I left beautiful San Cristobal on Tuesday and pulled an all night bus to Oaxaca town in the neighboring state of the same name.
With Mexico City now only five hours away by bus, I am near the completion of the loop I started a couple weeks ago when I made my way to Palenque via Veracruz and Villahermosa.
My first impressions here are that while Oaxaca is a nice town, by comparison to San Cristobal it's a bit expensive for lodging. I'm paying 400 pesos here for something I could get in San Cristobal for less than 200.
And while San Cristobal had dozens of low cost laundry services available, here I've been unable to find any service but dry cleaning! A minor annoyance perhaps, but clean clothes would be nice. . .
Check out the Lonely Planet's take below:
http://www.lonelyplanet.com/mexico/oaxaca-state/oaxaca
globetrotting former busker turned music teacher blogs about his meandering travels in new role as semi-competent tourist
Showing posts with label Chiapas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chiapas. Show all posts
Friday, August 24, 2012
Monday, August 20, 2012
Informative Daytrip to Chamula & Zinacantan
Saturday I joined a guided tour to the nearby native towns of Chamula & Zinacantan, about five miles from San Cristobal.
Chamula, at 80,000 population the bigger of the two, is home to a Mayan tribe called the Sotsil who have their own particular dress, religious customs, and language. The town features a small market, a municipal government building, and a large central square.
At the center of town is a medium size cathedral where the locals pay polytheistic tribute to a number of gods, spirits, and Catholic saints.
The floor of the cathedral is covered in pine needles as families gather around on their knees in small groups to light candles and worship.
Women wear distinctive black wool skirts and colorful woven tops, and some men wear black wool tunics over jeans or trousers.
The Vatican hierarchy has no direct or indirect control over this unique church but sends a priest once a month to baptize the children.
People were very welcoming and friendly to our group under English speaking guide Cesar who conducted a highly professional and informative tour. My group of about a dozen came from Holland, Germany, and France.
Zinacantan--population 30,000--is home to the same Sotsil tribe but its cathedral is much more mainstream.
In this town we visited the home of a family of textile weavers and watched as they worked their loom and prepare tortillas for the next meal.
Cesar was an excellent guide but he was very critical of Western missionaries who come to communities such as these to 'change the culture' as he described it.
For my part, I was happy to have a local act as my own medium to a fascinating minority culture that otherwise would've been a complete mystery to me.
Chamula, at 80,000 population the bigger of the two, is home to a Mayan tribe called the Sotsil who have their own particular dress, religious customs, and language. The town features a small market, a municipal government building, and a large central square.
At the center of town is a medium size cathedral where the locals pay polytheistic tribute to a number of gods, spirits, and Catholic saints.
The floor of the cathedral is covered in pine needles as families gather around on their knees in small groups to light candles and worship.
Women wear distinctive black wool skirts and colorful woven tops, and some men wear black wool tunics over jeans or trousers.
The Vatican hierarchy has no direct or indirect control over this unique church but sends a priest once a month to baptize the children.
People were very welcoming and friendly to our group under English speaking guide Cesar who conducted a highly professional and informative tour. My group of about a dozen came from Holland, Germany, and France.
Zinacantan--population 30,000--is home to the same Sotsil tribe but its cathedral is much more mainstream.
In this town we visited the home of a family of textile weavers and watched as they worked their loom and prepare tortillas for the next meal.
Cesar was an excellent guide but he was very critical of Western missionaries who come to communities such as these to 'change the culture' as he described it.
For my part, I was happy to have a local act as my own medium to a fascinating minority culture that otherwise would've been a complete mystery to me.
Friday, August 17, 2012
San Cristobal
San Cristobal de las Casas has a lot of the old world colonial charm of Antigua de Guatemala which makes sense--after all, Chiapas state which borders Guatemala is relatively remote from the rest of Mexico.
With its large indigenous population Chiapas has much in common with its Central American neighbor.
Nestled in a valley almost 7000 feet high--nearly as high as Mexico City--this region of Mexico also brings to mind northern Thailand and Laos.
This high valley is surrounded by mountains covered in lush green forest under bright blue skies and fascinatingly surreal cloud formations which can quickly turn ominous as rain can come almost without warning this time of year.
While under the noon day sun temperatures might approach 90 degrees, at night it can turn downright cold. One morning I was up before dawn and the thermometer was reading below 60.
Here you can meet tourists from all over Europe--I´ve heard German, French, and Italian spoken above all--and there are even some North Americans. Some tourists travel with children in tow.
San Cristobal features a very well-kept central area with colonial era churches and beautifully restored courtyard buildings.
