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Road Log and travel guide for West coast of Mexico

Pacific Coast Road, Nogales to Puerto Vallarta Driving and Travel Guide Log 2011 only $9.99

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LAND FOR SALE

Land suitable for small ranch. 

In La Loma 10 minutes north of La Penita.  700,000 pesos. Ejido. 

Contact Rafael at

(cell phone 045 311 161 0573)

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July 2, 2011  ..the heartbeat of the Riviera Nayarit

The Sol, the English Language source of News for the Riviera Nayarit Mexico, including La Penita de Jaltemba, Rincon de Guayabitos, Lo de Marcos. Los Ayala, Lo de Marcos, and San Pancho

Editor Bill Bell 


Win a dinner for two at Mateja's Bar and Grill on the beach in beautiful Rincon de Guayabitos! To be eligible, all you have to do is tell us in 50 words or less why you think Riviera Nayarit is the best place for a winter holiday? One entry per Friend of Riviera Nayarit. Winner will be announced September 30 2011.

submission must be posted on Friends of Nayarit Face book

Become a Friend on the Riviera Nayarit Click Here


New beach restaurant in Rincon de Guayabitos features some very familiar faces

Jorge and Melena opened up a new restaurant, Jorge's at the Colibri,  One of his pescado specials is Serandeado

Mexican State Elections Could Foreshadow 2012 Presidential Race


MEXICO CITY – Campaigning officially ended ahead of three state gubernatorial elections that are expected to provide indications about the shape of Mexico’s 2012 presidential contest.

“They’re a barometer of what next year may bring,” journalist Salvador Garcia Soto told Efe.

The three states, Coahuila, Nayarit and Mexico, have always been governed by the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, and voter-preference polls and analyst surveys indicate that leadership will not change hands following Sunday’s balloting.

The crown jewel will be the central state of Mexico, which has the country’s largest number of registered voters and is currently governed by “one of the clearest contenders for the presidency,” Garcia Soto said.

He was referring to Enrique Peña Nieto, whom many see as capable of taking back the presidency for the once-dominant PRI after a 12-year hiatus.

The “Peña Nieto effect” is seen as a key factor in the elections, even outweighing voters’ desire for change amid the conservative PAN’s decade-long grip on the presidency and the leftist PRD’s even longer tenure at the helm of Mexico City.

Read the entire article

Plan Ahead for Ley Seca: No Alcohol Sales July 2-3 in Nayarit                      © Tara A. Spears    

The first week-end in July is a holiday weekend for Americans but it is also the weekend of elections in Mexican States including Nayarit but not Jalisco. A Mexican federal law prohibits alcohol sales in states and cities when and where voting takes place. This ban will be in effect from 12:01 a.m. Saturday until midnight Sunday, and will apply to restaurants, bars and liquor stores. The 2011 Election Day is Sunday.

The prohibition on alcohol sales during voting is a long-standing law known in Mexico as la ley seca, or dry law. It takes effect the day before an election and continues until midnight of the day of the voting. The law applies only to sales and not to consumption, said Hugo Oliva, the Mexican consul in Yuma. "People can drink in their own homes after they vote," he said.

The Ley Seca/ Dry Law seems often to have a wide variety of requirements and local responses during election day. Every year seems to bring about some reform/ interpretation of the law regarding tourist areas from the various local governments, bringing less stringent interpretations for tourist zones. And, every year, there are at least a few accounts in the Spanish press of the local police fining or shutting down some operation for selling alcohol.

I have seen several newspaper reports that say the exception to the law in the resort areas is only if alcohol is consumed with food.  I have also seen reports that both buyers and sellers are arrested, indicating that this law must be interpreted differently throughout Mexico.

According to one Riviera Nayarit bar/ restaurant owner, “Yes, there is a ban on alcohol sales during this weekend’s elections, so stock up ahead of time. The deal is that alcohol is banned in the state that is holding the elections. So for this election only Nayarit will prohibit sales but you can go to Vallarta and drink all you want. These are only state elections this weekend, and only here in Nayarit. Obviously, during federal elections the entire country has the ban, which will be 2012.”

Political analysts closely watch the gubernatorial races as they fall a year before the presidential elections and generally are an indicator of the public’s voting attitude.  Since the early 1990s, Mexican voters use small plastic identification cards, containing their photographs, fingerprints and signatures. Under this identification system, voter credentials are compared with official voter-registration lists. Then voters mark paper ballots, which are deposited in see-through boxes. This takes place in the open, not behind curtains as in the United States, and is a response to Mexico's long history of electoral fraud.

While wishing good luck to the candidates, anticipate closures of local eateries and bars to stock up on your favorite brews before the weekend.

 



 

Not quite finished soccer Stadium in La Peñita de Jaltemba

Not quite finished soccer Stadium in La Peñita de Jaltemba

Views from My Tropical Garden    ©Tara A. Spears

Warm climate gardening tips

 Hello, Crossandra! Also known as the firecracker, this tropical native flourishes in the Riviera Nayarit year-round warm temperatures and high humidity.  It blooms nearly any time of year but is a prolific bloomer during the rainy season. A small tropical shrub that originated in south India, it is sold as a flowering houseplant in colder climates. The bushy, two to three foot tall (about a meter) plant bears an abundance of glossy, medium to deep green lance-shaped leaves that contrasts nicely with its pastel colored flowers. The flowers are held upright on green tubular bracts, which open from the top first then send out a sequence of flowers down the bract for a long visual feast of color. The clusters of flat-faced, five petal flowers appear in orange- the most common color- yellow, red, and pink.    

To read the entire story click here


Click here to read more about this new insurance product

Click here to read more about this new insurance product


This Week

Canada endorses Mexican bank chief for top IMF post

Canada has publicly endorsed the Mexican central banker vying to lead the International Monetary Fund as this country's preferred choice for the job.

The announcement was made late Friday afternoon, in a news release issued by the federal finance department. In the carefully worded document, Canada and Australia issued a joint statement on the hotly contested race for the managing director of the IMF…go to original article

Gold Cup: A USA-Mexico showdown at Rose Bowl

An estimated 90,000 people were expected to turn out at the Rose Bowl on Saturday for the Team USA vs. Mexico CONCACAF Gold Cup championship match. An overwhelmingly "viva Mexico" crowd assembled early for pre-game festivities - barbecuing, rallying and clad in green, white and red - prior to the 6 p.m. kickoff. …go to original article

Mexico stocks cling to gains, post weekly win

 Mexican stocks clung to slight gains Friday, capping a weekly advance by finding some support from better-than-expected economic data in the U.S., Mexico’s largest trading partner. …go to original article

Campaigning for Change in Mexico

Jorge G. Castañeda was long involved in efforts to end the 70-year dictatorial reign of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) over Mexico. In 1988, he supported the presidential ambitions of Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, who probably won the election that was officially called for the PRI candidate Carlos Salinas de Gortari. Cárdenas decided to contest local races across Mexico, and in 1989 Castañeda traveled to the town of Tepoztlán as an election observer…..go to original article

Mexico discovers 117 migrants hidden in truck

The Mexican army has discovered 117 migrants hidden inside a trailer truck in the southern state of Oaxaca. The federal immigration agency says soldiers detected the truck in the town of San Pedro Totolapam, 350 miles (564 kilometers) southeast of Mexico City. The agency says it doesn't know if any arrests have been made….go to original article

Ex-police chief in Mexico seeking U.S. asylum

A young woman who says she left her post as police chief in her Mexican hometown and is seeking U.S. asylum because of death threats calls herself "sad and angry" after assailants wounded a policewoman from her hometown,,,go to original article

Tiny camera opens up early Mayan tomb in Mexico

Footage taken on 5cm camera lowered through pyramid shows painted murals in 1,500-year-old tomb that seems intact. A small, remote-controlled camera lowered into an early Mayan tomb in southern Mexico has revealed a funeral chamber apparently intact, with offerings and red-painted wall murals, researchers say….go to original article

Analysis: Mexican ex-presidents lead debate on legalizing drugs

 Once praised lavishly by the United States for waging a war on drugs, Mexico's last two presidents now say legalizing them may be the best way to end the rising violence the U.S.-backed campaign has unleashed. Ernesto Zedillo and Vicente Fox led efforts to crush drug trafficking gangs in Mexico between 1994 and 2006 but the rapid escalation of violence over the past four years under President Felipe Calderon has convinced them a change of tack is needed.,,,go to original article

Last Week

US Agency's Gun Operation Stirs Anger in Mexico

The Obama administration is continuing an investigation into the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms - known as the ATF - for allegedly allowing guns to be smuggled into Mexico after they had been purchased in the United States by people who were suspected of criminal activity. The allegations have fueled anger and mistrust on both sides of the border….go to original article

