Visit to Chichen Itza…

Strange as it may seem, I am posting this in 2015 although I’d visited Chichen Itza in December of 2006. There were a few things that have happened over the years between when I visited Itza in ’06 and now that probably have something to do with that. Three or four times my computer crashed while in Mexico and it’s very difficult to repair stuff inexpensively there, so I’d put it off and use my backup computer. I was traveling almost continuously. I slowly over time forgot about not posting an entry about Itza. Than there was the accidental deletion of my picture folder. More travel. Finally got a newer, better computer, found some undelete software and was able to recover the pictures. Something else went wrong and a hard drive crashed, it could have been months before I was both able and interested enough to restore pictures and that’s probably what happened here.

Mysterious things like this happened many times because I was always using ‘used’ or inferior computer devices, older OS’s, and free to me computers in order to try to save money. Recall that I retired eight years early and so was living on and trying to extend the proceeds of the sale of my house.

I remember how happy I was a few years ago when I stumbled onto hundreds of travel pictures on an old backup hard drive I’d thought lost. The pictures were restored and then I just missed writing the story that goes with this series of pictures in Itza so it never got posted. This sort of mix up does happen when you’re traveling and don’t have a set schedule for blog posts.

Anyway, eight plus years late, here is the story of my trip to the #1 Maya site in the Yucatan. It’s a modern wonder of the world. A World Heritage Site.

———————————————————————————————————

After leaving Chetumal, I drove up the coast of the Yucatan intending to take a shortcut straight up to Chichen Itza, but lalalala, I just totally missed the turn off. (Even a couple hours later I couldn’t recall even seeing the turn off for the road). Oh, well. I’ll just keep going to Cancun, there’s a fairly nice RV park just north of town. But…I knew that Cancun wasn’t really Mexican. It was developed by a Dutch touring company and a monied investment consortium in the ’70’s on an area of beach that no one wanted. There was a tiny village nearby but that was it along much of the coast here. Anyway, I wasn’t all that interested in visiting Cancun to begin with but here I go missing my turn. Dammit. BTW, it’s 6 hours from Chetumal, and another 2 hours to Chichen Itza and the shortcut would have saved me 1/2 hour.

Well, I figure, I’ll make the best of it and stop at that RV park north of Cancun and visit for a couple days. So I’m driving into the city, on a four lane divided highway and everything looks so dull and boring…not my kind of Mexico. It’s just like they say, a big tourist trap and nothing else. Nothing Mexican looking about it, really.

So I see a turnaround…no signs saying it is but I figured I could make a U turn there without to much trouble. I haul my big ass 37′ RV to the turn and block traffic behind me, then try inching my way into traffic in the opposite lane. I find that there’s not much room here for my RV and have to stop and back up a bit to be able to make the turn. Meanwhile I’m blocking 2-3 lanes of traffic and coming the other way is a city bus guy looking right at me…but he smiles and waves and I notice that he’s actually cut off two lanes for me as he pulled up to the intersection! Nice! Anyway, I make the turn and head for Itza.

Two hours later I’m there, in the small village of Piste’ outside the ruins, and since the village is so small, quickly find my RV park. But I nearly passed it as the entrance was kind of hidden and was a little tight for my RV. Looked more like an alley at first glance. Had to make a couple tight cuts but made it in.

The place was empty of RVs but had the amenities I was looking for. Sewer, water, but only a 15A connection. But it was warm so I’d not need at all and the AC not likely. Everything about the park showing it’s age. The RV’ers restrooms were in pretty sad shape too. Doors wide open, not very clean, no TP or toilet seats. Well, OK, I can survive that. Stardust Inn was the name of the place, they don’t have an internet presence so I don’t know if they are still open these days or not. I walked around that first night trying to find an office but couldn’t. Church’s guide to Mexican camping said the caretaker lived back behind and he’d come and collect. He never showed up. I could see a house back there behind the fence, it looked deserted, and there was no gate to that property in the RV park fence. Lights in the house never came on. Gave up trying to pay as it got dark. I was hungry and needed to cook dinner so set it aside. Next morning, after my brain told me that the RV park might be attached to the hotel since it shared a wall, I walked in and a cute young thing behind the desk that knew a little English told me that yes they were the RV park too. But she didn’t know how much it would be for a weeks stay. She ran upstairs to talk to the ‘old woman’ as she put it and then charged me $7.62 per night. Wow. I’m liking that! I ended up staying for 10 days. After I’d been there 7 days, 3 really nice Class A rigs pulled in and I guess the manager came by and asked me very nicely not to mention what I was paying to the new guests. Hah! So it seemed as though the old lady didn’t really know what they were charging and just guessed. Well, it worked for me.

The next couple of days there at the RV park, I gathered information about Chichen Itza off the internet. Mostly, intellectually stimulating things wherever I could find a decent article. This because I’d been studying the Maya for decades. I liked doing that pre-review so I’d not be the typical stupid tourist. Be prepared, I always say.

The RV park was only a mile from Chichen Itza so I could walk on the nice sidewalk or ride my bike to the site with ease. There was a little convenience store right across the street from the RV park and 2 or 3 hole-in-the-wall restaurants where I did my shopping and ate 3-4 times during my 10 days in the village. After I’d been there several days, I asked a shop owner where I could get my bike fixed and he escorted me to the bike shop. Huh. That was nice of him. Then the shop fixed my bent wheel, fixed a couple other things, made several adjustments, and it was good as new. Cost was under $8. Then I was able to ride my bike all over this small village and check it out. Not the most interesting village I’d been in in Mexico, but it was friendly and easy to get around. <At one time I had some pictures of the town of Piste’ and where I stayed, but those were lost somewhere and sometime>.

Finally, I was ready, and walked the 1 mile to the Itza site. Early, like 8 AM arrival time. There were only 3-4 people in front of me when I bought my $9 ticket. Then I  walked down this tree lined pathway…

 

The walkways on either side are where the vendors set up a little later in the morning. There’s one setting up early on the left in the above picture. Late in the day, both sides of this path are full of vendors.

