Archive for the 'Travel' Category

Museums and Luchadores

Sunday we had a decidedly unusual day. Fans of Jack Black's goofy comedy Nacho Libre will understand that when we learned that the Lucha Libre were in town, we had to make a trip to see them.  However, because the Luchadores didn't get underway until 12:30, we zipped over to Merida's Regional Anthropology and History Museum, where we got a guided tour of this small, but interesting collection.

This figure is a mayan noble wearing a jaguar headress.

 

This is a terra cotta incense burner.

This is a stone ornament showing a serpent, with mouth open, and man emerging from the serpents mouth.

Now as I said, after the trip to the museum we headed out to Merida's Polyforum Izamna to see the Lucha Libre, Mexico's equivalent of the WWF. Unlike the WWF, the show has a heavy dose of slapstick comedy — raucous, ridiculous, and pure fun. Many of the wrestlers where masks, and flamboyant costumes, which just adds to the fun.  The Lucha Libre are very popular in Mexico, and the matches travel from city to city with regularity. 

This is the interior of the Polyforum, showing the number of seats and the layout of the show.  Imagine every seat in the place filled, which was the situation by the time the main bouts were underway.

The Lucha's are a family event, with whole families including very small children coming out to the show after Sunday mass.  The organizers cater to families too, with a wide variety of snack food and noise makers available from the stadium vendors. 

There were five bouts on the card, with each becoming more raucous and crazy as the afternoon wore on. 

There was plenty of throwing…

 … posing …

… flips …

… wedgies …

 

… audience participation …

 

… spins …

 

… lost shorts (a match winning move, it turns out!) …

 

… lady wrestlers, large and small …

… referee distractions (he's the guy in black!) …

… men in drag …

… referee participation! …

… body slams…

… and a bona fide cage match to finish the whole thing off!

After the match, all 8 boys with us each got a genuine Luchadore mask.  Beds and hallways have been used for wrestling matches for the last three days with great regularity. 

2007-03-20 11:57 pm | 2 Comments »

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From Cancun to Merida

Saturday we changed locale from Cancun, to Merida — the capital city of Yucatan State.  Getting to Merida is a 3 1/2 hour drive from Cancun on the 180 toll road.  Tolls will set you back just over M$300. 

Halfway to Merida, about 20 km from Valladolid, there is an infrequently visited post-classic Mayan site called Ek Balaam.   It's well worth the trip, just to see the stucco images and frescoes which have been uncovered in the last 10 years.

Ek Balaam is relatively small, with a number of low buildings and a ball court.  The main attraction is the large pyramid to the north of the site called El Castillo.  A number of thatched roofs have been constructed atop the pyramid, in order to preserve the stucco as it is uncovered. 

Ascending the main pyramid, you are able to step off the staircase to the left, and then view the jaguar mouth doorway.  This particular facade, which is all stucco, is probably one of the most stunning doorways present anywhere in the Mayan world today.

Flanked on either side by elaborate stucco figures, the main door is a stylized representation of a jaguars mouth.  The ruler of the city would appear standing upon the lower jaw of the jaguar.

The base of the jaw is encircled by key designs, and supported on each corner by a skull.

Directly on either side of the doorway are masks of the rain god Chac.

Seated above the doorway is another figure wearing large earplugs.  For me, this one is eerily reminiscent of the figures you see on Indian temples.  

Farther to the right of the doorway are two large warrior figures with feathered capes.  The first wears a belt, but doesn't appear to be wearing a headpiece, while the second wears an elaborate headdress and earrings.

Throughout the site, intact paint such as this small scene painted on the side panel of a doorway can be found.  We later learned that, while restoration has been underway for some time at Ek Balaam, more than 50% of the existing stucco is original, which is why through all of these photographs you can see small quantities of original paint.   

 After leaving Ek Balaam we continued on to Merida, where we checked into El Castillano hotel, a couple of blocks from the central square.  The bellhop informed us that it was Mexican night in the square, so we headed over to see what was happening.  Traffic was blocked off for blocks around the square, and the streets were flooded with people eating in restaurants, each with it's own musical act. 

 

A popular tourist activity is getting a "calese" ride from one of the numerous local drivers.

Over beside the cathedral in the square you can find a calese line, just like a taxi line, where you can get a ride yourself, which we did later.

Throughout the square, there are flower sellers seeking to sell you a rose for your sweetheart.  

Street musicians also offer lessons on how to play exotic instruments, like the ordinary cross-cut saw.  This guy was remarkable, using a simple bamboo and fishing line bow to coax everything from Happy Birthday to the Ode to Joy from his saw.

