Starting off

(Oct 28, 2011)

Hey Guys!

So in the end I decided to start a blog to make it easier for everyone to view my pictures! I will try to post a new album at least once a week, which you can find imprinted in my blog. I am having a wonderful time in Mexico City and think, despite its size, I really have done a good job of hitting the hot spots (thanks to Fabian and Malu - my wonderful hosts- and all of my other friends here who have helped me!). Tomorrow I will be heading to Guadalajara to stay with Paty and Rodrigo and I am excited to be getting closer to the beach!

All the best and enjoy the photos

Backtrack to mexico city

(Nov 6, 2011)

Well I have been having a marvelous time in Mexico City and have been surrounded by friends here. Fabian (Sr.), Malu, and Fabian (Jr.) have been so incredibly welcoming and helpful! They have taken me around the outskirts of Mexico City to make sure I can see everything! We went to the Pyramids at Teotihuacan and on a river boat cruise in Xochimilco. The pyramids were amazing and I, of course, ran up as many as I could! On the river in Xochimilco there were floating food, drink and entertainment stands and the river was full of ruckus groups drinking beer and toasting to everyone's good health! What fun! On Monday Malu and I went into the Historic City Centre to see the Main Cathedral, the Zocalo (one of the largest squares in the world apparently), the Palace, and the Ron Muick Exhibit (an australian artist who creates lifelike silicone human forms and sculptures). We had a lot of fun, even though our trek to the Tequila and Mezcal Museum turned out to be in vain (it was closed!).
          I have been spending the past few days with Eugen and Juan Carlos, a pair of wonderful cousins who stayed with us in 2005/6. We went into the huge Chapultapec park and saw the 'Castle' museum and spent a day running around helping me get organized for the next stages of my trip (bus tickets, cellphones, books etc). They were so helpful and trying to navigate this huge city and operate in Spanish was getting exhausting. Yesterday Eugen and Juan Carlos and I went to Coyoacan (for my 4th time - I love Coyoacan!) to look at the private galleries there and the Museums of Frida Khalo (amazing!) and Diego Rivera. After the galleries and museums we headed back to Fabian and Malu's beautiful house for an amazing lunch of straight-from-the-vine salad, Spaghetti Bolognese, freshly baked bread, and Spanish Merlot! After lunch we went for a walk to have Nieve (like Gelato) and we all went wild over the Red Wine, Tequila and Avocado flavours!
           While in Mexico City I have also connected with a friend of mine from GNS (high school), who was a few grades above me and now works in the Canadian Embassy here in la Ciudad. A few nights ago we met over some Oaxacan Mezcal at a Mezcaleria in Coyoacan. Tonight I am going to a Halloween Party at the Canadian Embassy and I will leave for Guadalajara tomorrow morning!
          I have also been in contact with Claire, a girl who works with the British Embassy here in Mexico City and remotely as the Latin America Communications Coordinator for Innovative Communities.org (the organization I am working with). Through meeting we have been able to draw up some concrete goals for my role within the foundation. As it stands now I will be drawing up a Project Research and Evaluation Template to be used for reporting on the various NGO/Not for Profit/Government-led community development initiatives that I stumble upon along my way. With this document I hope to create concise and comparable reports that will support InnovativeCommunities.org's initiatives in the field and provide suggestions for new community initiatives for them to start on next. I have also decided that I am going to treat this trip as a 'pre-masters research venture' whereby I will be writing down observations that I come across regarding public transportation and urban movements in each city that I pass through. I hope to be able to look back upon these notes after my trip to draw out themes and insights that can then be used as a base for an urban planning masters thesis. Mexico City is certainly a fantastic place to start a study of public transportation as it seems to have some good ideas but the sheer amount of people in the city has created significant difficulties in transportation plan executions!

          I have had an amazing time while in Mexico City and, besides some cellphone difficulties, have had no problems nor felt in danger while here. I have met the most amazing people and look forward to keeping in touch with them as I travel on my journey.

Backtrack to Guadalajara

(Nov 6, 2011)

