Saturday, December 21, 2013

New Listing, Casa Doris

Robert:

This will be in both MLS systems Monday. It's one of the best homes in Bucerias! Video between the two still shots.

Backyard  with pool, fountain, and pergola for outdoor grilling.


                 

Great room with massive cupola ceiling.

This home is 3 bedrooms, 2 baths; an open floor plan with dramatic and expansive domed cupola over the large great room. There is an enclosed garage, and a studio/workshop.

The garden is a dream-like tropical paradise, tranquil and hidden behind high brick walls for total privacy.

Just 2 blocks to the Bucerias plaza, and 1 1/2 blocks to the beach.

For more photos and data CLICK HERE!

Freakish December Rainstorm

Robert:

I was astonished in the early morning hours to be awakened by lightning, thunder and heavy rain. That just doesn't happen here in wintertime. But it did, and it was a downpour that roared for hours.

But, as is almost always the case here, by mid morning the sun was breaking through.

I shot this on the way to work at 8:30 a.m., then the last shot, of the sun breaking through, at around 11:00




Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Our Talking Office Doggie "Brooklyn!"

Robert:

Here's our office dog, Brooklyn, with her Xmas and New Year's wishes for you. I think Brooklyn is amazingly articulate and well spoken, considering that she has very little formal schooling.  Do you agree?




(Ok, I have to 'fess up. That's my sister's dog...she and Brooklyn live in Ft. Worth, Texas. My sister used an iPhone app (called "My Talking Pet") to make the video. Pretty cool, sis. Ho ho ho...woof woof woof...


Thursday, December 12, 2013

A Red Sea Of Poinsettias

Robert:

At various time during the year, a nursery is set up in the parking lot outside of Mega (one of our big super stores). The prettiest is the one each Christmas season, specializing in red and white poinsettias ("Noches Buenas" in Spanish), although they have a variety of other plants too.

I bought three of the smaller red ones for the office. They are about a foot tall,  good size for the corner of a desk. $30 pesos each (about $2.50 USD).

Notice how they almost glow in the night lighting.


Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Parades and Peregrinaciones

Robert:

This is a double festive season in Mexico. There is all the lead up to Christmas of course, and concurrently, through Dec 12th, all the reverence and celebrations for the Virgin of Guadalupe.

The "miracle of the Virgin of Guadalupe" occurred on Dec 12th, 1531, so every year on December 12, and the few days before, millions of Mexicans complete their long pilgrimages to the Basilica of the Virgin, built at the base of the hill where the miracles are said to have occurred. Many of the pilgrims have traveled long distances, and complete the last few miles on foot or even on their knees.

If you are not familiar with the background story, here is a summary from Wikipedia:

"...Official Catholic accounts state that on the morning of December 9, 1531 Juan Diego saw an apparition of a young girl at the Hill of Tepeyac, near Mexico City. Speaking to him in Nahuatl, the girl asked that a church be built at that site in her honor; from her words, Juan Diego recognized the girl as the Virgin Mary. Diego told his story to the Spanish Archbishop of Mexico City, Fray Juan de Zumárraga, who instructed him to return to Tepeyac Hill, and ask the "lady" for a miraculous sign to prove her identity. The first sign was the Virgin healing Juan's uncle. The Virgin told Juan Diego to gather flowers from the top of Tepeyac Hill. Although December was very late in the growing season for flowers to bloom, Juan Diego found Castilian roses, not native to Mexico, on the normally barren hilltop. The Virgin arranged these in his peasant cloak or tilma. When Juan Diego opened his cloak before Bishop Zumárraga on December 12, the flowers fell to the floor, and on the fabric was the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe..."

Cloak of Juan Diego

Juan Diego's cloak is on display and viewed by thousands daily in the new Basilica, next door to the old church. The cloak is now 482 years old, and inexplicably shows only very slight signs of deterioration or fading.

Other cloaks have been made, copies, of similar fabric, and in the Mexico City air, begin to fray and fall apart in about 8 years. 