You walk up that path, and it opens up on a big grass covered field where you get your first view of the pyramid:

 

 

And around on the other side, notice the snakes heads:

This side and two others have been restored. They are working on the forth side.

This is the last section needing restoration.

It’s spectacular. No wonder it’s considered one of the 7 wonders of the world on the new list. Then you turn around and find all these other ruins within spitting distance of the pyramid. Most of them with intricate carvings.

Turn around and there it is again… 100_2110 100_2111 100_2112 100_2113

It was blissful for me because I’d been an avid reader of studies of the Maya for decades. Must have read nearly 100 books about them. All these columns were very interesting. There would have been a ceiling at one time. Many ceilings were composed of tree trunks lashed together with grasses and branches providing cover, much like thatching found in England. In summer, they’d protect from the heat of the sun, and the rain showers. In winter they could be pried open a little to let in more light.

100_2114 100_2115 100_2116 100_2117 100_2118 100_2119Everywhere you look or wander there’s more ruins. All fairly interesting…to me at least.100_2120

100_2121 100_2122 100_2123 100_2124 100_2125

Here’s where you get a look at their attempt at a stone roof. They never invented the arch…or the wheel for that matter.
100_2126 100_2127This was a house.100_2128 100_2129

You might notice how few people there are in these pictures…that’s because I got here early and the tour buses don’t start arriving from Cancun until 11 AM and stagger their arrivals after that. So I’m far beyond where the crowds are right now. Eventually, it’ll get crowded as this place gets 2 million visitors a year, but arriving early means I can pretty much tour in peace.

And here a row of houses with a common front yard.100_2130 100_2131 100_2132This is so you can get a sense of scale of the columns. And then I finally ran into some other tourists. And these folks had their own guide, and kept getting in my way.100_2133 100_2134

This shot is of a dark and foreboding trail into the jungle. I went down it a couple hundred feet but it stayed pretty much the same the entire walk. Just a trail in the jungle. There was one small sign that said it was an ancient trail but no further info. There were a couple openings off that trail onto what I would suppose pass for meadows in the jungle, but could see no artifacts or ancient buildings anywhere. I learned later that the trail lead to a small well.100_2135 This is a modern example of the ancient thatching and mud hut methods. Very similar to European methods. It was a reconstruction to show us how most of the smaller houses were put together. They were saying that the typical Maya would have lived in this style house and just a few in stone houses.100_2136 Then we’re back in the main plaza. This plaza would have held thousands and the priests would have spewed their special brand of bullshit from the top of the pyramid, where, by the way, it was off limits to regular people. Death was the punishment. A plaque said that there was an altar in that building on top of the pyramid. Up there would have been where sacrifices were performed and the body pushed/thrown down the stairs.100_2137 Turn around and there’s more buildings…and this little guy.100_2138 100_2139 100_2140 100_2141

 

100_2142See how that wall is angled? Their engineers & builders could do that angle hanging off the sides of buildings, anything of a flatter angle would have collapsed. They seemed to have perfected that building style and it was used both as an outside facia or an inside ceiling.100_2143

And these are the buildings around the ‘Ball Court’ area. Quite the assemblage. Look how high the goal is. Before I came here, I didn’t realize they could be so high.100_2144 100_2145

 

The fans would sit on either end of the courtyard and also on top of the buildings. Even more would line the bottoms of the buildings and have to get out of the way when the players came their way.

You can see how the crowds have started to arrive. It’s around 11 AM and starting to get filled up here in the old town.100_2146 100_2147 100_2148There seems to be a little storm heading our way. And below is a close up shot of the ball hoop after the crowd drifted away. All I did was sit down for 15 minutes or so and they seemed to wander away as a group. Thousands of these ball rings all over the Yucatan were stolen and are in private collections, then there are hundreds in museums. There are 12,000 known Mayan ruins, most of them with ball courts.

100_2149 100_2150

This building was at one end of the ball court. Seemed as though it must be part of the facility but for what, I don’t recall. But I think it was where the King and his court sat during the games. Remember that some games were to the death, and some not. Some were played by captives against the home team, others captives only. Sometimes the winning team was killed, sometimes the losing team.

100_2151

Huge, isn’t it. I mean the ball court. Putting this much effort into what was essentially a stadium suggests that at one time, at least, the Maya had both the treasure and the leisure time for sports.
100_2152 100_2153 Look at this place. Wow. Explains why the Spanish were stunned first time they came here. By the way, I’m not posting all these pictures to annoy you folks, but for myself really. I do read my own blog quite often to remind myself of places I’ve been.100_2155

100_2156This was the backside of the building above. Unfinished berm. Shows how they put the buildings together mostly of rubble, then covered it with facia stones. 100_2157 100_2158 100_2159 100_2161 100_2162 100_2163And back to the main plaza. Seems like all roads lead here. Then I started heading towards the main cenote here in the city. There were several, and I visited them all, but this one was the biggest with the richest history. These were the buildings and paths along the way.

100_2164 100_2165

One of the sidewalk vendors had these. I really, really wanted some of his stuff but remember I was still trying to be conservative with my money so I passed on them. He wanted me to pay him for taking a picture and I’m afraid I wasn’t very nice to him about his attempt. Maybe if he hadn’t jumped me ‘after’ I’d taken the picture and tried to be a bully about it I would have been more kind.100_2166 100_2167

This path in the below picture is 2,000 years old. It leads to the cenote…where they got their water until they started throwing sacrifices into it. The pathway was built up enough that archeologists thought it had become a processional pathway. This is where they’d carry, drag, or accompany sacrifices to the gods. And angry, bloodthirsty gods they were too! 100_2168 100_2169Getting close. It’s right there. What, can’t see it?100_2170

Ran into this rabid dog at the cenote. Threw him a leg of man and he wandered off with it, so I was safe for a while.

