Sunday, January 27, 2019

Oaxaca Beachside: Puerto Escondido & Hualtulco

Oaxaca state, Mexico


Cozy!
After a delightful month in Oaxaca (City), we headed south and a little west to the Pacific coast, still in Oaxaca (State). We took a short 30-minute flight in a tiny airplane over the mountains (unfortunately shrouded in clouds), starting our coastal tour in the surfer town of Puerto Escondido. We stayed in the small village of Brisas de Zicatela, just south of Zicatela, which is known among surfers as the Mexican Pipeline, a very large tubular wave that is at its peak in the summer. We don’t surf but have read that this area is one of the Top 10 surfing destinations in the world.

Downtown Brisas de Zicatela
We checked in to our lovely Airbnb studio apartment and headed into “town,” which is mostly a packed sand road with restaurants, hostels, dogs, bars, a couple of Oxxo-like tiny tiendas, an organic market, and a tiny vegetable stand where they sold, along with the produce, ½ pound bags of pasta for 7 pesos (33 cents). 

We found one restaurant, run by an Aussie, where they had tasty meat pies … well, they sort of had them… since they were on the menu, but they were not always available. Once we had tried, and liked them, we asked the proprietor if we could order (and pre-pay for) a half dozen. Oddly, she said “no, I want to have them for my restaurant customers.” Which we thought we were. Anyway, we made a couple of runs at changing her mind, and she just dug in. Odd.
...no more pie for you!!


I love you, man!
Look, Marky likes it! he ate a corn tortilla!
The good news, though, is that we found a fish taco place, right off the beach, called Pepe’s. It was hidden away behind palm trees and foliage, sand floor, and 3 dogs in residence – 2 brindle hounds and a pit, all very friendly, despite the “perro peligro” sign on the gate. Pepe is a character in all senses of the word. He serves what he has, and if more people show up he heads out for a few minutes to get more fish, tortillas, booze, etc. We went 3 times in 15 days, because his coconut fish tacos were inspired by angels. Pepe also will take you on a fishing trip which transitions to a cooking class for his said heavenly coconut fish tacos. Next time! That said, we went 3 times!
Cue...angels singing


Turtle traffic jam

We connected online with a nice mexicana, Gina, who moved from DF to Puerto Escondido maybe 20 years ago. She was hired by the local government to run a tourist information booth and did so for years, until the government shut down her program. The good news is that while they quit paying her, they allowed her to stay in the booth, on a main tourist street, rent free, and she made the most of that – she is still there and goes by the moniker “Information Goddess.”
We went on a nighttime “turtle trip” with her and saw 80++? (It was DARK) Olive Ridley turtles coming in from the ocean to lay their eggs. There were so many we had to be careful not to get in their way, nor step on them. It was truly amazing.

Tiger Heron
Gina also connected us with a guide who took us in a boat into Laguna Manialtepec (which we think means “hill of springs” in Nauhuatl) for a birdwatching trip. This is not something we do regularly, but the laguna was so peaceful and calm, we might take up a new pastime. 

The laguna was like glass. We saw 40-50 different species, including a gorgeous tiger heron, and a peregrine falcon.








Drive along the coast to Huatulco
From PE, we took a local bus (2.5 hours, 85 pesos pp / $4 US) south to Huatulco, formerly known as Bahias de Huatulco, after the 9 bahias there. After the Spanish Conquest, Huatulco thrived as a port under Hernán Cortés' control serving as a vantage point for Spanish galleons and a distribution center for supplies on the Pacific coast. The latter half of the 16th Century saw Huatulco attacked bFrancis Drake (per Wikipedia). In the 1980s, Mexico decided to develop the area of tourism, along the lines of Cancun.

yummm... tiramisu
We stayed in another Airbnb in La Crucecita, on the eastern edge of the centro area. Good restaurants, including an Italian place with some killer fresh pasta Bolognese and tiramisu. And a 3 course champagne brunch...sigh.


The largest Virgen de Guadalupe

For scale
The church on the plaza is relatively new, probably 1980s when the town was built up. The church is stunning. In the cupola of the church is painted a 20 meter tall image of the Virgin of Guadalupe, which is the largest in the world. It is kind of like seeing Lupita on the ceiling of Grand Central Station.





There are beautiful beaches in Huatulco, though access was challenging due to the presence of the resorts that are a part of the tourism plan. We decided to walk in from the public access area, which was an interesting path through a swamp over boards, tires, and dog food bags full of cement. But it was free!




It is always fun to see the Mexican Christmas preparations which lasts for weeks... including a fun little parade of groups of elves, snowmen, ornaments and a star (sort of) leading the wise men. 







Also, leading up to the day of an important Virgin Mary in the area, there are groups of pilgrims actually running (wearing sandals or barefoot) from their homes to the festival church, really amazing.

Here today, barbecue tomorrow!

Also a cow moooved into the neighborhood and was very louuud. When one day it got quiet, Linda asked our Belgian hostess about the cow… it had become the main course at the church’s fiesta up the street!

Happy Holidays in Mexico!



