny 5-acre island right on the corals of the South Water Caye Marine Reserve. We stayed once again in Gaviota’s in a small cabin with electricity supplied by a generator until about 10 PM, but with communal showers and toilets. Included in our charge of USD32 per day were three delicious meals served family style in the screened dining hall. The snorkeling right off the beach is great. We saw stingrays and spotted eagle rays, lots of tropical fish and even to my consternation, a shark, although it was identified later as a harmless Nurse shark. We stayed four days and wished we had stayed longer.

    We had never visited Hopkins, a fishing village on the coast just south of Dangriga. Upon arriving in town without a reservation, we saw an appealing sign advertising Kismet on the beach “just a 10 minute walk” away. It wasn’t the best place to stay in town but by the time we had walked more than a km with our packs on our backs to find it we were reluctant to return to town to find another. A ditzy New Yorker woman and her Garifuna boyfriend Elvis ran it. After ten years in Belize I think she needs a break. She had a non-ending litany of complaints about the village, some well-founded, but some we sympathized with the locals. At least she cooked a good fish dinner, caught by Elvis in front of the hostel. One of our landlady’s complaints was the amount of garbage on the beach and we had to agree. The locals don’t want to pay for garbage pickup so they haul it to the edge of the narrow strip of sand beach and burn it. Piles of black residue lined the shoreline. Just next to Kismet was a fancy new vacation home complex, far grander than anything else in town, which is nowhere near ready for a tourist influx.

    One advantage of visiting Hopkins was its proximity to Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary. An American Alan Rabinowitz who tracked and studied jaguars established the reserve in the 1980s. Jaguars are nocturnal so we didn’t see any, but there are supposed to be at least eight in residence. Instead, we went to hike the trails. The reserve is huge, 98,000 acres, but we explored only one small section. It was overcast when we started out from Hopkins, but the sun came out for a brief time, causing the temperature to rise just as we were engaged in scaling a peak. I have not been so out of breath in a long time. It must have been because of the heat. Anyway the view from the top of Victoria Peak, the second highest in Belize, and several others, was lovely. We didn’t even mind the periodic rain as it cooled us down. Half way back to our starting point was a waterfall with a good swimming hole at its base, just perfect for the end of a hike. Another time I would like to try the tube ride down the river and stay overnight for a guided night walk. There is lots of territory to explore.

    Placencia is undergoing quite a bit of development but it is still nicely low-key. We travelled by bus from Hopkins to Placencia along a bumpy red dirt road past waves of expensive vacation properties under construction. This is in stark contrast to the beachside town of Placencia where simple accommodation is the rule. The construction of a new airport at the north end of town is making the area more accessible. In the meantime it is still pleasant, uncrowded and quiet. The coral reef is 17 km offshore but the sand beach is wide and the water is clear and warm. We chose to return to Placentia this year because of the better swimming, compared to the sea grass choked shores of Caye Caulker. We were glad we came. We got a simple room a block from the beach and kicked back for another five days. The restaurants were good and several bars offered evening entertainment. Friday night was drum night in one bar. A five piece band of locals played a combination of traditional African drums, maracas, conch shell and two turtle shells hung by ropes around one man’s neck. The beat was infectious and the variety of sounds and rhythms was just right. We ended our visit with an evening at the lovely Garden Restaurant being entertained by a young American man playing classical and acoustic guitar. No wonder North Americans are buying property in the region.

    Placencia is not the only Belize location becoming popular with North Americans. We stopped overnight enroute to Mexico in Corozal and talked to a Canadian man getting ready to build a home on the coast just north of town. We met several other Canadians and Americans, attracted by the fact they don’t have to learn another language, also building homes in the area. The Belize Government has offered tax advantages to foreigners, especially older people, to build homes and the prices are still reasonable.

    All’s well that ends well. We ended our trip as we began, back in the Mexican beach towns of Tulum and Puerto Morelos. Once again we escaped the worst of the winter. We came back with good tans after all that time on the beach. It was a relaxing trip with time to read and some new and old places to visit.


    Visit their webpage Sun and Sand in the Yucatan and Belize for more photos of their travel experience in Mexico and Belize.

    San Blas la Tovara Spring

    San Blas la Tovara Spring

    La Tovara Springs San Blas Nayarit

    La Tovara is a fresh water spring. The water is crystal clear and perfect for swimming especially since they put up a fence to keep the crocodiles out. Swim at your own risk.

    A trip on the Jungle Boat Ride to La Tovara will be the highlight of your vacation in San Blas. With the mangrove wetlands as your backup you will see rare tropical birds as well as turtles, iguanas and crocodiles. This is an excellent trip for birdwatchers. Be sure to stop at the crocodile farm where they breed crocodiles for repopulation.


    Check out Visit San Blas for more informtion about accomodations, maps, food and other information about the local area.

    See what other tourists are saying about La Tovara
    On the Wharf of San Blas
    Trip to Punta El Custodio, Platanitos – Mexico
    Sayulita & San Blas
    La Tovara, Nayarit
    Birding in San Blas, Mexico
    San Blas
    Swimming with the fishes
    Jungle Boat Ride
    Matanchen Bay and San Blas The Second Time Around
    Hellspiders and Crocodiles!
    San Blas, Boats, Mangrove, Swimming, Crocodiles and Birds – lots and lots of birds!
    San Blas Mexico ’07
    The week that was…..San Blas, Puerto Vallarta and Barra de Navidad
    February 2009
    Nayarit: San Blas, Tepic and in between

    North Beach, Isla Mujeres, Mexico


    Isla Mujeres offers several options for water activities, from windsurfing to admiring the wonderful coral reefs while snorkeling, to diving the underwater paradise of El Garrafon National Park, the impressive cave of the sleeping sharks and reefs such as Farito, Islaché and Manchones.

    Isla Mujeres hammocks

    Isla Mujeres hammocks

    An Isla Mujeres Mexico vacation is more laid-back and relaxed than Cancun, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t plenty to do. It just means you can do nothing at all or fill your days with exciting activities and variety of all types of restaurants and fondas (Mexican coffee shops) as well. Isla Mujeres is for vacationing in a small island with activities for all ages. Beautiful white sand beaches where you can enjoy nature land activities. Crystal clear sea admiring the diverse marine life, sailing and swimming with Dolphins. North Beach (Playa Norte) Isla Mujeres is a great place for relaxing, and the entire island has something for everyone in a great and serene tropical ambiance. Located away from hustle and stress, you can explore the wonders of the Mexican Caribbean. Mixed culture along local Mayan heritage, navigator past & fishermen legacy of more than 150 years ready to be rediscovered exploring the entire island by renting a bike, moped or golf cart. You can visit the Turtle Protection Center and see precious sea turtles, take time to see Hacienda Mundaca, have a delicious coconut ice cream, a spicy shrimp ceviche with a freezing beer, a cheese & wine picnic, a relaxing massage and of course, shop!

    Isla Mujeres’ efficient tourist infrastructure includes 1 to 5-star hotels, approximately 1200 rooms, a convention center, cultural center, travel agencies, banks, hospitals, money exchange offices, marinas, dive shops, beach clubs, bicycles, mopeds and golf cart rentals. There is also a wide variety of food ranging from traditional to international.

    Isla Mujeres aerial view

    Isla Mujeres aerial view

    Today, Playa Norte Isla Mujeres is a favorite destination for nature lovers and for all those hiding from stress. Locals are very friendly and whether like deep sea fishing thru the Caribbean Sea, talking about baseball and other popular sports with the locals, snorkeling in El Farito reef or El Garrafon park, scuba dive thru the cave of the sleeping sharks or the Manchones why not enjoy your Mexico vacation here. Laughing while having a beer and watching sunsets which are perfect over the blues and greens of the water and the mainland site across the sea channel. All these activities make Isla Mujeres a fun and relaxing place for Mexican tourists to visit.

