Reflection from Mexico`s West Pacific Coast or something of that nature.

July 20, 2006

It seems like forever since I blogged or even touched any piece of technology – over a week since that last evening in Colima – because we`ve been hugging the beach village until this place – a huge bay of reefs blue waters and wooded mountains – Zihautanejo. That next day was especially mad – after leaving Colima we had to find a local bus centre and headed for one of the larger villages called Ameria about two hours away. Only this place was well, desolate and instead of finding helpful bus drivers who could direct us onwards we found a raving mad burly Mexican man ranting in pidgin English about how his wife was a bitch and how he hated niggers because one had shot his arm up. Of course we did escape as always helped by the carefully placed local woman who had spent a few years working in the States and has just enough English.

After escaping Ameria we found our way to a building site in Tecoman – our first off-bible experience of the trip. And then we really had no idea what to do. I think my Spanish had at that point reached its maximum potential so far and again we got to the bus station and found our bus to Calleta de Capmos, situated on a headland over looking the miles of volcanic sands we had passed before and a sheltered bay in front. Calletta doesn`t really seem to stick in my mind but we met some nice people and had what Mark claims to be the best tacos hes eaten yet (and also the cheapest). (Taco’s take a very different form to any english equivalent – thin savory tortillas not crunchy but like wraps almost, with some spicy meat. Then you add the onion and the coriander and the varying types of salsas. In Mexico City this was followed by fried potatoes, fried onions perhaps some guacamole. In Caletta this was replaced with a warm bean sauce, and some tomato and radish salad and some more hot sauce.) I suppose the experience was ruined by our chronic sunburn and heatstroke – of which we had to take a day out and travel with backpacks the next day. Our first day on the beach was naive but incredible – a deserted mile of pounding waves that we spent the whole day in and out of and drinking coconut milk. Afterwards we suffered horribly – but it possibly was worth it in looking back.

On the coast you have to approach the day differently – getting up slightly earlier and siesta-ing between 1300 and 1700 when it is unbearably hot. After three nights in Caletta we found our way via a series of crazy buses to the tiny surf village of Troncones where we succeeded in perfecting this. We got a little green bungalow ting well, a large room with a balcony where nobody else was staying and we even had a fridge (all for about 3.50 sterling a night) The fridge meant that we were semi-self-sufficient (at least in milk and cereal and in Pina-Coladas). The food was good here and we rented surfboards and tried to learn for a couple of days. It’s been pretty damn laid back on the coast – just swimming and sleeping and eating and drinking in the evening. So far – two big bottles if tequila and a bottle of rum is the tally, but we haven’t really got drunk yet`- just chilled out in the evening times (although we bought giant shot glasses last night and subsequently slept in to 1100).

Yesterday (I wont explain yet more bus journeys and arrivals) we went snorkeling at the best beach (only accessible by ferry) – playa Las Gatos. It was pretty beautiful there and lots of amazingly colored fish (which I managed to completely swim around and miss). And last night I had my first Red Snapper, which here is just under lobster and stingray in terms of class in the seafood. Fried in garlic butter, it was delicious. The most fantastic part about Zihautanejo is our room – Will made us find a sea view and we discovered this seemingly abandoned hotel built in a gulley down the steep hills to the oceans next to all the really posh ones. Our room is overlooking the wooded gulley and is on a huge balcony. We have between us a hammock space a double bed outside a triple bed and a single inside, plus the rest of the hotels (or just our long balconies) bench chair table and hammock spaces. Hence the long siestas and tequila last night. In Troncoles I was sleeping on my roll mat (having drawn a short straw… long story) so this is absolute luxury. And the whole place is overrun by geckos which we watch for entertainment when they come out around midnight to hunt moths. Last night I also catalyzed (of which there may be many) Cicada fight – catching this unfortunate cicada and lobbing it in peoples beds – very immature but much fun when drunk.

So that’s the story so far. This morning at this ex-pat American café where they do cheap coffee and great breakfasts an American guy said Las Barritas is good so we might be heading there, but my next post will probably be from Acapolco. Today we are exploring the town (did I mention that this place is very picturesque and beautiful), tomorrow we are hoping to charter a boat and go to the best snorkeling beach around a few km down the coast. So hello to all of you back in Britain, Italy or Greece or wherever, it’s great to here from all of you on the internet…. So Godspeed everyone.

P.s. I hope Shaldon fest was great – also special hello to Duncan, Frank, Josh and Jimmy and Pearcey (p.p.s. well done we knew you had it in you) and Robbie if you pick it up.

P.p.p.s We haven’t been to anywhere with Internet connections for a long while so that’s why this is so old news, I didn’t explain that in the beginning.