 

Even ordinary people seemed to be carrying guitars, sitting in cafés, and strumming tunes.

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Marine Fauna

We've spent the last three days diving and snorkelling the wonderful reef system here.  The Yucatan reefs are the second largest reef system in the world, next to the Great Barrier Reef in Australia.  Comprising 1500 miles of reef, they extend from the Northern tip of the peninsula, south to Belize, Guatemala and beyond. 

We dove twice with Cancun's Solo Buceo to nearby reefs, and then, for our two youngest children who are not yet divers, made a trip south to the tiny fishing village of Puerto Morelos to snorkel the reefs there. 

I shot a couple of hundred photographs on my venerable Olympus C4000 digital camera, using the Olympus PT-10 underwater housing I purchased 3 years ago for it.  At one time this camera was my sole digital camera, but has now been relegated to a dive camera only.  The photographs were retouched using Microsoft Digital Image Suite 10 afterward.

Here's some of what we saw and did.

This is Janice and her brother Dave exiting a coral arch in the reef.  These are lots of fun to swim through, and you can frequently find interesting wildlife hidden inside the small caves formed by the coral.

A relative of the sea horse, it's always a thrill to spot one of the relatively rare trumpet fish on the reef.

Parrot fish are large fish with powerful beak-like jaws which they use to crush coral and feed on the polyps within.  This blue parrot fish was probably 18 inches long.

The barracuda is a predator with a fearsome reputation.  The truth is that they are a wary fish and rarely approach divers.  Jon did catch a glimpse of one catching and eating a smaller fish on this dive, and I was lucky enough to shoot this picture from a fairly close distance.

The big thrill of this dive was spotting four grey sharks.  They didn't stick around long enough for me to get any decent photographs, however.

   

Just as we were about to surface, one of the divers spotted a hawksbill turtle feeding.  These amazing creatures have the ability to stay submerged for up to 30 minutes at a time. 

On our second day of diving we saw even more wildlife.  This rock fish has painfully poisonous spines all across his back, which is a good reason not to touch him.  Experienced dvers, however, will frequently pick these docile creatures up by sliding a hand under the belly.  The fish will sit right in the hand, not moving, until placed back on the coral. 

This octopus was hidden in the crevasses in the coral.  We played with it a little, putting our hands into the mouth of its lair, and allowing the curious creature to explore our fingers with its tentacles.

Throughout the Carribean, you will find restaurants serving this fellow as lunch.  Spiny lobsters are like their northern cousins, but without the giant claws.

Moray eels, despite their fearsome reputation, are quite timid.  This little green eel was spotted by my son Chris, and I was lucky enough to get a picture before he bolted back into his cave.

 

It was quite a thrill to spot this young hawksbill turtle swimming in the water, and we were lucky to have him swim alongside our group for nearly 5 minutes. 

We spotted this enormous moray in a cave.  Probably close to six feet long, I was content to have a photograph of him sitting in the back of his lair, when suddenly he exited through a back entrance.  Swimming up over the coral I managed to snap these two photographs of him.

Our snorkelling trip started on the beaches in Puerto Morelos.  The reef here is a national marine park, and you can hire small operators to take you to them.  Reef Extreme offered a package which included guided tours of two areas on the reef, and a fajita lunch with open bar.  Here are the boats we travelled in to get to the reef.

While there are definitely fish (and some large ones) on the shore reef, the star of the show at Puerto Morelos is the coral.  This is a beautiful elkhorn, with a gorgonian in the foreground.

The reef is in very shallow water. I shot this photo from behind the boat, which was moored in perhaps 8 feet of water.  After a short swim from the boat to the reef, depths decreased to as little as 3 to 5 feet, with some portions of the reef actually poking out above water. 

 

Thriving coral reefs are frequently characterized as being underwater gardens.  This shot gives you an idea why.

And of course, there was plenty of wildlife, as this school of Blue Tangs and Parrot Fish shows.

2007-03-17 10:19 am | 4 Comments »

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Day trip to Xcaret

One of our favorite day trips in the Yucatan is from Cancun down to Xcaret, an eco-park just south of Playa Del Carman — a 45 minute trip.  Monday we rented a mini-bus and driver for the thirteen of us, and headed there for the day.