    The island of Isla Mujeres is located close to one of many coral reefs, and the area is popular for its snorkeling and scuba diving. Isla Mujeres is also home to a population of sea turtles. Because of the recent endangerment of sea turtles in the area, a facility was set up on the southern end of the island for the rehabilitation and breeding of them. This facility is open to the public.

    Isla Mujeres near Cancun is a secluded island paradise that offers unmatched beauty and charm. Just 7 kilometers away from Cancun across the turquoise waters of the channel, the perfect spot for a wonderful vacation in Mexico. Almost 700 meters in the wider part and 7.5 kilometer long, your Isla Mujeres vacation will be synonymous of an unforgettable adventure starting at the main village dock and its colorful motorboats anchored among the harbor.

    Easy to locate, easy to get to. By car Isla Mujeres is just 50 minutes north of Cancun Airport and by express ferry 20 minutes from Cancun-Puerto Juarez with departures every 30 minutes between 5am and midnight on board modern sun deck & air conditioned fast boats.

    Founded by Pueblo de Dolores in August 17, 1850, Isla Mujeres, near Cancun Mexico, was named by Spanish Conqueror Francisco Hernandez de Cordoba on 1517 after finding several female figures close to a small archeological site which was a temple dedicated to Ix Chel, Goddess of love, fertility and the moon. For approximately the next 300 years, it was a pirate refugee. Another Spaniard, Fermin de Mundaca was the most famous (1858) who built the majestic Hacienda in the heart of the island. Isla Mujeres was abandoned through the following decades and left a few fishermen and their families.

    A quick journey through time will give you a good vision of Isla Mujeres´ rich and long history. The first news about Isla Mujeres date back to before the Pre-Columbian era 564-1516 A.D. when it was a mayan province, Ekab, one of the four provinces or Mayan territories that formed what is today the State of Quintana Roo.

    Isla Mujeres rental boats

    Isla Mujeres rental boats

    At that time, Isla Mujeres was not a human settlement, it was a sanctuary to Ixchel (goddess of weaving, happiness, the moon, abundance and medicine, among others). From March 1st to 4th, 1517, a Spanish expedition under Francisco Fernández de Córdoba´s leadership, discovered the island and found a sanctuary with a representation of Ixchel and a court of women, hence the name Isla Mujeres it was given.

    By 1850, more than 250 fishermen, pirates and mayas running away from the cruel War of Castes, established themselves in the village of Dolores, on Isla Mujeres. The construction of Fermin Mundaca y Marecheaga´s Hacienda Vista Alegre, was a milestone in the history of Isla Mujeres, since it covered 40% of the total surface of the island, and controlled agriculture and cattle raising. At the end of the nineteenth century, Isla Mujeres had a population of 651 inhabitants in a defined urban area. The marine landscape, with its numerous birds, sailboats and fishermen made up a beautiful scenery.

    Playa Norte ( North Beach)


    Beautiful Playa Norte ( North Beach) is full of exciting activities. If you are going to be in the Cancun area have fun and visit this easy to access island retreat. On the white and fine sand beaches of Playa Norte, you can enjoy the air, the sun and the water, and it is a perfect place for those who practice yoga, since at dawn they can get full of energy and at sunset a complete peace invades them.


    Isla Mujeres Official tourism website has good information on the local accomodations, attractions, food and more available in english.

    See what others are saying about Playa Norte, Isla Mujeres.


    The Beach is Back, the Return of Playa Norte, Isla Mujeres
    A Mini-Vacation on Isla Mujeres
    Finally at Isla Mujeres!
    Chiling on the beach!

    Thinking small leads to the perfect Mexican beach town


    local food in mexico

    local food in mexico

    Along the Pacific Coast north of Puerto Vallarta, visitors argue about which beach town is best. Is it one of the more developed towns within shouting distance of Puerto Vallarta, or do you have to head up the coast and farther away from the major resorts, to a place like Rincón de Guayabitos? Or maybe the perfect beach town is somewhere else altogether.

    Our goal was to find out. We weren’t looking for a lot: a sandy beach, fresh seafood, a laid-back atmosphere and a genuine taste of Mexico.

    We travelled by bus from Guadalajara. We planned to get off at a little town called La Penita and then take a collectivo (a local van or small bus) to Guayabitos – a popular beach destination we’d read about in our guidebook.

    But we hadn’t counted on the winding coastal highway. My motion sickness was so bad, I felt too woozy to leave La Penita right away.

    That turned out to be just as well. Our brief stopover turned into an eight-day love affair.

    La Penita gets only a paragraph in our guidebook. The hardworking neighbour to Guayabitos, it has the bank and post office. At first glance, La Penita is a dusty, unimpressive town. The main street, Emiliano Zapata, is lined with grocery stores, clothing and gift shops, and small restaurants, none of them chic. Some buildings are in disrepair, others are under construction; some of the dirt roads are rutted and look, well, dirty. This isn’t Cape Cod.

    But slowly, the place grew on us. As La Penita worked its charms – a friendly chat with one shopkeeper, a smile from a passerby, and an exchange of email addresses with a fellow Canadian visitor – we began to relax and feel at home. Could there be a better beach town? Day after day, we decided to put off the search for just one more day.

    And there was, of course, the beach. Most days, there are more pelicans than people on the shore. The beach at the point where Emiliano Zapata St. meets the sand is small, but there’s a wider stretch if you walk north for about 10 minutes.

    We checked into Bungalows Don Jose, one of several small hotels offering apartments with a bedroom, living room and kitchenette. When we told the manager we might stay a few days, he reduced the nightly rate to $35 U.S.

    Days start early in La Penita. The church bells begin ringing at 5:30. Then there are barking dogs, crowing roosters, and guys who drive around town with bullhorns, announcing sales on everything from limes to cooking gas.

    It’s not an all-inclusive, but, hey, this is real Mexico.

    There are gringos, mostly Canadians and some Americans, almost all from the west coast. Some congregate at Hinde and Jaime Restaurant Bar, a simple place a block from the beach. In the morning they come for Hinde’s Mexican version of an Egg McMuffin. Tequila shots start soon after that.

    Another place to find gringos is Hamaca Maya. One of the only shops in town carrying good-quality Mexican crafts (the others carry mostly key chains and ashtrays made of seashells), Hamaca Maya is owned by Hala Hazzi. The Egyptian-born Hazzi, who also lived in Montreal, discovered this part of the world in the 1980s, when she worked for Canadian Holidays.

    Hazzi has travelled across Mexico in search of merchandise for her store. Still, she insists there’s no place like La Penita. “There are none of the manicured lawns of the five-star resorts. But what there is here is a human heart and human spirit,” she said.

    If La Penita feels too sleepy, Rincon de Guayabitos is just a 15-minute walk south along the beach. Guayabitos has dozens of hotels and restaurants geared for tourists. It’s also a place to come for happy hour or to sunbathe on a bigger beach.

    But if you want even more quiet, head in the other direction. The village of Chacala is 30 kilometres north of La Penita. The beach is the star attraction, its water perfect for swimming. So we decided to pack up our bags and hang out here for a few days.

    Susana and Poncie Escobido run Casa Pacifica, a pretty B&B about a 10-minute walk from the beach. “Chacala is what Hawaii was like 100 years ago – before the highrises,” said Poncie Escobido, who was born in Hawaii.

    Some visitors stay at one of the seven Techos de Mexico – modest lodgings inside local homes. The initiative began in 1997 and allows villagers to improve their homes and create a new source of revenue. Rentals of rooms or more cost between $25 and $45 a night.

    Though Chacala hasn’t got much in the way of a town centre, you can get a fine dinner at one of several casual restaurants on the beach. The seafood specialties include mahi mahi, slow cooked over charcoal, and fresh shrimp cooked any way you like.