A late post from Colima

July 10, 2006

I can’t believe this is only my third post after ten days of travelling and sightseeing and great fun in
Mexico. Actually i did try and post about the rest of my birthday and
Guadalajara on the 8th but after writing for an hour the computer crashed… so my memory might need to be jogged a little for this one.The rest of birthday was probably the best day so far – I got presents from the
Mexico gang (a photo album for memories and a picture frame) and then we just explored our way towards a mountain. Guanajuato is the most amazing place; the guidebooks rave about it (I’m such a bible basher) and after visiting the city I can’t imagine anywhere better… although we haven’t seen the beaches yet. We made our way up the cobbled streets and ended up in this wide straight avenue (we discovered that it was a UNESCO World Heritage sight) with a small gradient towards the mountains in the middle of this was a large park of winding paths and trees; which carried on until a series of small weirs and lakes. This ended in a large park with a gigantic statue of Miguel Hildaglo (his statues, and street name, are everywhere) who liberated the first few cities of
Mexico from Spanish rule. We the found some more steps up to an almost Japanese promenade, overlooking a lake at the base of the mountain.
 

            Leaving Guanajuato was very hard (as we had all fallen in love with the place) but we got a late bus to the second largest city of Mexico,
Guadalajara. (All of our bus rides have been particularly un-Mexican, traveling first class and watching sub-titled American movies). After the shock of arriving at our last destination, this seemed rather too easy (now Will, and I have tried to be more prepared, feeling that something is soon going to go tits up, but this may just be what we have recently dubbed `the gringo paranoia´) … but we got a cheap hotel not far from the main plazas and started to explore the city. Guadalajara Centro is made up of several plazas, each with their own character and centered around a more modern huge one that looks upon both the Cathedral (with brightly tiled spires and the blood and hands of a saint contained within, but more gothic than Mexico City´s) and the colonial theatre (with amazing frescoed dome and lots of gold). Guadalajara  didn´t seem to have as much to offer after our last locations but more relaxing than
Mexico City and felt more Mexican. We also had lots of great food; Sopa Azteca (Tomato/Chilli soup with lots of side dishes, this really nice dish of Marlin and Guacomole and Tortillas and some brilliant Burritos. It was also in
Guadalajara that are egos were much inflated by a group of Mexican girls coming up to us to have their photos taken with us because we were ´cute` and looked like the Libertines.
 

After a day of exploring, found our way to a bus to Tequila. You can kind of guess what happened, but it was brilliant none the less. First we had a tour of a distillery then, not before time, the tasting session where we tried 6 different types of Tequila. Mark and I might have had a little too much… and we came back with over five litres of fine Golden blended Tequila, for only about 16 sterling. (We also went to this great Tequila themed restaurant where we had those great burritos and free faux-Margaritas.) (Will has also reminded me of the great Iranian guy who came from LA, whom with we bitched about how the rest of the world was not as relaxed as
Mexico and how Tequila was so great).
 

Yesterday we arrived in Colima, taking a three hour bus ride through both mountains and for the first time, proper desert. We got an amazing hotel, and our room is the size of a barn (that is the most realistic impression I can give actually). We explored Colima, which is just really chilled with some small shady plazas and crumbling colonial buildings, but really we have just got stuff for our coastal stretch (rope, hammocks, money etc.).  Tomorrow we leave for unchartered territories, and for white sand blue waters and hopefully lots of Tequila and grass (we had our first offer last night but I left my rizzlas in the hotel). So adios Amigos…. Until next time. P.s. email me about whats going down in
Britain and Frank, can you send me your address.
P.p.s from Mark – don´t worry Luke, sent off the script, last thing I did before I left, can safely say Michael Caine will be the sleeper hit of 2007…P.p.p.s The most embarrassing moment so far – Will wishing Mark was a women in
Guadalajara so their ´relationship´ could be a lot easier… who know what goes through a mind such as William Darkin´s.

Happy Birthday to myself in Guanajuato…

July 5, 2006

Hello eveyone,

it being to 5th of the 7th month, it is my eighteneeth birthday. It feels pretty good to be in the beautiful city of Guanajuato; i just had a great breakfast of fresh orange juice (jugo de naranja) and bean and cheese melted onto some hot buttered rolls (Morelles i think). We left Mexico City at 12.45 on monday; the combination of a private bus terminal and the brilliant metro (which costs about 30 pence to go anywhere) was very easy to do (i was warned that Mexican bus stations are the most confusing places in the world but this was basically a Greyhound station). It cost us 252 pesos, about 18 sterling, to travel the 500 or so km to Guanajuato. On leaving the City all was apparent was the endles spawling slums. I won´t go into details, but this did put a bit of a down on the journey, to witness that kind of poverty, in a sleek first class coach.

Thn we were passing between the 7 hills of mexico city and onto the high plains. For a couple of hours it was only rock scrub, mountains and small subsistence farming. The it became flatter; more arable and grassland until the land became completely flat with a horizon of blue mountains. I have never seen so much sky in my life – the clouds seemed to touch the top and roll away from it. Then the storm started to gather, and the sky was so intense that i think i actually developed a sense of forboding.