Throughout Mexico there are street parades and festivals in the two weeks leading up to December 12th. Lori LaVelle took these shots of past years' street parades and festivals in Vallarta.


Photos by Lori LaVelle



Friday, December 6, 2013

Expert Chiapas Hula Hooper, Working the Stop Light!

We get a lot of street and bus entertainers here. Fire eaters, jugglers, strolling troubadours (some of whom can sing well and some of whom people basically pay to shut up).

This morning I was out doing my banking and paying the office electric bill when I saw this gal performing at the intersection of calle Estaciones and Carretera 200.

She was putting on a good show, so I asked her if I could video her for the blog. She said sure, so long as I let her know the URL so she could go to a cyber-cafe and look at the blog and watch herself on Youtube!

I gave her a propina of course. She's working for change after all.



She says her name is Diana, and she is from Chiapas (way down south). Que tengas cuidado con el trafico Diana!!!

Snow, Sleet and Ice in Dallas Today!

Bitterly cold arctic air is blasting much of Canada and the USA right now. Denver has set two record lows this week.

Even normally balmy Dallas-Ft. Worth is getting the wintry weather.

My sister in Ft. Worth, Barbara, sent me this picture of her backyard via Whatsapp this morning. Notice some of the trees still have leaves clinging to the branches!




Photo by Barbara Tresenriter


She says it is currently 27 F in Dallas with a wind chill of 18 F. Of course to the people in Denver or Calgary or St. Paul or Edmonton, etc. that 27 degrees sounds downright tropical.

Denver saw 17 below (F) a couple of nights ago.

I think I'll cross the street and wade in the surf on the beach. Aaaahhh that warm ocean and warm sunshine feels nice.



Thursday, November 28, 2013

Our Xmas Tree Is Up

Robert:

Happy Thanksgiving Americanos....don't eat too much now.

I keep the office open on Thanksgiving because so many of our clients are Mexicans and Canadians, and for them this is just another day.

This is the day that Lily normally took the Xmas decorations out of storage and put them up in the office. But last night I stayed late and did it alone. Lily is very much in our thoughts everyday, almost every moment, and that will be the case for a long time.

Here is our little tree, sitting on a table.

                                                                    


I bought this tree at Costco about three years ago; pre-decorated and pre-strung with mini lights. Naturally, some of the mini-lights have failed, but no hay problema. I bought a short strand last night at Mega for 24 pesos and put them on the tree this morning. Too bad the lights don't really show up in the photo.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Ricardo, Metal Mania! (NOT!)

Robert:

No, I don't mean metal music. Thank goodness.

Rather, a very polite young hombre named Ricardo Anaya stops by our office now and then, showing me samples of his artwork. His medium is metal, and he is not only a very pleasant and unassuming fellow; his work is quite good. It's more than just the same old same old that you so often see in Mexico. It is creative.

He does metal lamps, figures for wall mounting, tables, chairs, decorative railings, front doors, you name it. But always with style, flair, and creativity.

So...because I like the guy, and value his talent, I decided to give him a little free publicity when he stopped by today. 

Here are some samples of his work as shown on his website:


Lamps



Wall Art


Wall art, plus can be wired as a wall lamp.



Tres Caballos.


Stallion.

Ricardo is originally from Mexico City, but moved to Vallarta when he was 14.  He has his studio in Vallarta at Valle de Toronjo #301. He passes through Bucerias from time to time showing his work.


Here is a link to his website with lots more photos, and his contact info. He speaks some English, so don't be shy about calling or emailing him if you're interested in having something made.  CLICK HERE!



Saturday, November 23, 2013

"Condo Beachfront," Brisas Building, Zona Dorada, Bucerias!

Robert:

Hard to imagine, but we've just listed a very spacious 3 bedroom, 3 bath condo right on the beach, here in the Zona Dorada of Bucerias, fully furnished and equipped, for just $384,000 USD.

The living area and the master bedroom look out over  the pool, palm-shaded beach, and bay.



View from living area and terrace.

