August 1, 2012 


Click for BIG details | Page 3 Travel and Travel Buddies
Vehicle Import Permit
Questions
Q: Do I need a vehicle import permit to drive in Baja or at
the border?
A: No. If you plan to drive a vehicle beyond the
Mexico "Free Zone" you will need to purchase a Mexico Vehicle Import
Permit. The Mexico Free Zone, also known as the the Liberated Zone, or
Perimeter Zone o r
Free Trade Zone is a customs designation only for that area located
along the Mexican international land borders and which run inward up to
the point at which the Mexican Customs authorities have their first
"interior" check point (this is usually about 20 to 26 kilometers in
from the border towns - exceptions are on the peninsula of Baja
California and places like Puerto Peñasco where it runs to the ocean
front along the main highways.)
Q: Do I need a vehicle import permit if I drive in Sonora?
A: Maybe. You are only required to obtain a permit
if driving further than kilometer 98 of Mexican Federal Highway No. 15.
Q: How much does a vehicle import permit cost?
A: Effective June 11, 2011, the fee for importation
of a vehicle is $44.00 USD plus IVA; this fee is the same whether the
permit is obtained at the border, consulates or online.
http://www.banjercito.com.mx/site/siteBanje
r/Bicentenario/iitv/instruccionesIITV_ing.html

Q: Do I need a vehicle import permit if I am towing boat?
A: Yes. The cost is around $50 U.S.
Q: What if I have rented or have a lein on my vehicle?
A: If the vehicle is financed, is a rental car, is
leased, and/or a company car, a notarized letter of permission is
required from the lien holder or lending institution. To obtain this
letter, you oftentimes need proof of
Mexican auto insurance.
Q: I'm not a citizen of the U.S., can I still apply online?
A: Only U.S. and Canadian citizens can apply for a
temporary vehicle import permit online.
Q: If I purchase my vehicle import permit online, how far in
advance do I need to apply?
A:
You can apply for a temporary vehicle import permit up to six months
before you plan to travel to Mexico. You should not apply online for a
permit less than 10 days before you plan to travel to Mexico. Remember:
you can always purchase your vehicle import permit at the border, it
just may take more time.
Q: If I purchase my vehicle import permit online, what
documents do I need to take with me to obtain my permit?
A: You will need all the documents required when you
applied for your permit.
Click here to see required documents.
Q: If I obtain my vehicle import permit before leaving the
U.S. what documents do I need to take with me to the border?
A: You will need all the documents required when you
applied for your permit.
Click here to see required documents.
Q: Do I need Mexican Auto Insurance if traveling outside the
Mexican "Free Zone" with a vehicle import permit?
A: Yes. You can purchase
Mexican Insurance in 10 minutes or less online with www.Mexpro.com
Q: How long can I stay in Mexico after purchasing my vehicle
import permit?
A: The vehicle import permit is good for up to six
months (180 days). You can
enter and exit Mexico as many times as you wish during the period your
permit is valid. If you travel to Mexico without a valid permit
your vehicle can be confiscated by Mexican authorities.
Q: Why do I have to cancel and return my vehicle import
permit upon exiting the country (at the end of it's valid period)?
A: A guarantee deposit for the return of the vehicle
to the US, regardless of the form of payment, we be applied to all
vehicles. The amount of the guarantee will be determined by the year of
the vehicle. The guarantee will be refunded upon cancellation of the
permit at Banjercito offices, as long as it is prior to the expiration
date of the permit. The refund will be made in the same form as the
deposit was made.
-
2007 - Newer $400 USD
-
2001 - 2006 $300 USD
-
2000 - Older $200 USD
If the vehicle is not returned to the US prior to the expiration date
on the permit, or the permit is not canceled upon exiting Mexico, the
guarantee deposit will be forfeited.
Q: Where do I return/cancel my temporary import permit?
A: At any Banjercito located on the border. It does
not have to be the same border location where you entered Mexico.
Q: What happens if I drive my vehicle to Mexico and do not
get a temporary vehicle import permit?
A: If you are caught your vehicle may be confiscated
by Mexican authorities.
Q: What if I have an accident that totals my vehicle or it is
stolen while visiting Mexico? How do I cancel my permit?
A: Contact Mexico customs at these phone numbers:
(from Mexico) 01-800-463-6728, press option 7 for "comercio exterior"
(from U.S.) 1-800-475-2393; or this email address: CIITEVAduanaMexico@sat.gob.mx.
Q: Can I sell my car while in Mexico?
A: No. It is illegal.
Q: Can I bring motorcycles, boats and trailers with my
vehicle?
A: Yes. Towed vehicles must be on your Mexican auto
insurance policy for it to be valid. It is recommended you obtain
Mexican insurance for
boat(s) and
motorcycle(s), as well.
RV Specific Vehicle Import
Permit Questions
Q: How long is my RV or travel trailer permit good for?
A: The RV and travel trailer permits are good for up
to 10 years!
Q: Is my pickup truck with a slide-in camper eligible?
A: The 10 year RV temporary import permit is ONLY
allowed for RVs or converted vans.
Q: What if I am towing a vehicle with my RV?
A: You are allowed to tow a second vehicle, but that
vehicle is only eligible for the six month vehicle import permit.
Sonora Only
Vehicle Import Permit Questions
Q: Do I need a vehicle import permit to travel to Rocky Point
(Puerto Peñasco)?
A: No. The cities of Rocky Point (Puerto Peñasco),
Guaymas, San Carlos, Hermosillo, Bahia de Kino, Caborca, Father Kino
Missions, Magdalena and Santa Ana are all part of the Sonora, Mexico
free zone and do not require import permits. You are only required to
obtain a permit if driving further than kilometer 98 of Mexican Federal
Highway No. 15.
Q: How much does a Sonora Only Mexican vehicle permit cost?
A: About $30 if purchased from Banjercito at border
locations, $50 online.
Q: Why would I want to buy the Sonora only permit online if
it costs more?
A: Only for expedited service at the border.
However, you can pre-register online and pay at the border, saving
yourself time and money at the border.
Q: If I pre-register for my vehicle import permit, where do I
obtain my permit?
Click here to read more
questions
Bonampak, Chiapas
"Painted Walls"