100_2171

And here is the first view. This is the reason the people actually settled here. Lots of water. Later, of course, the priests co-opted the whole thing and twisted it into some kind of religious bullshit, but this is the real reason. Water. After I bought a coffee and snack, I wandered down there and sat on the edge.100_2172 100_2173 100_2174 100_2175

And an ancient guard shack…according to the sign. Eventually, they were making sacrifices here so often they had to keep regular people away. Early archeology found thousands of artifacts here underwater but they are distributed to 10’s of museums and private collections all over the world. And though this tiny building was for guards, that building in the background was where you got your coco. Now they serve all sorts of drinks. So in modern times, it’s still performing the job it was built to do.100_2176 100_2177

No snakes or anything.

100_2178

Water color kept changing on me while I sat on the edge and enjoyed my coffee with cocoa. Clouds passing overhead did their work on the colors.100_2179 100_2181 100_2182 100_2183Just a few steps from the cenote was this set of buildings and if I recall, the archeologists weren’t certain what they were for.100_2184So then I take a different path back to the main plaza. I thought this view (above) was a little eerie off into the jungle. I should have run the picture through a filter or two but, meh.

100_2185 100_2186

Some new wave hippy pointing out something. I’m laughing to myself while he was making a big bunch of BS right here for his group. Which I wasn’t a part of but could overhear. I tried not to step in anything he might have dropped. But I took a picture of what he was pointing at. It’s magical! HAH!

100_2187 100_2188

And then back at the pyramid I spy these people up there on top. What the hell? Everything I read said that no one was allowed up there. So I was curious. I noticed a Mexican National Park guy very near so I went and asked him about it. “Oh, those are Maya, they are the only people allowed to climb the ruin of the pyramid because they built it”. Ah. Ok. Well, as I walked home, I resolved to find some official next time I came who I could offer $200 pesos to to try and get permission. Eventually, there were like 30 people up there. So I might be able to sneak in unnoticed. Maybe.100_2189 100_2190 100_2191

Can’t remember what this building below as all about. Maybe the observatory.100_2192

This is the only side of the pyramid I haven’t shown yet. Note that it’s also restored. Just that one side (on the right in this picture) left to go. There’s some touch up needed of course…there always is.

100_2193

And a little closer.100_2194

After those few more shots of the pyramid, I wander down to the ticket office where there’s a coffee bar and such and enjoyed a nice snack and coffee while avoiding the tiny rain shower that happened by at the time. What an experience. Really enjoyed my visit to Chichen Itza. It turns out that if you enter the cafe, you’ve left the park and have to pay again if you want back in. Luckily, that meant little to me as I’d already taken the time to see the entire park, plus since I was staying in town just a mile away, I could come back anytime for another tour. Which I was already planning to do.

100_2195

Hope you enjoyed this visit.

 

 

 

Posted in Mexico \'06 | Leave a comment

On the Road & Chetumal…

From Catemaco we headed due east to Chetumal, spending the night in a Pemex station that had long lines waiting for fuel. I’d fueled up 2-300 miles earlier and could easily make it to Chetumal so I spent that evening cleaning up the grassy area in front of the station rather then waiting for fuel. It was a mess of plastic bags, cups, bottles, papers and the like people had tossed out of their windows and since it was my front lawn that night, I didn’t mind spending 45 minutes picking it up. Filled two big bags with trash then brought out my lawn chair and a beer and enjoyed the distant sun sinking into the jungle, I could swear I saw steam rising as it set.

Next day we’re on our way and pass this odd suspention bridge. Cool design.
100_2042.jpg

Around noon, we stopped along side of the hiway for lunch:
100_2047.jpg
——————————–
On of the many types of flowers right around here in the jungle:
100_2049.jpg
——————————–
100_2050.jpg
——————————–
100_2052.jpg

When we arrived at Chetumal, we had time to stop and do some shopping in a giant mall, then tripped out to the property of one of the travelers. This land was inhabited by the Maya for a thousand years and on this property, there is both a platform for a house, tons of broken pottery on the ground, and a small pyramid. Wow. It’s not everyone who can say that their property is an archelogical find.

Where I parked:
100_2054.jpg

The ancient mound where there use to be a house, the current property owner is allowed to build over it or around it but not dig into it:

100_2055.jpg

Another view of the mount behind the modern palapa with it’s hammocks:

100_2060.jpg

100_2061.jpg

Next day, I rode my bike up the road maybe 2 miles from where we were staying, to a Mayan ruin site…I don’t recall the name and a quick check of my guide books turns up nothing, but it is an improved site, with a parking lot with restrooms, and a charge of $50 pesos to visit. It took me from 7:30 am to around 10:30 at a leisurely pace, without having to dodge any other tourists, to circumnavigate the entire site. This is one of the estimated 12,000 ancient ruin sites all over Mexico. This one I would call…cozy. It was a working town until the Spaniards arrived, murdered a bunch of people, forced many into slavery, then built a giant church on the grounds to show how powerful their god was to the natives. The church is interesting in that it has a couple of huge arches incorporated into the building. The Maya seemed to never figure out the arch, they built what’s actually an inverted V, like this ^ only steeper, and it could not carry much weight, or they just preferred to ignore the superior load bearing abilities of the classical arch for their own reasons. Whatever the case, they didn’t use the arch. Or wheels:

100_2070.jpg

This was the first pyramid I was able to climb in Mexico…:

100_2071.jpg

An example of how the jungle can cover huge buildings, there is another large pyramid just up this trail but it’s totally invisible until you’re nearly on top of it:
100_2072.jpg

The top of another pyramid, this one has (had) what appears to be a home on top, the sign said that it was a female gods home or something like that:
100_2073.jpg

A thousand years ago, this plaza would have been devoid of trees, but filled with merchants and shoppers:
100_2074.jpg
——————————–
100_2076.jpg
——————————–
100_2077.jpg
——————————–
100_2078.jpg
——————————–
100_2079.jpg
——————————–
This is what the sign said is one of the rulers dwellings. There are several bedrooms, and a large kitchen nearby. These rooms are on top of a large but not very high pyramid overlooking a plaza, with a religious pyramid on the other side of it and administrative pyramids on either side. There does not seem to be what we would call a living room in the dwellings I’ve seen. But the weather here is so fair, I’d imagine people, including the rulers, would hang around outside until time for sleep:
100_2080.jpg

100_2081.jpg
——————————–
100_2082.jpg
——————————–
100_2083.jpg
——————————–
100_2084.jpg
——————————–
100_2085.jpg
——————————–
100_2086.jpg
——————————–
100_2087.jpg
——————————–
100_2088.jpg
——————————–
100_2089.jpg

That was just one of the thousands of towns and cities that the Olmec, Toltec, and Maya built over here in the Yucatan.