Tourism rebounds on violence-marred lake on Texas-Mexico border

Coy Callison doesn't believe he's risking his life when he steers his speedboat into crystal-clear waters that straddle the Texas-Mexico border, hoping to hook a few monster bass in an area marred with drug violence. His marriage might be a different story….go to original article

Mexico launches high-profile crackdown on lower-grade crime

The eight-day push by state and local police targets car thefts, muggings and other offenses. It makes for great PR, but Mexicans are skeptical. …go to original article

FIFA will allow Mexico to replace 5 players

Mexico will be allowed to replace the five players who have been dropped from the Gold Cup squad after testing positive for the banned substance clenbuterol…..go to original article

Driving back to the United States

From Carole Thacker La Peñita RV park

We all have our stories about getting ripped off at Pemex stations. When we take our Caravan down to La Penita we always give the lesson on buying fuel. One person stay with the vehicle. One person be by the pump. Check that it is zeroed. If possible say the amount of fuel you want. Give exact change if you can, etc.
Two years ago we brought the caravan down and stopped south of Santa Ana at the Pemex station. Our coach has a huge fuel tank and we were near empty. We filled up and the amount was $6000 pesos. I counted out the money in the coach and went to pay. The attendant said I needed to come inside. I did. While I was counting the money to him 2 other attendants came in and created distractions. When I counted the money again I was missing the $1000 peso note I had. I pointed it out and (by this time the others left) he said no, there was no $1000 peso note. I could not argue so left. I crossed the Pemex off the list.

Click here to read more

Americans Moving to Mexico in Droves
Michael Zenn - BoomersAbroad.com
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'Reports of violence have only reduced the frequency or duration of trips to Mexico for only 7 percent of Americans... and remains retirees' No. 1 travel destination.' - ABC News

Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - Recent reports strongly indicate that the highly televised Mexican drug war has not stopped most Americans from traveling or moving South of the Border. In fact, according to an ABC News report, of the 5.25 million Americans living in other countries, the vast majority (over 1 million) live in Mexico, and many more may be on their way. A number of Mexican communities now virtually look like U.S. suburbs and in some cases American and Canadian property owners outnumber locals.

No Fear Here

In areas far from US border towns, such as Puerto Vallarta, Playa del Carmen and Tulum, Mexico’s drug war is a distant and far away place. In fact, when surveyed, most Americans living here feel that they are much safer than in cities like L.A., New York, Chicago, Atlanta or Miami. Indeed, recent statistics prove them to be right.

According to a report last year by the LA Times, tourist areas in Mexico are 12 times safer than Tampa or Honolulu, 17 times safer than Dallas or West Palm Beach, 26 times safer than Orlando or Houston and a whopping 39 times safer than the U.S. capital, Washington D.C., and Americans and Canadians are coming in droves.

Why Here, Why Now?

Americans and Canadians are sneaking South of the Boarder for all the usual suspects: tropical weather, pristine property, tree-lined beaches, white-sand, warm turquoise water, crystalline coastlines, the beckoning beach lifestyle, and a litany of other adjectives. But perhaps this time they are descending on magical Mexico for a compelling new impetus altogether.

When the global recession hit, many retirees and investors were driven south where life is cheap and the living is easy. A dollar down here buys roughly 30% more, taxes are negotiable, and the economy is rebounding at a rapid pace. Personal debt and the credit crisis are virtually non-existent since Mexicans do not generally use credit to buy things.

Surging Economy

That could explain why the Mexican economy is surging (not sputtering) out of the global recession, recording a 4.3% growth rate in the first quarter of 2010 alone (much faster than the U.S.) And if you had invested $10,000 here in 2000 you would have witnessed a 232% gain in your bank account.

Perhaps the biggest bonus for retirees and investors in Mexico has been their opportunistic purchases of homes, condos and real estate property. In key areas, real estate in Mexico is far outpacing growth in other countries. For example, Playa del Carmen was named the fastest growing area in the world just a few years ago and Tulum, just to the south, is poised to grow even faster in the next 5 years.

Healthcare Heaven

The other goldmine that Americans and Canadians are getting in Mexico is the veritable healthcare jackpot they enjoy that includes full medical, dental and vision coverage for about $600 a year. This government run healthcare plan (IMSS) was created for Mexican employees but is also open to legal foreigners. Imagine a healthcare-fantasy world where there are no deductibles, no co-pays, no limits, no prescriptions to pay for and even pre-existing conditions are covered after 1-2 years. No small reason to make your way to Mexico.

There are now over 18,000 major American companies currently investing and operating in Mexico and it is estimated that over 1 million Americans are buying, building and or retiring here. In truth, no one knows exactly how many American or Canadian retirees, entrepreneurs, and families are now traveling or making plans to relocate to Mexico.

One thing’s for sure, it’s not a few, it’s not slowing down, and there seems to be no end in sight. And for those who might doubt it, just ask the Mexican locals and they will quickly remind you “they’re moving in all around us!”

All About OXXO \

PVNN Staff - PVNN
 


 

 
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - OXXO is a chain of franchise-based convenience stores in Mexico, with over 8,500 stores across Latin America and Columbia. It is the largest chain of this kind of store in Mexico. It is wholly owned by the beverage company FEMSA (Fomento Económico Mexicano), a company best known as brewers of Carta Blanca, Tecate and Indio beer. The store layouts follow a pattern similar to Japanese convenience stores such as 7-Eleven.

OXXO was founded in Monterrey, Mexico, in 1977, following a FEMSA marketing plan to use company-owned stores to promote and market the Cerveceria Cuauhtémoc beer brands. This distribution method bypassed the traditional Mexican network of local wholesalers (deposito de cerveza) selling beer via local supermarkets and small stores (tiendas and miscelaneas).
Click here to read the entire story

Dare to Play the Riviera Nayarit Game

RN Staff - Riviera NayaritDare to Play the Riviera Nayarit Game

Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - Winning a free vacation in Riviera Nayarit is child's play. The destination has created a new promotion that combines fun and adventure to win a four-night stay at the Ocean Breeze hotel for two adults in an all-inclusive plan.

It's easy to participate in this competition. Users must first visit Riviera Nayarit's Convention and Visitors Bureau website, rivieranayarit.com, and click on the link on the main page. The rest is all fun and amusement: three mini-games that can be played online will help the visitor get acquainted with some of the features of the destination.

Initially, the visitor will become a detective, looking for the differences in an image that displays the different activities that can be enjoyed in Riviera Nayarit. Next comes an amazing memory game with images from our destination.

The last game consists of another memory game that will show a series of photographs taken in Riviera Nayarit, and finally another series of images where the user will have to discard those photographs that don't belong to our destination.

Once the tests are complete, the user must register to participate in a drawing to win a trip to enjoy the luxury that Ocean Breeze has to offer. Only complete registrations received between now and January 10, 2012, will be eligible to participate, and contestants must be over 21 years of age.


The Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB) of Riviera Nayarit is promoting the destination through online competitions as part of a promotional strategy that allows Mexican tourists and travel agents in Mexico, the United States and Canada to be informed about the benefits that our destination has to offer, while they participate and have the opportunity of traveling to Riviera Nayarit.

• • •


Minimum Wage Insufficient for Daily Survival

Lourdes Martínez - Tribuna
go to original


Too little money for necessary purchases.

Minimum Wage Insufficient for Daily Survival

Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - Gerardo Lepe is 52 years. Although he is divorced, he supports his ex-wife and pays for the home where she lives with his daughters. All of his salary earned working as a waiter is spent on necessities, which is about equivalent to 1,200 pesos per month. Some personal items can be purchased with his tips.

For him, the controversial comments of the Secretary of Economy, Ernesto Cordero, in which he stated that Mexican families live on 6,000 pesos per month, would be an ideal scenerio, but it is not actual.

"Six thousand pesos a month is a lot of money, but we have a minimum wage as waiters which is 1,200 pesos per month. We accept these wages because we are hoping for tips. I work in one of the restaurants on the Malecon and due to the reconstruction, we are lacking in customers. However, I know other waiters who work in other areas and in Nuevo Vallarta, and they are not receiving many customers either."

"Yes, I have heard that the Secretary of Economy said that people can live with the minimum wage, but that is not the case. We actually survive on the tips we receive and when we are experiencing the slow season, it could be two or three days that we don't receive tips - what do we do now?"

Gerardo has been working for around 15 years in one of the traditional restaurants in downtown Vallarta. During the high season, on a bad day, he normally receives about 200 pesos in daily tips, and on a good day he could receive up to 500 pesos. But, in the low season, the best case scenario is maybe 70 or 80 pesos.

As a common practice, in low season, the company requests the support of the workers and may cut them down to working only three days per week.

"We are attempting to stretch our salaries to meet our expenses, but it is not sufficient - that is why we are angry and desperate."

Gerardo states that this year has been his worst "low season" in recent years.

"I have been really suffering this season and it is impossible to leave the house and not spend any money. I am only spending money on food and transportation. My ex-wife works in a hospital and she tells me that even though the people are still getting sick, they are trying to maintain without hospital care."

