Friday, May 25, 2007

Mexico

Angel de la Independencia with a typical taxi in front!

The end of my trip is now drawing to a close, and Mexico has been a great place to end up. Overall this country definitely feels higher up on the development scale then other parts of Latin America, making it slightly more comfortable to be in, from buses to toilets, and on top of that I'm visiting friends I met when studying in Valencia which is great. The food here is great, nothing like Mexican food back home and very spicy. Actually, this has to be the spice centre of the world, maybe more so than India. You go to eat what looks like a tasty strawberry courtesy sweet in a shop, only to discover its hot chilly flavour and burns your mouth out!

I started off heading from Cancun to Tulum, a slightly cheaper and calmer place on the Mexican carribean coast... It was a really great place to start off... There are some Mayan ruins there set right on the sea front, which is one of the most beautiful sea fronts I have seen, and the ruin paradisiac beach mix creates quite a picture.

Moving on, I stopped at Chitchen Itza, one of the main Mayan ruin sites, which involves a huge pyramid surrounded by all sorts of other buildings including an observatory, and also insane amounts of people, not to mention a sun hot enough to make you melt. My favorite part was when the place cleared out just before closing, and a fresh breeze cooled things down, so that you could really soak up how impressive the ruins are.

The next stop was Merida, a town I found extremely nice to be in, with a pretty colonial centre, some nice churches and I got to see the intensity of Mexican political campaigning. We're not talking about the odd speach here and there, this is a full blown excuse for a party, with trucks driving round blaring out music with people dancing on top, stages set up in the main square with comedians and musicians entertaining the crowds. What a way to get the people involved.

The main highlights around there was Uxmal, another important set of Mayan ruins which include a huge pyramid, and that was an interesting day because hitchhiking back I got picked up by a French tour group which gave me another perspective on tourism in the area. I guess out of all the mass tourism places I have been, I felt like the Yucatan peninsula really had managed to keep a lot of its charm, the people didn't just see you as a sack of money like in so many other places. I also made it to the cenotes, caves formed by the undergroudn rivers of the Yucatan peninsula which you can swim and jump in, the water is a beautiful turquoise colour lit up by holes in the roof.

My next stop was to meet Jonch in Villahermosa, a pleasant town with zero tourists enroute to Mexico City. The last time we had seen each other was two years ago having a good time at the San Fermines in Pamplona, so it was impressive to see the change, when he picked me up in his smart company car and took me to his huge office... It was food for thought on how things are going to change for me, but it was mainly great to catch up after so much time.

We flew together to Mexico City, to spend the weekend in Cuernavaca nearby, where we met up with Juan Pablo, another ex-Valencia student and also the family and respective girlfriends... It was a tough weekend partying and enjoying the jacuzzi!!! Back in Mexico City, I was definitely pleasantly surprised. I was expecting a monster city like Sao Paolo, and although it is a monster, I still felt the areas, obviously privileged, that I was seeing were full of greenery and had a good atmosphere to them, although traffic definitely seemed atrocious! I was staying with Juan Pablo, but also got to meet up with Luis and Silvia who were also in Valencia. Now I'm in Guadalajara after a brief stop in Toluca where I caught up with Barbara, and should be heading camping later on today to some beaches on the Pacific nearby... Sorry for all the names, but I hope other people from Valencia will enjoy the pics of what our friends are doing two years down the line...

It's going to be great to get back, and apart from family and friends I'm dying for some food from home, a pain au chocolat, a croissant aux amandes, a pizza from the Tratoria, an escalope Normande, some proper pasta with real basil... Yum yum!

Isla de Mujeres from above

Tulum ruins

What a beach!

Chitchen Itza

Mayan sculpture

The Observatory

The pyramid at Uxmal

Faces on the corner!

Iguanas everywhere!

Overgrown ruins

Mayan King

Azulejos

Vivir es un placer

Hacienda factory

Huge hacienda interior

The French tour group

Old machines for making material from cactus

Future vaqueros

Old house

Small town square

Election rally

Onto the balconies

Party truck

Getting some Agua de Jamaica

Old VW Beetle land

The evening election party

Tacos

Yucatan restaurant

Young people campaigning for some friends who were arrested and locked up without trial during a George Bush visit in March

Buying fabric

Peddling my bicycle taxi

The first Cenote

Horse powered train...

The splash after a 12m jump

Climbing up some roots

The last Cenote

The rickety rails

Hitching a ride with some American students

The Merida Cathedral

Virgen de Guadalupe

Mayan sculpture

Not a bad house in Merida

Streets of Merida


Hammocks in Merida
Its a good day for this man, his wife and his two kids if he sells two a day at 10US each

Merida by night

Quick snack

Chilaquiles

Peacock

Kids in uniform

Turtle pond

Crocs and turtles

School outing

Villahermosa laguna

Young students

The modern side to Villahermosa, you can feel the US is close!

Jonch at work

An incredible all you can eat seafood restaurant

Hunger strike against voting fraud in Villahermosa

Villahermosa town hall

Typical Mexican food

The beggar and the bride

Villahermosa Cathedral

Volcano from the sky

The Aztec stadium

Breakfast

A tough day travelling

A night out in Cuernavaca!

An architect's house!

Totti and his mammoth taco!

The tragic side to football

La Condesa

Old house

Mexico City taxi

The Zocalo

Art gallery

Mexico City Cathedral

Snake at the Templo Mayor

Healers in the Zocalo

Colonial building

Gardeners outside the Museo de Bellas Artes

Marc wouldn't mind a pair of these

Appreciating a work of art

Alameda central

Memorial

Chess
Edificio de los Pantalones

Dove advert!

Auditorio Nacional

A bit of Pro Evo

Looking at of Juan Pablo's flat

More Chilaquiles

Metepec town square

La Tlanchana

One of Metepec's many churches

Metepec fortress

Lunch with Barbara and her Mum

Flash flood in Toluca!

Link to the previous post:

Into the Carribean

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Rubio tienes q provar lo tacos al pastor...si aun no lo has hecho!

pues tengo gana de verte...

un abrazo, vale

Anonymous said...

QUE PASO GUEY!!! FUE UN SUPER GUSTO PASAR UN RATO CONTIGO EN TU VISITA A MEXICO... Y SOBRE TODO RECORDAR VALENCIA Y PASAR UN BUEN RATO GUEY!!! NADA MAS SE TE OLVIDO PONER EN LA WEB TUS FOTOS DE LA FIESTA DEL SABADO..JAJAJA... MUY BUENA! QUE TE SIGA LLENDO BIEN EN TU VIAJE.. Y DE REGRESO A TRABAJAR PARA PAGAR TUS CREDITOS!! UN ABRAZO!

Anonymous said...

Hey Owen, I was Just Passing By, a friend of mine told me about your blog, and it's amazing, I wish I can travel once the way you are doing, By the way I really liked the way you appreciate Mexico, you had a different "not so tourist" vision of My country....

congrats and keep traveling!!! this is the experience of your life

my name is diego and my e-mail is atomic_chilango@hotmail.com

I am friend of Araceli De anda's Brother....
Araceli is Luis Enrique's girlfriend....


well.... take care