Bonampak is a small site with Medium sized
pryamids and temples. It’s claim to fame is the Temple of Murals
with three rooms that house world famous murals. The turquoise,
rust and yellows are bright and clear as you duck into the 3
chambers ontop of the temple.
Click here to view more Bonampak Photography by Bill Dot Bell
Fast Facts
Culture - Mayan
Dates of Occupation –
650 to 850 AD
Location -
In the Lacandon jungle in Chiapas Mexico. It is
30 KMs south of Yaxchilan or 148KMs from Palenque.
Click here to read more on Bonampak
Yaxchilán, Chiapas
Fast Facts
Culture - Mayan
Dates of Occupation
–
Location
- Located in Chiapas
in the jungle basin of the Usumacita River which separates Guatemala
from Mexico. It is approximately 148 kms from Palenque and is accessable
only by boat.

  
Click here to view Yaxhilan photograph album
First Discovered
–
Mentioned by Juan Galindo (Soldier, Explorer, Son of the
Governor of Costa Rica) in 1833. Explored by Edwin Rockstoh in 1881.
Click here to read the entire story

The Huichol Indian
Encounter in Mexico's Riviera Nayarit
The
Huichol Indians of Riviera Nayarit are an indigenous ethnic group living
high in the Sierra Madre Mountains who escaped the conquest of the
Spaniards and being changed by Mexican culture.
They are one of
the last tribes of people in North America who still live much like they
did in pre-Colombian times, still maintaining their same rituals and
beliefs. They refer to themselves as “Wixáritari” which means, "the
people", in their native Huichol language.
They consider
themselves “mirrors of the Gods”, striving to reflect a physically and
spiritually sacred vision of the world.They are a unique, mystical,
spiritual people whose culture and artwork provide a fascinating
educational cultural encounter while visiting Riviera Nayarit.
A full day
excursion into the Sierra Madre to experience the wonders of the Huichol
Indian Culture and the beauty of Riviera Nayarit and the beauty that
surrounds them are in store for visitors who embark on this trip. You’ll
head north into Nayarit stopping in the authentic fishing village of
Rincon de Guayabitos before climbing 3,000 feet into the majestic Sierra
Madre Mountains.
Passing the
historic, majestic city of Compostela and the Puga sugar factory, you’ll
arrive at Nueva Valey, the small Huichol Indian village, population 130
natives!
Here you will
visit their temple, learn about their culture have first hand
experiences their costumes, music and dance. You will be allowed to take
“priceless photographs” and purchase their authentic beaded artwork and
handicrafts. This is a cultural experience visitors will never forget!
Click here
to watch a video about Huichol Culture in Riviera Nayarit.

La Venta, Tabasco
"The Sale"
La
Venta is one of the cradels of the ancient Mexican
civilizations. The settlement was populated by the Olmecs, the
culture that predates both the Mayan and Aztec and influenced
both regarding religion, health and medicine, astrology, city
planning and mathamatics.