This condo is highly rentable, or truly livable. With 1668 sq feet, it feels more like a home than a condo. Live here, and have plenty of room for family and friends to visit.





 To see the web page for this condo, with high def video tour, plus many more photos and more data, CLICK HERE.

New listing, Condo Rosa, Costa Dorada, 20 yards from beach, Bucerias

Robert:

Across the street from our office is Suites Costa Dorada, and in front, alongside the pool and extending to the beach, is the newer part, called Suites Claudia. We've just listed #707, a 1 bedroom, 1 bath unit about 20 yards from the beach.

There is a nice covered patio in front, and from there you have views of the ocean and pool. Furnished and equipped, for just $130,000 USD.


View from the patio.

This unit has a very strong rental history. Its location so close to the beach and in the Zona Dorada means there is constant rental demand.


Living area, bedroom beyond.


Here is a link to the web page for this property, with a video tour, plus more photos and data. Click here.

Lily Carpena, 1983 - 18 Noviembre 2013

Robert:

I'm certain I will never write a sadder post than this.

Our beloved secretary and dear friend of almost 6 years, Lily Carpena, died Monday night after a four month illness.

It is human nature to exaggerate when eulogizing, but it is no exaggeration to say that Lily was one of the kindest, most selfless persons I have ever known. Her decency, honesty, good cheer and warm goodwill toward everyone was unwavering and extraordinary; and continued even in the face of this unspeakably cruel and capricious twist of fate that ended her life so prematurely.


She was only 30.


With rue my heart is laden,
For golden friends I had,
Many a rose-lipped maiden,
Many a light-foot lad.

By streams too wide for leaping,
The light-foot lads are laid. 
The rose-lipped maids lie sleeping,
In fields where roses fade.

        A.E. Housman
                                                            




Thursday, November 21, 2013

Anton Chekhov, Diamonds In The Sky

Robert:

"WE SHALL LIVE THROUGH THE LONG PROCESSION OF OUR DAYS; WE SHALL PATIENTLY BEAR THE TRIALS THAT LIFE IMPOSES, AND WHEN OUR LAST HOUR COMES WE SHALL MEET IT HUMBLY, AND AFTER WILL SAY THAT WE HAVE SUFFERED, AND WEPT...WE SHALL FIND PEACE. WE SHALL HEAR ANGELS. WE SHALL SEE THE SKY SPARKLING WITH DIAMONDS. WE SHALL SEE EVIL AND ALL PAIN SINK AWAY IN THE GREAT COMPASSION THAT WILL ENFOLD THE WORLD. OUR LIVES WILL BE AS PEACEFUL AND TENDER AND SWEET AS A CARESS. I HAVE FAITH." 

ANTON CHEKHOV

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Daily Life In Bucerias; Lunch From A Trunk!

Robert:

There is always plenty of food all around you in Mexico. There are two taco carts that come by everyday...one on a big yellow tricycle sort of mechanism, the other in the back of a pick-up truck...but a really converted truck, with fold out sides and a roof.

Plus, any number of little restaurants in this neighborhood deliver. So, we never go hungry when working. Shed no tears for our stomachs.

There are even a couple of women who sell sandwiches (tortas) and hot plate lunches out of the trunks of their cars every day.

This morning at 8:30 I caught trunk-lady Carmen on her first go round...she sold me a torta de pierna wth lots of lettuce, tomato, and even a bit onion. Pierna literally means "leg" but in common practice when speaking of food it means uncured pork leg...like a pork roast. It is hugely popular here, and is commonly served shredded, mixed with a mildly tangy red sauce, and served in a big sandwich made with fresh baked teleras (the flatter, more oval sort of bakery bread), plus tomato and avocado slices.

Tortas de pierna are a staple item here, and are yummy.

Later today, around 2:30, Carmen came by on her afternoon route, and this time I bought her plate lunch (comida corrida).

 

35 pesos (about 3 dollars) for the beef tips in green sauce, with squash (calabaza) and potatoes. On the side, rice and beans, naturally. All ladled out of big steaming aluminum pots, right there next to the scissor jack and lug wrench.

