Tag Archives: travel

Walking Tours of Querétaro – an Excerpt

5 Jan
Download any of the Eight "Walking Tour" books at Amazon.com; Barnes and Noble.com; or Kobo.com

Download any of the Eight “Walking Tour” books at Amazon.com; Barnes and Noble.com; or Kobo.com

An Excerpt from my, “Walking Tours of Santiago de Queretaro”.

Walking Tours of Santiago de Querétaro
Copyright William J. Conaway, 1998

The Early History
The State of Querétaro is bordered by deep canyons and towering mountains. Its eastern edge lies along the Sierra Madre Oriental and its northern and northwestern along the Sierra Gorda where you find the Cerro de la Calentura (Fever Mountain), 3,350 meters tall (10,887 feet); the Pico de Zamorano (Zamora’s Peak), 3,300 meters (10,725 feet); Cerro Pengüicas (Penguin’s Mountain), 3191 meters (10,370 feet); the Cerro del Callo (Callous Mountain), 2,940 meters (9,555 feet); the Astillero (Splinter Mountain), 2,850 meters (9,295 feet); and the Cimatario (Summit Mountain), 2,447 meters (7,952 feet).

These mountain systems form tremendous valleys like those of where the cities of Querétaro, San Juan del Río, Cadereyta, and Tequisquiapan are located. These valley floors are at 1,800 meters above sea level (5,850 feet).

Archeologist tell us that from 6,000 – 3,000 B.C. waves of migrating tribes moving south peopled the country to the north of Querétaro with agriculturally innovative settlers who domesticated maiz, frijol, calabaza, chile, champiñones, etc. The innovation of the new “sedentary” way of life, with its security of steady supplies of foodstuffs, led to the further advancement of mankind: the invention of ceramics and weaving looms provided humans with cooking pots and warm clothing. All this we know from archeological digs in the State of Querétaro.

Querétaro forms a dividing line between Mesoamérica and Aridamérica. In Aridamérica the people remained nomads, hunters and gatherers. Fierce independent people who remained aloof and hostile when they confronted their other more settled brethren. The mixture of these two very different civilizations give Querétaro its unique cultural heritage.

By 350 A.D., the people in the northern areas of Querétaro lived in the mountains and used the natural formations for defense. They mined the rocky peaks for minerals to trade with the coastal populations in the Veracruz area, as evidenced by the pottery shards discovered later.

In the southern regions of the state were large cultivated areas in the valleys, San Juan Del Río being the location of important markets for trade in the region.

Walking Tours of Queretaro

4 Jan
Download any of the Eight "Walking Tour" books at Amazon.com; Barnes and Noble.com; or Kobo.com

Download any of the Eight “Walking Tour” books at Amazon.com; Barnes and Noble.com; or Kobo.com

Walking Tours of Guanajuato

3 Jan
Download a "Walking Tours" book today from Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble.com, and Kobo.com.

Download a “Walking Tours” book today from Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble.com, and Kobo.com.

Walking Tours of Guanajuato – an Excerpt

2 Jan

Download all Eight Mexican Colonial Cities Walking Tours

Download all Eight Mexican Colonial Cities Walking Tours

An excerpt from my “Walking Tours of Guanajuato: City of Cervantes”.

Walking Tour of Guanajuato:
City of Cervantes

Guanajuato is one of the Mexican cities which have best preserved their own peculiar spirit, and in consequence, their authentic stateliness.
Introduction to Guanajuato

Nature made this corner of México one of magnificence. Its indescribable dynamism fills all who see it with wonder and enjoyment. And it gives one an uneasy sensation: that of the intense power of geology over the stupendous and rugged landscape. Esteban A. de Varona
This guide is designed so that you can see all of the important places downtown between the hours of 11 A.M. and 2 P.M., because most of the museums and churches close then. If you can wait for lunch until then, you’ll be better off. Take a Snickers!

If you’re physically unable to walk long distances and you need a shorter tour try to do #’s 1-10, M1, and M3 at least. You can buy postcards of #’s 11-15 and either take a bus or a taxi to all the rest.

The legends are printed in italics. They are authentic, and have been handed down generation after generation. I suggest you find a place to sit and read them while you’re actually at the place named in them. But if you wish you can read them before you start out or afterwards. It’s up to you.

You really should spend a few days here in this magical place to get the feel of it. Right downtown at the start of our Walking Tour is the Hotel Santa Fe (4 star) directly on the Plaza de la Unión, or across the street the Hotel San Diego (3 star) next to the church of the same name. These are great places to spend the weekend and be serenaded by the University band.

