Archive | August, 2013
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Mexico lindo y querido

31 Aug

Another reason to love Mexico is that Mexico loves and protectsDSCN4373

animals, especially endangered species. See the turtle farm and hatchery on Isla Mujeres.  Small turtlesDSCN4383

big turtles

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future turtles

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and iguanas

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iguanas iguanas iguanas

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I thought the “island of women” (Isla Mujeres), Mexico’s eastern most point, was somewhat a slight concession to femminism, as tiny as the island itself, but I got it all wrong as did the conquistadores when they saw all those mysterious female idols on the island.  Then I came across this modern representation of the most important Mayan goddess Ixchel, the goddess of the rainbow, of water, fertility, abundance, the moon, love and medicine (maybe something like a midwife).  That’s what it says on the pedestal.

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Later I found drawings of the original, much fiercer looking version of this idealized, modern, European influenced representation. I bought  a Mayan calender with this picture of the goddess in the middle.

Ixchel_DresdenNow, she is one to be respected, a warrior woman, has nothing to do with that sailor-conquistador-dirty-old-man fantasy above.  Hey guys, she’s gonna eat you alive before you even say “hi” to her.

Talking about eating: now everybody knows Mexican food. I have always liked it, even before going to where you get the real real yummies. There I had it already for breakfast

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Geee, I’m eating faster than my camera says click ….

….and this was my morning drink: piña, apio, nopal, perejil, sábila, chayote, pepino. Color: fresh green. I drank it even before translating the ingredients. What do you think, did it make me go psychedelic or did it cure my wrinkles? Easy! It says chayote and not payote. It might have contrasted my free radicals, had I persisted with the recipe: pineapple, celery, prickly pear cactus leaf, parsley, aloe vera, cucumber squash. Sounds like Doctor Oz gone green.

I know you are waiting to see the pyramids and ruins. I’ll get to them, sooner or later.

Cheers

Gerburg

Cucurrucucù

29 Aug
Guantanamera?

Guantanamera?

A Mariachi band playing Guantanamera makes you feel

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They are playing  “Guantanamera”, because people from all over the world know  the song; do the mariachi think that tourists think it’s a typical Mexican song?  Never mind, Guantanamo is really not so far away from Cancun, geographically.  While waiting for the bus that takes us from the airport to Cancun I kindly ask the band in tourist Spanish to play “Cielito Lindo”. That’s Mexican (!) and I love that song. I have known it since high school times where our English teacher (a sturdy, short, quite unhandsome chap)had taught us the song in a bout of cosmopolitanism. He didn’t teach us much English but he certainly opened up our minds for the differences in human kind. For all my life I had believed that Cielito Lindo  is a name, like Cielito being the first and Lindo the family name.  How unromantic of me, it means something like “sweetheart”.  Before I could request “Cucurrucucù Paloma”, my other favourite Mexican song,  the bus came. (Actually I only know these two songs, but the lyrics almost by heart)

There are about a thousand (mas o menos 1000) good reasons to come to Mexico for holiday.  Bear with me for a couple of letters and you’ll know them all. 1st  The country is well prepared for tourism. In the airport  the employees speak English fluently, they explain to you how to get to town by bus. Everything is calm and orderly, no harassment of false helpers who want to lure you into their taxis and to their hotels. And don’t let any “Lonely Planet” tell you about Cancun’s chaotic traffic and reckless drivers.  It’s not true, that’s  reason no. 2: On the whole peninsula of Yucatan driversDSCN4428 are rather orderly, respectful and calm .

See you soon for the next 998 reasons

Cheers Gerburg