Click here to view more La Venta photography
Fast Facts
Culture - Olmec
Dates of Occupation –
Tribes occupied the site as early as 1600 BCE. for hundreds of
years, however the Olmecs and the city of La Venta reached its
zenith between 1000 BC and declined by 400 BC.
Click here to read more about La Venta
Caborca, Sonora
"Hill with rocks and boulders"
By Dorothy Bell

Fast Facts
Heroica Caborca is the official name
Elevation – 280 meters
Climate – Sonoran Desert (Altar Desert –
one of the hottest subsets of the Sonoran Desert) 38 °C from May to
October. Frequent Dust Devils or mini-tornadoes.
Population- 60,000 in the city
Industry – Agriculture (wheat, cotton,
grapes) Some animal husbandry
Click here to read more
How to Vacation
in Mexico With Kids

|
| Finding a family
vacation destination that has something for everyone isn't
always easy, which is why so many families from all over the
world choose to spend their vacations in Puerto Vallarta,
Mexico. |
 |
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico -
Thirty percent of the Mexican population is under age 14, according
to the CIA World Factbook, so this is a kid-friendly country with a
fondness for family traditions. Family life is celebrated often, but
particularly on Sundays, the only day off for many Mexican workers.
Friends and families descend on restaurants for a meal that can last
several hours or gather at the park or the beach for an afternoon
picnic.A trip to Mexico can
be a rewarding experience for your family as well, as long as you
prepare yourself and your children.
Before You Go
Step 1 - Apply for passports for
all family members at least two months before your vacation. If the
permission of a former spouse is required, it will require
additional time and paperwork. All Americans, regardless of age,
must have a passport to re-enter the United States. Laws and forms
can be found at the
U.S.
State Department's website.
Step 2 - Purchase an identification
tag or bracelet and have it engraved with your child's name, a
contact telephone number and any medical conditions or allergies
your child has. Teach young children both their full name and yours.
Mark their vacation clothing with name tags or a laundry pen and
take a current photograph of each child with you.
Step 3 - Pack a small first-aid kit
with over-the-counter painkillers and stomach disorder remedies
suitable for children, plus bandages, antiseptic ointment, blister
treatment, hand sanitizer and small packets of tissues. Take along a
copy of any prescriptions and brief medical histories.
Step 4 - Study maps and online
websites with your children to make a list of things to do, being
sure to include activities for all ages. Plan to balance activities:
a morning tour of a museum might be rewarded with an afternoon at an
amusement or water park.
Step 5 - Buy a simple Spanish
dictionary or download Spanish phrases. Look for books to
familiarize children with Mexican culture. "Off we go to Mexico," by
Laurie Krebs (2008), and "Look What Came From Mexico," by Miles
Harvey (1999), are two books that introduce children to Mexican
culture.
On Vacation
Step 1 - Encourage children to use
their phrase books to spot signs at the airport and along the
highway, or as they shop for candy and ice cream in Mexican shops.
Help them use friendly phrases to meet Mexican children or greet
hotel and restaurant workers.
Step 2 - Buy kid-friendly snacks at
Mexican "tiendas," small neighborhood grocery stores, or at the
"supermercado" - Gigante is a large Mexican supermarket chain, but
Walmart also has a large presence. Buy a small cooler to keep drinks
and snacks cool in your rental car and your hotel room if it doesn't
have a refrigerator. Offer children only fruit that must be peeled.
Step 3 - Do as the Mexicans do on
Sunday: Visit a local park or the town beach where musicians,
vendors and street performers add to the air of fiesta. Check the
calendar or ask at the hotel desk if there are any special local
fiestas or national holidays during your stay that might include a
colorful parade or firework show.
Step 4 - Shop at local markets for
unique Mexican kid's souvenirs like lucha libre masks, the hoods
worn by Mexican pro wrestlers. Toy stalls are filled with miniature
versions of Mexican cookware, trucks, puppets, dolls and pinatas.
Mexican candy stalls offer a new world of sweet treats.
Things Needed
• Passports
• Maps
• Children's books about Mexico
• Recent photograph of each child
• Identification tag or bracelet
• Laundry pen or clothing name tags
• Spanish phrasebook
• Family first-aid kit
Tips & Warnings
Don't overload your schedule and
make sure to keep an hour a day for quiet time. Pack an extra bag to
accommodate souvenirs your children are likely to haul home.
Children are welcome in most places in Mexico, but it is not
appropriate to take them to indoor bars or discos.
Prepare your children for some of
the sights they might see in Mexico, such as begging by children and
older or handicapped people, and homeless dogs. Avoid the meat
stalls in the market if your family might be sensitive to the smells
and sights.
Ancient Mexican culture featured
human sacrifice and a preoccupation with death, and gruesome images
can be seen in museums and at some ruins. Always accompany children
to the restroom and take along hand sanitizer and tissues.
References:
Travel for Kids: Mexico
On the Road: Mexico with Kids
Trekaroo: Travel with Kids to Mexico
Resources:
National Geographic: Kid's Guide to Mexico
Smart Phrase: Online Phrase Book
About the Author: Robin Thornley
has been a successful writer for more than 25 years, penning
articles for national magazines, newspapers and websites. She
specializes in a variety of topics, including business, politics,
lifestyle trends, travel and cuisine. She also is the author of two
guidebooks.
Tim Woodward: Caught in time-share hell in Mexico
Go to original article
Any American who has
vacationed in Mexico has either verbally stiff-armed an army of pitchmen
or succumbed to the horror of a time-share presentation.
Tourists in Mexico are
repeatedly badgered to attend time-share presentations. As bait, the
pitchmen offer jungle tours, booze cruises, even cash. And every tour,
cruise and peso of it is earned the hard way — by surviving a hard sell
from hell.
My wife and I survived
one years ago and emerged looking as if we’d spent a day of torture in a
Mexican prison, which in a sense we had. We vowed that never, under pain
of death, would we be suckered into another one.
That, however, was
before we met the irresistibly charming and cunningly sneaky Javier on a
recent vacation. Javier wasn’t at the beach or any of the usual huckster
hangouts, so our guard was down. We met him in an American-style,
big-box supermarket, a nice little man we initially thought was the
store interpreter.
When we asked a clerk
about a product that was advertised but not on the shelves, he produced
a walkie-talkie and called Javier — who was wearing what we thought was