We arrived in Guanajuato (pronounced qwana-kwato) and were all pretty worried – the bus station was in a sparsely populated bit of scrub and we had no rooms and no idea where to go. I managed to get a bus to the centre – and all became clearer as we moved through this journey. We started through what was the outskirts but then entered a tunnel and came out in a more developed industrially populated area. Then we moved up into the steeply winding hills, and considered what it would be like to sleep out in the open (absurd to me now, with our nice rooms and favorite cafe etc.). Another tunnel and it all became clear; the town was actually a small city (of only 20,00) but bulit in the steep valley between several mountain-sized hills and rocky outcrops. This place is amazing – to cut a long story short we found rooms in this old centre of the city, and it is incredible – all the houses are built on top of each other, and there are several main plazas, with fountains, giant box shaped trees and basilicas. (There are even underground roads everywhere, with celllar doors from houses just opening up above them).

Yesterday we explored – we veisted the Diego Riviera museum which was ok, and walked all over the city. We were going to visit the Mummy museum (more Mexican morbid exihibitions) but after trecking there realised that the sight of the worlds smallest Mummy didn´t really appeal to us. Today we are planning to do some walking in the foothills, but after being so tired from walking yesterday and a couple of beers at 2500 m we kind of overslept.

So far the trip has been all that i have hoped for and more, the food very good,and we get along with a smattering of Spanish. I have a feeling Guanajuato is going to be the most picturesque places we are going to visit, it is just so damn cool (as Rupert would say).
p.s. (to all who know us) If you have any questions about Mexico, don’t hesitate to ask.
- JR X

The Journey, the Digs and the Great First Day in Mexico City

July 3, 2006

Better start at the beginning, the bus station in Exeter perhaps. No that was just – a goodbye to my Dad and off to Heathrow. Heathrow; was was as busy asi thought it would, possibly more, and just reminded me how insular life in a small village in Devon is. Heathrow must have the broadest spectrum of the world nations in one small place. You can sit next Budhist monks, Sikh men dressed like warriors and crazy Japanese people dressed in a explosion of colour. I still felt silly in my big straw hat though. What also occured to me is just how easy travelling is – it really is just like Richard (the Beach) says – all you nedd is the ticket and the cash and your there. I was just washed along by departure times and queues and then i was in Toronto – it was, well an incredible feeling after twenty two or so hours sitting having a ciggarete in Toronto watching the sun go down.

The flight was amazing – i looked out the window just in time to see the white dust of the melted ice sheet at the very top edge of Canada – and then hundreds of miles of glaciers, barren rock and forests. I can only describe Canada as desolate – vey thing is so vast – where it is populated there are a few farms – the odd town, in about a hundred mile square. Desolate – the airport echoed this thougt – it was empty and minmal completely and utterly different to Terminal One Heathrow. I was travel weary and tried to go to sleep for six hours waiting for Will, Mark and Rupert´s flight but became only dazed and slightly lonely. Subsequenty i was ecstatic to meet them at around midnight. Toronto airport became great after that – we wnt and found some Canadian siol in touch and talked about – jazz i think. I can´t express the need i had to talk to someone after 16 hours travelling on my own. And then we walked around, enjoying the sight of the more hardened trveller, bedding down in sleeping bags or walking around in travel-worn cowboyboots, jeans and general lumberjacking outfit.Air Canada is the best airline – they gave us hot towels – constant supplies of free drinks and snacks. So we were shattered when ariving at Mexico City airport but –  pretty pampered really.

We were given a taxi service, picked up by one of the two young brothers who run the Hostel Coyote Flaco in Coyocan (place of the Coyote). This place is brilliant – we have a dorm of four everythings brad new and not quite fixed up yet – we had our curtains put up as me put our stuff up when we arrived. Its colourful clean and modern and really small. Yesterday we went to the world best Taco stall (apparently) where we showed how we were idiot-gringos and ordered 4 delicious yet chilli and lard soaked tacos each (intsead of four between us). Will has not recovered.

At breakfast today (which was really really rubbish) we met Lauren, from Bristol and Devon (but lives in Leeds) and then (embarrasingly) the-NYCamerican-woman-whose-name-nobody-can-rember who spoke good Spanish and we used the Metro to go to the Historical Center of Mexico city togeter. its great to meet such friendly people and today was so brilliant, a delicious lunch of chicken Fajittas, a trip to the incomprehensibly morbid and stomach churning Museum of the Inquistion and the mindblowing Muralist museum. The second was so wierd – we came out completely low and desgusted (althought the Iron Maiden was too cool) – the latter was so amazing – the artist Vlady was – well one of the best painters ive ever witnesses and we had a heated debate over Rivieras’ world famous Man Controlling the Universe).

Now, after i rattled trough this hurried and belated account of the trip so far, i m going out to the center of Coyacan (the quiet leafy, beautiful suburb we are staying) to the market and for food. Its almost 8 o’clock. Tommorow are travellers skills (which are severely limited will be tested as we make our own way to Guanojuato (north) and have to find accomodation. Until next time, godspeed.

- JR in Mexico City. 


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