    Towns like Chacala are found up and down the Pacific coast of Mexico. Travellers learn through word-of-mouth about little beach paradises found off the beaten path. We were reminded of Playa Azul, north of Ixtapa. Or Puerto Angel, on the southern reaches of the Pacific coast.

    But once you’re off the beach, there might be little to do and few conveniences of home. While we had first-class digs at Casa Pacifica, including a room decorated in antiques ripped from the pages of House & Garden, that’s not the norm in the more remote towns.

    On this stretch of coast, most of the travellers we met were looking to strike a balance between the complete, colourless comfort of a high-rise hotel in Puerto Vallarta and the rustic beauty of a village on the frayed edge of the map.

    When a cold, rainy spell hit in Chacala, we wanted to go home. So we headed right back to La Penita and Bungalows Don Jose, our very own balancing point.

    The first thing we did was knock on the door of our downstairs neighbours: Eric and Laura Bracht and their 19-month-old son, Forest. From Wenatchee, Wash., the Brachts were in Mexico for six months. Eric, a bus driver, who in a former incarnation worked as a therapist, has an interesting take on the search for the perfect beach town: “There’s no such thing as the ideal paradise. People are basically discontent. They want things they can’t have.”

    Hala Hazzi would disagree. And so did I, at least that afternoon.

    Just before sunset, I grabbed my towel and my book and headed for the beach. Two fishermen emptied a bucket of fish heads onto the sand, which brought more pelicans than I’d ever seen. My book lay unopened as I watched the birds and the orange sun.

    When I looked behind me, I noticed a line of shop owners – they’d left work to come and watch the sunset, too. Right then, I couldn’t think of anything else in all the world I had to have.

    How to get there: Air Transat has direct Montreal-Puerto Vallarta flights. Then it’s a one-hour bus trip to La Penita. The bus trip from Guadalajara takes four hours. Primero Plus buses leave several times a day from both cities and make stops at La Penita. To get to Chacala, you’ll need to take a collectivo or taxi from La Penita. To learn more about Techos des Mejico, visit the organization’s website at www.techosdemexico.com.
    © CanWest MediaWorks Publications Inc.
    Thinking small leads to the perfect Mexican beach town


    Lover's Beach ( Playa del Amor ) Cabo San Lucas

    Lover's Beach ( Playa del Amor ) Cabo San Lucas

    Playa del Amor ( Beach of Love )
    This beach is most commonly referred to as Playa del Amor or could also be called Playa del Amante ( Lover’s Beach ). Its common English referrence is Lover’s Beach and the locals will have no problem understanding that this is the beach you’re talking about.

    Once known as Playa de Doña Chepa, Playa del Amor is a charming location, but to get to this hidden cove you’ll need some kind of floating transportation. The easiest way to get there is to hire a water taxi at the marina in Cabo San Lucas. The captain will take you on an informative tour of the diving areas around the arch (El Arco), point out Playa del Amor, then go around the popular point for a wonderful view of the dramatic area where the Sea of Cortez meets the Pacific Ocean.

    You should pack a romantic lunch of your choice and plan on spending the most of the day enjoying Playa del Amor and the striking wind and water shaped rock formations. Just ask your skipper to come back for you at a pre-determined time all for one price. Be cautious if you want to go swimming here, the powerful waves and currents of the Pacific ocean in this location make swimming quite dangerous. Swim and snorkel only on the Sea of Cortez side of Playa del Amor.

    Playa del Amor - Lover's Beach

    Playa del Amor - Lover's Beach

    There are no services available on Playa del Amor and the beach can be easily accessed by water taxi, or glass bottom boat from the Cabo San Lucas marina, or you may rent a kayak from Médano Beach. You can also be adventurous and climb the rock formations from the Medano beach side over to Lover’s Beach. This is not recommended and it is the usual way that many locals get over to the secluded cove.

    Cabo San Lucas is world-famous for the breathtaking display of natures force at Land’s End as well as Playa del Amor. Until you stand near the arch and feels the powerful forces of nature and its beauty here, you really haven’t experienced Cabo San Lucas. The towering majesty of the rock formations are impressive and awe inspiring, the caves, Lover’s Beach, and the clear azure tropical waters. There is great snorkeling on the bay side, running from Playa del Amor to the marina breakwater just outside the entrance of Cabo San Lucas harbor. This marine sanctuary is great for viewing a wonderful variety of colorful tropical fish as well as game fish. So rent snorkel gear and have a mini adventure, take a water taxi and be sure to arrange your return trip as well and have fun.

    See what other Mexico tourists are saying about their visit to Lover’s Beach.
    Last port-of-call Cabo San Lucas
    Greetings from Hello World!
    The Honeymoon
    Vacay #1: Mexico
    Babymoon
    Lover’s Beach
    Annual Trip to Cabo!!!
    A Trip to the Lover’s Beach in Cabo San Lucas
    First port of call – Cabo San Lucas
    Honeymoon!
    Riu Palace Hotel and Lovers Beach ~ Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
    back and blogging!
    Los Cabos
    jimena
    Heavy sigh….
    I’m back online….and LOVING it!
    Don’t Be a Squid in Cabo
    cabo “boom boom pow” 2009….(part two)
    cabo!!
    babblings and cruise info
    divorce beach
    mexico
    The cruise as seen by our point-and-shoot
    jesus provides transport to lover’s beach
    Cruisin’
    DOUG’S 60TH BIRTHDAY – CABO SAN LUCAS
    cabo conclusion!


    The Copper Canyon Cheap & Easy
    by Sheri Lynn

    Copper Canyon Mexico

    Copper Canyon Mexico

    We made the trip to Mexico’s Copper Canyon in November. This is the trip that you helped Justin and I plan the itinerary for — and I am reporting back to you on details that I hope you will find helpful.

    We were unable to do the hike from Batopilas to Urique due to time constraints and weather. Instead, we travelled by bus/train to Creel, van to Batopilas; where we stayed for 4 days before retracing our steps.

    We took the bus from El Paso across the border to Juarez. As we drove to the Greyhound station in El Paso, parking was immediately an issue. We looked at several options; our choice was a parking garage right across the street. Well guarded, well lighted. We parked on the bottom within view of the guard, who generally won’t wander about. 3 dollars a day. When we returned, all was well with the vehicle.

    The bus leaves to cross the border every hour on the half hour. 5 bucks. At the border, we received verbal assurance from the bus driver that he would wait for us as we did the paperwork. We came back outside to find our packs on the ground, no bus. On the bus we had left two small bags of relative importance. ALWAYS STAY WITH ALL YOUR BELONGINGS.

    We ‘knew’ that…In any case we were told to wait for the next bus, while a bus official radioed ahead about our bags. In a small panic and in a state of lack of trust, we hopped a cab (15 bucks to the bus station in Juarez.) to the bus station and found our bags waiting.

    There was confusion with the terminal officials who had not been able to find us on the next bus and apparently there were several people looking for us. A security official sat us down and gave us a talking to, while we smiled and nodded, not understanding a word of his hurried spanish in our anxious state…we had severely underestimated the reliability of the folks we were dealing with, and we were humbled. We abruptly adjusted our collective attitude and continued our journey.

    First class bus: Juarez to Chihuahua (Omnibus) — $23 dollars each. We also exchanged some money at the bus station. Rate was 9.20 to 1. We saw two Danielle Steel movies on the bus — quite dramatic. The bus made one food stop – cafeteria style restaurant – 2 burritos and a soda for 35 pesos. We stayed right next to the bus…the trip was quite pleasant.

    Your suggestion of hotel — The Posada Aida — was most excellent. Clean, small, and a good mattress for 80 pesos for the both of us. We will return. The proprietress fussed over us, bringing us extra blankets which we did not need… In Chihuahua we ate dinner at Don Cremas – very clean and good food. Cold beer – Indio. We wandered around the city and felt safe.