I spent this past week in Guadalajara city with another family whose son came to stay with us in Victoria about 4 years ago (Rodrigo). How lucky I am to have so many fantastic friends all over the world!  
I spent my first day wandering the old quarter of the city’s downtown and was able to watch parts of the final Marathon for the Pan American Games (tip – marathons are not all that exciting to watch, there is a lot of waiting around!). Luckily I was able to wander along the Marathon path on my way downtown and see the runners wiz past me every once –in-a-while. In the old centre of Guadalajara I checked out a few art galleries, with my favorite being ‘El Hospicio de Cabana’, a beautiful 16th century hospital complex that had once been used for housing orphans, the homeless, and the sick or disabled in the city. While this may sound like a lot, the grounds were huge with many courtyards and gardens throughout. More recently the complex had been used to house military activity during the independence- fighting years and is now well maintained and scattered with art exhibits that lead the visitor on an elaborate scavenger hunt through the hundreds of rooms!
On my second day I went to a small satellite municipality called ‘Tlaquepaque’, which is positioned mainly as a tourist-y artisan centre. The colonial era buildings were beautifully maintained and the pedestrian walkways leading to the central square were lined with luxurious furniture and art stores. So far, this has been the place where I have seen the highest concentration of loud English speaking American tourists. I just wonder how they plan on getting their purchases home with them! My favorite Gallery by far in this neighbourhood was Sergio Bustamante, who employs a whimsical, storybook-like style in a variety of mediums including jewellery, sculpture, painting, shoes, handbags and furniture. His work was showcased in the Pan American Games closing ceremonies and I have a few pictures of his gallery on my blog J
Day three involved me lounging pool-side at Paty and Carlos’ health club before being dropped into the very chaotic middle of a MASSIVE fair. The fair is called ‘la fiesta de octubre’ and it is pretty much the same as any Canadian summer fair except 5-10 times bigger. I was told by a police officer that the fair likely holds 100,000 people at any one time: very easy to get lost in. I often hear about travellers searching for that ‘truly authentic local experience off of the tourist trail’ and, well, I found it! I was the only westerner that I saw in the 3 hours I spent wandering (squeezing through) the crowds and not a single word of English was spoken – not even by me!
On day four Carlos very kindly set up a tour of a nearby tequila plant for me (the makers of El Jimador for all you tequila connoisseurs). On the tour I met a team of 4 electrical engineers working for General Electric in Guadalajara and we all squeezed into their car and headed up to the city of Tequila to go on yet another tequila tour and then on a road trip to a popular lake in the area. All in all (what, with drinking tequila starting at 10am and meeting new friends) it was a very eventful day!

                I arrived at Paty and Carlos’ beach-front condo in Lo De Marcos (north of Puerto Vallarta) two days ago and have been spending my time conducting interviews of local non-profit initiatives and writing reports ever since! I have stayed out of the extremely hot sun for the most part but plan on going for a swim later this afternoon.This town is exactly what you would imagine a tropical beach-side town to be: beautiful, relaxed, and humid. Time seems to slow down here for everyone but me! I've been taking advantage of the peace to get some work done. Don't worry all - I'm not completely crazy: I plan on hitting the beach with my sunscreen, hat and iPod tomorrow.
               
                On Monday I will be heading to Puerto Vallarta to stay with the mother of two of our current students and then onwards to hostel living from there! I haven’t decided whether I plan on heading to the small towns of Puebla and Cuernavaca surrounding Mexico City first, or just going straight down to Puerto Escondido and Chiapas State. In the spirit of not missing anything, I feel inclined to take a Mexico City area detour but need to figure out how far out of the way it will take me and what options for lodging are available in these two small cities.

                Overall I have loved staying and visiting with friends in Mexico and everyone has been incredibly helpful and hospitable to me! I am looking forward to venturing out on my own and hitting the hostel trail a week from now! My Spanish seems to be slowly improving, along with my pronunciation (thanks to my audio language lessons!), and I am developing a good daily rhythm of early morning exercise, healthy eating, keeping up to date with current events and work responsibilities, and then heading out to explore the sights! I only hope that the internet holds up because it is really what is holding everything together!

Puerto Vallarta, Puebla, Cuernavaca, Oaxaca

(Nov 15, 2011)

Well I have been pretty much on the move this whole past week!

I spent 3 days in Puerto Vallarta, staying with the family of two of our current homestay students. The live in a beautiful 'hacienda-style' home with a big two-story courtyard in the middle and a VERY open-concept kitchen, livingroom, dining room and entry way surrounding. Despite the significant age difference in Puerto Vallarta (a popular destination with the 55+ USA and Canadian Crowd) I had a great time, running around the city, seeking out the gay beach (It's quite something to see a beach full of 40+ and very fit men in speedos and gold chains), taking water taxis from secluded beach, to secluded beach, drinking local moonshine, and going to the Mismaloya Zoo! The water taxi was fantastic as it took a full hour to get to the beaches and small communities and cost $25 for a return trip - a fraction of the price of chartering a boat! I, of course, sat RIGHT up at the front of the 'taxi', peering frantically at the horizon looking for sharks, dolphins, and whales and squealing with every big wave encountered. The rest of the passengers on the boat weren't nearly as excited as I was with the relentlessly jumping fish and the hot pursuit of a speedy Marlin. Good thing I was there - I kept the boat afloat! I loved the Mismaloya Zoo - When you arrive you have the option of buying a bag full of fruit and vegetables that come with instructions regarding which animal in the zoo eats which type of food. You then walk through the winding hilltop jungle path, traversing rivers, sneaking under spider-filled canopies, peering into open top animal habitats, and dodging angry Jaguars (that like to jump up on their flimsy chain-link fences as unsuspecting bypassers scoot past. At the end you have the option of playing with all or one of a selection of baby cats: a lion cub, a tiger cub, or a highly irritable leopard cub. I chose the tiger and it turned out to be the best choice as he was extremely playful and seemed to bask in my attention. The lion, on the other hand, was lazy, and the leopard tried to maul anyone who touched it.