"I do blame the slowness on the Malecon reconstruction because the tourists coming to Vallarta are not able to visit this area. We are being told that it will make up for it in the future with the nice improvements, but we still need to eat during this four month period."

"The basic basket" is sold in the majority of the local markets in Vallarta. The basket is composed of 89 goods and services grouped into the categories of: food, beverages and tobacco; clothing, footwear and accessories; housing, furniture, appliances and household accessories; health and personal care, transportation, education and recreation, as well as other services.

The basic basket tends to change in weight and with the additions or deletions of some of the items. Given technological changes, the goods and services will also change based on the family income or changes in habits or preferences of the consumer.

The first ten items that make up the basket are rice, oils & edible vegetable fat, eggs, bread, biscuits, cakes and pastries flour, wheat, chicken, milk, and pasta for soup.

"Mucho trabajo y poco dinero" (lots of work and little money) is an expression used by locals trying to live on the minimum wage in Jalisco.

Mexico's daily minimum wage rate is set annually by law and determined by zone. The minimum wage rates are 57.46 Mexican pesos in Zone A (Baja California, Federal District, State of Mexico, and large cities), 55.84 pesos in Zone B (Sonora, Nuevo Leon, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, and Jalisco), and 54.47 pesos in Zone C (all other states). Mexico's minimum wage was last changed on January 1,2010.

 

Christina celebrated her ninth birthday recently

New Requirements for Bringing Foreign-Plated Cars into Mexico


go to original
June 22, 2011

The Mexican Ministry of Finance and Public Credit has issued a new decree affecting expats bringing foreign plated cars into Mexico: "New Requirements for Bringing Foreign-Plated Cars into Mexico: Banjercito."

From the Banjercito website:

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT

The Ministry of Finance and Public Credit (SHCP) has issued a decree which states that beginning on June 11th, 2011 anyone applying for a temporary import permit for vehicles must make a deposit in the amount determined by the following table:

Vehicle Year Model
Amount to be paid in Mexican Pesos. (Peso amounts are based on applicable exchange rate.)

2007 and later - USD $400
2001 until 2006 - USD $300

2000 and earlier - USD $200

Click here to read the entire story

Princess Cruise Lines: Stop Slandering the Safety of Puerto Vallarta
Luis Melgoza - change.org
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June 28, 2011
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Princess Cruise Lines: Stop Slandering the Safety of Puerto Vallarta
 
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, is one of the safest cities in the world, with criminality well below that of Long Beach, CA --where Princess Cruise Lines is headquartered--, Vancouver, BC, Bermuda, Bahamas, US Virgin Islands and most other places on Earth.

Mexico is the 15th. largest country in the world, with an area of 761,606 square miles, and the alleged "wide spread violence" in the country is restricted to less than 1% of its territory and is nowhere near Puerto Vallarta.

Princess Cruise Lines, irresponsibly, has stated that it is canceling stops at Puerto Vallarta "because of continued violence" here.

PCL further states, falsely, that recent US Department travel warnings include Puerto Vallarta. Nothing further from the truth!

The US State Department travel warnings do NOT, even remotely, mention Puerto Vallarta as an unsafe place. Quite the contrary, Thomas Dale & Assoc. a US security firm with clients such as CNN, Disney, Paramount, J. Walter Thompson and many others, just concluded an analysis which determined that Puerto Vallarta is very safe.

Some Comments:

Jaime Elorriaga...Vallarta is safe, more than any other cities. I live between Vancouver and Vallarta, and went to university in Dallas, and lived in the US for a long time. Vallarta is a safe area, this is really unfair, if this happens, then I will start blasting to all of my friends, from Vancouver, I even have people from Vancouver working on that cruise, not fair at all. If you check crime rates between coastal cities, then you'll see why Vallarta is the best,
Please reconsider, you need to crunch numbers, and not listen to Fox, or things like than, do your own research, and make it happen, if you decided to make this move due to ecnomic times, then do so, but don't shield on "insecurity".


Patricia Daniels...To remove a source of economic security to any port, but particularly at a port of safety, is not good for the community that depends on ships of call, nor for the cruise line that arbitrarily would make such a decision. Puerto Vallarta has been a destination for decades. Its popularity enabled other areas to copy its success. Makes one wonder about how the real thinking behind this move came to be. A review is definitely the least that can be done, with more consideration of the economic impact.

Peter Godfrey...I have visited PV every year for the past 12 years, I have had a condo there for the past 5 years...it is a wonderful, friendly city with great attractions, excellent dining and super beaches..how Princess can make such a statement is slanderous and should be withdrawn immediately!!

Please join the people of Puerto Vallarta in asking Princess Cruise Lines to stop slandering this safe and welcoming city.

Sign the Petition:
 

Read more on PVNN.com http://www.pvnn.com/vallarta/news/28jun2011/princess-cruise-slander-pv.htm

If you agree with the injustice of Princess Cruise Lines, you can sign the petition by going to change.org.

 

 

New Immigration Law for Mexico & How They Affect Expats
Stephen M. Fry - YucaLandia/Surviving Yucatan


(photo: despertardetamaulipas.com)
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Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - The web is abuzz with sketchy information about the new Ley de Migración. President Calderon signed it into law on May 24, 2011, along with several official blurbs published in the Mexican Government’s Diario Official.

The main focus of the new Ley de Migración is clearly directed towards improving protections and documenting protections and rules targeted to migrants from Belize, Guatamala, Honduras, etc as they traverse Mexico.

This post is just a preliminary report on the aspects that affect expats, because even though the Ley de Migracion was published May 30, the associated regulations with specific requirements (El Reglamento) for the new Immigration law have not yet been published. This means that INM has no procedures in place yet for how to apply the new law, nor do they have instructions for issuing the new "Tarjeta de Residencia" cards.

The new law has bundles of changes affecting ex-pats that dwarf last May’s changes.
Ley de Migracion para Mexico (in Spanish)

For starters, here’s a partial list of some of the new interesting twists:

No more FM2's or FM3's, no more stand-alone Non-Inmigrante & Inmigrante categories, and there’s a tweaked Inmigrado category. Tourists and other Visitors descriptions have not changed much.

Instead of the old "Inmigrante" & "No Inmigrante" (FM2's & FM3's), there are 4 new categories:

Visitante: 6 Types: Non-Working Visitors (tourist), Working Visitors, and Visitors for Adoptions, Humanitarian, etc. 180 day limit. See Chapter 2, Article 52, Items I – VI of the Law for descriptions of all 6 types.

Residente Temporal: Covers the old "No Inmigrante" (old FM3), 4 year limit per visa, Work Permit possible, Leave and Re-enter as many times as desired. This also seems to include the old "Inmigrante" FM2 "Rentistas". See Chapter 2, Article 52, Item VII

Residente Temporal Estudiante: Covers Student Studies, Research, Training, including working on university degrees. See Chapter 2, Article 52, Item VIII

Residente Permanente: Several types: Covers the old "Inmigrado" and a few special "No Inmigrantes" (the old FM3s for asylum seekers & refugees ), and it appears to cover working "Inmigrantes". It allows indefinite stays, no need to renew, and includes the right to work. See Chapter 2, Article 52, Item IX and Transitorios, Sexto, I – VI

Other Items Affecting Ex-Pats:

Permanent residency can be granted after just 4 years of Temporary Residency.

Permanent residency can also be granted after 2 years of marriage or common law relationship with Mexican citizen, (with such marriage also recognized by the Mexican Government by successfully registering a foreign marriage with your Registro Civil). Such Permanent Residency also depends on the applicant successfully completing 2 years of Temporary Residency (concurrent with the marriage). Article 55, Item II

To read the entire story click here

The rains have come to Jaltemba Bay and swarms of flying insects have appeared...some say they are flying ants, others say flying termites.  Kathy Olivas did some research and this is what she found:

SUBTERRANEAN TERMITE REPRODUCTIVES-SWARMING TERMITES

Primary reproductives are the king and queen, the swarmers that started the colony. The king and queen mate periodically, and the queen may live as long as 25 years.Primary reproductives (king and queen) range in color from honey to black . They are about 1/4 to about 1/2 inch in length. The male and female mate for life and are responsible for producing eggs that become the workers, soldiers, and future alates of the colony.

click here to read the entire story

 

Serving the Community:

Francisco Zuniga Ibarra, President of La Penita Ejido

                   © Tara A. Spears

As more international visitors to beautiful Mexico decide to purchase property here, inevitably they hear the term ejido with various explanations. Although I have lived in Mexico for nearly a decade, it wasn’t until recently that I finally understand the term.  Because I know Francisco Zuniga Ibarra, a really nice guy,  and his family from before he was elected president of the La Penita Ejido, I felt comfortable meeting with him to get the facts.  Pancho has lived in La Penita for 45 years and as an area business owner, he has a vested interest in community operations and improvements.