    The train left the city at 6 am and we grabbed a taxi to get there, with a stop at a grocery for snacks. I know you are familiar with the train so I’ll leave that alone. It was pleasant and the food ‘okay’ but not spectacular or even worth mentioning. The tour groups eat first so if you’re on your own, be sure to have snacks for breakfast because it’ll take awhile to get served. The coffee is decent.

    We disembarked at Creel. At the station, we were met by several people hawking hotels; we were attracted to a young woman who appealed to our sense of fiscal responsibility by promising us a ‘backpackers hostel’. Margarita’s guest house; 250 pesos a night for a private room for two, includes breakfast and dinner if you don’t mind eating in a crowded room, the walls lined with folks waiting to eat. We’d have breakfast there (varied – oatmeal, tortillas, eggs, beans etc.), but go elsewhere for dinner. Hospital de Cruda has limited hours but is wonderful, as you recommended. Our other favorite — Veronicas. We tried one other — ugh – and stuck with the first two.

    We met some interesting folks at Margaritas, and took a tour we felt we could have skipped (100 pesos each, local tour by bus and ‘tour’ of Tarahumara mission). In any case, Margarita’s was comfortable and clean though quite busy. Great source of information.

    Also it’s very easy to exchange money in Creel — there’s a casa de cambio right on the main street with a good exchange rate and it beats standing in line at the bank across the plaza.

    Bus to Batopilas leaves every other day, and there’s a Suburban on the other days leaving from Los Pinos hotel. We managed to finagle space on a van doing a tour for tourists — cost us 150 pesos, the tour members paid 200. The van made frequent and interesting stops for leg stretching, and a wonderful lunch break perched on a precipice. Took 7 hours.

    Copper Canyon Mexico

    Copper Canyon Mexico

    When we got to Batopilas, all the hotels were booked for tourist groups. We had heard of senora Monse at Margaritas and headed straight there while the other tourists stumbled about in a confused state. Senora Monse’s has 4 rooms — all clean — 2 with private baths. Hot water if you tell her about it in advance — hot water bong, wood heated. Our room on the river was 250 pesos a night; the others are 200 pesos, but we splurged. She has bottled water and is a wealth of information. The other tourists from the van finally landed on this hostel, one woman in tears at the state of the rooms (!!!!). Apparently their collective expectations were much higher — and although they had planned (as a group) to stay several nights, they left the next day.

    Restaurants: the Swinging Bridge was booked for said tourist groups. Beer is hard to find. La Zagjuan will have cold beer (and Luis will slip you tequila if he’s in the mood), but food is not always available. We prefer Senor Che’s. Senora Adenina is a wonderful cook. You need to go tell her what you want to eat and what time you’ll be back. Dinner for 30 pesos each — wonderful hospitality and Senor Che will slip out for cervezas.

    A storm descended and this is where we decided against the backpacking. Navor is highly recommended locally as a guide – 150 pesos/day/person plus 100 pesos/animal for backpacking. Also does local tours. We did local hiking, on our own, when the rain let up.

    We stayed in Batopilas 4 days — one I spent in bed and senora Monse sent me to a local healer/massage lady who was wonderful. We went to her twice and spent some time talking to her and her family.

    We cooked for ourselves for the most part – local groceries are fine, though baked goods are not very fresh. Spent much time just sitting and relaxing in the plaza.

    On the return trip, we caught a bus (leaves daily 5 am during the week) 120 pesos for the both of us; full of locals and a herd of drunk cowboys. Harrowing and interesting. Bus driver had to stop at every stream to fill the radiator with water and provide constant maintenance to the dilapidated vehicle — the recent storm didn’t help that road. Bus finally quit outside of La Bufa, but we saved the day with duct tape from our packs. Unbelievable that the thing ran at all…

    Back in Creel, we stayed this time at Los Pinos, not feeling like all the camaraderie over at Margaritas. Los Pinos smelled like disinfectant cleaner and was 200 pesos/night for a private room with bath.

    Only second class buses are available for the return trip to Juarez, as far as we could tell. (We asked for first class, but you get what’s there.) We took the bus all the way — with all the usual second class stops, etc. Cheap, though (750 pesos for two)…and fun. No restaurant stops – few station stops for toilet – no toilet on board – bring food and water, plus we had a deck of cards.

    Satevo Mission Church Copper Canyon Mexico

    Satevo Mission Church Copper Canyon Mexico

    Returning back across the border was a long slow process – we were slightly ticked that the other passengers were treated rudely and we were given courtesy (we were the only whites on board) at the border itself. All went well, and then we were back in El Paso.

    It was Justins virgin voyage to Mexico, and he loved it, although he swore off corn tortillas for awhile. The food in the Canyon can be dull, but with your recommendations we were very happy.

    Thanks for all your help in our planning this trip – your tips and of course the People’s Guide proved invaluable!! All the little things – having coin pesos for bathrooms, hauling water and snacks, expecting time delays and keeping expectations expectant of surprises, A TRAVEL POCKET for paperwork/cash, having an inflatable pillow and immersion heater, reading material and cards, a small spanish dictionary for constant study, carrying toilet paper…on and on…all these little things prove invaluable in the big picture toward making the trip stress free and enjoyable – and I Iearned that level of detail from the PG.

    If there are any small details I left out that you would find important, please let me know. .

    Our next trip is to the Pacific Coast!

    Saludos, Sheri

    This is a contribution about their Mexico bus travel trip found at The People’s Guide to Mexico.
    Here is the link to her original report on their bus travel experience in Mexico The Copper Canyon Cheap & Easy.


    I think there are two valuable points about their bus travel in Mexico here. The first is ALWAYS STAY WITH ALL YOUR BELONGINGS. The second is the display of how efficient and reliable the Mexican bus system is. There are literally thousands of destinations that scores of Mexican bus lines serve throughout the entire country of Mexico every day. Depending on which region of the country you are in usually dictates what major bus company services that area. Finally I would like to say that anytime you have the opportunity to chose between Second Class, First Class or one of the two more premium bus services, that for longer trips always choose a First Class service or above. If one is not currently available from where you are starting your trip, ask for the first place that you can change to a higher class bus. The buses are generally newer, make more frequent rest stops, and it is the first level of premium bus classes that have a bathroom. First Class service or above is always recommended for any long distance route, anything that takes over a few hours, and most often you should plan your Mexico bus travel at night for trips that take 6 hours of more. You will find many of these long route overnight buses to be occupied by some tourists but mainly business travelers and normal everyday Mexicans.

    Xpu-ha Beach



    From Cancun to the archeological site of Tulum, a sequence of natural formations has given the Riviera Maya an appeal that attracts more visitors every year. This strip, on the easternmost side of Mexico along Route 307, is a privileged place where coral reefs, underground rivers, inlets that are true aquariums, beaches and the impressive tropical forest are some of the wonders of this land. Explore its archeological sites; visit the picturesque town of Playa del Carmen, known by the ancient Mayas as Xaman-Há. From here, canoes with pilgrims departed to visit sanctuaries built in honor to the goddess Ixchel in Cozumel Island. Today it is still possible to appreciate the culture and traditions through the locals while vacationing at this almost untouched destination.

    Xpu-ha Beach Tulum

    Xpu-ha Beach Tulum

    Riviera Maya, Mexico

    The Mayan ancestors named this beach Xpu-Ha ( ish-pu-ha ) meaning “morning dew” for it’s great beauty and luscious and spectacular vegetation.

    A long stretch of sugar-white sand, Xpu-ha ( ish-pu-ha ) was made for swimming and walking. They’re starting to build more around there, but it’s still fairly remote. And the bay is gorgeous. While there’s a beach right by the famous ruins of Tulum, the best beaches are just south. And though they’re great for swimming, they’re almost made for strolling. You can walk for miles on these beautiful beaches.