After Puerto Vallarta I took the night bus (12 hours) south to Mexico City to transfer to a short bus to Puebla. I had an unfortunate robbery experience where the man sitting next to me *attempted* to steal my camera and money from my wallet as I was in the washroom, however I found out in time and was able to scare/guilt him into giving my things back without ever accusing him. I allowed him to do the right thing anonymously and everything worked out in the end. A good (and 'soft') lesson : never leave your bag at your seat, even if it is in the middle of the night and your neighbour seems to have been sleeping for 2 hours - theifs are dedicated and will lie in wait for hours if need be. I spent one very tired day in Puebla, quickly threading through the streets of the historic city centre and visiting a train museum (it was great! there were about 20 trains on the lot open for visitors to walk through, and many of them held various train art forms (contemporary and historical train-related photographs and paintings), and a series of other galleries. Puebla was nice but I didn't need to spend any more time there than I did. It felt a little Kitschy with its rows upon rows of artisan shops and the obsessive and meticulous street grid pattern was more overwhelming than it was helpful. I stayed in a beautiful and clean little hostel that night and shared a beer on the hostel rooftop terrace with two of the other girls staying in my dorm room.

Up until recently I had been yearning more and more for interaction with young people my age and to have people to wander the cities with. Well, in Cuernavaca I found it! I connected with a very nice 'Couchsurfing' host named Lucy and stayed with her for the weekend while I attended the various events associated with the Art and Theatre Festival (Festivale Arte Vago) in the city. Lucy is an international exchange student from the Czech Republic currently starting her masters on International Relations at a private and country-wide university in Mexico, called TEC Monterrey. She was very nice, welcoming, experienced in couch surfing, interesting and intelligent, vibrant and man - does she like to party! My first night in Cuernavaca we met up with a group of her friends who also participate in the Couchsurfing community in Cuernavaca and we all went to a concert, a midnight alleyway abstract theatrical performance (at one point, we literally watched water boil), and went on a hunt for the cheapest beers in existence (1L for $3 CDN; 1 bottle for $1 CDN). Don't worry, family and friends, I only drank one of each and stayed very much aware the whole night - I DID, however, have a lot of fun! The following day I met up with one of the friends from couchsurfing that we had spent time with the following night and we spent the day following tribal parades through the cute little town, watching various plays and entertainer performances, and hoping to various restaurants and bars so I could try all of the city's 'specialties'. In Mexico it seems that each city has a different Specialty. The food of the moment in Mexico City was Tacos al Pastor, In Guadalajara the focus was on tequila, In Lo De Marcos tongue tacos were all the rage, In Puerto Vallarta skewered fish and shrimp was popular and in Puebla the focus was on stuffed and grilled Peppers (Poblanos). In Cuernavaca the focus was on a delicious chicken-base soup called Pozole. It is a clear broth soup with corn and meat and is served with avacado, lettuce, peppers and fried pork skin (I passed on that) to add in as one likes. I also tried 'flan' which is a custard sold by street vendors everywhere. That night we went to a big Reggae concert in the city centre and then danced the night away at a Reggaeton bar (Reggae is slow and bob marley-esq and Reggaeton is more akin to Latino Electronic HipHop) with a couple of Lucy's friends who turned out to be professional mexican football players.

The next morning I made my way to Mexico City and transferred to a bus to Oaxaca. The bus arrived 4 hours late in Oaxaca due to a variety of road blockades on the highway and I quickly made my way to the Luz de Luna Hostel near the Oaxaca city centre. I ventured out briefly to find one of the Oaxaca specialties: 'Tlyuda - a quesadilla with avocado, lettuce, cheese, and a pounded flat steak called cecina - all made on a tortilla the size of 2.5 flattened heads (aka it was HUGE - $5 CDN for one provided enough food for two meals!). Today I am going to explore the city, seek out various art museums and just generally get oriented in this beautiful city! The guide books tout it as a cultural and culinary centre and I am excited to spend the week here!

Tales from Oaxaca and San Cristobal


(Nov 26, 2011)