If you’d rather stay out of town there’s always the Hotel Misión de San Gabriel de Barrera (5 star) right beside the museum of the same name. You can taxi into town from there.

Don’t go to Guanajuato by car. Go by bus. México has the best bus service in North America. They have comfortable seats, movies, bathrooms, and they maintain a speed limit of 55 miles-an-hour. Having a car in Guanajuato is of no real benefit.

If you must drive, park as soon as you enter the city. There’s a public parking lot on the left hand side of the divided street just after the statue of the miners, Estacionamiento Público.

From the bus station or the public parking lot you can get a cab into the city to our starting point, Jardín de la Unión.

If you’re on a budget: from the bus station take one of the city buses that says Jardín Unión on the windshield. If you’ve driven to Guanajuato, from the parking lot, cross the street, and walk down to the covered bus kiosk. Take any bus that says Jardín Unión on the windshield.

The city, approached by road, is completely concealed in a long deep valley until the last turn in the road when suddenly you’re on one of the busiest thoroughfares (there are only three) of Guanajuato.

The mountains to the north are Los Cerros del Cuarto. Due south, across town from them (statue of Pipila) is the San Miguel mountain. On the east are Los Timultos, and northeast the Mellado, Valenciana, and Cata. The Guanajuato River, with its tributary, the Cata, flows underground mostly, and completely follows the length of the city.

Walking Tours of Guanajuato

1 Jan
From La Cata

From La Cata

Living and Writing in Mexico – 2012 in review

31 Dec

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2012 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The new Boeing 787 Dreamliner can carry about 250 passengers. This blog was viewed about 1,300 times in 2012. If it were a Dreamliner, it would take about 5 trips to carry that many people.

Click here to see the complete report.

Walking Tours of Guanajuato – Available for download on Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble.com, or Kobo.com

29 Dec
Download all Eight Mexican Colonial Cities Walking Tours

Download all Eight Mexican Colonial Cities Walking Tours

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Walking Tours of San Miguel – Download on Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble.com, or Kobo.com

28 Dec

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Walking Tours of San Miguel de Allende

27 Dec

San Miguel med

 

In the last few years San Miguel has been given a makeover. The churches have been restored to their former glory. The electric, and cable TV wires have been put underground, in conduits along with the transformers, and all the poles have been taken down. The telephone wires (because of the underground moisture problem for communication cables) have almost all been run over the roof tops, out of sight. Every facade has been replastered and painted with a fresh coat of earth tone white-wash too. So if you haven’t been down in a few years, you will be impressed and delighted with the changes. So NOW is the time to come to beautiful San Miguel de Allende!

An Exceprt from my, “Walking Tours of San Miguel de Allende”.

Walking Tours of San Miguel de Allende
by William J. Conaway

Introduction to San Miguel
San Miguel de Allende was declared a National Monument by the Mexican government in 1928, and later the United Nations added the town to the list of International Treasures to be conserved.

There is a large foreign colony in San Miguel. The reasons most of them choose San Miguel vary from person to person, but the most important one is the arts. San Miguel’s traditional support for the arts may be traced back to 1781, when it contributed to the upkeep of an official academy of art in the capital. San Miguel became an art colony, for foreign residents, beginning around 1951. With the help of Americans Nell Fernández, Stirling Dickinson, and the G.I. Bill, the Instituto Allende opened its doors. Veterans, disabled or retired, poured in to study art and/or live in inexpensive post-war México. There’s more culture in San Miguel than in most large cities in the States.

Some like living here because of the climate. It never seems to get too hot or cold, too wet or dry. The average temperature is 64 degrees (F), and the average rainfall per year is 27 inches. The nights are cool enough to use a blanket, and the days warm up as the sun climbs. Eternal Spring!

Also, San Miguel has a unique charm of its own. The native-born residents don’t understand it any more than foreigners do, but it’s there. One of the things you can see and feel about this town is that it doesn’t change. You can leave it for as long as you wish, but when you return it’s almost like you never left. Even some of the same people can be sitting in the Jardín right where you left them! Sure, there’s more traffic, new restaurants, and different shops, the outlying colonias are much bigger, but the feel of the town is still there just as you remember.

Within about two blocks of the Jardín lies (not too surprisingly) a majority of San Miguel’s most famous historical homes and churches. Enjoy the extraordinary beauty of a colonial Mexican town, well preserved through the centuries.

A Gringo Guide to Mexican History – the Perfect Gift!

25 Dec
Download a e-book gift today! Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble.com, and Kobo.com too!

Download a e-book gift today! Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble.com, and Kobo.com too!