Our shaky start was our tour to Coba and Tulum. Have you ever had one of those days where you felt as if you were living in the Groundhog Day movie? This tour turned out to be that kind of day. Our "ground hog day" experience was the constant long and often repeated explanations about the history while not seeing anything for hours. Steve and I had explored Coba in 1 ½ hours before so we couldn’t believe that we spent over three hours there (mostly just listening to the guide talk). We were dropped at a very bad roadside restaurant, where nothing was Mayan or even Mexican, and it was 2.30p.m. Since we’d met at 7.00a.m., it had been 7 ½ hours with no snacks or water provided and we were all starving. At this point we all agreed that some food was better than no food. Tulum, my main reason for booking the tour, was totally disappointing. With less than an hour in fading light when a minimum of three hours is needed for exploring all of these fascinating ruins, we had to listen to the guide for 40 minutes and then we were told the site was closed. Our final straw came when the guide insisted on dropping us off at a nearby beach before traveling back. It was totally dark so the only thing to see was the well-lit bar! After the kind of day we’d had, we needed that drink! Arriving back at our resort at 8.00pm-13 hours after we’d met that morning, we were exhausted from the frustration of wasting so much time with so little time devoted to seeing ruins and the constant repeating of the history. Highlight of our day? - meeting three lovely ladies who told us about their trip to the Ek’ Balam, ruins found as recently as 1997. Their high praise of the site and tour guide convinced us to book another trip.
The day before we left Mexico dawned bright and the temperature
was very pleasant, so we headed out with some trepidation for another day-long
tour. But this one proved to be the pinnacle of our two-week visit. The bus was
on time, our tour guide, Sergio, is an anthropologist whose father is an
archeologist and they’ve worked together on many sites. He’s half Mayan and
half Spanish and an incredible font of historical knowledge. He also speaks 4
languages so I’m incredibly envious.
We had the perfect amount of time to explore these amazing ruins of Mayan architecture and walk along the wall and peek into the very small rooms at the base of the pyramid. Then we were off to visit a real Mayan village where they prepared a typical meal for us of a pork dish, rice, beans and corn tortillas made by hand. Following that, we toured a couple of the Mayan homes. Most of them have no electricity, no TV, no indoor bathrooms, none of the modern luxuries that we have here at home. And the homes were probably smaller than your living rooms. Made us feel really blessed that we have as much as we do!
Muchas gracias for tuning in to read my blog and stay tuned
for our adventures in Costa Rica in December. In the mean time we had not one
but three Thanksgiving dinners so we are trying to recover and gear up for a
busy end to 2012!
No comments:
Post a Comment