a store uniform. He was friendly, helpful and spoke excellent English.
If we couldn’t find a product or a label confused us, there was Javier.
Need an ATM? Directions? Help in translating? Javier was delighted to
oblige.
As we were leaving the
store, my wife happened to spot some zipline brochures on a counter near
the exit.
“Wouldn’t it be fun to
go on one of these?” she innocently asked.
Lurking just within
earshot, Javier was on her like a cockroach on an empenada.
“You want to go on a
zipline tour? I can set one up for you. It goes 7,000 meters from one
mountaintop to another. Beautiful! You will love it!”
“I don’t like heights,
Javier. Do you have anything that stays closer to the ground?”
“Yes, a party cruise.
You will love it!”
Javier was not the
store translator. He worked for a posh resort, which had an arrangement
with the store to let its hawkers work the crowd. This has become common
in Mexico; it was just our first exposure to it. A bit sneaky, if you
ask me, but apparently legal.
“I don’t know, Javier,”
I said, feeling my stomach tighten. “How much does it cost?”
“Normally $225,” he
replied, “but for you — today only — a special price of only $40. And
I’ll throw in some beautiful T-shirts. What size do you wear?”
“What’s the catch,
Javier?”
“No catch at all. All
you have to do is attend a 90-minute presentation at a beautiful resort
only five minutes from here. It’s not a time share — it’s a private
residence resort. And the people are very nice. It’s not a hard sell; no
pressure at all.”
The difference between
a time share and a private residence resort, of course, is the same as
the difference between cow dung and horse poop. We should have seen it
coming. I was starting to sweat and could feel my blood pressure rising
dangerously. But just when I was about to sprint for the safety of the
nearest cantina, my bride, ever the optimist, blurted the fatal words:
“Oh, come on. Let’s go.
It’ll be fun.”
Going for the throat,
Javier arranged to meet us the next morning in the village where we were
staying and drive us to the Jaws of Hell Resort. That isn’t its real
name; I made it up. But hell is what I was dreading, an expectation that
did not go unfulfilled.
The next morning,
Javier was waiting at the village square to take us for a ride,
literally and figuratively. After winding over a jungle road, he
delivered us to the palatial doors of a resort that appeared to have
been designed for Mayan royalty. It was heart-stoppingly beautiful,
sinfully opulent. You half expected to see Donald Trump and Kim
Kardashian fox-trotting in the lobby.
Our “guides” were Pepe
and Lupe. They began the inquisition pleasantly enough, treating us to a
sumptuous breakfast of everything from made-to-order omelets to sushi.
Then we were whisked away in golf carts to a Fantasy Island setting of
palms and coconuts, lakes, tropical birds, crocodiles, interconnected
swimming pools and a waterpark-style river bobbing with overstuffed
Americans on floaties. It was groomed and manicured to the point of
being almost too pretty, as if it wasn’t quite real. If you have a
seven-figure bank account and “The Stepford Wives” is your favorite
movie, you’d think you’d found paradise.
After dazzling us with
Lincoln Memorial-size Mayan statues and suites where everything but the
toilet handles was made of marble, Pepe and Lupe escorted us to a
conference room filled with other victims, sharpened their calculators
and got down to business — meaning us. As resort members, they said, we
could enjoy a two-bedroom unit with room for friends and family members
for up to six weeks a year for a mere $800-a-week maintenance fee. A
one-bedroom or a studio could be had for somewhat less. If we didn’t
want to use our weeks, we could sell them and make money. And as anyone
knows who owns a time share, that’s about as easy as selling used
underwear.
It took awhile for Lupe
to get to the bottom line, a.k.a. the membership fee. Pepe for the most
part remained silent. I think he was a trainee, or maybe he just didn’t
have the stomach for what was coming. To fatten us up for the kill, Lupe
produced a gleaming iPad and showed us pictures of other five-star
resorts we could enjoy by doing a simple exchange with victims in, say,
Italy, Fiji or Dogwater, N.D.
The membership fee,
when she finally got around to it, was only $61,000. In the unlikely
event that we didn’t have that much up front, we could pay in monthly
installments of roughly a third more than our house payment. Putting it
another way, we’d be paying $61,000 for the privilege of paying $800 a
week to stay in a marble palace with a view of a golf course we would
never use. Airfare, meals, taxes and gratuities not included. If that
sounds reasonable to you, I have a great deal for you on fox trot
lessons with Donald Trump.
As politely as
possible, we told Lupe and Pepe it wasn’t in our budget. Along with a
new Ferrari, a Gulfstream G650 and spa dates with Paris Hilton.
No problem, she said. A
more modest plan could be had for $40,000 and change. Still too much?
Plans C, D and E were available for less money up front, offered a
variety of accommodations and features, and came with a barrage of
financial options that would have confused an accountant. As the
bombardment continued, I realized that what was happening was nothing
other than the time-honored Mexican tradition of bartering. It was
exactly what happens on the streets and beaches of Mexico, except that
instead of necklaces and T-shirts, the stakes are colossally higher.
By the time we said no
for the fifth or sixth time, I was sweating like a nun at Hooters on
Amateur Night. I’d have paid a thousand bucks just to get the hell out
of there.
At last, when we said
no to even the cheapest plan, Lupe reluctantly introduced us to her
manager — who trotted out still more plans. When even he gave up, she
icily drove us to the resort’s “travel agency” to collect our free gifts
and a cab ride home.
But we were far from
home free. After stonewalling some of the best time-share sales people
in the business, we were now in the clutches of the travel agency
people.
I won’t bore you with
the details except to say that the final pitch — by then our “90-minute
presentation” had taken the whole day — seemed almost reasonable.
“It actually sounds
like a good deal,” said my wife, who is smarter than I am about such
things. “I think we should do it.”
And so … we did. No
time-share or private residence membership, no ownership of anything.
Just a travel club that, if we live long enough and go to enough places,
should be worth almost what it cost to join.
The important thing is
that it got us out of there, clutching party-cruise tickets and the
world’s most expensive cheap T-shirts. By then I was so battered from
sales pitches that I felt like an iguana squashed on the highway.
We were glad we had
opted for the no-pressure presentation Javier had promised back at the
supermarket. The hard sell would have killed us.
Mexico - 6th Largest Coffee
Producer
Banderas News
Team