 He is serving a three year term as president of the Comisariado Ejidal de La Penita de Jaltemba. Pancho explained his duties: “My chief responsibility is to coordinate the efforts of all the individual member municipalities in regards to all campo projects, agriculture, and livestock. The biggest challenge is getting proper papers for the land.” La Colonia, La Penita, Guayabitos, Los Ayala, Monteon, Chulavista, Villa Morelos, and Lo de Marcos are communities within the ejidal.  Zuniga’s personal goal when taking office was to regularize the documents for lots so that locals and foreigners alike can be secure when purchasing property. “The ejidal commission is not likely to approve clear land title if the purchaser solely wants to buy the land for speculation and resale only,” cautions Pancho. “However, buying land to immediately develop/build on is usually approved as it benefits the community by generating jobs.”  It is helpful to know how the system of Mexican communal agrarian land evolved in order to understand the complications of ejido property.

Click here to read the entire story

Bribery in Mexico: A State-By-State Guide to Graft

T.W. - The Economist
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Mexico City - “I am confiscating your driving licence. You can collect it at the police station on Monday, but you will have to wait all day, maybe longer. Shall we settle the matter here?” Your correspondent is by no means the only person to have been approached for a bribe in Mexico (he declined). Households paid around 200m backhanders to companies and public officials last year, according to a report published in May (PDF) by the Mexican branch of Transparency International, an anti-corruption outfit, which we have plotted as a map (above). At 165 pesos ($14.10) per bribe, officials are charging 20% more for their corrupt services than they did in 2007.

The survey quizzed 15,000 homes on whether they had paid bribes in the course of completing 35 tasks, from installing a phone line (2% had) to running a street stall (23% had). Mexico is only averagely corrupt by Latin American standards. But corruption varied widely by state: if stopped by traffic police in Tamaulipas, nine times out of ten motorists were expected to cough up; in Quintana Roo, “only” a quarter of such stops result in palms being greased. Overall, the most corrupt places were Mexico City and the adjacent state of Mexico, whereas the cleanest was the peninsular state of Baja California Sur.

Not coincidentally, they are respectively the most- and least-densely populated parts of the country. Eduardo Bohórquez, head of Transparency’s Mexico office, reasons that in over-populated places there is excess demand for public services, which allows officials to auction off the scarce resources they manage. The poor are especially likely to be targeted for demands for bribes and acquiesce to them, he says.

It is not all bad news. Since Transparency’s first survey in 2001, it has become easier to access government aid programmes without having to pay people off, which Mr Bohórquez believes reflects a strengthening of the country’s democracy. The postal service and electricity market are cleaner, thanks to reforms in both sectors. Most federally-run programmes have been getting less corrupt. The mixed performance of the states has no obvious link to which party runs them.

But overall, things are little better than they were a decade ago. Traffic police, the worst offenders, have got even greedier. Hospitals are more open to speeding up appointments with a little financial encouragement; more school certificates are being bought than before. Justice is still for sale: nearly a quarter of those who had dealt with state prosecutors said they had paid to influence their case. Transparency reckons that the public paid some 32 billion pesos in bribes last year. As long as policemen and judges are for sale, the cost to society will run much deeper.

Los Amigos is Looking for Someone to Manage Our Website

Los Amigos is looking for a volunteer to manage its website. The individual should have html experience and be able to make text changes to existing javascripts, adapt existing cascading style sheets and create simple images and resize photos. This is a great opportunity for you to contribute to the community. If you are interested, please contact Dave Easby at theeasbys@gmail.com .

Revision to the Recycling Collection Calendar


We would also like to announce that the collection day for our plastics and corrugated cardboard recycling program has been moved to Tuesdays in La Peñita and La Colonia (collection was previously on Wednesday). Monday will continue to be the collection day in Guayabitos and Los Ayala.

2nd Medical Tourism Global Forum in Vallarta 24-26

Keph Senett - PVPulse.com


The CasaMagna Marriott Puerto Vallarta will host the 2nd Global Forum on Medical Tourism, August 24-26.
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Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - After several years of planning, the implementation of a "medical cluster" for the Puerto Vallarta/Riviera Nayarit region has begun. A group of executives from the area's major tourist and health organizations met recently to discuss integration strategies.

A health care cluster, according to the Medical Tourism Association, is "generally an independent organization of hospitals, clinics, medical professionals and the government in a specific city, state, or region." These bodies jointly fund the enterprise, and the interests of all members are represented. The main purpose of a health care cluster is to promote the members and to build a reputation as having extremely high quality health care.

When clusters are successful, it can mean big business for the member organizations and for the hosting regions. Indeed, according to the Medical Tourism Association, "forming a healthcare cluster or medical cluster is probably the most important single step in establishing a medical tourism destination."

Last month, in Mexican Business Web, Association of Private Hospitals of Jalisco president Gabriel Najar Lopez suggested that the formation of a health care cluster could result in $450 million pesos, or triple the amount the association's 50 member hospitals earned in 2010.

Among the speakers at the meeting were Angarita Luis Mayorga, director of the Puerto Vallarta Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB), Carlos Arceo, founder of Global Medical Tourism Forum and president of the Mexican Association of Medical Tourism, and Dr. Jorge Hernandez Villanueva, owner of the CMQ pharmacies and hospitals. All parties agreed that the cooperation and integration of the tourism and healthcare sectors was a vital part of the success of a regional healthcare cluster.

Puerto Vallarta and the Riviera Nayarit are already uniquely positioned to provide services to the growing segment of Canadian and American tourists seeking medical tourism opportunities. The area has many hospitals, clinics, and spas with an internationally-recognized reputation for quality.

The CasaMagna Marriott Puerto Vallarta will host the second Global Forum on Medical Tourism, August 24-26, 2011.

The meeting adjourned with the agreement to meet again on July 4, 2011 to continue to explore steps towards an integrated tourism and health industry cluster in Puerto Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit.


 

La Peñita Conalep Graduating Chefs Showcase their Skills  

                                 © Tara A. Spears

Thirty seven young and talented chefs scurried about setting up a luscious buffet that consisted of each graduating student’s best culinary effort after completing the three year training program. Adriana Gallegos Garcia, right photo, confessed, “I’m so nervous!  What is no one likes my dishes?”  The annual culinary arts (Muestra Gastronomica) exhibit is important to the students because the event invites government dignitaries, hotel and restaurant managers (think job offers), besides their families.  As if that isn’t enough pressure, the students also earn a grade for their entries. The mouth watering display was impressive, consisting of:  appetizers, beverages, fruits, side dishes, entrees of beef, chicken, pork and seafood; and my personal favorite- yummy desserts.

Click here to read the entire story

WORKING FOR THE COMMUNITY

Local Rotary News

ROTARY JALTEMBA BAY LA PENITA CLUB RELFECTS ON ITS PAST YEAR'S ACCOMPLISHMENTS
Out-going Jaltemba Bay La Penita president, Eddie Dominguez, presented an overview of last year's projects, goals and financial accounting. The club's successful projects rank it in the top one per cent of the district's sixty-two clubs. Quite an accomplishment for a three year old club! Goals were met and exceeded. Financial stability was obtained under the direction of treasurer Carlos Rendo. A big applause is in order for Eddie and his hard working members. Looking forward to the new Rotary year, under the leadership of Dr. Lidiana Flores, projects and goals are being considered. Some of the projects and programs under consideration are: kindergarten, secondary school, Conalep high school, recycling, prenatal, dengue, mammogram, scholarships and books. Members are being asked how they can best participate. Rotary Jaltemba Bay asks you to look into your heart and choose a service project as well. A small, yet mighty club, needs to grow its membership and encourage visitors, residents and Rotarians from a far, to lend a helping hand. Susana Connors is available to answer any questions. Please contact her at sescobido@aol.com.

 

ROTARY JALTEMBA BAY LA PENITA CLUB WINS YET ANOTHER ROTARY INTERNATIONAL GRANT
Rotary Jaltemba Bay La Penita Club has created a successful model for partnering with other Rotary and service clubs. Last year it partnered and won a grant with 12 international Rotary clubs for the extensive remodeling of the Zacualpan Prepa high school project. In the same year, it partnered with Kalispell Montana Rotary club and La Pentia's Los Amigos and Chacala's Cambiando Vidas in the winning of a grant for scholarships and leadership training. The program will roll out this year, benefiting 80 students. The latest partnership involves a grant between Los Amigos and the Jaltemba Rotary club, expanding the existing La Penita Recycling program. Success begins with a dream evolves into a plan followed by tenacious action. Many hours of work are clocked before the project begins. We thank all those dedicated souls whose motto is "service beyond self". If you would like to participate in either the recycling project or the leadership program, please contact Susana Connors at sescobido@aol.com.