Here's to elegant dining. Cheers. 





Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Traffic Menagerie On Lazaro Cardenas Street

Robert:

Lori LaVelle took this photo  just a  couple of blocks from our office, on Lazaro Cardenas, the main street that runs parallel to the beach.This is not untypical of our "traffic," except for the doggie ridin' high in the saddle, alongside the vaquero (cowboy). See the doggie? (I didn't at first glance.)

Photo by Lori LaVelle






That pooch looks pretty relaxed up there...I guess he's a true cowdog. A red bandanna would give him a rakish aspect. The burro looks a little pensive, lost in his burro thoughts, don't you think?


Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Giant Sea Bass, Candy & Nut Buffet!

Robert:

Lori LaVelle dropped by the La Cruz Marina Market on Sunday.



La Cruz Marina (Photo: Lori LaVelle)

It's a weekly occurrence every Sunday during high season. This is a big market with lots of locally grown produce, homemade crafts, rugs, homemade soaps, prepared food to sample (paella, French pastries, quiche, fresh bread, etc.).

And, freshly caught fish. Here's a hefty sea bass:

That'll yank your cork! (Photo: Lori LaVelle)


A sea bass of that size would feed a big Mexican family, or be bought by a sea food restaurant for pescado sarandeado! Or just lots of filets!

Sea bass is one of the tastier fish in this area, along with of course red snapper and the epitome, dorado. All three are firm and delicious.


Nuts, fruits and candies! (Phot: Lori LaVelle)


The market opens early every Sunday morning throughout high season. Some of the fresh fish vendors are there in advance, but most of the market is open by around 9:00 a.m., then closes at 2 p.m.

Lori says get there as early as you can, because things get picked over, and it gets crowded.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Digital Dickinson!

Robert:

There is now an Emily Dickinson Digital Archive, where you can see extremely high resolution scans of the original cursive manuscripts of her complete works, published and unpublished, poems completed and poems abandoned. Emily is perhaps the finest lyrical poet in the English language, with the exception of Shakespeare. She shares his extraordinary and sublime ability to capture indelibly the essence of a fleeting mood, of a momentary, almost transcendental, inner state.

Click Here

For example below is the link to an early manuscript of one of her most stunningly powerful poems. 
Once on the page, notice that you can zoom in on the manuscript with such clarity you can almost see the fibers in the paper she used.

Link to Manuscript


In case you have trouble reading her handwriting, here is the printed text.

There's a certain Slant of light,
BY EMILY DICKINSON
There's a certain Slant of light,
Winter Afternoons –
That oppresses, like the Heft
Of Cathedral Tunes –


Heavenly Hurt, it gives us –
We can find no scar,
But internal difference –
Where the Meanings, are –


None may teach it – Any –
'Tis the seal Despair –
An imperial affliction
Sent us of the Air –


When it comes, the Landscape listens –
Shadows – hold their breath –
When it goes, 'tis like the Distance
On the look of Death –

Friday, November 1, 2013

Trick or Treaters from Last Night

Robert:

Well-known local real estate broker Lori LaVelle has joined our staff as our newest agent. Welcome aboard Lori, and thanks for the photos below!

Lori was out with her mom Linda and friend Kathleen last night. They got a good people-watching table at Mark's Restaurant, and sat back to watch the local kids.



Is he Dracula? Or Johnny Depp as Tonto?

Mark's provided the Halloween Hostess


Kathleen and Linda,"Katrina shopping" at Jan's.

Another culturally hybrid Bucerias Halloween has come and gone. Thanks again Lori for the fotos.




Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Bargain Alert! Casita Ocean View; La Cruz, Big Price Reduction!

Robert:

Bargain alert! The price has just been lowered substantially on Casita Ocean View in La Cruz. Hard to imagine, but now you can get a spacious 2 bedroom 3 bath home with good sized pool and big views of the bay, just 100 meters from the beach, for just $245,000 USD.


Views of the bay!


Inviting pool!