|
| Mexico's main coffee producing
area is the state of Chiapas. There are over 400,000 coffee
farmers in the country of which 90 percent are small tracts of
land with less than 12 acres. |
 |
Chiapas, Mexico -
Rodolfo Trampe, Executive Coordinator of the Mexican Association of
Coffee Production Chain, announced that Mexico was the 6th largest
coffee producer in the world in 2011, just after Brazil, Colombia,
Indonesia, and Vietnam. Mexico is also one of the largest producers
of certified organic coffee.Coffee arrived
to Mexico in 1790 and it was adopted immediately. Currently the
major producing states are Chiapas, Veracruz, Oaxaca, and Puebla.
These states produce 90 percent of Mexico’s coffee; but it also
grown in Guerrero, San Luis Potosi and Hidalgo.
Mexico's main coffee producing area is the state
of Chiapas. Consequently, this is also Mexico's poorest state. There
are over 400,000 farmers of which 90 percent are small tracts of
land with less than 12 acres and 30 percent of them are women. Most
of the small farmers were moved off the most fertile land, in favor
of the large coffee plantations owned by foreign investors.
Coffee Consumption
Mexico’s per person average coffee consumption is
just under three pounds per year Rodolfo Trampe said, a low figure
compared to Guatemala’s and Columbia’s consumption of 5.5 pounds per
person, and Brazil’s and Finland’s per person consumption of 12+
pounds and 26.5 pounds, respectively. Even though Mexico’s coffee
consumption is small, it has doubled since 2000.
Coffee Export
Rodolfo Trampe said that production this year
would be between 4.2 and 4.4 million - 132.3 pound sacks bags of
green coffee.
In terms of export Mexico is in eleventh place
with 2.8 million bags exported; a figure representing around $900
million. Mexican coffee farmers are the number one suppliers of
coffee to the United States.
Coffee is the second largest traded commodity in
the world, only behind petroleum.
Climate Change
According to Amecafe (Asociación Mexicana de la
Cadena Productiva del Café), a major growers’ organization, global
climate change is expected to have an adverse long-term effect on
prices and on the sustainability of coffee-farming in Mexico.
In an effort to raise yields of coffee to at least
19 bushels per acre within 3 years and to 32 bushels per acre
eventually, Mexico’s Agriculture Secretariat has announced financing
of $16 million for a
program to gradually replace aging coffee groves in
12 states.
Source: Mazatlan Messenger