 

ROTERACT AND INTERACT? WHAT AND WHO ARE THEY?
For service clubs to succeed into the future, they must always focus on the recruitment of new members, specifically younger members. Both International Rotary Interact (12 to 18 years) and Roteract (18 to 30 years) present opportunities for youth and young adults to do Rotary service in their own way. Some of these involve building orphanages and schools. They function under the encouragement but loose supervision of parent Rotary clubs. Nationally the interest of service amongst the next generation is growing. It is important that Rotary listens to its youth and adjusts to meet their concerns. Social media, like Facebook, allows the human side, the stories, to reach out and touch the heart strings of our ever busy youth. Posting any activity wins an audience. It is Rotary Jaltemba Bay La Penita club's goal to create a Roteract club. For more information, please contact Susana Connors at sescobido@aol.com.

 

JALTEMBA BAY LA PENITA ROTARY WELCOMES NEW MEMBERS CAT MORGAN AND OWEN WALCHER
Jaltemba Bay La Penita Rotary Club welcomes two new members, Cat and Owen. They are previous Rotarians, now making Jaltemba Bay their new home. They come with solid Rotary background, enthusiasm to participate and the desire to make a difference. Owen is a marketing guru. While the Jaltemba Bay Rotary club is renown for its weekly news bulletin it is just beginning to explore the power of social media. It is lacking a web site. Owen has a host of ideas which will all be much appreciated. Cat is talented in her right, adding energy medicine and massage to her list of accomplishments. We look forward to their energy and contribution

U.S. Overseas Citizens Count Project

Overseas Vote Foundation is working with international and domestic organizations to determine the number of Americans living abroad and how they are dispersed geographically. Every US citizen living abroad should step forward and join the project.

Your rights as an overseas American are important.

Americans living abroad are not counted in the US Census. Currently, there is no up-to-date estimate of the size of the overseas US citizen population. Understanding the size and location of our population is crucial to improving access to voting, social security and consular services - and for that we need your help.

Overseas Vote Foundation is working with international and domestic organizations in the Overseas Citizens Count Project. Our goal is to determine the number of Americans living abroad and how they are dispersed geographically.

Your help is essential. Every US citizen living abroad should step forward and join the project.

Please sign-up and be counted today! Click HERE to do your part.

Overseas Vote Foundation (OVF) is a non-partisan, non-profit organization dedicated to the civic participation of overseas Americans. Our programs include voter support and outreach, technology development and analysis, and electoral research.


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Overseas Vote Foundation (OVF), founded in 2005, is the first and only nonprofit, nonpartisan 501(c)(3) public charity organization dedicated to serving the voter registration needs of uniformed and overseas American citizens who wish to participate in federal elections by providing online access to innovative voter registration tools and services. For more information, click HERE or visit OverSeasVoteFoundation.org.

A Battle of the Saints at Mexcaltitan

RN Staff - Riviera Nayarit


 
They may be a little too heavy at times, but they are in no way cheating. That's what the people of Mexcaltitan say regarding the festivity for the island's patron saint, which could be the mythical starting point for the pilgrimage of the Nahuatl tribes in search of Tenochtitlan. As every year on June 29, San Pedro and San Pablo will engage in a battle, and the winner will be that who is known as the cornerstone of the Catholic Church.

Since the arrival of the Spanish and evangelization, this small island, lost in wetlands, has honored both apostles. And, even if the Huitchilopoztli God ever commanded its people to undertake a pilgrimage in search of an eagle - or for more realistic effects and a more precise interpretation made by the Boutorini Codex - a heron devouring a snake, now San Pedro and San Pablo are the guides every year.

The festival is colorful and unique. Shrimp-fishing characterizes this region, which is known as the 'Venice of Mexico', and the Saints sail out very early, followed by a procession of parishioners from around the island to bless the waters so that the traps they've set get as close as possible to the three ton record per night that was set in the past.

The mangroves create the shrimp's habitat and provide the material to build an elaborate levee system that have been used for fishing since immemorial times, while a shorter-than-usual mass is celebrated.

This is followed by a battle, and the whole town is split up in two teams, each one representing one of the two saints, who compete on a race throughout the island, followed by a pagan celebration.

Each team will chose their best sailors for the race, who will compete on board of enormous canoes carrying the image of their respective saint. They'll circle around Mexcaltitan, propelling the canoe with sticks that are submerged to the bottom of the channels, just like they do in the trajineras in Xochimilco, and not with paddles like it's done in the rest of the country. Every year, San Pedro's team will invariably win.

"No, we're not cheating. It's just that San Pedro is even more miraculous and it's better to commend fishing to him, as we don't want to annoy him. The strongest contenders are always placed in San Pedro's team, and this is why he always wins… but we're not cheating, the competition takes place like any other", said Hector Apodaca, a guard at the Museo del Origen, which was built on this island to celebrate its designation as Cradle of Mexican culture.

The joy, cheering and festive environment that surrounds the races is only the beginning of a party as traditional as any, which includes dancing and eating, as well as fireworks during the night, but more importantly, framed by a natural environment of incomparable beauty.

How to Get There
Mexcaltitan is located 21 miles northeast of Santiago Ixcuintla, approximately 1 hour from San Blas and 2 from Tepic. From Santiago Ixcuintla, you must take the road towards Sentispac, and continue on towards the La Batanga pier, where you'll have to take a boat to the island.

It's recommended to sleep in San Blas when visiting Mexcaltitan, as the travel to and from the island can be made with ease. In San Blas, one can find a room in comfortable hotels like Garza Canela, Hacienda Flamingos and Casa Mañana, among others.

Lick your Fingers
Eating at Mexcaltitan is a whole new experience. This is the place that gave birth to the original recipe of the 'cockroach shrimp', and in no other place can they be found as crunchy, the ideal snack to go along with a beer. Fish in the zarandeado style, shrimp tamales, shrimp pate and aguachile from Nayarit complete the feast.

• • •

About Riviera Nayarit: Mexico’s newest destination, Riviera Nayarit, stretches along 192 miles of pristine Pacific coast framed by the majestic Sierra Madre Mountains just ten minutes north of accessible Puerto Vallarta International Airport. The region extends along the entire coast of the Pacific state of Nayarit including the resorts of Nuevo Vallarta, the historic colonial town of San Blas, exclusive Punta Mita, picturesque fishing villages, miles of serene beaches and spectacular Banderas Bay. Riviera Nayarit offers countless activities, all pleasantly affordable, such as: PGA golf courses, luxury spas, whale watching, turtle release, zip lining, surfing, record deep sea fishing, bird watching, international cuisine, and shopping for local artwork and traditional Huichol handicrafts. The region attracts and satisfies vacationers of all tastes and budgets with its wide range of accommodations including chic luxury resorts, eco-tourism boutique hotels and quaint B&B inns. Visit the website at RivieraNayarit.com
 

OPEN ALL SUMMER


El Tajín El Tajín is a pre-Columbian archeological site and was the site of one of the largest and most important cities of the Classic era of Mesoamerica. Bill Bell Photograph

Photography by Bill Bell

El Tajín is a pre-Columbian archeological site and was the site of one of the largest and most important cities of the Classic era of Mesoamerica. The city flourished from 600 to 1200 C.E. and during this time numerous temples, palaces, Mesoamerican ballcourts and pyramids were built. From the time the city fell in 1230 to near the end of the 18th century, no European seems to have known of its existence, until a government inspector chanced upon the Pyramid of the Niches in 1785.

El Tajín is a pre-Columbian archeological site and was the site of one of the largest and most important cities of the Classic era of Mesoamerica. Bill Bell Photograph El Tajín is a pre-Columbian archeological site and was the site of one of the largest and most important cities of the Classic era of Mesoamerica. Bill Bell Photograph El Tajín is a pre-Columbian archeological site and was the site of one of the largest and most important cities of the Classic era of Mesoamerica. Bill Bell Photograph

El Tajín was named a World Heritage site in 1992, due to its cultural importance and its architecture. This architecture includes the use of decorative niches and cement in forms unknown in the rest of Mesoamerica. Its best-known monument is the Pyramid of the Niches, but other important monuments include the Arroyo Group, the North and South Ball Courts and the palaces of Tajín Chico. In total there have been 17 ball courts discovered at this site[6]. Since the 1970s, El Tajin has been the most important archeological site in Veracruz for tourists, attracting over 650,000 visitors a year.

El Tajín is a pre-Columbian archeological site and was the site of one of the largest and most important cities of the Classic era of Mesoamerica. Bill Bell Photograph


Archeologists Discover Hundreds of Mayan Burials in Mexico IBTimes
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In a recent archeological excavation in the Tabasco state of Mexico, around 116 Mayan burials were discovered, 66 of which were deposited in funeral ballot boxes while the rest were scattered around the urns.

Archeologists at the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), who were involved in this excavation, claimed that this finding is very important. They believe that the finding represents the reclaimed greater skeletal sample in that region of the Mayan area, which could be an associated pre-Hispanic cemetery to this culture.