    Xpu-ha is on a small bay about 60 miles south of Cancun. You can get to this beach by going south down the Riviera Maya. The entrance is marked just off the resort community of Puerto Aventuras.

    xpu-ha beach

    xpu-ha beach

    The beach is a length of sparkling white sand. Around the bay’s northern point, there is a lagoon and slightly inland from that, there is the stunning Xpu-ha cenote. The cenote is very long and narrow and reaches into the jungle for 500 meters, its shape and size makes it one of the Yucatan’s most unusual cenotes. It only takes about 15 minutes to walk from the beach to the lagoon, then another 10 minutes to walk inland from the lagoon to the cenote.

    There are also few private homes at Xpu-ha and some rustic cabañas that can be rented. There are also two small cafes and several dive operators. These local divers are professional who know the area very well. Xpu-ha has also a RV park and campground as well as a beach bar and restaurant. It has two little beach front restaurants/bars that serve the catch of the day. There is good snorkeling here, but watch out for the fishing and dive boats that harbor here – you don’t want to get run over while you are watching the fish.

    See what other Mexico tourists have to say about their trip to Xpu-ha Beach.


    17th April 2009 – Xpu-Ha Beach
    Xpu Ha Beach
    Xpu-ha Beach
    Akumal, July 2006
    Minotauro Down Stream and Nohoch Na Chich
    Xpu-Ha Beach Mexico Travel Information
    Catalonia Royal Tulum 6/12/19 – 6/19/09
    Xpu-Ha Palace Photo Gallery
    My Beloved Xpu-Ha
    Xpu Ha Palace
    Entry from Cancun
    HOLA from The Riviera Maya in Mexico
    Diary Mexico Return 2nd Chapter
    Xpu-Ha Beach…a Gem Close to Playa
    Photos from a Day at Xpu Ha Beach
    Xpu Ha for music, the beach and Tai Chi
    Rivera Maya, Mexico
    La Playa Xpu Ha Restaurant
    Day 4…Xpu Ha & Playa

    Accomodations


    Al Cielo Hotel
    The clear azure waters of the Mexican Caribbean, the white sandy beaches, the coconut palms and the thatch roof palapas have been combined to make Al Cielo Hotel a privileged and unique place for it’s natural beauty.

    Al Cielo Hotel
    Carretera Federal Cancun-Tulum KM 118
    Xpu-Ha Beach 1.5
    CP 77710 (Riviera Maya)
    Solidaridad, Quintana Roo
    Mexico
    011-52-984-840-9012

    Xpu-Ha Palace
    Designed to enjoy nature at its best, in an environment where local flora and fauna cohabit in a showcase of native species, among rustic and charming bungalows, Xpu-Ha Palace has adapted its facilities to welcome pets. During your stay you will have all the advantages of the all inclusive features and the possibility of bringing your furry companion on a complimentary * basis. Your pet will also be provided with services and amenities at no additional cost. From special bedding to a relaxing grooming session, and with the talented handlers at the pets’ club he will also feel a very special guest.

    Xpu-Ha Palace
    KM 265 Carretera Chetumal Puerto-Juarez
    Riviera Maya, Mexico 77710
    011-52-984-875-1010
    Fax 011-52-984-875-1012
    Xpu-Ha Palace
    Xpu-Ha Palace is a Palace Resorts property.

    Aventura Spa Palace invites you to take your body, mind and spirit on a journey that will at once purify, restore, and revitalize the senses. Ideally positioned in the heart of the Riviera Maya, where the tropical sun meets the turquoise waters of the Caribbean Sea, the ultimate pampering experience awaits.

    Aventura Spa Palace
    KM. 72 Carretera Cancun – Tulum, Riviera Maya,
    Quintana Roo 77710
    011-52-984-875-1100
    Fax 011-52-984-875-1101
    Aventura Spa Palace
    Aventura Spa Palace is a Palace Resorts property.

    Catalonia Royal Tulum
    Barcelo Maya Palace Deluxe
    Barcelo Maya Colonial and Tropical Beach
    Barcelo Maya Beach and Caribe

    Palacio De Gobierno


    Institution of the province of Tlaxcala by Charles IV, king of Spain

    Institution of the province of Tlaxcala by Charles IV, king of Spain

    The former palace of the viceroys, where Cortés stayed when he was in Tlaxcala, now commemorates the history of the region’s people. Covering the interior walls of the 16th-century palace are immense, brilliantly colored examples of Mexican muralism.

    The murals by Desiderio Hernández Xochitiotzin (b.1922), depicting everything from early inhabitants of the Valley of Mexico to the Wars of Independence, accompanied by reproductions of the 16th-century codices that inspired the work. The murals in the Palacio de Gobierno of Ciudad de Tlaxcala entitled “The history of Tlaxcala” were created beginning in 1956 and continued until 2000 by Desiderio Hernandez Xochitiotzin.

    At the time of its construction in 1545, the palace was divided into three parts. The west end of the building housed the granary, the center contained the home of the four indigenous lords, and Spanish viceroys had quarters in the west. Don’t miss the representation of Tlaxacala (“corn tortilla” in Náhuatl) at the top of the far right arch.


    Palacio De Gobierno
    Plaza de la Constitución 3
    Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala
    Mexico

    On the north side of the zócalo. Open daily 9am-6pm. Free.
    Guides loiter inside, offering to explain the murals in Spanish or English for a few pesos.


    Visit Tlaxcala Palacio de Gobierno – Murals by Xochitiotzin for the larger images of these exceptional murals.


     

    Ritual festivities for Camaxtli

    Ritual festivities for Camaxtli

     

    Christian religion and the indians

    Christian religion and the indians

    Spanish conquistadors meeting the Indians of Tlaxcala 2

    Spanish conquistadors meeting the Indians of Tlaxcala 2Indian temples burning after the Spanish conquest

    Indian temples burning after the Spanish conquest

    Indian temples burning after the Spanish conquest

     

    Encounter of Indian princes in Tlaxcala

    Encounter of Indian princes in Tlaxcala

     

    Spanish conquistadors meeting the Indians of Tlaxcala

    Spanish conquistadors meeting the Indians of Tlaxcala

     

    an indian god leads his people to the promised land of Tlaxcala

    an indian god leads his people to the promised land of Tlaxcala

     

    Indian vendors at the market of Tlaxcala

    Indian vendors at the market of Tlaxcala

    Tlaxcaltecan warriors fighting against warrior from Texcoco, Cuauhtepec and Ocelotepec

    Tlaxcaltecan warriors fighting against warrior from Texcoco, Cuauhtepec and Ocelotepec

    Tlaxcaltecan victory against the Aztecs

    Tlaxcaltecan victory against the Aztecs

    Tlaxcaltecan ceremonies in honor of Xochiquetzalli

    Tlaxcaltecan ceremonies in honor of Xochiquetzalli

    Tlaxcaltecan ceremonies in honor of Xochiquetzalli 2

    Tlaxcaltecan ceremonies in honor of Xochiquetzalli 2

    Mexican emperor Maximilian and empress Charlotte

    Mexican emperor Maximilian and empress Charlotte

    Tlaxcalan warriors confronting Spanish conquistadors

    Tlaxcalan warriors confronting Spanish conquistadors

    Malinche interpretor of Hernan Cortes

    Malinche interpretor of Hernan Cortes

    Indian warriors

    Indian warriors

    History of Mexico since its independence

    History of Mexico since its independence

    History of Mexico since its independence 2

    History of Mexico since its independence 2

    Quetzalcoatl announcing his return for the year one cane

    Quetzalcoatl announcing his return for the year one cane

    Pre-conquest image of Tlaxcala

    Pre-conquest image of Tlaxcala

    Patron god of Tlaxcala

    Patron god of Tlaxcala

    Discussions between Taxcaltecans and Cortes

    Discussions between Taxcaltecans and Cortes

     

    Destruction of the indian gods by the Spanish conquest

    Destruction of the indian gods by the Spanish conquest

     

    Discussions between Taxcaltecans and Hernan Cortes 2

    Discussions between Taxcaltecans and Hernan Cortes 2

    Discussions between Cholultecas and Teochichimecas at their arrival in the valley of Tlaxcala

    Discussions between Cholultecas and Teochichimecas at their arrival in the valley of Tlaxcala

    Tlaxcala gets a Spanish province ( 1545 )

    Tlaxcala gets a Spanish province ( 1545 )

    The Virgin of Ocotlán is statue of the Virgin Mary in Ocotlán, Tlaxcala, Mexico. The Virgin of Ocotlán is the patron saint of Tlaxcala and the neighbouring state of Puebla.