It feels like it has been so long since I have written an update! I am currently in San Cristobal and have been here for just under a week.
Prior to this I was staying in Oaxaca, at a beautiful little hostel called Luna de Luz de Nayoo. I made many friends in this hostel and through couchsurfing and I was busy every day and night trying to coordinate meetings with people I had contacted online! Oaxaca was a beautiful city but, as with many of the cities in Mexico, the tourist centre was very manicured and I don’t think it fully reflected the ‘true’ local lifestyle. It was here in Oaxaca that I started to notice more European, Canadian, and American tourists, though a different variety from those in Puerto Vallarta. My favorite part of Oaxaca was the 20th de Noviembre market. While I have had a bit of a hard time with the other markets I have encountered in Mexico (look, smell and sound very ‘real’), the more ‘westerner friendly’ maintenance patterns in this market were very much appreciated by me. Here I tried Chapulines (deep fried and marinated grasshoppers) and surprised my friend by buying a whole bag for my ‘emergency food supply’. I figured that grasshoppers would keep well and are full of nutrients and would come in handy in the case of near starvation due to long-haul bus rides. I spent the rest of my days wandering through the city, looking at the city’s galleries and museums (none were all that impressive, actually), wandering through the market (at least once a day), and salsa dancing with couchsurfing and hostel friends at night. I took a few trips out of the city, both with a fantastic girl from my hostel named Gabriella. Unfortunately we are travelling in opposite directions and said goodbye as we both left Oaxaca. I am getting used to the constant hellos, quick friendships, and goodbyes.  It’s hard to know what to say to someone who you meet on the road and lives so far away from you – boy voyage seems to suffice. On one of the day trips Gabriella and I ventured out to the ruins at Monte Alban, where we tried to imagine the Aztec shadows weaving throughout their city. The other trip we took was slightly less successful – and while we should have known better than to take an organized tour, our disinterest in planning the logistics of the trip blinded us. On our tour of what seemed like 1000 people, the first stop turned out to be a huge tree that we could see from the courtyard (and thus, we didn’t pay to get closer),  the second stop was to a textile store that involved a brief information session before the buying began, the third stop (to the ‘mezcal factory’) also turned out to be a store with a brief demonstration before buying, the fourth was to an unimpressive ruin site, and the fifth was to a beautiful ‘petrified waterfall’, though we arrived too late in the day to go swimming and ended up having to pay twice as much to get in! While the tour only cost ~$15 + 4 entrance fee to the waterfall, Gabriella and I were very steadfast and refused to buy or pay for anything else (we even packed a lunch!). The guides (who no doubt get a cut of the purchases) did not like us very much!
So here I am in San Cristobal. I arrived early in the morning after having taken (much more successfully, this time) the night bus and found my way to the beautiful hostel I was couchsurfing at (aka everyone else there paid to stay but I didn’t! Ah the joys of couchsurfing). For the first three days I stayed at the hostel and spent my time wandering around San Cristobal. There are many jewellery galleries, museums, stores, and trendy restaurants here. I like to think of San Cristobal as ‘backpacker’s Disneyland’ – manicured, colourful and full of ‘culture’. I have really enjoyed visiting here but don’t think I could live here as the paint begins to peel (so-to-speak). While San Cristobal is a nice place to come back to and the hostel I had been staying in was beautiful (vases of flowers and beautiful tile work everywhere!), some of my favorite sights here have been those outside of the city. One day two girls from the hostel and I went on a tour (this one was much more successful) to a town called Chamula, which is a small indigenous town with a magnificent ‘church’ (quotations because inside the Christian church structure the community was actually practicing traditional maya rituals and methods for worship). Here we learned all about the Maya beliefs and religion and met mayan families. Our guide was fantastic – though he was not of indigenous descent himself, he had taken time to learn the mayan ways, language, and most of the families in the town. I felt very welcome in the town – which was nice because it seems like the indigenous population are often so offended or wary of the visiting tourists. Even in San Cristobal. Yesterday I went with a friend for a boat ride through the Beautiful Canyones de Sumidero. As we glided beneath the towering rock walls on either side, I peered endlessly into the rock-clinging tropical forests along the banks for monkeys, crocodiles and sleeping jaguars. While I didn’t see any monkeys or jaguars, we did see about 1,000,000 vultures and 8 HUGE crocodiles (makes my friend from Egypt look tiny!) lazing on the banks with their mouths gaping!
That night I moved from my hostel to a new couchsurfing venue, which turned out to be more of a couchsurfing/backpacker/hippie commune than anything else! We all had a huge and delicious dinner together and I couldn’t believe the stream of couchsurfers that continued to glide in throughout the meal! I would call it a business if there were money involved! I am very happy here, though the farm house I am staying in is very cold. It took me half the day today to thaw out. Unfortunately, thawing brought on symptoms from the sunstroke I must have gotten yesterday while in the Canyon and I spent the day half-hobbling around the city, trying to get as many of the last remaining sights in as possible. In the morning I was able to conduct an interview for the organization I am working with and will work on writing up my report on it soon. Thank god for the rehydration salts that I carry with me everywhere, because by the end of the day I was not in good shape. When I returned to the ‘commune’, however, I stumbled upon my next great adventure! A group of people from the ‘commune’ have hooked up with a local guide and are planning to go on a jungle hiking/kayaking trek along the Guatemala/Mexico Border! The trip will be for 6 days and it is just too fantastic for me to pass up! So, as of Monday, I will be off the airwaves for the following week as I go one a jaguar hunt (or vice versa)!

Lots of love to you all – Into the jungle I go!

(photos will be posted from San Cristobal soon)

How to survive the Lacandon Jungle: don't offend the guide. It's a wonder I'm still here...

(Dec. 11, 2011)