"Possibly, the 66 found in the ballot boxes correspond to individuals pertaining to the Mayan elite and the 50 rest - that were rich in diverse positions around and on the foot of them to their companions", stated archaeologist Ricardo Armijo, coordinator of the archaeological rescue.

The funeral deposits were found underneath three mounds in the area that had been devastated previously by agricultural activities.
 


$100,000 pesos REWARD

For any information leading to an arrest and conviction

for the murder of Len Schell on Monday, May 30

between 9:00am and 12:00pm on calle Lirios

above cinco de diciembre known as la Pechuga

 

Information in English please call

Cell: (322) 185 2969/044 (322) 889 7392/ 044 (322) 779 7377

Email: informa.vallarta@gmail.com

All information is kept strictly confidential

Se ofrece Recompensa de

$100,000 pesos

Por cualquier información que lleve a la captura y condena

Del o los responsables del homicidio de Len Schell

Ocurrido el Lunes 30 de Mayo de 2011

Entre las 9:00am y las 12:00pm en calle Lirios Arriba de la colonia 5 de diciembre (La Pechuga) 

 Favor de llamar al

Cell: (322) 185 2969/044 (322) 889 7392/ 044 (322) 779 7377

Email: informa.vallarta@gmail.com

Toda la información es confidencial y anónima


Archaeologists Peek Into Early Mayan Tomb

Mark Stevenson - Associated Press

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A 1,500-year-old Mayan burial chamber visited for the first time ever via remote camera sits beneath this crumbling and unstable Mayan pyramid, authorities said.


Mexico City - A small, remote-controlled camera lowered into an early Mayan tomb in southern Mexico has revealed an apparently intact funeral chamber with offerings and red-painted wall murals, researchers said Thursday.

Footage of the approximately 1,500-year-old tomb at the Palenque archaeological site showed a series of nine figures depicted in black on a vivid, blood-red background. Archaeologists say the images from one of the earliest ruler's tombs found at Palenque will shed new light on the early years of the once-great city state.

The National Institute of Anthropology and History said archaeologists have known about the tomb since 1999, but have been unable to enter it because the pyramid standing above it is unstable and breaking into the chamber could damage the murals.

It said the floor appears to be covered with detritus and it is not immediately evident in the footage if the tomb contains recognizable remains. But archaeologist Martha Cuevas said the jade and shell fragments seen on the video are "part of a funerary costume."

The chamber was found in a heavily deteriorated pyramid complex known as the Southern Acropolis, in a jungle-covered area of Palenque not far from the Temple of Inscriptions, where the tomb of a later ruler, Pakal, was found in the 1950s.

While Pakal's tomb featured a famous and heavily carved sarcophagus, no such structure is seen in the footage of the tomb released Thursday. The institute said in a statement that "it is very probable that the fragmented bones are lying directly on the stones of the floor."

But Cuevas said the discovery shed new light on early rulers, and its proximity to other burial sites suggested the tomb may be part of a funerary complex.

"All this leads us to consider that the Southern Acropolis was used as a royal necropolis during that period," Cuevas said.

Susan Gillespie, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Florida who was not involved in the project, said "this is an important find for Palenque and for understanding Early Classic Maya history and politics," in part because the later rulers who made the city-state larger tended to build atop their predecessors' temples and tombs, making it hard to get at them.

"Palenque was a relatively important western Maya capital in the Early Classic, but with the buildup during the time of Pakal and some of his successors, those accomplishments were buried and thus difficult to assess, buried literally by Late Classic structures atop Early Classic ones," Gillespie wrote.

The later rulers wrote almost obsessively about Palenque's history in long stone inscriptions, but Gillespie noted that "finding archaeological confirmation of the earlier kings has been extremely difficult."

The tomb's floor occupies about 5 square meters (yards), with a low, Mayan-arch roof of overlapping stones. Experts say it probably dates to between 431 and 550 A.D., and could contain the remains of K'uk' Bahlam I, the first ruler of the city-state.

The tomb's existence was revealed by a shaft found near the top of the ruined pyramid, leading downward. But it was too narrow to provide any kind of view of the chamber. In late April, researchers lowered the tiny two-inch-long camera into the tomb using the six-inch (15-cm) wide shaft.

While the general public had not seen images of the interior of the tomb, video of it was made after the chamber was detected in 1999, noted David Stuart, a specialist in Mayan epigraphy at the University of Texas at Austin.

The images had circulated among researchers and been posted on the internet, and Stuart said that some evidence suggests the tomb "is the burial of a noted female ruler of Palenque named Ix Yohl Ik'nal, based on the date and on the identities of ancestral figures painted on the walls."

"The female ruler is mentioned in a number of the historical texts of the site," Stuart wrote.


It would not be the first tomb of a female noble found at Palenque; in 1994 archaeologists found the tomb of a woman dubbed The Red Queen because of the red pigment covering her tomb. But it has never been established that she was a ruler of Palenque, and her tomb dates from a later period, between 600 and 700 A.D.

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan RuinsPalenque Chiapas Mexico Photography by Bill Bell
The site of Palenque had been abandoned by the Maya people for several centuries, when the Spanish explorers arrived in Chiapas in the 16th century. The first European to visit the ruins and publish an account was Priest Pedro Lorenzo de la Nada in 1567; at the time the local Chol Maya called it Otolum meaning "Land with strong houses", de la Nada roughly translated this into Spanish to give the site the name "Palenque", meaning "fortification". Palenque also became the name for the town (Santo Domingo del Palenque) which was built over some peripheral ruins down in the valley from the main ceremonial center of the ancient city.

An ancient name for the central core of the city currently consolidated was Lakam Ha, which translates as "Big Water", for the numerous springs and wide cascades that are found within the site.[1] Palenque was the capital of the important Classic period Maya city-state of B'aakal or B'aak (Bone), after one of the city's most frequently occurring Emblem Glyphs

 

Photography by Bill Bell

Click on any photograph to view in larger format

Map of Palenque (for a larger view double click on the map)

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill Bell

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill BellPalenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill Bell

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill BellPalenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill BellPalenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill Bell

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill BellPalenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill Bell

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill BellPalenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill Bell

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill BellPalenque Chiapas Mexico Mayan Ruins Photograph by Bill Bell

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Photography by Bill Bell

 

Palenque Chiapas Mexico Photography by Bill Bell Palenque Chiapas Mexico Photography by Bill Bell



• • •

Another Successful Season for the Los Amigos Recycling Program

The Recycling Program that Los Amigos first put in place in 2008 continues to gain momentum. What began as purely a school-based program recycling plastic bottles in La Peñita has now been expanded to include other types of plastics as well as corrugated cardboard and covers the entire community of Jaltemba Bay.

The departure of most of the community’s seasonal residents represents a good time to review the progress that was made this season.

Thanks to the generous support of the Jaltemba Bay Rotary Club, Los Amigos embarked on an ambitious program to build more recycling baskets.  An enthusiastic group of volunteers attended the ten Saturday workshops – many of them coming week after week to help out.  The basket-making season concluded with a special session at CONALEP, where the regular basket-making team worked with a group of students, including a number of scholarship recipients, putting together baskets for the school.

A total of 334 baskets were produced.  Well, actually, there were 337 produced; three individuals made it into the “Order of the Double Bottomed Basket” when they accidentally put bottoms on both ends of a basket.  After all, we did advertise that all you needed to bring to one of the workshops was your enthusiasm.

The Committee would like to thank Gayle and Tony Dixon and Ryan Campbell who took turns hosting the regular Saturday workshops over the winter season Mimi Beaupre and Zobeida Barrera who helped organize the session at the CONALEP.

The Committee also made great progress over the winter getting the hotels and bungalows to participate in the program.  Thanks are due to Heather Gunn and Sheila Soenen for their hard work in helping to make it happen.

Los Amigos are now collecting an average of 4,000 kilos of plastics each month – and having a huge positive impact on the environment.  The program was also expanded this year to include corrugated cardboard.  Between December and April alone, almost 12,000 kilos of plastics were compacted and sold to a recycler.  The program is well on its way to become self-sustaining from a financial point of view.

The Committee owes a debt of gratitude to Vern Porter, who supervises the operational side of the program, and Gustavo Cisneros Dávila who operates it on a day-to-day basis.

One of our key initiatives next year will be to develop an implement an educational program for the schools on the benefits of recycling.  Marion Rogers has agreed to chair the group looking at this and would welcome volunteers to help out.

Los Amigos also had an opportunity this season to thank two silent heroes of the recycling program:  Danny Milski has provided us space for our compactor operation for the last three years at a rent of $1 a year and Rodger Murphy from Green Parrot who was instrumental in helping to finance the purchase of the truck, trailer and compactor when an opportunity arose to obtain it. 