A day or two later I moved over to a nearby RV park intending to stay a month or so…but the place wanted $32 per night and the weekly rates were not much better. They never told me what the monthly rate would be. Anyway, I didn’t see much in the area that would be all that interesting anyway, so I headed on up to Cancun and Chichen Itza. But here’s a few pictures of the RV park anyway. The ocean was pretty nice:

100_2090.jpg
——————————–
100_2091.jpg
——————————–
100_2094.jpg
——————————–
100_2095.jpg
——————————–
100_2096.jpg
——————————–
100_2097.jpg
——————————–
100_2098.jpg

Posted in On the road in Mexico | 1 Comment

Visit to a cemetery….

The several Mexican cemeteries we have passed in our 3-4 weeks here have been interesting to see at 40 MPH but I wanted a closer look, so when we stopped for a break right across the street from an old cemetery in the suburbs outside of a big town, I wandered over there with the camera to get a few shots.

Their cemeteries are colorful, cramped, with many heartfelt expressions of love chiseled into the granite markers. We visited a few days past the day of the dead so there were many flowers still there, adorning the graves…

The small buildings are really shrines to the departed, and the more money you have, the bigger and better the shrine is. There were above ground crypts as well, some going back to the 1800’s.

Many of the cap stones and shrines showed their age by style and weathering, but mostly the care and tending of these rest spots implied that the Mexican people visit their departed loved ones often, and bring gifts along with the flowers. One thing I did notice is that the tiles used in the construction of most of the shrines were nicer then most of the types of tile I’d seen in stores and homes I had visited in Mexico.

While I don’t know the burial traditions of this place, I think anyone would get a sense of how nice the people really are by seeing how they care for these family members. I wonder how far back their traditions go…

Picture 001.jpg
——————————–
Picture 002.jpg
——————————–
Picture 003.jpg
——————————–
Picture 004.jpg
——————————–
Picture 005.jpg
——————————–
Picture 006.jpg
——————————–
Back on the road, and a couple hours later, we stopped at a Pemex for lunch. I found this guy living in a diesel air filter. I wanted the filter so I dropped it out and watched it scamper under my rig…too quickly for me to get another shot.
Picture 007.jpg
——————————–
Then the weather started to close in again and we drove through a couple of drenching squalls:
Picture 008.jpg
——————————–
This is one of the rain swollen streams we crossed, one thing they don’t lack here is rain:
Picture 010.jpg

Posted in On the road in Mexico | 1 Comment

Down in Catemaco…

After we left Xalapa, we first headed east then south to Catemaco. It is a picturesque town on the shore of a lake of the same name. When we arrived, there were no other RV’s in the park that we could see, but the lake was inviting and we settled in for the night despite the lack of sewers or running water at out spaces. They were also asking too much and we negotiated a better price for several days. Meanwhile, we arranged for a special boat ride the next day for $350 pesos for six people. Happily, a German couple arrived late in an older Class A, Horst and Anna, and they joined our little group the next day for a lake tour.

How we all parked in this little space:

Picture 012.jpg

The restaurant where we had great food at a great price, 1/2 the cost of in the US but high by Mexico standards of pricing:

Picture 014.jpg

The boats the tourists take to tour the lake, ours was arranged for the next day:

Picture 015.jpg

Up the street:

Picture 016.jpg

Dusk over the lake. It’s just across the street from where I’m parked:

Picture 011.jpg

Next day our boat waiting for us:

Picture 018.jpg

And we’re off:

Picture 020.jpg

The greyhound surveys, seemed he was a natural sailor:

Picture 021.jpg

Lazy birds:

Picture 022.jpg

——————————–
Picture 024.jpg

This area has been inhabited for thousands of years. It was in ancient times, a resort area. Although there are few ruins, there is some reason to believe that at one spring at the north end of the lake, bubbling warm fresh water through mud, has drawn people for centuries for soothing mud baths. There were constructions that have been rebuilt and reproductions of ancient statuary akin to the works that would have been here a thousand years ago and have been reset at ancient positions, though the actual statues are long missing. We toured the area, it’s called an ‘eco preserve’ area by locals, and some of the profits from our tickets are put back into preserving the flora and fauna. The pictures you see here are of the rebuilt buildings and reproductions of typical statuary, mostly historically accurate in that they are appropriate gods and goddesses of the indigenous peoples of the area. These first few pictures are as we motored the lake near the western shore for views of the egrets and a few nice estates.

Picture 029.jpg
——————————–
Picture 033.jpg
——————————–
Picture 030.jpg
——————————–
Picture 038.jpg

Their are 3 kinds of birds in this shot…we were told that the two smaller species, one mostly black, and the other mostly white with yellow feet, sometimes get drunk and walk on the wild side, producing the larger and heavier 3rd type of egret that was nearest the top of this tree. It’s dark with yellow feet, and they always seem larger then their parents. Or so the guide told us. You can see that it appears twice as large as it’s neighbors near it as well as larger then those perched below.