    The Legend


    Virgin of Ocotlan

    Virgin of Ocotlan

    In late spring of 1541, a young native Tlaxcalan man named Juan Diego (sometimes given as Juan Diego Bernardino) was going to draw water from a river believed at the time to have healing properties. Juan Diego was a convert to Catholicism who was known for his piety and was a topil (altar server) at the Franciscan monastery. There was an epidemic in the region and he wanted to bring the water home to his family, who were sick.

    As he came to a hilltop, he encountered a beautiful lady who asked him, “God bless you, my son, where are you going?”

    Juan Diego explained that he was going to bring medicinal water to the sick. The lady responded, “Follow me closely. I will give you another water with which you will extinguish the contagion and cure not only your family but all who drink of it, for my heart is always inclined toward the lowly and will not suffer to see such things without remedying them.”

    The woman led Juan Diego down the steep hill as night began to fall. At the bottom was a pine grove with a spring of water, that still exists today. The lady told Juan Diego that whoever drank the smallest drop would be restored to perfect health. She then told him that he would find an image of her in the pine grove where they were standing, a “true portrait of her perfections and clemencies, and that he should advise the Franciscan fathers to place it in the church of St. Lawrence” that stood on top of the hill.

    Juan Diego took water from the spring and hastened off to cure the sick. Later he went to the Franciscan monastery to tell the friars of his experience. The friars observed the expression on Juan Diego’s face as he told the story and believed him, possibly also because he was a regular altar server there.

    That evening they followed him back to the pine grove. In the light of the sunset, the trees seemed to burn without being consumed. One tree was particularly fat, so they opened it up with a hatchet and found the statue of Mary as Juan Diego had said they would. They prepared a litter from tree branches and flowers and lifted the statue up onto their shoulders to carry it to the church of St. Lawrence.

    History of the Shrine


    The earliest mention of the shrine is found in the writing of the Tlaxcalan historian Diego Muñoz Camargo, who makes reference to there being a Franciscan missionary center in Tlaxcala in 1588 or 1589 called Santa María Ocotla. In an earlier book he refers to a nacimiento desta agua (“source of this water”) where there is a cross in a group of forest trees that evokes great devotion.

    Juan de Palafox y Mendoza, then Archbishop of Puebla, made a visit to the shrine in 1644, although he does not mention a statue. He wrote in his own account of the visit that he recited the rosary there and praised the religious devotion of the inhabitants of the town. The first mention of the statue occurs in 1689, in the frontispiece of a history of the city of Tlaxcala, published by Don Juan Benaventura Zapata y Mendoza.

    Diego de Osoria de Escobar, Archbishop of Puebla in 1670, appointed Juan de Escobar as caretaker of the shrine. Juan de Escobar is responsible for constructing the shrine with its present floor plan, with the chancel, transept, and cupola. The second caretaker, Francisco Fernández, was in charge of the shrine from 1691-1716. He installed the retablo dedicated to the Virgin of Guadalupe.

    The third caretaker, Manuel Loayzaga, was the man responsible for giving the shrine the appearance it has today. He put in the magnificent central retablo with the great silver niche in which the statue stands as well as the pulpit. The pièce de resistance however is the camarín, the eight-sided chapel behind the niche that is used as the Virgin’s dressing room. It is decorated with “solomonic columns”, paintings from the Life of the Virgin, portraits of Doctors of the Church who defended the Virgin Mary, and at the centre, the great round table on which the statue stands as it is being dressed.

    Just as importantly, Loayzaga put the final, “official” version of the Ocotlán legend into print, publishing two editions of his book Historia de la milagrosíssima imagen de Nuestra Señora de Occotlán (sic) in 1747 and 1750.

    The Statue


    The statue of the Virgin of Ocotlán is the centrepiece of the shrine. It stands 148 cm tall and is reportedly made of pine, although this is not certain. It is carved as wearing a long tunic and mantle. The tunic is gold, with red trim. The mantle was blue at one time, but the paint has faded, revealing more gold beneath it. The statue stands erect, looking straight ahead, hands folded in front of the chest. The carved hair is brown and a replica of the image in the Museo de la Memoria shows it to have seven plaits of hair in back.

    Normally, the statue is dressed in a cape. of which it owns many, and a large crown that was given to the statue in 1975. It also has pierced ears, earrings, and many finger rings in addition to the scepter it carries. A silver crescent moon with a “man in the moon” face looking up at her has been put at the base of the image to confirm its identity as an Immaculate Conception.

    Devotion to the Virgin of Ocotlán is concentrated around the various processions that take place several times during the year. The statue leaves its niche over the altar on three fixed dates: New Year’s Day and the first and third Mondays in May. The Monday processions are referred to as the bajada (descent) and the subida (ascent) respectively.

    The shrine of the Virgin of Ocotlán is now a parish church. It is located on a hill overlooking the city. From the zocalo go two blocks north on Independenia to Guridi y Alcocer. Turn right and when the road forks, take the left fork uphill to the church.

    With almost 150 years of history, the Mummies of Guanajuato have become a part of our culture and traditions as a people settled on the slopes of a large ravine that has generously produced the riches of its innards since the age of Spanish viceroyalty.

    In 1865 the first mummified body that lay in the Santa Paula Pantheon was extracted, and as the years go by, other bodies are discovered in the same condition due to the characteristics of the soil in which they rested. At present more than one hundred mummies make up the inventory of the museum created in their honor.

    The wonder aroused by the mummies has been the inspiration for countless films starring Mexican wrestling heroes, and in the 1970s these films introduced other countries to the image of these stiffened bodies. In 2007 the Municipal Government redesigned the old Mummy Museum’s exhibits thematically, and with an infrastructure suitable for this exhibition which attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors every year.

    The Mummies of Guanajuato are totally incorporated into the culture of Guanajuato’s inhabitants; from both a historical and social standpoint, they represent the different stages that have allowed this city to reinforce its position today as an important domestic tourist destination. Conserving and enlarging the cultural heritage associated with the mummies’ legacy has also been the object of painstaking scientific studies carried out by American specialists in forensics and anthropology. Restaurants in Guanajuato, Mexico

    View Larger Map of Restaurants in Guanajuato, Mexico

    These scientists have performed studies on mummies in other parts of the world, and in Guanajuato they are applying advanced techniques that will result in the enrichment of museum archives since it may be possible to learn possible causes of death, approximate ages, social environment and even the facial reconstruction of the mummified bodies.

    The Mummies are part of Guanajuato’s Heritage and for this reason we conserve, preserve and share them with the visitors that come to our city in search of them. Dr. Eduardo Romero Hicks, Mayor of Guanajuato


    the mummies of guanajuatoLocated south of Trozado Hill, the Santa Paula Municipal Pantheon was opened on March 13, 1861 and although it was not yet finished, it began operations on this date.