Call Deborah Foster, cell 322 117 3099. To see the web page for this property, with many more photos and more data. Click HERE



Monday, October 28, 2013

Halloween Hegemony and Day of the Dead

Robert:





Sometimes the relentless creep of American culture here creates a strange mix of reassuring yet disappointing moments. For newbies, there are still plenty of stranger-in-a-strange-land moments to be had, to be sure, but those moments are fewer and less frequent all the time.

For those more curious intellectual travelers who come here in search of the intriguing, sometimes mesmerizing experiences that only a foreign culture can provide, there is still plenty of that around. Mexico's cultural traditions are extremely strong and resilient, but more and more, aspects of US culture are apparent everywhere.

The net result is that the cultural adjustment period for Canadians and Americans who move here is much shorter and less challenging than it was even a few years ago.

Traditionally, Mexico did not celebrate Halloween. Rather Mexico celebrated (and still does) November 1 and 2, El Dia de los Muertos (the Day of the Dead), with all night, all family, candlelight vigils in cemeteries, at the graves of their loved ones. There is remembrance of the departed, socializing among family members, and a sort of all night picnic.

This from Wikipedia: "Traditions connected with the holiday include building private altars called ofrendas honoring the deceased using sugar skulls, marigolds, and the favorite foods and beverages of the departed and visiting graves with these as gifts. They also leave possessions of the deceased.

Social scientists are fond of saying that this tradition is emotionally beneficial inasmuch as Mexican kids grow up accepting death as a reality, a fact of life; not as merely an abstraction. And, the all night gatherings strengthen already powerful family bonds.


There were and are traditional Day of the Dead treats; pan de los muertos (bread of the dead - ghoulish sounding at first to foreigners, but it is a delicious sweet bread, dusted in granular sugar); and the molded sugar skulls mentioned above, etc.

But the creeping hegemony of US culture is producing a sort of holiday hybrid here now. Both Halloween, with its jack-o-lanterns, expensive commercial costumes, disguises,  and mischief making) and Day of the Dead are celebrated.

Mega, Walmart, Chedraui, the mom and pop tienditas, all are now full of the usual Halloween junk. Elaborate and costly Princess and Snow White, etc. costumes for the little girls; Spíderman and Wolverine, etc., for the little boys. Plus all the hideous rubber masks, plastic vampire teeth, fake blood, spider web in a spray can; it's all here. And the struggling working class moms and dads increasingly feel the pressure to buy their kids these expensive, elaborate outfits and paraphernalia .

US culture is inventive and creative, that's clear. From wonderful musical theatre, to rock and roll, and on and on, the US delights and influences the world. But the US also leads the world in the successful marketing of dubious, even needless junk, especially insidiously, to kids (I'm sure you've noticed, especially if you're a parent or grandparent); and in knowing how to make kids feel entitled to everything they see on tv, and on the store shelves. Everything that can be commercialized, is. Relentlessly.




Catrinas


So struggling Mexican parents now feel yet another heavy financial burden around Halloween.

Mischief is still pretty tame. About the worst form it takes is egging of houses or cars. In fact I have only seen evidence of it once, about four years ago. It's not common. Yet.

Maybe those egg throwers are just the disappointed kids whose parents just could not afford the latest Justin Bieber mask or Disney Princess dress. 

But happily, to a certain extent, this sort of overall cross-cultural influence works both ways. What's the fastest growing restaurant chain in the USA? And the hottest restaurant stock? Chipotle Mexican Grill. Pass the fajitas and chow down amigos.










Friday, October 25, 2013

Today is the anniversary of....

Robert:

As you will see, I am a European history buff.

Today is the anniversary of the Battle of Agincourt, in 1415, in which Henry V and his exhausted, sickly and underfed army of around 6,000 to 9,000 English knights, longbowmen, and men at arms, defeated a rested and better equipped French force that outnumbered them roughly 4 to 1. Some accounts say 6 to 1. And the French had cavalry!! And this was on French soil, near Calais.