Picture 040.jpg

The weather was a little spooky, what with the clouds rolling over and sometimes threatening to rain, but it was mostly mild with a temp around 74F and no rain all day…

Picture 044.jpg

We approach the sanctuary:
Picture 048.jpg

Pay our $35 pesos and cross the suspension bridge with our guide:
Picture 051.jpg

A restored walkway:
Picture 052.jpg

One of the ceremonial circles:
Picture 053.jpg

A little local color:
Picture 054.jpg

Picture 055.jpg

Picture 056.jpg

Picture 057.jpg

This goddess takes on the sins of the petitioner or something, that’s the meaning of the black around her mouth. At first I just thought she needed a shave.
Picture 058.jpg

This was the sweat lodge. Water would be poured onto hot rocks for steam:
Picture 059.jpg

One of the interesting buildings that I forget the meaning of:
Picture 061.jpg

This use to be the area where they got the mud, now I’m not sure:
Picture 063.jpg

Some kids enjoying a swing:
Picture 070.jpg

There’s a gator out there somewhere. They were almost hunted to extinction by the locals but these are protected:
Picture 073.jpg

These lizards are rescued from the wild as eggs, grow up here, then are released at age 3 or 4. They handle that treatment well and after release are hunting on their own quickly. The locals eat to many of them which is why they need to be protected here:
Picture 074.jpg

On our way back from the ‘Eco Preserve’, we passed Monkey Island that some idiot thought would be a good place to release a few imported Indonesian Short Tailed Macaques. They’ve been overfed ever since but have never made it from this island to the mainland. The 2-3 year old animals are captured and sold to zoos all over the world., which maintains the tribe population at around 20 individuals. One alpha male, female adults, and then the kids. Tourists have been overfeeding them since they got here. As you can see, they are fat, but not as unhealthy (I’m told) as they use to be because of a change in the treats the tourists are now allowed to give them. Before there were too many treats, now it’s protein instead. As you can imagine, the dog went nuts when he saw these little hairy people…but the monkeys could have cared less:

Picture 078.jpg

Picture 079.jpg

Picture 080.jpg

Picture 081.jpg

Picture 083.jpg

That tour only took 3 hours so the rest of the day we wandered around downtown Catemaco while I looked for some stuff called Microdyn. It’s based on iodine I believe and it’s used for purifying water and veggies. Took quite a while to find it, had to go to 4 stores. This town is a quintessentially Mexican village. I’ve been through many villages down here now and this one really gets my vote as one of the more interesting and attractive. But for you Gucci wearing types, it is very rustic as well. But there are some 3-4 star motels here. I’m glad I made it up here.

One of the aggravating things about RV’ing in Mexico is the lack of consistency. For the money we would have been paying for our spaces here, compared to the US, or even a better Mexican RV park, we would have gotten 30 amp, water, and sewer, or at least a working dump station. Maybe even cable. Here, we got 20 amps, no water unless you wanted to drag a bucket over to the restaurant, and a dump station you had to back up too, and that was higher then where you could park a rig like mine to use it…and sewage doesn’t flow uphill. They tried to charge us way too much, but we were able to negotiate a pretty good price since it’s the off-season and the place was empty when we got there. The campground ended up having my Class A, another Class A, two Class C rigs, a couple class B camper vans, a truck camper, and even backpackers, who used a tent. They mostly all arrived later in the day and the next day so we considered ourselves lucky to get the discount when we arrived and the place was empty. Plus we ended up staying 5 days for a look around so that made them happy. Like I said, I stayed indoors most of that time watching and listening to games and working on the blog, while it rained buckets, but I got a good sense of this place when I did go out. It was great staying here.

Posted in On the road in Mexico | Leave a comment

On to Xalapa (aka Jalapa)…

After we left the Emerald Coast, we headed on up to Xalapa. This is a city with all the amenities including one of the largest collections of Olmec giant stone heads at their museum. It was off our track but the ladies wanted to visit with one of their friends that has a place down in Coatepec, which is just south of Xalapa.

So we arrive there late afternoon, settle in at the parking lot of a Sam’s store and spend the night. Next day the women head off to their friends place and I take a taxi half way across town to the museum. I got there at 10am and wandered around for 4 & 1/2 hours. Could have been longer but I was suppose to meet the women at 3pm and follow them to Coatepec to camp. Well, the road was so bad and the boondocking site so small in Coatepec that we decided to bag that excursion and stayed on the Sam’s parking lot for another night there in Xalapa.

The city itself is just your typical semi-modern Mexican city so I didn’t take any pictures of it, and we were having some rainstorms though the area so it was sort of gloomy.

When you first walk into the museum, this Olmec head is right there. They didn’t have any brochures to hand out so I’ll have to go by memory for this part, I think this head is considered the 7th best out of all they have:

100_1884.jpg

This one is even better, it spoke to me while I was standing there, almost made me wet my pants, stupid ghostly Olmec head voice:

100_1886.jpg

These guys were pissed at something:

100_1887.jpg

These things weighed tons so they are not worried about a visitor walking off with them:
100_1889.jpg

So you know, we are getting progessively older as these pictures take us for a walk through the museum. Starting over 800 years ago and going back to 4,700 years BPE. I won’t say much about these pieces since their descriptions were in Spanish so I don’t know much about them, occasionally there were brochures available in English so I can describe some pieces. This is a picture of the other wing of the museum, I’m still in the first part of this main wing when I took this shot out of a side door, just to give you an idea of the size of the place. They have some of the heads in their own alcoves with other pieces, they look like little courtyards in the tropics:
100_1890.jpg
——————————–
This is a panther, stylized as you can see. The mouth is like a pathway to the other side:
100_1891.jpg
——————————–
100_1893.jpg
——————————–
100_1894.jpg
——————————–
100_1895.jpg
——————————–
100_1897.jpg
——————————–
100_1898.jpg
——————————–
100_1899.jpg
——————————–
100_1900.jpg
——————————-
Here’s one of the altars:
100_1902.jpg
——————————-
Can’t remember for sure…father holding dead son?
100_1903.jpg
——————————–
100_1907.jpg
——————————–
100_1909.jpg
——————————–
One of the more interesting figures
100_1910.jpg
——————————–
100_1911.jpg
——————————–
This is a clay figure of someone after they have had their skin flailed, no explanation of why you would want such a statue, maybe as a warning?:
100_1914.jpg
——————————–
These following clay figures are all over 1,000 years old and are an excellent example of the type of creative art they had going on back then, wouldn’t I love to have one of these:
100_1915.jpg
——————————–
100_1916.jpg
——————————–
100_1917.jpg
——————————–
100_1918.jpg