All in all, it has been a busy and productive season; no small part of this is due to the work of Carol Wallace who agreed this year to take on the challenging task of chairing the Recycling Committee.

And it’s not done yet.  Contrary to what some people think, the recycling program will continue to operate all summer.  So, if you are a permanent resident, be sure to keep putting out your plastics and cardboard.  Collection is on Mondays for Guayabitos and Los Ayala and Wednesdays for La Peñita and La Colonia.  Please put out the cardboard only on collection days and break down boxes if at all possible.

And last, but not least, thanks to all of you for your support of our recycling efforts.


Mexico Drug War Forcing Canadian Mennonites to Flee

Jeff Davis - Postmedia News
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Mexico Drug War Forcing Canadian Mennonites to Flee
Mennonites in Mexico (Jordi Busque)



As Mexico spirals deeper into a cycle of drug-fuelled violence, Mennonites who migrated there from Canada nearly 90 years ago are returning home by the thousands.

These traditional pacifists have found themselves caught up in the crossfire of Mexican drug cartels, which are waging a bloody battle for supremacy. As a result, the Mennonites have become the victims of crimes ranging from carjackings and armed robberies, to kidnapping and nighttime raids on their villages.

An estimated 5,000 of the more than 70,000 Mexican Mennonites of Canadian origin have left the country in the past few years as the drug war has escalated, said John Janzen of the Mennonite Central Committee, a national organization for the community.

"Mennonites traditionally try to live apart, and lead simple peaceful lives," he said.

"Normal life has been disturbed by the drug cartels that are fighting among themselves for supremacy."

Known for their independence and self-sufficiency, Mennonites typically don't turn to government authorities for help. But in two of the states most affected by drug-related violence — Chihuahua and Durango — they are increasingly turning to the Canadian Embassy in Mexico City with safety concerns.

Read the entire story here

 

Mexico Assures that Puerto Vallarta is Safe

Gay Nagle Myers - Travel WeeklyMexico Assures that Puerto Vallarta is Safe

Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - The Mexico Tourism Board expressed concern about Princess Cruises' decision to drop three calls in Puerto Vallarta this winter, and assured travelers that the destination is safe.

"The Mexico Tourism Board would like to work with Princess Cruises to help address any concerns they might have," the board said in a statement.

The board pointed out that many U.S. and Canadian retirees "happily call Puerto Vallarta home" and cited Travelocity's recent ranking of Puerto Vallarta as No. 8 in its top 10 summer family destinations for 2011.

The Puerto Vallarta Tourism Board said it looked forward to welcoming Princess Cruises again in 2012.

"The board is sorry to learn of Princess Cruises' recent decision to cancel the remaining calls to our port for 2011. Puerto Vallarta is a leading cruise destination in Mexico and continues to offer a wide range of shore excursions and a safe experience for all cruise passengers," the destination's tourism board said in a statement.

It cited a study by Los Angeles-based security firm Thomas Dale & Associates that found the number of negative events involving foreigners or non-foreigners is "fractional compared to the large ex-pat resident population and the millions of visitors who vacation each year in Puerto Vallarta and find the destination safe and continue to visit numerous times."

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Mango season !

 

lick the

Click here to visit our site

 

Princess Cruises Cuts Calls in Puerto Vallarta

Mexican Tourism Officials in 'Total Shock' at Princess Move

Gene Sloan - USA TODAY
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Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - Princess Cruises' decision to cancel calls in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, for the rest of the year has left the country's tourism industry in "total shock," a top tourism official tells USA TODAY.

"Puerto Vallarta is a perfectly safe destination," says Rodolfo Lopez Negrete, chief operating officer of the Mexico Tourism Board. "We were very surprised and clearly very concerned about the announcement of Princess Cruises pulling out."

As we reported Monday, Princess cited worries about the safety of cruisers and crew in canceling calls in Puerto Vallarta -- a move that comes just months after Princess and several other cruise lines pulled out of Mazatlan, Mexico, over safety concerns.

The decision came just days after the robbery and murder of a Canadian man who was living in Puerto Vallarta with his family, and in the wake of a new U.S. State Department travel warning about growing drug-related violence in Mexico. The travel warning specifically mentioned Mexico's Jalisco state, where Puerto Vallarta is located.

Still, Lopez Negrete says the drug-related violence in Jalisco and other areas of Mexico cited in the travel warning is taking place far from tourist areas, and the State Department is unfairly lumping whole regions together without being specific about the risks to tourists.

"Mexico is a very large country," he notes. "If there are some episodes of violence up in the hills of the state of Jalisco that doesn't mean that Puerto Vallarta is an unsafe place for tourists."

Lopez Negrete draws a comparison with Los Angeles, which he notes is considered a safe tourism destination despite recurring violence in some areas of the city that aren't near the places that tourists go.

"If they kill 100 people in East L.A. that doesn't mean that I shouldn't go to Los Angeles," he says.

Lopez Negrete says Mexican tourism officials were given no warning of Princess' move, but top Mexican officials including Secretary of Tourism Gloria Guevara Manzo have since reached out to the company.

"Unfortunately we were not given the chance to have a prior dialogue with the Princess Cruises executives to talk about this topic before they made the decision," he says.

Lopez Negrete says Mexico remains a wonderful and safe place to visit, despite what Americans may be hearing about drug violence on the evening news.

"The perception of the consumer is that Mexico is up in flames, (and) that is totally wrong," he says. "There are episodes of violence in pockets of the country, but that is in places we do not recommend (people) go."

Of 2,500 municipalities in the state, only 80 have experienced drug-related violence, and tourists are rarely the victims of crime, he says.

"Mexico receives more than 20 million tourists every year, and we receive more than 6 million cruise passengers every year," he says. "When you compare the number of incidents that tourists have had in Mexico to that scale of business, it's really small."

As for Puerto Vallarta, Lopez Negrete says it is "more beautiful than ever, more wonderful than ever. (It has) fantastic weather, fantastic food (and) has become one of the meccas of the world."


Read more on PVNN.com http://www.pvnn.com/vallarta/news/24jun2011/mexican-tourism-officials-princess.htm

There is no reason not to go, he says.

 

 

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Quintana Roo Proudly Promotes Mayan Heritage The News
The News
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Quintana Roo is a state that proudly promotes its Mayan heritage, Governor Roberto Borge Angulo recently said during the presentation of the program Mayan World 2012.

President Felipe Calderón Hinojosa presided over the presentation of the program, which aims to attract a larger number of tourists and to trigger the tourist potential of the region.

“A great moment is around the corner. The date: Dec. 21, 2012, is not a synonym of destruction or devastation, but an opportunity to reconsider our relationship with the planet and the rest of its inhabitants,” Borge said.

The people of Quintana Roo take great pride on the remnants of the Mayan culture that can be found across the state.

“The arrival of this new era will give us the chance to renew and transform into a better version of ourselves.

“We are committed to preserving our natural and historical legacy. All service providers from this unique destination will take part in this new beginning and they will generate attractive options so our national and foreign visitors enjoy the huge natural and cultural richness of Quintana Roo,” the governor said.

Yucatán, Campeche, Chiapas and Tabasco are also participating in Mayan World 2012. The program will culminate on Dec. 21, 2012 at the Sanctuary of Hope.

The state government is promoting the preservation of the environment through the strategy “Green Quintana Roo.” The Sanctuary of Hope is an instrument to promote the invaluable heritage of Quintana Roo among the new generations. It will be built using recycled material to encourage the population and visitors to participate and collaborate in preserving the state’s heritage.

“(The sanctuary) will be a symbol that will represent all of us. It will become a forum to promote Quintana Roo’s richness, the kindness of its people and attractions for Mexico and the rest of the world,” Borge said.

The program Mayan World 2012 will be the perfect opportunity to enhance traditional events, such as the Santa Cruz Fair in El Cedral, which may be recognized as an Intangible Heritage of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); the Travesía Sagrada Maya, which houses the shrine to the Goddess Ixchel; the competition Mayan-Caribbean Expedition, which consists of a 200-kilometer (124.2 miles) route that passes through the communities Bacalar, Laguna Guerrero, Calderitas and Raudales; and the Life and Death Cultural Festival in Playa del Carmen and Xcaret.
“We will also organize a series of concerts, cultural and sport events, exhibits, gastronomic shows, and conferences throughout 2012,” Borge said.
 

Mexico Senate Recognizes Disability Rights

Víctor Mayén - The News
go to originalMexico Senate Recognizes Disability Rights

Mexico City - Two months after the inauguration of the new Senate facilities, senators decided to launch a public tender for the construction of two official seats for people with disabilities in the Plenary Session Hall of the Senate.

On Monday, the Resources and General Services Department of the Chamber of Senators, through a publication in the Official Journal of the Federation (DOF), launched the public tender to invite companies interested in participating to present a project that would convince the senators.

The senators forgot to include two seats in the Plenary Session Hall with special characteristics that would allow people with disabilities to make use of the facilities.