20 diciembre 2018

Thursday, January 3, 2019

Alebrijes and Oaxaca Valley Villages


Oaxaca State, Mexico


Mark should be careful of his new friend!

The famous watertower
We decided to push our low-to-the-ground knowledge level a bit recently, and enlisted the help of a new friend in Mexico, Jody, who was and is a Spanish teacher, a San Francisco (CA) native, and has lived on and off in Mexico and Oaxaca since 1978. We were introduced to Jody by friends we recently “re-met” in Chapala / Lakeside, Kevin and Erin. That story is long, but both of us knew Kevin maybe 20 years ago in our former “coffee lives,” and it turns out Linda went to high school with Kevin’s wife, Erin, in Othello WA (population 5,000) in the early 1980s. Crazy that we met up in Chapala, Mexico!






Bus -- we're not responsible for nuttin'
We asked Jody to introduce us to some of the pueblos south of Oaxaca, as well as a give us a primer on the local bus system. That in itself was a real eye opener. We left Oaxaca heading south on a van-sized bus, 30 pesos ($1.50) pp, and our first stop was a small pueblo called San Antonino Castillo Velasco. We took a mototaxi from the bus stop on the highway (another 21 pesos!), and stopped at the Iglesia Santo Domingo, a 16th century church.


Flashy neon!

Santo Domingo in San Antonino
Overall, 15 churches in the area were restored with the oversight and funding from a local Ocotlan Zapotec artist, Rodolpho Morales, who died in 2001. The church itself was striking. From the outside it had a painted façade, with a giant 15-foot rosary hanging above the entrance.







Inside, the painted murals and frescos were beautiful, and though Guadalupe got a nice statue of Juan Diego kneeling before her, she herself only got a 2-dimensional painting. Mary got a full-on statue. Just sayin’.









No photo of produce, meat focussed!
We then walked through the San Antonino Mercado, a great market. Someone wrote that Mexicans have a special gift for stacking produce, (and meat), and it was on full display here. They looked like food altars, and we wanted to just stand and glory in their beauty.


Being tracked
We strolled up the road over to Ocotlan, the “big town” in the area. We noticed as we walked (maybe a kilometer) that the dogs looked pretty healthy, and ran in packs of 2-8. They were pretty focused on you if you had food, but otherwise were non-plussed.




When we reached the zocalo in Ocotlan, we walked to the Palacio Gobierno, which had large murals painted by the aforementioned Senor Morales. The building had cerrado (closed) tape across the doors, but as often happens in Mexico, if you look in and are interested, someone shows up and lets you in.



Rodolpho Morales mural of tianguis (market) day



One long wall was covered with a mural from the 1950s (or so) that showed life as it had been in the area for hundreds of years, before Cortes and after. The other wall had more contemporary themes, with many “flying ladies,” ala Marc Chagall. These were from the 1970s we were told.




Another beautifully restored church was in Ocotlan.











We then took another mototaxi (these are basically motorcycles fitted with a cab that hold a driver in the front and 3 people in the back, 15 pesos for 3 people) to a couple of talles de artesanas (workshops), the most famous of which was that of Josefina Aguilar.



She is famous for her clay figurines, tiny and large,
and generally brightly painted. It is a family affair, with multiple generations working, and kids running under foot, playing. We had fun trying out the various campanillas (little bells) made of clay. They had enough different pitches to create a bell choir.







We caught another bus back toward San Martin Tilcajete, this pueblo famous for its alebrijes, the carved and brightly painted wooden animals made famous (again) in the movie Coco. We walked into the village, and noticed ALL the various alebrije shops through town.


The workshop consulted for that movie is that of Jacobo y Maria Angeles. The merchandising of the workshop was top notch. We had a guide who took us around and explained things, all in very fast Español (we decided against English to push ourselves a little). Linda thinks she got about 70% of it, Mark says he got 25%, but… todo bien! (all fine!)


Key things – the copal wood they use, once carved, takes about 2 years to dry and cure. Think about that. Someone spends weeks carving a jaguar, then it sits and waits for 2 years, before it re-enters the process. After the curing, they spend a lot of time patching the cracks, again with shims of copal, and then putty. After a lot of sanding, the pieces are ready for painting – which takes another 2-3 months.

When we saw the finished products, it was beyond amazing. The sheer beauty of the pieces truly elicited emotional responses (awe, speechlessness, tears). The price tag for say a 24” jaguar was 130,000 pesos. That’s somewhere near $8000 USD. Totally worth it if you have the money and the passion / appreciation. Some of the pieces we saw curing were 5X the size of that jaguar. So maybe the price of a Lexus. But again, the sheer beauty of this artwork and work that goes into it, makes the price tag completely worth it. The tour is free, though one should give a propina (tip)!



Japanese business principles in Mexico?!


We had a Oaxacan lunch and were thinking to stop at another church on the way back into Oaxaca city, but the shadows were growing long, so we just took the “Walrus” bus (Automorsa) back into town. It was great to have a local be our guide for the day, to experience the valley villages outside the normal tourist track. And we made a new friend! Thank you, Jody!



If you want to contact Jody for Spanish lessons or tour advice, reach out to her here.


2018 27 noviembre