Hotel Meson de la Luna
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Travel Blogs from Merida
The Cenotes
... day, which is a national holiday, but all the festivities start the night before. So we went to the Zocalo (the central marketplace) after dinner, where a lot of people had already gathered, and after a speech and a lot of yelling "Viva Mexico" fireworks were set off above the cathedral. Which was a spectacular sight, even if after a while all the ashes and leftovers from the arrows started raining down on ...
Mayan delight
... br> Next Morning - Jen still not well. Went to a local doctor who admonished us for a self prescription and put Jen on a course of anti-biotics. After a day of rest, pleased to announce the patient is recovering well.
Back to the flight, it amazes how lovely the people of Mexico are. On this delayed flight, after sitting on the tarmac for an hour, not a whinge or gripe was heard. Nothing seems to faze them. They amble along the footpaths. We seem to ...
¡Ay! Phone
... built 1561). Its a relatively tasteful affair as the peasants denuded it of much of its finery during the revolution. It does hold the Christ of the Blisters though so named as its survived a church burning down without a singe - blistereing instead. Its bordered by the aforementioned Governers Palace and the Casa de Montejo - the old governors house - the square used to be the parade ground for the military as a show of might to keep the natives in ...
Merida, una città da scoprire...
Questa mattina alle 06.45 apriamo gli occhi senza nemmeno la sveglia, riposati ma molto umidi. Io rimango a sistemare gli zaini e Fili va in spedizione per capire se é vero che i bus partono anche dall'ingresso del sito oppure no. Il ragazzo della reception ci ha detto una bufala e quindi il mio maritino avventuriero blocca un taxi e ci facciamo portare alla stazione dei bus ADO-Oriente di Pisté. Colazione da Oxxo che ormai č diventato il nostro mito ...
You need more than two nights in Mexico City
... highly respected by Rivera, who claimed him as one his artistic luminaries and teachers. Posada's narrative style was an extremely influential model for Rivera's mural painting. Calavera Catrina, a symbol of the urban bourgeoisie at the turn of the nineteenth century must be taken here as an allusion to the Aztec Earth Mother Coatlicue, who is frequently represented with ...