Guanajuato
“Mountainous
Place of the Frogs”
Guanajuato
is an amazing city; literally a labyrinth of tiny colonial
streets leading into tunnels underground in the belly of the
city. Colorful small houses and grand colonial buildings dot the
urban landscape and center around a plethora of tiny treed
squares that pop out throughout the city.
Fast Facts
Population -
135,000 year
round residents
Elevation –
6,583 feet
(2.008 ms)
Climate –
Mild summers, cool winters
|
Month
|
High Temp
|
Low Temp
|
|
January |
71°F
21°C |
42°F
5°C |
|
February |
74°F
23°C |
44°F
6°C |
|
March |
78°F
25°C |
48°F
8°C |
|
April |
81°F
27°C |
52°F
11°C |
|
May |
82°F
27°C |
55°F
12°F |
|
June |
79°F
26°C |
56°F
13°C |
|
July |
74°F
23°C |
55°F
12°C |
|
August |
75°F
23°C |
55°F
12°C |
|
September |
74°F
23°C |
54°F
12 °C |
|
October |
74°F
23°C |
50°F
10°C |
|
November |
73°F
22°C |
46°F
7°C |
|
December |
71°F
21°C |
43°F
6°C |

Monthly
variation: Warmer in the summer, cooler and dryer in the Winter
Rainy
season: May to October
Money – Banks and ATMs
Airport – Leon
Festivals
High Tourist
Season – Mid December to Mid March especially Christmas and
Semana Santa, July and August are busy with Mexican vacationers.
Semana Santa – Week
preceding Easter
Cervantino
Festival in mid-October.
Medical – Numerous
Doctors
Industry –
Tourism and agriculture

History
Guanajuato (Quanap-huato)
means “Mountainous Place of the Frogs” in the Purépecha
regional dialect. Some of the nomadic tribes worshipped the
spirit of the frog and settled in this area where a mountain
appeared in a frog-like shape. Situated in a basin of the Sierra
de Guanajuato range, the area was flooded constantly from the
Guanajuato River that overflowed from 3 kms beneath the earth.
Various indigenous bands inhabited the area prior to the arrival
of the Spanish; the Otomi, the Nahua, the Guamares and the
Purépecha. They settled along the river and as the population
increased, homes and settlements expanded up into the hills
following the path of the river.
To read more click here
Tonalá,
Jalisco
"Place from which the
Sun Emerges"
The Shopping Mecca of
Mexico
Tonalá is known
throughout the country for its lively Thursday and Sunday
outdoor marketplace.
Specializing in
pottery and glass, Tonalá also has treasures to trash. You can
find it all here in Tonalá.
  
Daily
glass blowing demonstrations. The market has a plethora of hand
made glass for sale.
 

Tonalá,
Jalisco
Fast Facts
Population - 374,258
in the city, 408,729 in the municipality
Location – Located in
central Mexico on the east side of the Guadalajara metropolitan
area
Elevation – 1540
meters

Statues for your every need;
Our Lady
of Guadalupe, Christ, to
any one of a
number of Saints