Well,
I hiked into the Lacandon jungle along the Mexico – Guatemala border and survived! In a quick turn of events I found out about an ‘exploratory’ jungle and decided that, instead of heading to Palenque and over to the Yucatan immediately following San Cristobal, I would sign on to this jungle excursion! The trip was to cover 6 days and include a mix of kayaking, hiking and camping on and off trails through the region’s jungle. Our team included 6 people: 2 Swedish women, a Canadian woman from Toronto, a Canadian man from Quebec, myself and the guide. When we were actually in the jungle (about half of the promised time) the trip was fantastic.
On our first night we arrived late and, instead of kayaking to our camping spot, we took a local motor boat from a small nearby town and navigated the crocodile-filled river in pitch darkness. It really was quite something to peer into the blackness with nothing but a small headlamp for direction and crocodile spotting! The roar of the engine was deafening and the threat of potential head-on collision and hungry crocodile advances onto our floundering team was exhilarating! That night we camped in the jungle beside the river and could hear all sorts of bugs and animals around us throughout the night.
The following day we packed up our gear and kayaked down the river, stopping for lunch and a hike along an overgrown trail to an unexcavated Mayan ruin site. At the beginning of the trek I was using a side-to-side scanning method for snake protection (I was wearing sandals and shorts! Very snake ‘friendly’) and by the end of the trek we had walked through so many underbrush-thick, muddy, and thorn-covered trails that fear for my delicious ankles dissolved. There was no way I could protect myself from snakes even if I wanted to. I just walked along and hoped that nothing would feel hungry as I passed! On this hike we saw a lazy anteater meandering through the treetops, toucans, Royal Scarlet Macaws, hawks, a variety of bugs, puma and tapir tracks (but no actually pumas or tapirs – probably best), and deer. We arrived at our next ‘camp’ spot just as the sun was setting – no thanks to the guide, who took his time and stopped to look at plants and animals along the way. It is amazing how fast someone (me) can paddle down a river with the threat of night (and the accompanying invisible hungry crocodiles) approaching!
We spent most of the following day in the car, driving to the boat launch for the Yaxchilan ruin site. We took a small motor boat to the site, which was nearly empty by the time we arrived and looked especially beautiful in the yellow light of the setting sun. We wandered the mystic ruins, climbing up temples and winding through underground passages filled with sleeping bats. At one point, as we walked through the jungle paths to another section of the ancient city, we became surrounded by a family of howler monkeys. It is important to understand that howler monkeys do not merely howl, but rather roar with a ferocious fervour. Seriously – we could hear their tiger-like calls kilometers away in the previous days and thus to have a group of 5-9 very vocal and territorial monkeys in the trees above and around you is really quite amazing.  In the site grounds we saw large rodents (can’t remember the names), toucans, and spider monkeys in addition to the vivacious howlers. That night we drove to the indigenous Mayan village of Lacanja, where the local people have jumped on board with ecotourism schemes supported by the government.
We stayed in a beautiful little cabana that night but faced disappointment in the morning when the local guide said that he would not take us on the original planned hike into the jungle to camp due to liability and spiritual aversions to taking sick people into the jungle (I had been really quite sick for the entirety of the trip up until this point and was not nearly my usual exuberant self. However, for the $500 trip, I was making the most of what energy I did have). Instead of the mysterious and exploratory hike that I had paid so much for (the rest of the trip was pretty ‘regular’ for an adventure tour and thus could have been found at a much cheaper price), we ended up walking through a beautifully manicured park, to a have lunch by a babbling stream, and end the day at a beautiful waterfall. Boring! At this point I was not impressed: Throughout the trip it became apparent that the Swedish girls were getting significantly reduced rates (one of the girls was the girlfriend of the guide, the other was her sister), that the guide was incredibly unorganized (he kept stopping for 2 hour-long lunches, leaving our camp site around noon every day, and had a very less-than-appropriate medical kit), and that the prices quoted to us and the trip promised was open to be changed as the guide pleased. Now it seemed that the true essence of the trip, THE event that had led me to pay so exorbitantly for the trip, was being stripped out of the package. The other Canadian woman on the trip, equally displeased, and I decided that something needed to be said. That evening we held a ‘business meeting’ with the group, requesting the reintroduction of the off-trail hike and an improvement in our value-for-money. Our guide, his girlfriend and her sister all took extreme offense to our complaints and requests and I learned in the process that I really need to work on my business and negotiation skills. My ‘hardball’ approach did get us results (the following day we went on a fantastic, out-of-the-ordinary jungle trek) but poisoned the relationships on the trip, creating tension and dismissal from the ‘family’ group members.
