Friday, January 29, 2010

When First Impressions are Misleading


San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas Mexico

We arrived yesterday after an 8 hour drive from La Crucecita. We now have a whole new understanding of Huatulco as a major Fonatur project, the ambitious design and the reality within the current global recession. We became suspicious of La Crucecita's validity as a real Mexican pueblo when we realized we didn't see any dogs on the streets, there were no "mofles" or "llantera" shops and not a single "ferreteria"to be seen. Where are all those somewhat scruffy looking businesses that are the lifeblood of our town of Zihuatanejo? We learned the answer when we spoke with some of the locals who explained that every building in the town is only 20 years old and that the looks and impression of Mexico is a package designed by Fonatur. It's a nice place to visit, but not really a place to live! However, in saying that, we did enjoy some of the best live music and saw lively venues full of both locals and tourists - a scene that Zihua is missing these days.



Our coastal route along Hwy. 200 is one of the routes that has been designated to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence. Ruta 2010 signs seemed to be a good name for this odyssey of ours. However, we said goodbye to the coast, the windy towns of the Tehuantepec isthmus and we began our inland trip through Tuxtla, the modern and busy capital city of Chiapas. From there the road climbs even higher to San Cristobal.

We arrived in the late afternoon, and found our way through the busy streets full of people dressed in traditional clothing (I can't wait to see the textile mercados) to our destination. Our apartment is in the complex http://www.kukurutz.com/. Like many colonial towns, the facades are deceiving and from the outside, the buildng looked to be very old and in poor repair...but what waited inside was truly a delight. However, let me back up and explain what happened on our first interaction with a person in this town....and we hope first impressions will not be lasting ones.

As we were getting out of our car across the street and down the block from our destination, I was holding on to my printed internet map of the school and the apartment. A young Mexican man approached me and asked if he could help me. This often occurs in Mexico where I sense people are proud of their towns and want a newcomer to have a good experience. I told him that we were fine and were just walking over to check into our new apartment. He excitedly took the papers from me and walked us across the street, where he rang the bell and spoke to the young woman in Spanish. We were taken in and he accompanied us to our apartment where he began to tour us and show us the TV, fireplace, curtains, bathroom towels, shower etc. The caretaker arrived and looked confused, but he spoke no English and I was given a registration form to complete. The young man encouraged me to sit down and fill in my registration. Gene went back to get the car and begin to bring in our luggage with the caretaker and his children.

No sooner had I sat down with my pen than this young Mexican man started asking me where I was from and where I had bought my colorful Mexican bag. I was chatting with him and filling out the form, thinking that he would be asking me for a propina for his assistance, when I heard my gum package wrapper crinkle in his pocket. I said "hey what are you doing with my gum"'...and then I realized he had his hand inside my bag and at that second he bolted out of the door and out through the gateway that had been opened to allow Gene easy access with our luggage. I yelled "Robo" (robbery) and everyone looked very confused as the caretaker had been told by the young man that he was our taxi driver. I was lucky as he only took approximately 300 pesos from my zippered change purse. It could have been much worse, but this was not an auspicious start to our 2 week stay here. I can only hope that his need for my money was much more than mine.

The town is vibrant with faces, costumes, architecture and locations we are not famliar with. It is pushing the envelope of my comfort levels. In the mercado this morning, the faces weren't the soft and welcoming faces we see in Zihuatanejo, but the wizened, hardened faces of the tiny, sinuous indigenous people we see struggling with their loads in their heavy woolen clothing.

Today we signed up for our Spanish classes which begin Monday at http://www.lacasaenelarbol.org/. We planned it, we wanted it, we need it, but can we cope?

Monday, January 25, 2010

Red Fish, Blue Fish, Yellow Fish and a Hotel Flamboyant too




La Crucecita, Bahias de Huatulco, Oaxaca, Mexico

Today, we left Puerto Escondido. My feelings about it are slightly different after 24 hours in the town. I now think of it as I think of other sport oriented places like Banff, Whistler, Lake Tahoe. You are either one of the people doing the sport...in this case it was surfing. Or you are one of the people who are really trying hard to get noticed. There were a lot of young people in bikinis, boardshorts and tanned to perfection. Brazilian wax shops were in abundance. There were also a lot of older "Hippies"in various forms of Oaxacan traditional dress - perhaps enroute to yoga classes or other forms of self-discovery as the metaphysical shops were also not to be missed.