History
Tonalá
was founded by the Zapotec Indians who intermarried with the
Toltec and other Indian tribes. They spoke their own indigenous
language mixed with Nahuatl.
Click here to read more
Traveling
To The Riviera Nayarit:
There Is Life After The
All-Inclusive
From the
Huffington Post
The
Riviera Nayarit
offers colourful
art, interesting
sights, and golden
beaches lined with
resorts.
A few kilometers
from Puerto Vallarta, in Western
Mexico, the Riviera Nayarit
region is expanding rapidly.
Hotels are being built,
renovated, expanded…and this is
the case of the Occidental Grand
Nuevo Vallarta Hotel, where we
stayed and which has invested
$14 million into renovations, in
response to clients’ growing
expectations when it comes to
the quality of all-inclusives.
Tucked in between
the Pacific Ocean and the Sierra
Madre Occidental, the Riviera
Nayarit stretches over 300
kilometers to the north of
Puerto Vallarta. It is the
southern part of the region (in
the Bahia de Banderas
municipality) that has seen the
strongest growth in the hotel
industry. Between 2007 and 2012,
the number of rooms has risen
from 10,000 to 12,500, an
increase of 25%.
Click here to read the entire story
From Facebook On The Road in Mexico
Go here
Dorothy Bell makes recommendations on Facebook for those that want to
fast track Nogales to PV
Nogales to PV -
Zipping Down the Coast
We don’t like to
do this. Normally we like to smell the roses.
However if you are quickly zipping down to PV or
Riviera Nayarit, I suggest the following:
Preparation
1) Have all your
papers and correct documents ready for immigration
and vehicle permits.
2) Get your
insurance online. Get a quote from us
click here
We offer great quality insurance at a reasonable
price. You can buy it just before you leave.
3) Buy a Guia Roji
Road atlas before you cross over the border. It is
the best map for Mexico.
4) Have pesos for
the trip down. You need gas, tolls, hotel and food,
5) Have a cooler
on hand so you can buy drinks and snacks for travel.
While we love eating in restaurants along the way,
but if you do not know the town or city you could
spend a lot of time searching for a restaurant. It
will also take up valuable daylight time to get
served. You will want to have a breakfast and lunch
for your first day and purchase breakfast and lunch
for day 2 in Navojoa or Mochis.
6) Be ready to
cross the border early. Take the truck crossing -
Mariposa crossing – as it is easy - takes RVs and
has way less confusing traffic. It is open at 6 am.
For more go to the
complete article on Page 3 Travel and Travel Buddies
You must drive
through here and at KM 21 you will have to present
your documents and get your permits. The army bank,
Banacerito is open 24 hours a day to process vehicle
permits.
When in doubt, drive on the “D” roads or toll roads.
Stay on HWY 15 or 15D.
Once you have left
the Immigration office you will bypass Magdalena,
then drive through Santa Ana where you will continue
down highway 15 towards Hermosillo. Hermosillo is
277 kms from Nogales.
There is some
construction in Hermosillo so watch carefully and
head towards Guaymas and HWY 15 and 15D.
When you approach
San Carlos/Guayamas continue and take the bypass
toll around the cities. San Carlos/Guaymas is a good
place to stop if you have difficulties or need
something desparately. It takes about an hour to
enter and then exit to purchase something so move on
and bypass if at all possible.
Continue 132 more kms to CD Obregon. There is a
Walmart to the right just as you enter the city
where you can get supplies (ie sandwich fixings)
beverages, and use the ATM if needed. We suggest you
stock up for a breakfast and lunch for the following
day.
You must drive through CD Obregon. It is not too
congested but be cautious as there is a turn.
Continue to Navojoa. This is a congested town. If
you are driving an RV or big truck you must watch
carefully for a detour to the left for truck
traffic. Make your way through the small city. At
the other end there is a large supermarket that you
can purchase stuff or load up with supplies.
Continue to Los Mochis. You will cross a state
border and usually at borders there will be a
military stop….
Continue to Los Mochis. Many of our readers
recommend the Zar Hotel – right on the Highway.
Apparently they have a good restaurant for your
dinner.They do NOT take pets.
If you have an RV
there is an RV Park – such as it is – to the right
as you enter town.
This trip will
likely have taken 11 hours – nearly 500 miles or so
after you left immigration. Rest as tomorrow you are
getting up early.
Day 2
Preparation: have
your breakfast in your cooler. Also lunch as there
is No supermarkets enroute that will be open until
Mazatlan.
Get up early.
It is often foggy in this farming area and there is
often tractors and farm equipment just south of
Mochis.
Drive Hwy 15
through farmland etc and prepare to turn to HWY 15D
just before Ciullican. Get on the toll and zip down
towards Mazatlan.
Be cautious. Mazatlan is having some construction so
there may be detours. Head for Tepic and Puerto
Vallarta. You will pass supermarkets for supplies
and cash.
Head south and stay on the toll highway towards
Tepic. Do not pass go.
Once you have
crossed the state line into Nayarit there is a
choice. Stay on the Highway to Tepic OR head towards
San Blas and take a different route. I suggest that
if you have a car – take the San Blas route. If you
have an RV and are driving from July to December,
take the Tepic Route. (The San Blas Route gets
overgrown after rainy season and can scratch your
RV).
If you go through the San Blas Route, take the Hwy
54 towards San Blas but turn off when you see the
signs for PV. Head towards Las Varas.
(If you take the
Tepic route drive straight to the city and then turn
when signed to go to Puerto Vallarta. Beware that
RV’s and trucks must drive in the laterals when you
see them. Laterals are the slow frontage roads on
some city streets.
The stretch of
Highway from Tepic to Compostela to Las Varas is
windy and narrow and sometimes steep.. There are not
many places to pull over.
From las Varas to
PV is easy peasey. You will be passing through town
after town, pueblo after pueblo of the Riviera
Nayarit. Like pearls on a necklace, each one is
beautiful and distinctive. Drive carefully and
defensively.
From Los Mochis to
PV will take another 10 or 11 hours.
If you are
interested in breaking this up so you have one other
stop we suggest driving day one to Navajoa. Stay in
the Best Western (it does Take Pets.) If an RV stay
in San Carlos. Day two drive to Mazatlan. Day 3 to
PV.
If you want a much much more detailed set of
instructions
go here
Puerto Vallarta Malecon

  