How Henry pulled this off is really a study of grace, inspiration and brilliance under immense pressure and against terrifying odds. It is taught at West Point.

He was not only a brilliant field general, he fought hand to hand alongside his men, front and center. He used the Frenchmen's wild overconfidence, the slope of the land, the narrowness of the battlefield (hemmed in by thick forest on either side) and the deep mud of the freshly ploughed field, all to brilliant, brilliant advantage, turning a desperate and apparently hopeless situation into a stunning victory. There were very few Englishmen killed that day, most accounts say fewer than 200; but many thousands of French died. Some accounts indicate that 6,000 to 7,000 French knights died in just the first ninety minutes of battle.

Both sides had chroniclers and historians present, to witness and record the battle, so there is a surprising amount of specific info about what transpired over those three and a half hours. It was one of the most important battles of  the Hundred Years War.



However, near the end of the battle, Henry committed a war crime, even according to the laws of chivalry of those days. His men were holding a huge number of French prisoners, more French prisoners than there were British soldiers to guard them, with weapons of the fallen still lying all over the field, and suddenly, Henry thought he saw signs of French reinforcements coming. He feared he would lose control of the prisoners in the chaos of defending against a new attack, and that the prisoners would be able to easily re-arm themselves from the weapons on the field, and join in the new attack. So, he made a snap decision to execute thousands of French prisoners on the spot. He lined them up in front of rows of his archers; others were locked in barns and storage buildings which were set on fire.

The feared attack never came; so go the horrors of the fog of war.

In Henry the V, Shakespeare handles this event with a classic Machiavellian interpretation. Namely, that a great king must be noble and good hearted, but able to be utterly ruthless in an instant when the situation demands it. And Henry's bona fides of prior goodness and nobility are substantial.  For example, a few weeks before, the British had besieged the French town of Harfleur, and after it fell, he saw to it that the citizens were well treated and not widely abused. Those who did not wish to swear allegiance to Henry were allowed to leave with their possessions and even given a tiny amount of traveling money. Henry's soldiers were strictly forbidden abuses or atrocities, although undoubtedly some renegades ignored the rules and tried to take advantage of the French. One British soldier robbed a church in the village, and Henry had him hanged.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Gravity; Neil deGrasse Tyson Misses the Point

Robert:

From Andrew Sullivan's blog, The Dish:


Mysteries of : Why Bullock's hair, in otherwise convincing zero-G scenes, did not float freely on her head.
In real life, people don’t talk the way they do in movies or television or (especially) books. Real locations aren’t styled, lit, or shot the way they are on screen. The basic conceits of point of view in literature actually make no sense and are in no way “realistic.” Realism isn’t verisimilitude. It’s a set of stylistic conventions that evolve over time, are socially agreed upon, and are hotly contested. The presence of these conventions is not a sign of quality. Departure from them is not a sign of quality’s absence.
The Realism Canard is the most depressing trend in criticism I have ever encountered. I would rather read thousands of posts of dismissive snark about my favorite books than read one more blog post about something that happened in a work of fiction wasn’t realistic or factually accurate to our world as we know it. … [W]e’re talking here not only about the complete misreading of what something is (fiction vs. nonfiction), but the holding of something to a standard it isn’t trying to attain and often isn’t interested in (absolute verisimilitude). We’re talking about the reduction of truth to accuracy.



Saturday, October 12, 2013

Oops!

Robert:

If you're familiar with Bucerias, you might remember this street...it's Avenida Estaciones...the street that heads out to Colegio Bucerias then continues on to Valle Banderas.

Yesterday around 3:30 p.m., this flatbed truck, loaded with very tall road grading equipment (center of photo, beyond the patrol car), tried to navigate through all the the overhead utility wires.

It didn't work out...he snagged some wires, and pulled down 2 utility poles...



Notice that one of the concrete utility poles that he pulled down has fallen across a parked car...not apparent in the photo is yet another concrete pole, also down, on the other side of the street, further down the block...it is very lucky no one was hurt...