Xcaret sits on a rocky bay with beautiful sandy inlets for snorkelling and swimming.  The park also sports a small zoo, with native species like tapir and coatimundi, as well as animals like deer.  The big attraction, however, is the underground river.  Geologically, the Yucatan peninsula is a massive spit of porous limestone.  It has no surface water, except where water from the underground aquifer bubbles to the surface in limestone wells called cenotes.  At Xcaret, snorkellers enter one of these underground rivers at one cenote in the park, and then swim the river until it surfaces at an exit near the ocean about 45 minutes later.  At various places throughout the swim, surface light enters through overhead light wells, which allows views of the river bottom, and surrounding rocks.  The water is clear (cenotes frequently boast visibility in the hundreds of feet), and cool, and the swim is hugely enjoyable.  At the exit, the brackish pools support a thriving and colorful fish population.

The other great attraction of Xcaret is the two hour long night show.  When we we first saw the show 8 years ago, it was a reenactment of the Mayan ball game, followed by a trek over to a natural amphitheatre where troupes of Mexican dancers performed traditional dances from different Mexican states.  It's evolved to a Las Vegas style extravaganza.  Now staged in a massive new theater, evocative of a Mayan ball court, it begins with the ball game, the Oaxacan flaming hockey game (played with a ball soaked in kerosene, it makes the NHL look just a little ordinary), and a short set-piece on the history of the Maya and the conquistadors.   Following an intermission, there are traditional Mexican dances, horse tricks, singers and more.

The night show really is the best part about Xcaret.  It would be hard to justify the steep entrance fee to the park solely based on the other attractions, but you would easily pay that fee for the show alone in any other city.

Here are some photos

xcaret mayan woman

xcaret theater

xcaret the god quetzalcoatl confronts spanish conquistadors

xcaret the god quetzalcoatl watches the subjugation of his people

xcaret veracruz dancers

xcaret caribana dancers

xcaret papantlan flyers  

xcaret papantlan flyers

xcaret tobasco drummers

xcaret lone trumpeter

xcaret hat dance finale

xcaret horseman with lassoo

xcaret dancer with lassoo

2007-03-15 4:52 pm | No Comments »

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Hurricanes, Flags, and OpenID

Over the last few days as we've travelled in and around Cancun we've seen first hand the results of Hurricane Wilma, the storm which devastated the Yucatan in October of 2005.  The damage was phenomenal.  Everywhere we travel there are new trees (50,000 were apparently replaced in Cancun alone).  The beaches are back, a product of a $20 million dredging operation which replaced the sand torn away by Wilma.  Construction is underway as well, as irreparably damaged hotels have been torn down, and new buildings are taking their place.  Some buildings stand windowless and unmaintained with their broken steps and palapas facing the beach, a testament to the force of the hurricane. 

Across Laguna Nichupte from the Royal Sands, where we are staying, flies the largest flag I have ever seen.  This photograph was shot at sunset from a distance of 2.8 kilometres.  The size of the flag, compared to the buildings behind, is no trick of perspective.  The buildings and the flag pole are very near to each other.  That flag actually is as large as it seems.

Flag etiquette demands that a flag must never be allowed to touch the ground. When the flag is changed, it takes a convoy of trucks to carry the dozens of soldiers required to do the job.   These men stand in a line, each with a section of flag draped across a shoulder, walk forward as the halyard hoists the flag skyward, and then step aside when their small portion is completed.

The symbolism is magnificent.  The dramatic size of the flag makes a powerful statement that Cancun is Mexican. And while Cancun is a tourist mecca, the number of people required to raise that flag says that Cancun is for Mexicans as well.  Indeed, it's the driving force in the Mexican tourism industry, responsible for more than half the tourism dollars that Mexico earns each year.  By extension, Cancun tourism is also a massive employer, with thousands upon thousands of Mexicans drawn to the area to work in construction, the hotels, restaurants, bars, boats, and the shows that Cancun provides.

After the hurricane Mexicans, and the Mexican government, followed through on the statement that flag represents. 

So, what's this got to do with OpenID?

Yesterday, Nick Cubrilovic published a piece critiquing the industry excitement over OpenID. The criticism was fairly worrying — despite all the hype, not enough companies are consumers of OpenID to make it useful.  Who cares if Microsoft and AOL, plus scores of smaller companies, jump on the band wagon, issuing new OpenID's, if they don't in fact use OpenID themselves? We'll just end up with the same identity gulag we have today.

Microsoft and AOL's support for OpenID is a bit like that flag – a massive statement that the concept matters.  But unless they follow through, working together to create opportunity for those that would build sites and applications based upon OpenID, then the symbolism doesn't matter.  The ecosystem called OpenID will never get off the ground.    

Mañana.

2007-03-14 8:48 am | 4 Comments »

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