    The Santa Paula Pantheon is a magical place with a mysterious atmosphere, and the beauty of its niches, tombs and mausoleums transport us in time and space, capturing the imagination of the wary and incredulous visitor. From its belly come the mummified bodies that are exhibited in the Mummy Museum of Guanajuato.

    Hotels in Guanajuato, Mexico

    View Larger Map of Hotels in Guanajuato, Mexico
    On June 9, 1865, to the amazement of the gravediggers, the mummified body of Remigio Leroy, a French doctor, was exhumed from Niche 214 of the Pantheon’s first series. This is the first and therefore the most ancient of the Guanajuato Mummy Museum’s collection. In the early days, visits to the catacombs of the Santa Paula Pantheon to observe the mummified bodies were informal and clandestine, a practice based on the growing interest of tourists who were attracted by mysticism and curiosity.

    Today the Mummy Museum of Guanajuato exhibits more than 100 mummies that have been found in the Santa Paula Pantheon and are an attraction for the City of Guanajuato. The exhibition has an introductory video about the meaning of death for Mexicans and their way of accepting it. The Mummy Museum is a must-see for those wishing to learn more about the city’s most important attractions.

    The Mummies have generated great worldwide interest in visiting them and researching the reasons for mummification, which as opposed to other mummies in the world, are conserved through a natural process.

    museo de las momias guanajuato111 bodies of mummified women, men and children make up the collection of Guanajuato’s Mummy Museum. Exhumed between 1865 and 1989.

    Throughout its existence, the Mummy Museum of Guanajuato has undergone few modifications to its facilities, but on March 21, 2007 it was reopened after a substantial renovation. It’s important to note that the modification and renovation of museum space was completed in fewer than 60 hours, signifying a true challenge for the workers of Guanajuato, who through the initiative of the mayor, Dr. Eduardo Romero Hicks, successfully carried out the task of preserving and promoting the heritage of the City of Guanajuato.

    Theater: The Museum’s Introductory Video. “Historic, Artistic”: Origins of the museum and some important artists whose work is centered on the Mummies of Guanajuato.

    Recreating Origins: Reconstruction of the way in which the mummified bodies were exhibited since the second half of the 19th Century.

    Voices of the Dead: Some of the collection’s most representative constituents tell us their story.

    Little Angels: Baby mummies, dressed according to the “Little Angels” tradition.

    Image Studies: Studies performed on the mummified bodies of a man and woman. Interesting findings.

    Tragic Deaths: People whose lives were cut short by alarming events.

    Typical Clothing: Mummies who were buried in typical clothing.

    Mother and Child: The Museum’s most important piece is kept in this hall: The World’s Smallest Mummy.

    Santa Paula: Reconstruction of the Pantheon’s niches that the Museum’s mummies were extracted from, and exhibition of bodies from the collection’s different stages.

    Coffins: Here you’ll see what the Museum’s halls looked like before this year’s renovation.


    Two Quinnipiac professors are part of a research team that revealed its research findings from a unique investigation of 22 mummies in Guanajuato.

    The press conference was held at the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art in Hartford.

    The research team includes Ronald Beckett and Jerry Conlogue, the co-directors of Quinnipiac’s Bioanthropology Research Institute and former hosts of National Geographic’s Mummy Road Show.

    The third member of the team is Jerry Melbye, director of the Forensic Anthropology Center at Texas State University.

    In May 2007 the three scientists were invited by the mayor of Guanajuato, Dr. Eduardo Romero Hicks, an American-trained medical doctor, to collect as much data as possible from 22 of the 59 mummies now on display at the Mueso de Las Momias. The first of these mummies was found in a mausoleum crypt in Guanajuato in 1896 and the last was removed in 1958.

    There were 111 mummies found in this location. This collection represents one of the largest groups of natural mummies on display in the Western Hemisphere. The scientists researched each specimen in detail using the latest technological devices and forensic knowledge.

    It is believed that the mummies involved are of people died sometime between 1850 and 1950. The local legend is that these mummies were preserved as a result of the life-preserving sulfur and mineral-rich water of Guanajuato. Mayor Hicks attended the press conference to answer questions about the project, the museum in Guanajuato or these myths.

    All of the mummies examined were “common” folk, not royalty, who lived in this working-class silver- mining community. The results shed light on the health and lifestyles of a broad sector of people residing in this ancient village. A fetal mummy, a newborn boy, a man who supposedly hanged and a woman who was rumored to be buried alive were among the cases investigated.

    Financial support for the research project was acquired from the government of Guanajuato, research grants from Quinnipiac University School of Health Sciences and from the researchers themselves.


    Museo de las Momias Guanajuato
    Explanada del Panteón Municipal s/n
    3600 Guanajuato, México
    01 473 732 0639


    Tula
    Her excellent ruins call to adventurous travelers from all over the world.

    Downtown Tula a semi-central zocalo, a centrally located cathedral and several commercial streets. To reach the centro just head toward the cathedral from whatever route interests you. The cathedral is visible from everywhere and is near everything. Juarez runs past the side of the cathedral to the zocalo.

    tula ruinsTula is one of the best studied archaeological sites in Mexico, archaeologists from all the world have visited it. Considered the first large settlement in northern Mesoamerica and once the Toltecs’ greatest city.

    Tula is believed to be founded during the 9th century by the legendary Ce Actatl Topiltzin (Quetzalcoatl). Ce Actatl Topiltzin, the most venerated kin in indigena history and mythology. Under his rule, Tula grew to hold thousands of inhabitants and developed an architecture that would serve as the prototype for Aztec cities.

    The story goes that after many peaceful years at Tula he abandoned the city in 884 because of growing conflicts with neighbors. Leading many of his followers to the Gulf coast and heading out to sea off the coast of Veracruz vowing to return in the year 1 Reed. Several kings followed expanding Tula into the center of the mighty Toltec empire. Hundreds of years later, Cortes arrived in Veracruz on the year 1 Reed. The legend is that because of his skin color and this strange coincidence of timing, the Aztecs believed the conquistador was the same light-skinned Quetzalcoatl who fled to the east so many years before which caused Aztec Emperor Moctezuma to warmly welcome Cortes. Hotels in Tula de Allende

    View Larger Map of Hotels in Tula de Allende, Mexico

    The Toltecs, whose name means builders in Nahuatl, relied on irrigation for their agricultural success modeled their architecture after the sytle of Teotihuacan. During the 200 year long Toltec rein after drought and crop failures weakened the Toltec capital in 1165 the Chichimecs attacked and destroyed Tula. The ruins of the city, eroded due to the poor rock quality found in the area, as well as poor maintenance because of the Toltecs sporadic internal instability. Quetzalcoatl urged the Toltecs to evacuate the city prompting some residents to bury their possessions and move to the region called Tlapallan. Tula was eventually absorbed by the Aztec empire. Aztec ceramics and pottery can be found scattered among the ruins.

    Restaurants in Tula de Allende

    View Larger Map of Restaurants in Tula de Allende, Mexico
    From the entrance area a path winds past cacti leading through some vendor stalls before arriving at the main plaza. The first structure you see on your right (north) when you arrive at the main plaza is Ballcourt #1 which is just north of the large Edificio de los Atlantes. The Ballcourt, which is almost 70m long, held the depiction of a ball player in ritual dress which is now located at the Museo Nacional de Antropologia in Mexico City. To your left (south) is the monumental Edificio de los Atlantes (Pyramid B). Starkly standing against the horizon high above the rest of the site, the Atlantes emblemize Tula on covers of National Geographic and on posters in tourist offices throughout Mexico. The statues representing warriors were originally standing inside a temple holding religious figures. The Atlantes are evidence of the change from theocratic to military rule in Tula during the Postclassic period. On the pyramid’s northern side and is El Coatepantli (The Wall of Snakes). This wall depicting jaguars and serpents in procession impressed the Aztecs so much that they built copies of it in the plazas of their cities. Reliefs of serpents feasting on humans adorn the adjacent wall.