Friday, October 11, 2013

Piña Vendors Coming In Off the Streets Today

Robert:

Around 11 a.m. a pickup truck filled with ripe pineapples pulled up in front of the office.

The driver came in with a slice of pineapple, offering it to Deborah as an enticement. It smelled so sweet and delicious she had to try it.

Sold!



Deborah bought one (10 pesos) and I bought 2...Yummy. Makes the whole office smell like sweet pineapple.

Big New Price Reduction, Casa Palapa, Punta del Burro!

Robert:

I have always said this is one of the most spectacularly beautiful homes in all the bay area. It's an "Oh my God!" and "Wow!" house if ever there was one.

The price has just been lowered from $995,000 to an astonishingly low $825,000 beautifully furnished and equipped, ready to move in.

The views of the bay are dream-like, and a wide, gradual beach is just a few steps away.





Below is the link to the web page for this amazingly lovely home, with many more photos, and a 360 Panoramic Virtual Tour.

 CLICK HERE

Contact Deborah Foster to View This Home: cell 322 117 3099


Wednesday, October 9, 2013

This Will Make You Hungry! Pal Antojo from El Pechugon! 38 pesos.

Robert:

One more reason I love living in Mexico! Great food everywhere, for very little money. There are scads of roasted or grilled chicken places all over Mexico...there are many mom and pop places on the roadside, plus big chains...of the chains, my favorites are El Pollo Feliz, and El Pechugon.  El Pollo Feliz is chicken grilled on a charcoal fire. It's great.

But for roasted chicken, I like the chain called El Pechugon. There is a new El Pechugon near the plaza in Bucerias,..up by the taxi stand and Magallanes.

Today I picked up my lunch there. I always get the menu item called Pal Antojo. A quarter chicken, plus two taquitos, and roasted new potatoes. Comes with a bag of fresh made salsa, roasted jalapeños, and tortillas. Take a look:


How much do you think all this delicious food cost me? 38 pesos. That's $2.90 at today's exchange rate. Such a ganga! (bargain). I wonder, what would a lunch like this cost in the 'States or Canada these days? I truly have no idea. Would it be more? Less? About the same?

Monday, October 7, 2013

Three reasons I Love Visiting Guadalajara - Video

Robert:

I spent this past weekend in Guadalajara. I always stay in the wonderful and atmospheric Hotel Morales, in the city's historic center. In the video below this post, there is a clip of the hotel's beautiful lobby, with massive stone arches, fountain, balconies, etc. Meanwhile here's a couple of stills:





It's just a great hotel, and is reason number one I love to visit Guadalajara. ("Guad." for short) A very famous Mexican celebrity was staying in the Morales while we were there, a singer called El Chapo de Sinaloa, and he was eating breakfast with his entourage at the next table, so my companion had her picture taken with him, of course. I was only slightly jealous.

Reason number two I love to visit Guad. is the spectacularly dramatic series of connected plazas, surrounded by magnificent historic buildings, that comprise the historic center. These plazas are just lovely, like the beautiful old colonial Mexico of your imagination, and are filled with activity day and night; street entertainers, free concerts in the band shell, horse drawn carriage rides, you name it. They are also surrounded by huge old department stores, for a little shopping if you want.

   



Reason number three is the fabulous Guadalajara Zoo (Parque Zoologico.). This is a really large old zoo that covers many, many acres; it has been around a long time, with big trees and beautiful gardens all through it. It is truly a zoo in a forest.

There is now a wonderful new attraction; the Sky Zoo, a double chairlift (yes, like a ski lift) that takes you all the way across the zoo, passing through the canopy of treetops, then at the far end of the zoo, doing a u-turn around the bull wheel at the end, overlooking the deep canyon beyond, then bringing you back across the zoo to where you started. See clips of this in the video below this post. Meanwhile, a still:



The zoo also has a train that circles the perimeter, with three train stations with rest rooms and snack bars. You can get on and off the train as you like.

The zoo also has a Safari Adventure, seen in the video, during which you can feed the giraffes from your hand. This is a big hit with everyone, every time; always shrieks and squeals of delight.