A large, crowded central market is one of the main attractions here--for tourists and locals alike--and features a colorful array of products, many of them hand-woven textiles made by the Indian women.
Jewelry is also a big local product simce Chiapas is the third largest producer of amber in the world.
With its large indigenous population Chiapas has much in common with its Central American neighbor.
Nestled in a valley almost 7000 feet high--nearly as high as Mexico City--this region of Mexico also brings to mind northern Thailand and Laos.
This high valley is surrounded by mountains covered in lush green forest under bright blue skies and fascinatingly surreal cloud formations which can quickly turn ominous as rain can come almost without warning this time of year.
While under the noon day sun temperatures might approach 90 degrees, at night it can turn downright cold. One morning I was up before dawn and the thermometer was reading below 60.
Here you can meet tourists from all over Europe--I´ve heard German, French, and Italian spoken above all--and there are even some North Americans. Some tourists travel with children in tow.
San Cristobal features a very well-kept central area with colonial era churches and beautifully restored courtyard buildings.
A large, crowded central market is one of the main attractions here--for tourists and locals alike--and features a colorful array of products, many of them hand-woven textiles made by the Indian women.
Jewelry is also a big local product simce Chiapas is the third largest producer of amber in the world.
Monday, August 13, 2012
San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas State
In beautiful San Cristobal de las Casas I have found this year's ¨place that sticks¨.
Though only slightly under a hundred miles south/southeast of Palenque, the bus trip took almost six hours over rugged mountain terrain covered in thick jungle and pine forest.
Anyone who has visited northern Thailand will notice the similarities. The villages we passed through are some of the poorest in Mexico, inhabited largely by today's descendants of the Maya Indians who live in unfinished wooden houses, some with dirt floors, but surrounded by some of the most beautiful country imaginable.
I'm back in my element here.
San Cristobal, the main market town in the region, is not actually the capital of Chiapas state--as I mistakenly wrote a few days ago. (Tuxtla Gutierrez holds that honor.) But it probably is the most picturesque city for miles around, so accordingly I was up early for the photographer's ¨golden hour¨ between 8.00 and 10.00 to catch the town at its finest with my digital camera.
I'll stay here at least another few days and will continue to post my observations, so check back again in a day or two. . .
Though only slightly under a hundred miles south/southeast of Palenque, the bus trip took almost six hours over rugged mountain terrain covered in thick jungle and pine forest.
Anyone who has visited northern Thailand will notice the similarities. The villages we passed through are some of the poorest in Mexico, inhabited largely by today's descendants of the Maya Indians who live in unfinished wooden houses, some with dirt floors, but surrounded by some of the most beautiful country imaginable.
I'm back in my element here.
San Cristobal, the main market town in the region, is not actually the capital of Chiapas state--as I mistakenly wrote a few days ago. (Tuxtla Gutierrez holds that honor.) But it probably is the most picturesque city for miles around, so accordingly I was up early for the photographer's ¨golden hour¨ between 8.00 and 10.00 to catch the town at its finest with my digital camera.
I'll stay here at least another few days and will continue to post my observations, so check back again in a day or two. . .
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Back to the Highlands: Palenque, Chiapas State
I finally have some travel momentum happening after bailing out of a somewhat flooded Veracruz early Friday morning.
Ernesto made its mark in Veracruz but we must have been on the very edges of it. We had plenty of rain but it was on and off all day, and not continuous. It was windy as well, but nothing like what you would expect with the fiercest of tropical storms. I spent much of Thursday taking photos of a rainy downtown Veracruz.
Yesterday I caught a bus first thing in the morning for the trip to Villahermosa, the capital city of Tabasco. What should have been a six and half hour trip of just over 300 miles stretched to almost ten hours of construction zone jams, stops at police/army checkpoints, and one very long wait at a toll plaza. Arrgghh!
So I was happy to get a room late yesterday just across the street from Villahermosa's bus station which enabled me to quickly catch another early bus this morning for the two hour ride to Palenque.
Once I got checked into a room here it was only 11.00 a.m. and plenty of time to run out to the ruins and the national park surrounding it.
I spent a happy couple hours roaming the massive site--one of the major Mayan archeological sites in Mexico--shooting photos of the immense structures, dodging the many mostly Mexican tourists, and walking through the very well kept jungle paths leading down from the site to the excellent museum and park exit below.
I think I'm much happier in the highlands than on the seashore. It's still very hot and humid here, but there are decent airconditioned rooms available for 300-400 pesos--still pretty much within my budget.