Our last 3 days of beach exposure before we head to our mountain destinations, are destined to be spent snorkelling and exploring the various coves that make up the Bahias de Huatulco. This area is a national park, and the environment is struggling to compete with Fonatur's version of the Mexican tourist experience. Our goal is to see all 7 bays that comprise the park, so Gene and I decided to endure 13 kms. of dust, washouts and washboard surface to see the first of the bays as you head East. Bahia San Augustin is just far enough away from the main resort to be ignored by most tourists except those who go on the Ecotourism side trips. We were not disappointed.

Bahia San Augustin was one of those places that we all dream of. It jumped right out of the movie Y tu Mama Tambien..in fact, I swear it was the bay of that movie. An industrious restauranter, Manuel waved us into his enramada con estacionmento and we gladly left the dusty Ford behind to snorkel in one of the nicest waterfront parks we have seen. The bay has a large living coral reef that is easily accessed, and we were happy to see no one standing on it, feeding fish or otherwise fouling the area. After a long snorkel with most of our favorite tropical fish visible in crystal clear water, and a bit of a struggle to get Gene back up due to his reliance on one leg only, we enjoyed a lunch of filete pescado a la parilla (what else??).

We found the little Mexican town of La Crucecita right on the doorstep of the articial town of Santa cruz de Huatulco, and the developments along the coast. It is our kind of place - a zocalo, numerous authentic restaurants, shops and within walking distance of one of the bays we want to explore tomorrow.... And how could we pass up staying at the Hotel Flamboyant....a colonial gem across the street from the Zocalo. This just could be the best 3 days of my life!


Sunday, January 24, 2010

On the Road Again



Playa Zicatela, Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca, Mexico.


If life is a highway, I'm back on the road again after a speed bump and a detour. First the speed bump,...Gene took a 'little"fall on the rocks to Playa Los Gatos. This happened back in December when our son Eric first came to visit. It wasn't witnessed by me (or anyone else), so I want to say it was little, but it started a trend in falling for Gene that has resulted in an injured right leg which has persisted and created a reduction in his mobility and necessitated the use of a "baton", a colorful cane I bought at the mercado, to navigate over the uneven surfaces which make up Mexico. He's getting better but he is being very careful as any setback could change our plans on this trip. Then my life took a "detour"when I went back to Vancouver to stay with our daughter Kristen and Reilly while she underwent surgery. She was diagnosed with thyroid cancer and I wanted to be with her while she had the surgery and recovered. This was a detour in our plans for another full winter in Mexico, but one that gave me the unexpected plesaures of a chance to be with my children and learn more about their lives in Vancouver. And see Vancouver pre-Olympics in all its glory. Well done Canada, and well done Kristen who has made a quick and healthful recovery.


Gene and I are both figuratively and literally back on the road and in this case, it's Mexico's National Hwy. 200. Let me be the first to say that it is a road with a lot of speed bumps, but here they are called TOPES. We have taken this highway before, with our friends Paul and Lynn and last year with Frank and Helga. Highway 200 winds down the scenic coastline of Pacific Mexico and for the last 2 days we have driven from Zihuatanejo, Guerrero, bypassing Acapulco (thanks GPS and Guia Roja) and are now in Pto. Escondido Oaxaca state. It is a slow, winding way to see the country side but we do love it and are happy to be on our journey together again. Today is a rest day, we aren't travelling. Instead we are watching the strength and beauty of surfers as the vye for position on the waves here at Playa Zicatela. Like Zihuatanejo, Pto. Escondido seems to be lacking in tourists. The restaurants, beachside palapas, roads, streets are empty waiting for the usual crowds of the "high season" to come. We should feel lucky to be here while it is so nice and quiet, but this quiet means that this is not a good time for Mexico. And when it's not a good time for Mexico, it makes our presence feel all the more significant to all the Mexicans we encounter. We have to make sure that our journey on this highway is one where we respect our status as visitors. We are visitantes who have started a journey realizing that we don't know what's ahead on this journey just as certainly as we do not know what's ahead on the journey of life!