But business is business and with the successful re-hauling of the trip my mood changed, I stepped out of my demanding mask and spent the next day in, what I thought to be, extremely agreeable terms with the rest of the group. My excitement during the off-trail hike, as we traversed MANY deep and fast flowing rivers and waterfalls, knee-deep mud flats, and snake filled underbrush shone through. Though we didn’t see any, our ‘wander’ (more like a gallop) through the jaguar, snake and crocodile-filled jungle  filled me with fear of new encounters with every tree we passed, brambles we navigated and swamp we waded through. Despite this, I felt that everything was positive and I was finally getting what I had paid for: a real, exciting and turbulent jungle experience. I hoped that the relationship break that had occurred the night before could be repaired. I was wrong.
The next evening, after sunset but still 2 hours outside of San Cristobal (or final destination), I was informed by the tour guide’s girlfriend’s sister that I was not to stay on their property that night (as had been arranged) and that I would have to find a new place to stay upon arrival in the city. Dirty, tired, still sick, disoriented, and without any way to contact couchsurfers or research hostels I suddenly felt very homeless, rejected, and offended. I learned at that moment how truly juvenile and unprofessional the guide and his ‘family’ were. To turn a woman, vulnerable due to her age, appearance, and language barriers, out onto the street due to a business-related disagreement seemed so incredibly ridiculous to me and after the shock had worn away I was able to find comedy in the whole situation. The difficulties they would surely face in the future due to their inability to handle business-related negotiation and complaints made me feel vindicated, though this is probably not the right perspective to take. Luckily, I had made a great friend in Laurie (a fellow trekker), a very adventurous woman from Ontario who was spending time in San Cristobal. We had both seen the trip from a more supply-demand perspective and operated like allies and friends throughout the trip and following. In disbelief that the tour guide and ‘family’ could be so petty, Laurie very kindly invited me to stay at her friend’s house with her. I was able to spend an ‘administrative day’ relaxing and catching up on communications with family and friends and organizing my next steps via couchsurfing, finding information about hostels, sights and transportation. For me, organization is the name of the game and needing to have ‘organization days’ may sound neurotic but if it helps me to be safe, explore foreign countries and puts me in a position for potential spontaneity, it can’t be all that bad – right?
The following day Laurie and I hopped on a bus to Palenque, to see the huge Mayan city ruin site. On route we met up with Stav, a couchsurfer who I had been in contact with previously but had lost touch with in recent weeks. It was funny to run into each other – I love the ins and outs of the ‘travel/backpacker road’. We all shared a beautiful cabaña in a hostel called El Jaguar and explored the ruins the next day. Palenque was so huge that after 2 or 3 hours we were getting weary and looking forward to lunch. We had all politely rejected the ‘mushrooms’ (of a hallucinogenic variety) on offer throughout the park and thus were feeling in need of some reinforcements (of a NON-hallucinogenic variety, if possible). After lunch we headed back into Palenque city proper and worked out our next steps. Laurie needed to head back to San Cristobal so we said goodbye to her. And as we said goodbye, the thing that I had wished for and talked about so much on the jungle trek happened – we encountered the jaguar. Not just one jaguar, but three spotted, black and beautiful jaguars who glided through Palenque city in cages, as if to perfectly tie up the ends of the rollercoaster jungle trek that Laurie and I had experienced.
Stav and I decided to continue on to the Merida area to meet up with a couchsurfer who I had contacted previously. We opted to take the slightly cheaper but far more time consuming and ‘exciting’ second class bus route, spending a few dark and shady hours in the Escarcega bus terminal (NOT in the best part of town) leading up to midnight and then a very sleepless ride to Merida, arriving at a less-than-perky 6 O’clock in the morning. We spent the day on a very inefficient shopping trek as we dragged ourselves and our backpacks through the bustling, fairly modern, but melting (structurally and climatologically) city of Merida. After finding very little of what we had set out to find, we were defeated and headed to the small village of Hoctun – where I am writing from now.
The village is small and the people here exude a beautiful disposition – allowing me to feel incredibly welcome here – having been greeted by smiles everywhere I go. Ana, my couchsurfing host, is extremely nice and I feel very welcome in her house. The small and relaxed nature of the village here is a positive influence on me and I have been able to relax into the limited internet availability and ‘mañana mentality’ (aka everything takes 2.5 times longer to do than it would in Canada). I will spend one more night here, swinging in my hammock as I dodge hungry mosquitos and then Stav and I will head to see the Mayan ruins at Chichen Itza and then we will split up – I to playa del Carmen to catch up on photo uploading and volunteer report templates, and him to Tulum – his plan is to get to Patagonia in Chile by March! Talk about rapid fire!
Lots of love to you all, I apologize for the inconsistent elongation of time between updates – I am, it seems, relaxing into the backpacker and Latin American mañana ways. Best not to fight it!