So instead of heading deeper into Yucatan--it's still almost 1000 kilometers to Cancun from here--I will continue to make my way further south to San Cristobal, capital of Chiapas state, and Mexico's southernmost state. The guidebooks say this is a very beautiful region, and if Palenque is any indication, then I'm sold.
In 1994 this region made world headlines when the Zapatistas began their New Year's Day revolt under Subcomandante Marcos.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zapatista_Army_of_National_Liberation
From San Cristobal I will be able to loop back west and north to Mexico City by way of Oaxaca and other points.
Check back here in a day or two: I'll try my best to post again from San Cristobal. . .
Ernesto made its mark in Veracruz but we must have been on the very edges of it. We had plenty of rain but it was on and off all day, and not continuous. It was windy as well, but nothing like what you would expect with the fiercest of tropical storms. I spent much of Thursday taking photos of a rainy downtown Veracruz.
Yesterday I caught a bus first thing in the morning for the trip to Villahermosa, the capital city of Tabasco. What should have been a six and half hour trip of just over 300 miles stretched to almost ten hours of construction zone jams, stops at police/army checkpoints, and one very long wait at a toll plaza. Arrgghh!
So I was happy to get a room late yesterday just across the street from Villahermosa's bus station which enabled me to quickly catch another early bus this morning for the two hour ride to Palenque.
Once I got checked into a room here it was only 11.00 a.m. and plenty of time to run out to the ruins and the national park surrounding it.
I spent a happy couple hours roaming the massive site--one of the major Mayan archeological sites in Mexico--shooting photos of the immense structures, dodging the many mostly Mexican tourists, and walking through the very well kept jungle paths leading down from the site to the excellent museum and park exit below.
I think I'm much happier in the highlands than on the seashore. It's still very hot and humid here, but there are decent airconditioned rooms available for 300-400 pesos--still pretty much within my budget.
So instead of heading deeper into Yucatan--it's still almost 1000 kilometers to Cancun from here--I will continue to make my way further south to San Cristobal, capital of Chiapas state, and Mexico's southernmost state. The guidebooks say this is a very beautiful region, and if Palenque is any indication, then I'm sold.
In 1994 this region made world headlines when the Zapatistas began their New Year's Day revolt under Subcomandante Marcos.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zapatista_Army_of_National_Liberation
From San Cristobal I will be able to loop back west and north to Mexico City by way of Oaxaca and other points.
Check back here in a day or two: I'll try my best to post again from San Cristobal. . .
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Mexican Computers Rather Frustrating
I'm back in Mexico nearly a week but haven't posted til now because of typical frustrations with Mexican keyboards and cybercafe computers.
There's also the not insignificant problem that Google has completely redesigned the ¨dashboard¨ of Blogspot, and I find it extremely difficult to navigate my way around.
I guess this settles it: I'm going to have to get my own laptop! I can't afford to spend hours relearning to blog on strange machines everywhere I go.
I arrived in Veracruz yesterday following a five hour first class bus trip from the capital. Located on the Gulf of Mexico about halfway from Mexico City to destinations in the Yucatan, the climate here is hot and humid--a bit of a shock to my system following several temperate days and nights at Mexico City's altitude.
So I'm well on my way to the peninsula but already am leery of the idea of Cancun, where it's likely to be just as hot & humid as here. I already miss the cooler mountain air.
I'll stay here another day at least to get my bearings and figure it out: should I continue east where it will be just as muggy as here but where there are also ancient Mayan ruins to check out?
Or should I re-think this journey? Maybe with an eye on points further south, perhaps to Chiapas state and northern Guatemala?
I'll keep you posted!
There's also the not insignificant problem that Google has completely redesigned the ¨dashboard¨ of Blogspot, and I find it extremely difficult to navigate my way around.
I guess this settles it: I'm going to have to get my own laptop! I can't afford to spend hours relearning to blog on strange machines everywhere I go.
I arrived in Veracruz yesterday following a five hour first class bus trip from the capital. Located on the Gulf of Mexico about halfway from Mexico City to destinations in the Yucatan, the climate here is hot and humid--a bit of a shock to my system following several temperate days and nights at Mexico City's altitude.
So I'm well on my way to the peninsula but already am leery of the idea of Cancun, where it's likely to be just as hot & humid as here. I already miss the cooler mountain air.
I'll stay here another day at least to get my bearings and figure it out: should I continue east where it will be just as muggy as here but where there are also ancient Mayan ruins to check out?
Or should I re-think this journey? Maybe with an eye on points further south, perhaps to Chiapas state and northern Guatemala?
I'll keep you posted!
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