——————————–
100_1919.jpg
——————————–
100_1921.jpg
——————————–
100_1922.jpg
——————————–
100_1925.jpg
——————————–
100_1928.jpg
——————————–
100_1930.jpg
——————————–
100_1932.jpg
——————————–
Here’s a couple shots of El Tajin, where a lot of the pieces here in the museum came from, and that I visited a few days before:
100_1933.jpg
——————————–
100_1934.jpg
——————————–
This piece is the most macabre in the museum, this is a clay representation of a torture victim. They would be tied up like the clay figure, with those big ropes, with arms placed in those cones (they’re hard to see, there are like horns near the ear and they are behind the head) so you would have your arms up behind your head and tied, with all the weight of the rock, the whole thing is made out of rock, except the rope then ?, shiver:
100_1939.jpg
——————————–
100_1940.jpg
——————————–
100_1941.jpg
——————————–
These skulls and artifacts were presented here like they were found in a group grave; it may have been raided, not known:
100_1942.jpg
——————————–
This guy with the huge woody is wearing the skin of a victim, seems happy about it:
100_1943.jpg
——————————–
Anyway, hope you enjoyed the visit to the museum. Sadly, the Spanish did an excellent job of stealing all the gold so there are none of those types of artifacts here. There are some pieces at Chichen Itza and I’m planning on going there next, don’t know for sure where that museum is yet but I’ll try to find it soon.

Posted in On the road in Mexico | Leave a comment

On the Emerald Coast, Mexico…

After spending the morning touring the El Tajin ruins, one day is probably enough, half a day not enough, we went on without Woody (he headed on down to Panama), to the Emerald Coast. This area is well worth the visit. We got here just between the seasons so where we stayed they had few guests. We stayed two nights to recharge our personal batteries and to get on-line (it takes some effort to get the satellite set up and running and all, so if we’re not going to be in one place for at least two days, we usually bag it and don’t set up at all).

Anyway, here’s where we stayed. Note that there are several RV camping spots all up and down the coast here, all bordering the ocean. Many choices, good facilities, good nearby services and food, etc. It’s a place where you could settle for several months if you wished:

100_1862.jpg
———————————–
100_1863.jpg
———————————–
100_1866.jpg
———————————–
100_1872.jpg
———————————–
100_1873.jpg
———————————–
As you can see, not to popular with the tourists at this time of year:
100_1876.jpg
———————————–
100_1877.jpg

The Caribbean shore, where in days of yore, Spaniards came to exploit, er, explore.
100_1879.jpg
——————————–
100_1880.jpg
——————————–
100_1881.jpg
——————————–
100_1882.jpg

Posted in On the road in Mexico | Leave a comment

Even More from Catemaco…

We’re hanging here at the La Ceiba RV park in Catemaco (Caw-tea-maw-ko) another day or so, it’s Sunday, Nov. 19, 2006 and I’m trying to catch the NFL games today. I have ordered streaming audio of all the games over the internet and then I’ve got the TV tuned to an early game, Oakland vs. Kansas City, shown on a local station (with audio in Spanish). The sources are out of sync by about a minute so I watch the play on TV, and a minute later, listen to the play by play from the computer. Strange, but no stranger then the stuff you do. Yes, I can see you through your computer screen.

Anyway, here are some more pictures of the ancient city of El Tejin.
——————————–
100_1827.jpg
——————————–
100_1828.jpg
——————————–
100_1829.jpg
——————————–
100_1830.jpg
——————————–
100_1831.jpg

They tell me that there are 17 ballcourts here but I only found two so I am no longer sure what I’m looking for when it comes to ballcourts. Most of the hoops that are traditional on either side of a ballcourt have been stolen and the rest removed to be placed in museums. But still, I would expect to see a wide narrow area with viewing stands on either side of any ballcourt. I suppose you folks should come here and see for yourselves. Why is the hoop stolen so often? It’s because of the macabre history of the hoops, and their artistry. During ritural games, sometimes lasting for days, the teams would use the head of someone bested in battle or the head of a sacrificial victim. The human head pushed or tossed through the hoop would count as a score, sometimes ending the game. Much like todays basketball. Every member of the loosing team could be killed. Kind of an inducement to play really, really hard. Many players died during games. Other games appeared to be just for practice where the teams tossed handmade balls of flora through the hoops to score. Thanks to the Spanish, we can only guess at most of the daily history since they destroyed all the written codicies and we only have bare sketches and their biased opinions of some of the daily life here.
——————————–
100_1832.jpg
——————————–
100_1833.jpg
——————————–
Thought that I would take my own picture with the neat structure in the background but I miss timed, that’s why I have a stunned look, it’s called the Pyramid of the Niches and is said to have 365 niches (it’s crumbled some). The pyramid was painted red and the niches black. It would have been impressive when built for sure:

100_1836.jpg
——————————–

The pathways and plazas shown here are original. Very comfortable to walk on, not the bumpy plazas of old Europe or the ancient roads of the Romans (I’m told), though this place has some roads like those too, the main road into this complex is rough cobblestone:

100_1837.jpg
——————————–
100_1838.jpg
——————————–
100_1839.jpg
——————————–
100_1840.jpg
——————————–
100_1841.jpg
——————————–
100_1842.jpg
——————————–
100_1843.jpg
——————————–
100_1844.jpg
——————————–
100_1845.jpg
——————————–
100_1846.jpg
——————————–
100_1847.jpg
——————————–
100_1848.jpg
——————————–
100_1849.jpg
——————————–
100_1850.jpg
——————————–
100_1851.jpg
——————————–
100_1852.jpg
——————————–
100_1853.jpg
——————————–
100_1854.jpg
——————————–
100_1857.jpg
——————————–
100_1855.jpg
——————————–

Well, that’s all the pictures I have of El Tajin. Tomorrow we are getting back on the road so I’ll not be on the web for a few days. After that, I’ll put up pictures of this place, Catemaco, quite the lake they have here. It’s been raining heavily for the last couple days so we’ve kind of stayed indoors mostly. But the first whole day we were here, I got some good shots.