    Immediately west of the Edifico de los Atlantes is the Palacio Quemado (Burnt Palace). Believed to have been an administrative center in ancient Tula. A chacmool (messenger to the gods) was originally found in the central patio. Like many other indigenous cultures, the Toltecs built their largest buildings on the eastern boundary of the plaza to witness the sunrise. Toltec leaders attempted to maintain sociopolitical control by inspiring awe and linking natural phenomena to the government. Tula’s Templo Principal once towered over the others. Because of deliberate destruction by the Chicimecs and others following Tula’s adandonment at the end of the 12th century, it now pales in comparison to the Edificio de los Atlantes. Temple Principal was most likely once aborned with a massive scuptural slab found nearby which is covered with images of Quetzalcoatl in his manifestation as Tlahuizcaltec Uhtli (The Morning Star). Adjoining the ballcourt on the interior of the plaza is El Tzompantli, a small platform built by the Aztecs. Tzompantli means “place of skulls” and was used to display the victims of sacrifice.

    cozumel villaNote that on any of Cozumel’s East coast beaches intense rip-tides, under-tows, and strong currents often exist.

    Some of the best ways to avoid any danger is:

  • Don’t know how far into the ocean is a safe distance for you?
  • Walk into the ocean until the water is as high as your ribcage.
    This rule may be flexible depending on the current status of the surf and your swimming abilities. If you are unsure of the water’s nature, stay in a more shallow area.

  • Use fins while swimming, body surfing, or boogie boarding in the deep surf
  • Fins give you great power in the water. If you are already a reasonably strong swimmer, they will only enhance your abilities!

  • ALWAYS swim with a friend spotting you from land
  • If you get caught in a current, don’t panic or struggle!
  • First and foremost, remember to breathe and keep your cool! Then, swim at an angle WITH THE CURRENT using a back or side stroke. It may take you a while to reach land, but by swimming at this angle, you are slowly breaking out of the ocean’s current and returning to calmer water.
    Just remember to be patient! If you try to fight the ocean, the ocean is going to win! It will deposit you on the beach eventually.

  • Use sunscreen!
  • On a sunny day the sun will burn you if you’re not protectedThe island of Cozumel’s east coast is a great place to visit during those winter time “Nortes” (north winds)

    During this time, the ocean can be very calm and nearly surf free. Keep this area in mind if you’re not comfortable with rough seas.

    vallarta-beach-mexicoThe best months to visit the Mexico beaches are from November to May. July-August, Christmas, and Easter attract large numbers of holidaymakers from both inside and outside the country. The hottest and most humid months, June, July, August and September are to be avoided in view of the torturous weather. Insect problem during these months is another issue. August-November has the possibility of rough seas on the Pacific coast mainly due to storms. For diving off Baja California, the time period from August to November is the best, with its warm, clear waters and blue sky. Mexican beaches can be enjoyed with a huge variety of sumptuous food and drinks and of course, music and dance. Tulum Beach Mexico

    Other attractions are the coral formations that are simply superb at some places. Besides, some nearby ancient sites like Chichen Itza and Tulum are worth visiting.Some of the places featuring the best of Mexican beaches are listed below. Tulum (on the Caribbean coast) has one of the most beautiful beaches in the world, with picturesque Mayan ruins overlooking the same. The ambience thus created is awesome and is the reason why thousands of tourists visit the place each year. Tulum is 130 km south of the massive resort of Cancún. It is a tiny but perfectly formed white sandy cove, with beautiful palm trees and the inviting azure Caribbean Sea to swim in. The entrance to Tulum has a huge car park, souvenir shops, café and restaurants. As such, there is no place to stay on the spot, but there are a few hotels and restaurants in Tulum village. Beside, there are plenty of resort type places, cabañas (beach huts) and campsites along the coast road south to Punta Allen.

    playa del carmenPlaya del Carmen (on the Caribbean coast) is a cool, casual beach with plenty of accommodation, excellent bars, restaurants and shops. Although very popular and draws crowds from all over the world, the place is still low-key, friendly and relaxing. It is the best place in Mexico to buy high quality crafts, especially jewelry. Boats are available for Cozumel, famous for world class diving and a park for swimming with dolphins. Puerto Escondido (on the Pacific coast) has several stretches of magnificent sandy beach, with a laid-back ambience and plenty of inexpensive accommodation. Popular beaches include the 2 km long Zicatela (surfing paradise) to the east of the town and Playa Puerto Angelito on the west. The surf here reaches 7-8 meters during the months of August-November due to south Pacific storms.

    mexico zipolite beach
    Puerto Angel area (on the Pacific coast) is known for its tranquility with the most popular beach being the Zipolite. Security is a bit of a problem here. Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo (Baja California) proffers miles of marvelous beaches and is a major American tourist destination for fishing and young partying. The best beaches are the Playa Cemeterio, Playa Santa Maria (great for swimming), Playa Costa Azul, Playa Canta Mar (ideal for surfing) and Playa Solmar (whale-watching from January to April).

    Bahia Concepcion beachThe shore of Bahia Concepcion (Conception Bay) has several scenic beaches including Playa Requesón, Playa Buenaventura, and Playa Coyote. It is on the coast of Sea of Cortez, which is a protected marine sanctuary. The facilities are fairly basic (with no fresh water at some places) but the natural beauty and tranquility more than compensate for this. Excellent for water sports and great for seafood (especially clams). Playa Santispac has the best campsite, with some fine restaurants. Playa Buenaventura is for kayaking enthusiasts. Bahia de Matanchen, San Blas (on the Pacific coast) is a small but truly Mexican fishing village of San Blas featuring an excellent town beach but the best in the area is Bahia de Matanchen about 4 km away. It has a broad crescent bay with splendid beaches of prime soft sand and a relaxing atmosphere.

    Between Puerto Vallarta and Acapulco, the central Pacific Coast has several hundred miles of coastline with fine sandy beaches and excellent facilities. The place is known for its fantastic seafood, lively nightlife and scores of activities.

    acapulco beach

    Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Eric_Morris

    Continuing south past Aztec Stadium on Insurgentes Sur from its junction with Río Mixcoac and Río Churubusco we see on the right the modern Teatro de los Insurgentes, a circular building with a mosaic by Diego Rivera on the faáade depicting the history of the Mexican theatre. To the right stretches the district of Tlacopac.

    Alvaro Obregon Monument

    The Insurgentes Sur continues south to the district of Villa Obregón, passing on the left the Àlvaro Obregón Monument which commemorates the revolutionary hero and President, murdered here in 1928. The sculpture and relief carving on this massive granite memorial are by Ignacio Asúnsolo. A macabre showpiece to be found in the memorial is a glass container in which is preserved in spirit Obregón’s hand and arm which he lost during the revolutionary struggles.

    General Álvaro Obregón, a revolutionary leader and president of the United States of Mexico, was gunned down in this spot while attending a banquet in 1928, shortly after being elected for a second term of office. The assassin was a young religious fanatic by the name of José de León Toral, who was motivated by Obregón’s anti-church policies. The sombre monument with two granite statues depicting agriculture and industry commemorates moments of the revolutionary period. It houses the General’s forearm and hand, which was blown off by a canon in the Battle of Celaya. This event coined the phrase “Nadie resiste un cañonazo de 50 mil pesos” (“Nobody resists 50 thousand pesos worth of cannon fire”). The monument was designed by Ignacio Asúnsolo and is found within the pleasant surroundings of the Parque de la Bombilla.

    Avenida Miguel Angel de Quevedo e Insurgentes
    San Angel
    01090 Mexico City
    Mexico