Yucatan to Belize! (finally!)

(Dec. 29, 2011)

Wow! It has been almost a month since I last updated my blog! I apologize profusely and aim to not let it happen again!

After leaving the village of Hoctun (near Merida), I traveled with my new travel companion, Stav, to the ancient Mayan ruin site known as Chichen Itza. We both found it extremely underwhelming after having seen Palenque, which is situated in the middle of lush jungle and leaves far more up to the exploratory imagination. Chichen Itza, on the other hand, is set up as a series of ‘stops’ and there are no options to climb into any of the ruins. While I appreciate the structure for protecting the integrity of the ruins, the mix of limited exploration and information regarding the ruins (I would have hoped that the information would have at least improved in the absence of free wandering abilities), the swaths of Cancun-day tripping tourists, and the high prices to get into the ruins left a lot to be desired. For anyone considering whether they should go to Chichen Itza I would suggest going if it is the only ruin you have to option of seeing but would highly recommend both Palenque or the more remote and wondrous Yaxchilan if the options present themselves. Feeling a little downtrodden after the ruins, Stav and I traipsed to Valladolid, where we stopped for the night to get our bearings.
                The next morning we had a truly spontaneous experience in which, instead of heading in different directions like we had originally planned, on a whim we decided to hitchhike north to Isla Holbox (pronounced ‘Hol-bosh’). We had both been meaning to try hitchhiking but had held off due to the potential dangers of going it alone. With the two of us we felt safer and more in control and decided not to let our travel companionship go to waste! We walked to the outskirts of town and within minutes of standing by the road with our thumbs outstretched, we were picked up by a very full pick-up truck filled with a very nice family traveling home to Cancun. Along the road they offered us ice cream and invited us to stay with them if we ever stopped by Cancun. Definitely a fantastic first hitchhiking experience!
                We arrived on Isla Holbox just as the sun was beginning to set and we walked down the beach with our backpacks in a stealthy attempt to find a beach-side camping spot. The beach turned out to be more populated than we had expected and with the threat of darkness (and mosquitoes!) closing in we decided to cut our losses and head inland, where we camped in an overgrown and empty lot. The mosquitoes attacked us with a vengeance that night, despite our attempts to keep them out of the tent – I am now firmly aware that marshes are not ideal places to set up camp! We spent the next two days biking around Holbox on rented bikes, finding beaches with wading flamingos, skittish stingrays, and odd prehistoric-looking skeletons peppering the beach. I would not say that the island itself is very bike friendly, however, as we were constantly having to ford lakes which had formed in the middle of the sand roads due to recent rainfall. On our last day in Holbox, Stav and I, appalled at the high prices being asked for seafood on the island, decided to make our own. We ventured down to the docks in the early morning and found a small fishing boat filled with fish. We had no idea what kind of fish they had and were not entirely sure what exactly we were looking for but we were somehow able to acquire 2 good size fish that had been (painstakingly) cleaned for us, for free! We went into the deal with the understanding and intention to pay for the fish but came out, slightly bewildered, with two free fish. We obviously looked like short-time visitors with our backpacks and so I am not sure what the intention was behind the gift. Regardless, we walked away with enough fish for two meals and, after we found a new beach front camping spot at the other end of the island, we started preparing the fish. We each took responsibility for one fish and one meal and so I set to scaling my fish on the beach to make fresh ceviche for lunch, while Stav started preparing his fish to stuff and grill for dinner. Both our meals turned out very well and we were able to feel proud in our culinary and enterprising genius! I was mainly proud of myself for scaling the fish and the compliments paid by passing tourists on their daily golf cart jaunts down the beach were very much appreciated! We left the island feeling proud and satisfied – we beat the high prices and had a great time doing it!
                After Holbox we hitchhiked down to Cancun, where we spent a brief 2 hour stop to visit and eat with our new hitchhiking friends (who we met on our way to Holbox)! They had invited us to have dinner with them at their home and we very happily took them up on the offer! Both the mother and the father make their living from cooking – the father runs a taco stand and the mother makes tamales. We all sat together in their prep kitchen eating homemade tamales and learning about some of the dangers and difficulties associated with living in Cancun. Like most cities in Mexico, I would imagine, the pristine image of the tourist laden areas do not flow freely into the local residential areas and the tourist police do not seem interested in working beyond their jurisdictions.
                From Cancun we took a small bus to Playa Del Carmen, where we stayed for two nights in a very party-oriented hostel called the Playa Hostel. The hostel itself was beautiful and a lot of fun, with a variety of outdoor terraces and hammocks and couches strewn throughout the hostel’s many levels. We spent the day exploring the very glamorous city of Playa! I have to say, while most backpackers that I have encountered thumb their nose at the touristy nature of Playa, I really enjoyed its vitality and energy and liked the range of attractions that it offered. In the glitzy Malecon the people and surroundings were manicured and beautiful, with twinkling lights, white sand beaches, and lush gardens. Even just a few blocks north it was possible to find the much more humble and ‘normal’ areas with affordable and delicious food, interesting people to meet, and a better idea of how the local people of Playa live. I liked being able to see the two parts of the city so close to one another and the benefits of both so accessible. Despite having the reputation for being THE party city, Stav and I didn’t actually do any partying while we were there – even though we were told about a bar that offered free drinks for ladies all night! I guess it’s saying something that I would rather have a good night sleep than party all night long for free – how boring!
                We hitchhiked from Playa to Tulum, stopping along the way to go snorkeling with sea turtles! We saw a huge turtle and a baby turtle and yet another stingray! I discovered that I do not like snorkeling that much, but vow to keep trying it to see if I will like it once I get a handle on the breathing part (I’m not very good at it right now! I seem to have trouble breathing just from my mouth!). We spent two fairly unsatisfied nights in Tulum, one in a beachfront ‘public’ campsite (which we were shooed from in the morning) and the other in a private site at great expense. In backpacker lore, Tulum is THE backpacker destination with its ‘relaxed’ atmosphere and beautiful beaches. We actually found Tulum to be far less appealing even than Cancun and were shocked to find huge stretches of beach completely blocked off by resorts, a city that was 4 Km away from the beach, and very limited transportation options! We didn’t encounter any like-minded budget travelers and instead seemed to be surrounded by resort types and resort-type feeders on all sides. Overall, Tulum was a big disappointment: the city, the beach, the people, the prices. Maybe it wasn’t as bad as I had imagined but just seemed as such due to the high expectations we had developed going in.