If you can’t get enough of the ruins, here’s a link to another site that has more pictures:

El Tajin Archaeological Ruins

Posted in On the road in Mexico | 4 Comments

Down in Catemaco…

We settled here in Catemaco next to a large lake and have spent a couple days relaxing and checking out the town. It was overcast when we got here, the day after a major wind storm that caused lots of fallen trees and power lines, etc. It’s been intermittently raining most of the day so I took this opportunity to do some budgeting and computer work while trying to figure out why the Oregon Ducks football game was on the radio for 35 minutes and then after a glitch on my end stopped playing. Then all I could get from the radio station was a commercial loop. Very maddening but the Ducks are loosing big time anyway so no biggy to me I guess. Damn it.

I’ll get some more of those 100 pictures I told you about up here today while I’m enjoying the Prairie Home Companion. Here’s a link especially for you foreign readers, since you may have no idea what the show is about. Each show is 2 hours long and they are mostly comedy and music with some old fashioned monologues thrown in. Anyway, the shows are archived and available for free as streaming audio in English on-line:

Prairie Home Companion

The first day in Mexico it was getting wet and that evening we stopped and stayed at a Pemex station for the night.

Here’s a shot of our rigs and the weather:

100_1777.jpg

The next day was more of the same weather:

100_1780.jpg

We passed this huge statue in a grape growing region:

100_1782.jpg

Here’s one of the many swollen rivers we passed over that day:

100_1784.jpg

Finally we arrived at the El Taj’in ruins in the highlands:

We were sort of mobbed by salespersons as the weather was poor we were among the few that visited that day.

Here’s a view of the museum from where we parked for the night. Since we got there late in the afternoon, we stayed on the museum parking lot for a mere $6 US. Next morning we headed into the site thankful that it is free on Sundays.

100_1785.jpg

A look at the booths the vendors use to sell you all sorts of trinkets:

100_1788.jpg

The walk to the museum:

100_1790.jpg

The entrance to the site:

100_1791.jpg

Another view of a couple pyramids:

100_1792.jpg

The following pictures speak for themselves, note that these ruins are over a thousand years old, and were inhabited then abandoned then re-inhabited then finally abandoned for 800 years. Anyway, enjoy:

100_1795.jpg

——————————-

100_1797.jpg

——————————-

100_1798.jpg

——————————-

100_1799.jpg

Ahh, I’m finally here, the place I’ve studied and read about and seen pictures of nearly my entire life. It does not disappoint. The Mayans built this place, I believe over a thousand years ago:

100_1800.jpg

A shot of Sam to give you an idea of scale, plus she’s cute. Here she’s pointing out her great dimples to me, as if I didn’t know already:

100_1802.jpg

100_1803.jpg

One of the several ball courts (17) here at the site, this one is the most well defined:

100_1804.jpg

100_1806.jpg
————————————
100_1807.jpg
————————————
100_1808.jpg
————————————
100_1809.jpg
————————————
100_1810.jpg
————————————
100_1811.jpg
————————————
100_1813.jpg
————————————
Here they (archeologists) are protecting the place with a roof since there are a lot of fresco paintings all around this building. The thatch roof helps keep it dry:
100_1814.jpg
————————————
100_1815.jpg
————————————
A view from the hill top, where the elite lived in the cooling breezes, looking down over the city. Even up here, in the quiet part of town, there appear to be plazas where the elite could stand high over groups of people and lie to them, just like today:
100_1816.jpg

Up in the elite part of town:
100_1817.jpg

Look carefully at the lower half of the picture, those are frescoes painted over a thousand years ago:
100_1818.jpg
——————————–
100_1819.jpg

Sam talking to the scientist we found up on the bluff sweeping up around the covered building. He knows five languages and kept Sam occupied for 40 minutes. Since I don’t speak Spanish, I wandered off after 20 minutes or so:
100_1820.jpg
——————————–
100_1821.jpg

These following shots are just a few other buildings I happened to pass while wandering the site:
100_1822.jpg
——————————–
100_1823.jpg
——————————–
100_1824.jpg
——————————–
100_1825.jpg
——————————–
This shot is of a stair well that I thought was particularly interesting. Seems meant to be intimidating:

——————————–

Well, I’m kind of tired so I’m going to take a break. I’ll put up more tomorrow before the football game.

Posted in On the road in Mexico | 1 Comment

Back into Mexico…

We’ve been on the road in Mexico now for a week, we crossed the border on Nov. 7th and today is Nov. 13th. The first travel day we went to a small town right on the Caribbean coast named La Pesca and stayed right there on the beach for 3 days. It’s a Mexican tourist destination and the beach we stopped at has hosted as many as 70,000 on vacation weekends. But it was nearly deserted while we were there.

The first set of pics is of three of our four rigs and the RV park we stayed at in Mission, Texas:

100_1748.jpg

This next picture is of two of the group members, Woody on the chair and Sam there in the foreground. Woody was born in Panama, joined the US Marines there and spent his 30 year career in the US. He has a thick accent, speaks Spanish first and English second and is driving back to Panama to visit all his relatives. He wanted to travel with us for a while since he had never driven an RV in Mexico and wanted to know the ropes.

Sam was born in Colombia, moved to New York at 1 & 1/2 and speaks both Brooklynese (though she grew up on Long Island) and Spanish. She is traveling down to a remote place in the Yucatan to stay a few months and maybe take a management job, if it’s offered.

Not shown is Kathe, she’s a land owner in Mexico and has been across the border at least 20 times, speaks fluent Spanish and English and will be trying to sell homes on her property to women that would like to retire down in Mexico.

We’re all traveling together to sort of help each other along with accumulated knowledge and mutual assistance.