Mayan
Wooden Masks: Historical Beauty
© Tara A. Spears
Mexico’s creative
traditional folk art is a true celebration of rich color and vibrant
beauty. Each of Mexico’s 31 states offers unique talented artists
producing a seemingly limitless collection of stunning and whimsical
hand crafted art. Of all the different art forms, the hand carved wooden
masks best reflect the Mexican culture and pride of the indigenous
people. Carved wooden masks that portray the devil, ancient deities,
jungle animals, or immortalize deceased individuals were regularly used
in religious and cultural dances, as well as during war. The left photo
is an example of a Mayan ceremonial mask. Mayan masks had a wide variety
of uses, and the importance of the masks dictated how intricate the
designs on various masks were. The abundant availability of carved masks
at the tiaguis-open markets- make these a great collector’s item.
Ancient Tradition:
The Mayan people
inhabited the Yucatan Peninsula from 2500 BC to 1550 AD. The basic
principles of the Mayan religion were adapted from the Olmec and
Teotihuacan people, prior to the seventh century AD. The Mayans viewed
the natural world, along with all that was a part of it, as a
continuation of the sky-world above and the underworld below. The jaguar
was believed to be a gatekeeper to the afterlife. According to Jeeni
Criscenzo, “The ancient Maya had a complex pantheon of
deities whom they worshipped and offered human sacrifices. Rulers
were believed to be descendants of the gods and their blood was the
ideal sacrifice, either through personal bloodletting or the sacrifice
of captives of royal blood.” The deities are common figures on the
wooded masks, particularly the warrior masks.
The antique masks also
contain the faces of people. We know that some masks were used in
wedding ceremonies, and there were masks made to commemorate many births
and deaths. Not all Mayan masks were for such profound purposes,
however. The Mayan's also used masks for entertainment as well. The uses
of masks by the Mayan people were as varied as the style of the masks
themselves.
Click here to read the
entire story
Santo Domingo Museum is filled with
the history of Oaxaca and Mexico
Click here to look inside
Internet While You Travel Mexico Internet while you travel is not usually a problem. There is an assortment of opportunities to go online. a) Hotels & RV Parks  Hotels in Mexico are certainly offering internet to their customers. Generally speaking any 3 star hotel and above will offer it. Unfortunately, No-tell-motels do not. They figure you are in their establishment for something other than Internet. Destination RV Parks are likely to offer internet too. We try to list internet services when we list RV Parks. If a RV Park has upgraded and offers internet, let us know so we can tell others. Click here to read more information
Driving In Mexico By David Simmonds I have driven tens-of-thousands of miles in Mexico and the worse thing I can remember happening was having a mango jump off the flatbed of an oncoming produce truck near Mazatlán, smashing out the left headlight in my old VW van and spraying mango pieces and juice from head to huarache, where I sat in the driver’s seat. I thought I’d been shot by a deranged sniper until I figured it all out. And another time I blew an engine (another VW van, naturally) in the Sonoran desert on my return trip on a 100 degree summer day when few cars were on the road (this was years ago, before toll roads), only to be rescued by a pickup truck full of missionaries who rope-towed me to the Arizona border, almost making a believer of me. Click here to read the entire story Customs Allowances into Mexico via Land and Air DO NOT BRING EITHER GUNS OR DRUGS INTO MEXICO. Mucho problema! Don't try it - think about it or even toy with the idea. If caught you most likely will end up in prison for a very long time. You are allowed to bring into Mexico: a) 2 cartons of cigarettes or 50 cigars or a kilo of tobacco (2.2lbs) b) 3 liters of wine or hard liquor c) 12 rolls of film d) a computer e) 2 cameras - photo, movie or other If traveling by air you are allowed a $300 customs allowance in addition to the above. If traveling by land you are only allowed $50. Be reasonable and don't bring in quantities of anything that might look like you are planning to resell them. You really don't have to load up on food anymore as there are enough Supermercados with a good supply and variety of food. When you cross most borders you will be asked to push a button or your car will automatically trigger one. If your light is green you will continue to pass through. If you hit a red signal your luggage and vehicle will be searched. Additionally if you look suspicious or a guard has the desire - you can be searched regardless of the light. Customs Allowance into the US US citizens are allowed to bring home from Mexico: a) $800 US in purchases duty free. . b) 200 cigarettes or 100 cigars or 2 kilos (4.4lbs) of tobacco c) 1 liter of alcohol - wine or spirits Customs Allowance into Canada Canadian citizens are allowed to bring home: a) after 24 hours $50 CAN in purchases duty free; after 48 hours - $300 CAN duty free; or after 7 days - $750 duty free. b) 200 cigarettes or 50 cigars or 1 kilos of chewing tobacco c) 1.5 liter of alcohol - wine or spirits Don't forget to turn in your Car decal before leaving the country! |