                After Tulum we hitchhiked to Chetumal, the border city in Mexico to Belize, where we stayed with our beautiful couchsurfing host named Maria, and 4 other couchsurfers! The house was packed for the three nights that we were there but we all got along well and were graciously welcomed by Maria and her family. On our second day in Chetumal we were all invited to attend a cello concert that Maria was putting on at a local clinic for children and families living with Cancer, and this day was one of the highlights of my time in Chetumal. We were warmly welcomed into the event by the organizers and the children and it was overwhelmingly humbling to look around us at children that were so sick and yet so strong and happy. We watched them play with piñatas and dash for the candy, just like any other children would. At the end of our time there we all sang Christmas carols together before saying goodbye. I felt so lucky to have the privilege to attend such a personal event with such spirited and strong people and families. The following day a group of us went to the Lagunas de Bacalar where we lounged by the tri-tone blue waters of the lakes, swinging in hammocks under wind beaten palapas (grass reed huts). Stav and I decided to continue traveling together with the Korean couple who had also been staying with Maria and, though we had a hard time crossing the border due to the presence of the couple’s van, it was a good experience for me to cross my first central America land border of this trip with friends. I have learned that it is rarely worthwhile to attempt to cross a border in a private vehicle, rather than as foot traffic. Once we were able to actually FIND the immigration office, the Belizian border officials had us fumigate and completely unload the van, bring all of our possessions inside into the office and then, without even looking at it, had us take it all the way around the building to load it up again. It was like some cruel joke – definitely a ‘good exercise’ in more ways than one!
                With the border crossing having taken much longer than anticipated, we drove directly to Belize City to have dinner and find a camping spot. Unlike in Mexico, the local people here seemed to have no problem with us camping in their public neighbourhood parks and even offered us protection, saying that the local security guard would watch over us. The guard, however, offered little help when, at 3am in the morning, we were HUNTED by a pack of wild (well, probably not wild) dogs that surrounded the tent, barking and advancing for the next 2 hours. I was pretty terrified and became quickly aware of how incapable I am at dealing with wild (or semi-wild) animals. I was afraid to leave the tent for fear that the dogs would attack me but I was afraid to stay in the tent in case they attacked us anyways. After lying there awake and listening to their growls and menacing barks, the dogs eventually retreated and I was able to get a final hour of sleep before they started up again at 7.
                The next morning we walked around the very small Belize City (imagine New Orleans one year after the  hurricane – I imagine that Belize City received tropical storms  yearly and this must explain its crumbling appearance) and learned of the very strong Creole and Caribbean influence present here in Belize. Belize is drastically different – there is an interesting mix of culture here, with the ubiquitous American influence, mingling with a Caribbean flavor and people, a few remaining Latin American and Mayan people, and a puzzlingly large population of Chinese immigrants, who seem to own all of the supermarkets in the country.
                From Belize City we took a small boat to Caye Caulker, the well-known backpacker’s partying haven, where we lounged in the sun for the afternoon and finished off the night with a delicious lobster dinner ($10 USD for a whole lobster, a shrimp skewer, vegetables, rice, beans, bread, a rum cocktail, and fruit for dessert) and drinks at a swinging bar. I am absolutely amazed that swinging bars have not become popular in Canada as they seem to me to be the most fun way to enjoy a beverage and friends. There is just something so perfect about drinking a rum cocktail while swinging around a suspended table on a rooftop terrace. We were the only ones at the bar at the time but I can only imagine the seasick-related feelings that may be experienced in a packed joint, with people swinging every-which-way. I’m sure I will find out as I travel further south however, so far I have yet to have a real party night out since I have been traveling. I guess it isn’t very high on my priorities list.
                For Christmas Stav and I headed to the San Ignacio area with our Korean friends and hopped off in Bullet Tree Falls to stay with Aiden, our couchsurfing host. The property that he is taking care of is beautiful – lush green tropical jungle dotted with orange, lemon, lime, plantain, star fruit and avocado trees. All the rooms are open air in a ‘palapa’ style and we shared the space with 4 more couchsurfers, making us 7 in total. Among us there was a Finnish girl named Audrey, A Quebecois guy named Alex (I ‘surfed’ with him in Hoctun, so it was nice to see him again), Brad and Chelsea from Boston,  and Aiden, from Guelph, Canada. We had a nice time together, sharing a modest Christmas Eve meal of beans, rice and eggs (staples here in Belize) and made a Christmas lunch feast of omelette and fruit salad the following day. While my Christmas didn’t feel much like Christmas, I still had a great time in Bullet Tree Falls and was sad to say goodbye to Stav as he continued onwards to Guatemala.
                Right now I am staying in a Belizian seaside town called Hopkins at the Funky Dodo hostel. I plan on staying here for the next week to organize myself, my pictures, and my work for ICO so that I can get back ‘on track’ and set myself up to volunteer, conduct evaluation reports, and keep my photos and blogs organized while traveling. I have had a great time traveling with Stav and have learned that traveling with someone is a lot different from traveling alone. We shared many more adventures than I would have had on my own (thanks to hitchhiking and camping) and were able to be a lot more spontaneous and relaxed about travel safety. That said, I quickly began to feel disoriented as my ability to spend time alone on the internet organizing photos, blog posts, couchsurfing, transportation and hostels and ICO work; and reading my books and lonely planet fell by the wayside in lieu of increased socializing and adventuring. Traveling with Stav was a good lesson in relaxing and freedom from external responsibilities but I’m ready to get back into my original model for discovering as much about the world around me as I can – I guess organization is the way for me!

                I hope all is well and that everyone has been having a wonderful holiday!