100_1750.jpg

Our first stop inside Mexico after we passed the border and border checks, this is what passes as a rest stop, we had lunch here. That’s Kathe there in the middle of the picture and her rig behind:

100_1757.jpg

Just a random shot of the roadway and the typical flora and fauna, lot’s of moisture in this area. Nothing like the West coast of Mexico at this latitude, which is basically a desert:

100_1758.jpg

Late in the day we arrive at the beach in La Pesca for some boondocking:

100_1759.jpg

——————————-

100_1760.jpg

Just a shot of my rig:

100_1761.jpg

Then the jetty:

100_1762.jpg

Then there is that finger of ocean water that was creeping up the beach while we wandered around, and patterns of wetness all the way up the beach. There was a friend of Kathe’s that came by and told us the dredging done recently in the channel was causing this problem, so we move to another nearby beach:

100_1763.jpg

Here was my first overnight boondocking place:

100_1766.jpg

And a general shot of the area, note that on busy weekends there are nearly 70,000 Mexicans here, obviously, this is the off season for this beach. If you look carefully you’ll see all those little grass covered shelters in the picture all the way up the beach. They’re rented for $50 pesos per day:

100_1765.jpg

After settling in a little, I wandered over to the beach, it’s around 100 yards from where I parked, and took the following four pictures. It’s sunset and these are mostly looking somewhat east:

100_1767.jpg

As you can see from my shadow, I’m very tall:

100_1768.jpg

100_1769.jpg

100_1770.jpg

Dawn the next morning:

100_1771.jpg

Still dawn, but you can see there are some tourists, Sam & Woody. We did see a lot of Mexicans drop by. In fact we helped a family that had dropped their car alarm remote into the ocean, so they couldn’t get their SUV started to drive home. I silenced the siren and Sam was able to activate the starter with the same secret procedure as works with her alarm. We got hugs:

100_1772.jpg

100_1773.jpg

That’s Kathe’s little 4 wheel drive runabout. I added a little hidden switch to deactivate it so a bad guy would have trouble hot wiring it:

100_1774.jpg

A couple days later and we leave the beach and pass through La Pesca. It’s a typical little town of 3000 near the beach:

100_1775.jpg

100_1776.jpg

Posted in On the road in Mexico | 1 Comment

Psychology of a riot…

While I was stationed at Treasure Island, I occasionally went over (aka ‘went ashore’) and wandered around looking at stuff. I’ve used the trolley so many times that now it’s nostalgic for me. Spent many hours in fine restaurants in downtown San Francisco as well. Also many hours on fisherman’s wharf. This predated the Height Asbury stuff by a couple years but that by no means precludes activism. More on that later.

One of the things I did was to visit a burlesque show. I was from a pretty small town…Walla Walla, Washington…population around 30,000 at that time…and hadn’t been to many large towns except to pass though. Anyway, at age 18, I went to this show. I had to smile the whole time because it almost exactly like the old movies I’d seen about burlesque. The theater was obviously very old, late 1800’s or so. Very ornate with red velvet everywhere, including the seats. Lights were pretty dim so the place looked very clean. It was hushed and with the ornate and amazing architecture, seemed stately. While I was sitting there waiting for the show to begin, I glanced around and laughed out loud when, 5 or 6 seats to my right, in the row behind me, I see a guy making himself comfortable, wearing a trench coat, just slipping his hand into his crotch under the coat. I couldn’t believe that all those jokes I’d heard about pervs in big cities were based on fact.

Then the comic came out, did a few jokes and then started introducing the girls. I have to tell you people, six of the seven women that came out and did classic strip tease dances were six of the most beautiful women I’d ever seen. Beauty queen looks, movie star good looks. I was blown away. I expected skags. When I glanced back at the guy in the trench coat? Yep, yanking it. I had to laugh again, and as I glanced around the theater, there were like five or six of those guys going at it. The theater had 100 or so seats and it wasn’t full or anything since it was the first show, like around 4:30pm.

During every one of my shore leaves, I always went to the USO in downtown since they had free snacks, pool tables, and a piano there and I liked to tinkle…since I’d taken lessons for several years. Most of the pieces I knew by heart were classical and you need to practice allot to stay on top of them. One afternoon when I went in there, there was another guy already playing. He was brilliant. So talented that he had a crowd around. He was asked by a curious onlooker why he was playing a piece in a different key then the asker had learned it, the player said he just played in his favorite key and with a musical flourish, changed keys. Then I asked him to play the piece in four flats…his hands just danced around until he was playing that same piece in four flats. Wow. And he did that kind of stuff for the next hour.

That’s when I decided that all the practicing in the world would never make me as good as he was. Basically, then and there, I stopped playing or caring about practicing. Wonder what happened to him.

Another day, I was wandering around SF, I don’t remember the day of the week or anything but I remember knowing that there was going to be some kind of war protest that day after a parade. So I watched the parade and after it ended, there was a lot of people just standing or milling around while the families left. Then it got ugly. Shouts of protest, banners started flying, and cops started arresting, people pushing loud-mouthed hawks, doves asking for hugs, and on and on. Hmmm, I was thinking, just getting interesting.

Pretty soon, there was an impromptu antiwar march going on. And a half hour later, from where I stood on the street, I could see probably 15,000 people marching down the hill toward Fisherman’s Market. This amazed me. I had never seen that many people marching for anything, and this was an antiwar march! Pretty cool being 18 years old and seeing all those people my age all against war and hate and such.

Well, I sort of followed along on the sidewalk as the march got bolder and bolder, then the whole group got angry with the cops that were trying to stop this unauthorized march. I have to say how weird it was to get swept up in this march. I was just wandering on the sidewalk along with them, then I felt an urge to step onto the street to march along, it was a mental thing, palpable, Jung’s overmind control or something. Then I got very angry, I could feel and sense the anger sweep up the street towards me, I wanted to kill something, or at least knock it down and stomp on it and I had no idea what or why. Then, as we, thousands of us nearly running now, passed an alley I ducked into it. Deep down, I didn’t want to stomp on anyone, didn’t even know why I’d wanted to to begin with. As I stood there in the alley, watching all the marchers shouting, fists raised, angry, rushing to kill something, I got a hold of myself and calmed down. Wow, mob rule. Now I knew what that meant.

Went back to the base shortly after, with a lot to think about. Mobs, war, peace, free love.

Posted in Active duty... | Leave a comment