Melanie feeds the giraffe.

There is an aquarium, and a separate admission area called the Selva Magica (The Magic Forest), that is all rides. Roller coasters, hammers, octopus, himalaya, ferris wheels, etc., all the usual fairground rides, and in great numbers. This requires a day to itself.

(Oh, by the way, as you'll see there was a big parade through downtown Guad. on Sunday morning, with music-themed floats; a great, fun parade, with lots of dancing in the streets, and the crowd singing along and dancing a bit too. The macabre zombie-like dancers at the end were dancing to Michael Jackson's Thriller, just in case you can't quite make out the music.)

Now, here's the video. The tiny, excited little voice belongs to Melanie, the 6 year old daughter of my traveling companion.






Thursday, October 3, 2013

"Breaking Bad" Commentary from Andrew Sullivan

Robert:

Andrew Sullivan is among the best journalists writing today. I've been a reader and subscriber to his blog, The Dish, for many years. Today, this analysis of Breaking Bad appeared on The Dish.

I have to admit I only watched the first episode of Breaking Bad, and have not yet downloaded any others. But this intriguing analysis makes me much more likely to do so.

Andrew writes:

In some ways, Breaking Bad was, for me, a hymn to Machiavelli. Walter White – in order to secure his honor as well as his survival – leaves traditional morality and virtues in the desert to seek power and money and respect. And he does so with such brilliance and fortitude and elan that Old Nick himself would have marveled at the spectacle of untrammeled evil and empire building.

 If a man is truly a man through force and fraud and nerve, then Walter becomes the man he always wanted to be. He trounces every foe; he gains a huge fortune; he dies a natural death. Compared with being a high school chemistry teacher? Niccolo would scoff at the comparison. “I did it for me.”

Like Richard III or Richard Nixon, Walt is consumed all along by justified resentment of the success others stole from him, and by a rage that his superior mind was out-foxed by unscrupulous colleagues. He therefore lived and died his final years for human honor – for what 466px-Portrait_of_Niccolò_Machiavelli_by_Santi_di_TitoMachiavelli calls virtu, a caustic, brutal inversion of Christian virtue. And there is some worldly justice in this – he was cheated, he was diminished, his skills were eventually proven beyond any measure in ways that would never have happened if he had never broken bad. And breaking bad cannot mean putting a limit on what you are capable of doing. What Machiavelli insisted upon was that a successful power-broker know how to be “altogether bad.” You have to leave a woman choking on her own vomit to her death. You have to murder a child on a toy scooter.

But the script cheats. Why? Because Walter is already dying. The calculations you make about your future do depend very much on how far you can see ahead. And the cost-benefit analysis of “breaking bad” when the alternative is imminently “dying alone” is rigged in favor of the very short term, i.e. zero-sum evil. If Walt had had to weigh a long, unpredictable lifetime of unending fear and constant danger for his family and himself, he would have stopped cooking meth. As, indeed, he did, when finally given the chance – only to be yanked back into the life of a mobster by his brother-in-law, bored, sitting on a john. Nice Shakespearean touch that, I thought.

And was he happy? Yes, but in a way that never really reflects any inner peace. He is happy in a way that all millionaires and tyrants are happy. His will is done. But we know that this does not lead to actual, enduring happiness. Which is why, for me, Machiavelli’s great flaw is that the life of such a brutally powerful figure, ruling by force and fraud, is a mug’s game. Isn’t the consequence of his proud immorality a never-ending insecurity? Do not most mob bosses live in fear every day and die by the same methods they employ? Did we not see that happen to Gus? Even to Mike? Did Saddam have a happy ending? Or Richard III? These are lives mesmerizing in action but miserably, existentially insecure. Remember Mike’s face as he took a last look at his grand-daughter. You call that happiness?

So for me, Breaking Bad should be taught alongside Machiavelli – as a riveting companion piece. 

Andrew Sullivan from The Dish

Link to The Dish http://dish.andrewsullivan.com/

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