Notes from the field: Adventure Walkers

"Notes From The Field" cronicles Adventure Travel with all things intriguing and adventurous for the fan of exotic culture and ancient civilizations. Meant to be niether too academic nor too wildly sensational, it seeks to illustrate that truth can be more fascinating than fiction. These are "walking adventures" for the rest of us.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

Marvelous performace at Benimerito

Students at Benimerito de las Americas performing

Romans famous Oaxaca woven rugs

Getting in the lanchas for our trip up the Usumacinta River

The Acropolis at Yaxchilan in high canopy jungle

On the Usumacinta River on the way to Yaxchilan

Palanque's Palacio, My focus on this visit...

The Palacio at Palenque, under dramatic skies

Coatimundis, Mesoamerica's answer to the racoon

Friday, October 20, 2006

Little Jungle Friends: Coatimundi

Another Mexico Adventure

Just back from Mexico...Again...helping Lori's parents with a group of 80. It is the end of a very wet rainy season--that was still going--which made for the best weather ever: Cooler in the tropics, greener in the highlands...awesome altogether. Every experience was fantastic. Fewer mosquitoes in La Venta park, Villa Hermosa, but more coatimudi's (see picture). Palenque was near deserted allowing us to climb around on the ruins and me to discover a whole, new breathtaking experience exploring the "Palacio", its courtyards, sculptures and underground passageways...before a sudden shower drenched us all with a delightful cooling effect. The air was actually refreshing (rare in the tropics) riding the small wooden "lanchas" down the Usumusinta River to Yachillan (I looked for the watch I lost there in 2004 when I fell down by the Acropolis, but the jungle had grown up so much through the rocks, the effort was near hopeless. A howler monkey is probably wearing it and enjoying his newfound prestige.) The drive by beautiful lake Catemaco was great as usual and Cerro Vejia (The Mesoamerican "Cumorah") was only lightly shrouded in mist and ideal for picture-taking with the faint strains of Mexican band music rifting up form the valley below in San Andres Tuxla. Oaxaca was a bit tense with burned out bus barricades and newly applied graffiti citywide, the result of recent teacher strikes and anti state government demonstrations, but the outlying towns as quaint as ever. A night in Vera Cruz eating a scrumptious shrimp cocktail on the plaza was awesome. Finally a visit to the always impressive Teotihuacan Ruins in Mexico City and the world-famous Archeological Museum off Reforma topped off a wonderful trip. Great people and great and memorable experiences.