The document reads as follows: “The Chamber of Senators urges companies to build and install two seats for people with disabilities.” Moreover, the Senate also ordered the construction of 33 new seats, although the specifications of these have not been released yet.

The document was originally released by the directive board of the Chamber of Senators on May 11, after a formal complaint presented by the president of the Free Access Association, Federico Fleischmann Loredo. However, the document only became official on Sunday.

According to Carlos Cravioto Cortés, the General Director of the Legal Affairs Department of the Chamber of Senators, the Senate’s new facilities were in accordance with all official construction, equipment, and civil protection requirements. “We will make sure that these two seats become a reality. After all, people with disabilities are not a liability for this country, but rather people with rights than can improve Mexico and society,” he said.

• • •
Learn Spanish and Avoid Alzheimer's


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A cognitive neuroscientist, Ellen Bialystok has spent almost 40 years learning about how bilingualism sharpens the mind. Her good news: Among other benefits, the regular use of two languages appears to delay the onset of Alzheimer’s disease symptoms.

Dr. Bialystok, 62, a distinguished research professor of psychology at York University in Toronto, was awarded a $100,000 Killam Prize last year for her contributions to social science. We spoke for two hours in a Washington hotel room in February and again, more recently, by telephone. An edited version of the two conversations follows.

Q. How did you begin studying bilingualism?

A. You know, I didn’t start trying to find out whether bilingualism was bad or good. I did my doctorate in psychology: on how children acquire language. When I finished graduate school, in 1976, there was a job shortage in Canada for Ph.D.’s. The only position I found was with a research project studying second language acquisition in school children. It wasn’t my area. But it was close enough.

As a psychologist, I brought neuroscience questions to the study, like “How does the acquisition of a second language change thought?” It was these types of questions that naturally led to the bilingualism research. The way research works is, it takes you down a road. You then follow that road.

Q. So what exactly did you find on this unexpected road?

A. As we did our research, you could see there was a big difference in the way monolingual and bilingual children processed language. We found that if you gave 5- and 6-year-olds language problems to solve, monolingual and bilingual children knew, pretty much, the same amount of language.

But on one question, there was a difference. We asked all the children if a certain illogical sentence was grammatically correct: “Apples grow on noses.” The monolingual children couldn’t answer. They’d say, “That’s silly” and they’d stall. But the bilingual children would say, in their own words, “It’s silly, but it’s grammatically correct.” The bilinguals, we found, manifested a cognitive system with the ability to attend to important information and ignore the less important.

Q. How does this work — do you understand it?

A. Yes. There’s a system in your brain, the executive control system. It’s a general manager. Its job is to keep you focused on what is relevant, while ignoring distractions. It’s what makes it possible for you to hold two different things in your mind at one time and switch between them.

If you have two languages and you use them regularly, the way the brain’s networks work is that every time you speak, both languages pop up and the executive control system has to sort through everything and attend to what’s relevant in the moment. Therefore the bilinguals use that system more, and it’s that regular use that makes that system more efficient.

Q. One of your most startling recent findings is that bilingualism helps forestall the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease. How did you come to learn this?

A. We did two kinds of studies. In the first, published in 2004, we found that normally aging bilinguals had better cognitive functioning than normally aging monolinguals. Bilingual older adults performed better than monolingual older adults on executive control tasks. That was very impressive because it didn’t have to be that way. It could have turned out that everybody just lost function equally as they got older.

That evidence made us look at people who didn’t have normal cognitive function. In our next studies, we looked at the medical records of 400 Alzheimer’s patients. On average, the bilinguals showed Alzheimer’s symptoms five or six years later than those who spoke only one language. This didn’t mean that the bilinguals didn’t have Alzheimer’s. It meant that as the disease took root in their brains, they were able to continue functioning at a higher level. They could cope with the disease for longer.

Q. So high school French is useful for something other than ordering a special meal in a restaurant?

A. Sorry, no. You have to use both languages all the time. You won’t get the bilingual benefit from occasional use.

Q. One would think bilingualism might help with multitasking — does it?

A. Yes, multitasking is one of the things the executive control system handles. We wondered, “Are bilinguals better at multitasking?” So we put monolinguals and bilinguals into a driving simulator. Through headphones, we gave them extra tasks to do — as if they were driving and talking on cellphones. We then measured how much worse their driving got. Now, everybody’s driving got worse. But the bilinguals, their driving didn’t drop as much. Because adding on another task while trying to concentrate on a driving problem, that’s what bilingualism gives you — though I wouldn’t advise doing this.

Q. Has the development of new neuroimaging technologies changed your work?

A. Tremendously. It used to be that we could only see what parts of the brain lit up when our subjects performed different tasks. Now, with the new technologies, we can see how all the brain structures work in accord with each other.

In terms of monolinguals and bilinguals, the big thing that we have found is that the connections are different. So we have monolinguals solving a problem, and they use X systems, but when bilinguals solve the same problem, they use others.

One of the things we’ve seen is that on certain kinds of even nonverbal tests, bilingual people are faster. Why? Well, when we look in their brains through neuroimaging, it appears like they’re using a different kind of a network that might include language centers to solve a completely nonverbal problem. Their whole brain appears to rewire because of bilingualism.

Q. Bilingualism used to be considered a negative thing — at least in the United States. Is it still?

A. Until about the 1960s, the conventional wisdom was that bilingualism was a disadvantage. Some of this was xenophobia. Thanks to science, we now know that the opposite is true.

Q. Many immigrants choose not to teach their children their native language. Is this a good thing?

A. I’m asked about this all the time. People e-mail me and say, “I’m getting married to someone from another culture, what should we do with the children?” I always say, “You’re sitting on a potential gift.”

There are two major reasons people should pass their heritage language onto children. First, it connects children to their ancestors. The second is my research: Bilingualism is good for you. It makes brains stronger. It is brain exercise.

Q. Are you bilingual?

A. Well, I have fully bilingual grandchildren because my daughter married a Frenchman. When my daughter announced her engagement to her French boyfriend, we were a little surprised. It’s always astonishing when your child announces she’s getting married. She said, “But Mom, it’ll be fine, our children will be bilingual!”

 

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As Mexico Hurricane Season Approaches, International Insurance Group Offers New Tips For Homeowners

Mexico Homeowners Insurance provider International Insurance Group, Inc. offers consumers tips on reviewing insurance coverages for homes and condos in Mexico in preparation for hurricane season.

Quote startMany Mexico based homeowner’s insurance plans do not offer hurricane coverage, and those that do may include severe coverage restrictions, or use outdated policy language.Quote end

Most of the Homes and Condos owned by U.S., Canadian and other foreigners in Mexico are located near the coast. The 2011 hurricane season is predicted to be an especially active one, both in the Pacific and Gulf of Mexico. In anticipation of the predicted active hurricane season, Mexico Homeowner’s insurance provider http://www.mexpro.com (an International Insurance Group, Inc. Company) advises owners of property in Mexico to take the following steps to prepare for hurricane season.

1. Get Mexican Homeowner’s Insurance. If a policy is already in place, it should be reviewed carefully.. Does it even offer hurricane coverage? Is the insurer A-rated with the A.M. Best Company, and thus able to withstand thousands of hurricane claims? Is the policy written on U.S.-style coverage forms?

Many Mexico based homeowner’s insurance plans do not offer hurricane coverage, and those that do may include severe coverage restrictions, or use outdated policy language. Mexpro.com, a U.S. based insurance provider, offers new Homeowner’s Insurance with hurricane coverage, available with fixed deductibles and low co-payments in all coastal areas.

“At this time, we do not have any moratoriums on writing new policies. But that could change quickly, as storms begin to develop”, stated Jim Labelle, CEO of Mexpro.com.

Property owners are advised to act now to obtain coverage before moratoriums take effect. Mexico Homeowners can get A-rated coverage, based on U.S.-style policy language, directly online at http://www.mexpro.com or by calling 1-888-467-4639 (U.S. and Canada) or 001-888-467-4639 (toll free from Mexico).

2. Protect belongings. Those homeowners in residence in Mexico home during hurricane season should pay attention to the weather.When a storm is approaching or threatened, homeowners should take precautions such as storing valuables in a safe place.

3. Be vigilant. Keep an eye on the local weather tracking websites. Have your insurance policies handy.

4. Board up windows. If a storm looks like it is going to hit, cover windows with boards. These don’t have to be special hurricane shutters, but they need to be thick and securely nailed over the windows.

5. Owners of homes and condos in Mexico who rent their houses out should also communicate this items to the renters. .

Hurricane season can be damaging and expensive, especially to the unprepared. Consumers who own homes in Mexico are encouraged to contact Mexpro to discuss their current policy coverages and receive a free, no obligation coverage analysis and premium quotation.


Grand Canyon Photography by Bill BellGrand Canyon Photograph by Bill Bell

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