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Mazunte
We had an 8 or 9 hour ride along winding roads through mountains to the coast to our final stop. Surprise, we are staying in Puerto Angel, a port town close to the beach towns of Zipolite and Mazunte, where we were supposed to be staying. The dive hotel here is the only accommodation for miles due to the Easter holiday and an obvious failure to book ahead by the tour company (Intrepid Travel, who has agreed to a partial refund of the tour price after a month to review my complaint). I’m pretty low maintenance, but I have my limits and this hotel went below them. In the morning…
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Oaxaca
Arriving in Oaxaca late in the evening, we stayed in a hotel with cute courtyard half an hour’s walk from the old town. We went for a cooking course the next day in this culinary capital of Mexico. After we were treated to a breakfast of delicious tamales, cooked inside corn husks, then went to market with Oscar the chef to pick out chilies and other fresh produce to make the menu we had decided on. After a couple of hours of chopping, peeling, rolling, stuffing, etc. we sat down with our creations with beer and mezcal served by a handsome helper. We had many courses to our gourmet meal…
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Puebla
We left by van in the late afternoon to Puebla, an industrial city of three million, with a beautiful old town centred by a massive church and zocalo (town square). We had some mollettes (deep fried tortillas filled with whatever) as street food appetizers, then tacos at taco joint. We made our way to the arena for Lucha Libre. We were late and had to stand for two hours to watch the matches. I first saw this sport a couple of years ago in Mexico City. It’s like wwe in Canada I think. Some of the fighters are enmascardo, masked characters. They aren’t seen in public without their masks. Lucha…
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Mexico City
I checked out three museums within a few blocks of my hotel in the Centro Historico Saturday morning, sometimes dodging the homeless who seem to be set up permanently in their spots down the side streets. Muse de Arte Popular, with fantastic folk art, Museo Mural Diego Rivera, art and displays of the famous muralist, and Museo Memoria y Tolerencia, with disturbing displays of genocides around the world. I took a taxi to a hotel in the more upscale Zona Rosa, nicer but much further from most attractions. Here I met my tour group, and first on the agenda was a “taco crawl”. This consisted on one taco joint. We…
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Teotihuacan
My free day in the historic centre was spent in museums and shopping. The museum in the National Palace in the Zocalo, the largest square in Central America, has murals of Diego Rivera. He is Mexico’s most famed artist, except maybe for Frida Kahlo, who he married twice. The first marriage ended when he slept with her sister. He really got around considering he was not incredibly attractive.He and Frida lived in her Blue House in separate areas until her death. I saw the museum now there on my last visit to Mexico City. The museum in the Palacio de Bellas Artes also has murals by Rivera and others. There…
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Mexico City
I was up at 3 am for my flights to Mexico City. I would not normally plan on a night out on a day that started like that, but…. Ballet Folklorico de Mexico plays Wednesday nights at el Palacio de Bellas Artes. I bought tickets through Ticketmaster Mexico. I went to pick up my ticket, then had a nap. The show at this beautiful building started at 8:30, so I had time to visit Burger King. I was ushered up to the front row of the cheap seats, where I looked down on the show with a queasy stomach. There were eight different sets, one after the other, with up…
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Mexico Food Adventure
I’m leaving soon on this trip starting in Mexico City. It’s almost a free trip, since after your 9th with Intrepid Travel the 10th is free – to a limit. So I paid about $200 for this one, plus my $2100 voucher. It’s expensive for a trip to Mexico, with a lot of inclusions mostly involving food. We will travel through Puebla and Oaxaca, and end on the Pacific coast in Mazunte. It’s my second time to this massive city. I was there for Day of the Dead celebrations in 2015. This is the gorgeous Palacio de Bellas Artes, which will be a block from my hotel. I have to…
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More Tokyo
I explored some more of Tokyo the next day using a metro pass to easily get around. I never waited more than 3 minutes for a train. I was so tired of walking that my legs led me back to the metro where I could sit down for a while, there didn’t seem to be any other place to do that! I once again used Anthony Bourdain and his show Parts Unknown for inspiration. In his Tokyo show he went to the Robot Restaurant and thought it was the greatest show on earth. That was a few years ago and it’s become a little more G rated. I met a…
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Tokyo
Tokyo! Largest city in the world according to population density. 36 million people in the city and surrounding area, about the same as in Canada. My tour ends with one night here, but I have an extra two nights. Our hotel is close Ueno Park, a massive green space with a zoo and museums. Lunch was a tiny restaurant where you ordered from a vending machine outside. Our last night as a group was dinner in a restaurant just big enough for our group, then drinks in another tiny place that we shared with a group of business people getting loud and smoking weed. That night there was a massive…
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Hakone
We travelled by bullet train, then trains and bus to this resort area. We had a picnic lunch on the lake with a view of Mt. Fuji and a tori gate in the lake. We were very lucky. Mt Fuji, a sacred mountain and the highest in Japan, is notoriously shy, more often than not hidden by clouds. We crossed the lake on a pirate boat then took a cable car to the top of a mountain where there are sulfur springs.Fuji is an active volcano, and the area is famed for its hot springs, and bathing areas known as onsen. In the resort town, we had huge rooms, and…