Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2025

HOTEL ANTRE CHAPULTEPEC GUADALAJARA

PERFECT LOCATION, INCREDIBLE VALUE, 

TOP-NOTCH STAFF FOR PROSPEROUS VISIT


Hotel Antre Chapultepec staff is outstanding about explaining the price, departure times, etc. of the tours it sells from the front desk.

I wish it would affiliate with a better tour provider than Jalisco Tour Mendez.


Both daylong tours that I took spent an endless amount of time stopping at horrible restaurants and tourists traps that likely pay the tour company a kickback for depositing hapless tourists at their doorstep.


The base price of the tours is 25 USD -- at that low price, you get a tour that only rates about 2.5 on a scale of one to 5.

 

 


Thursday, June 5, 2025

HOTEL ANTRE CHAPULTEPEC GUADALAJARA

PERFECT LOCATION, INCREDIBLE VALUE, 

TOP-NOTCH STAFF FOR PROSPEROUS VISIT


Hotel Antre Chapultepec’s room temperature control is fixed.

You have to ask the front desk to send a person up to set it.


That means you only have a choice of air conditioning on or off -- you cannot adjust it to you comfort.


Please, treat guests like adults, and remove the governor on the temperature settings that can only be overridden with a code used by management.


The breakfast buffet was about 14 USD -- very high by Guadalajara standards.


I checked it out and while it looked clean, it really didn't appear to be worth the money.


I could not justify paying more than 20% of my daily room rate on a breakfast that was not cooked to order and had no luxury items on the buffet tables.

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

HOTEL ANTRE CHAPULTEPEC GUADALAJARA

PERFECT LOCATION, INCREDIBLE VALUE, 

TOP-NOTCH STAFF FOR PROSPEROUS VISIT


The Centro Historico is a 20 minute walk -- or a rideshare under USD 5 with tip – from Hotel Antre Chapultepec.

Tlaquepaque and Zapopan are about a half hour (45 minutes with traffic) 10 USD rideshare trip to visit those historic and vibrant neighborhoods.


The room had a large desk for working and room enough for a small fainting couch by the large balcony.


I would gladly stay again. 


And I wish every major city had a centrally-located, cost-effective Hotel Antre.

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

HOTEL ANTRE CHAPULTEPEC GUADALAJARA

PERFECT LOCATION, INCREDIBLE VALUE, 

TOP-NOTCH STAFF FOR PROSPEROUS VISIT


The fabulous working class Santa Tere neighborhood, with dozens of outstanding foodie spots, is a 12 minute walk north of the Hotel Antre Chapultepec.

GDL is a gastronomic mecca -- with amazingly fresh and fabulous seafood for not being a coastal city.


With a smooth check in and bilingual staff, Hotel Antre sets you up for all the cultural delights that GDL has to offer.


Jalisco state also is ground zero for outstanding coffee production.


Several of the best coffee purveyors in all of Mexico are within walking distance of the property.

Monday, June 2, 2025

HOTEL ANTRE CHAPULTEPEC GUADALAJARA

PERFECT LOCATION, INCREDIBLE VALUE, 

TOP-NOTCH STAFF FOR PROSPEROUS VISIT


Hotel Antre Chapultepec’s daily maid service brought two large bottles of water and cleaned -- while honoring my request to not remake my bed.

The front desk arranged a tour for me and helped estimate the price of a car service.


The room has tons of outlets -- regular prong and USB -- for recharging.


Antre Chapultepec is in the heart of Colonia Americana -- voted the hippest neighborhood on earth (as judged by Time Out Magazine).


Endless upscale and down home restaurants, bakeries, shops, street art and early 20th century architecture are within easy walking distance.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

HOTEL ANTRE CHAPULTEPEC GUADALAJARA

PERFECT LOCATION, INCREDIBLE VALUE, 

TOP-NOTCH STAFF FOR PROSPEROUS VISIT


The Hotel Antre Chapultepec is modern, perfectly-located and well-run.

I asked a lot of questions before my arrival and the staff answered each of them expertly.


The hotel is very near Chapultepec and its noisy bars and clubs plus it is on one of the city's busiest streets -- but I only heard a minor roar on my 10th floor, sound proofed room.


I had a fabulous balcony with southern exposure.


The room was large for a price well under 100 USD per day.


The walk-in shower had endless warm water.

 

Saturday, October 30, 2021

DIA DAY LOS MUERTOS

THE DAY OF THE DEAD IN OXACA, MEXICO

Oaxaca is a cultural capital.

The region is amazing and diverse.

The city of Oaxaca easily is one of the top 10 culinary destinations on the planet.

The grand churches and buildings are an architecture buff’s dream.

The surrounding small towns are historic and enchanting.

Nothing compares to the observation of Dia de los Muertos.

It runs Nov. 1 to Nov. 2 but for weeks leading up to the family-centric observations, folks are decorating altars, preparing special foods and sharing their colorful city.



Sunday, February 23, 2020

PROUD TO BE PART OF THE SAUDADES

 Poetry/ Photography/ Short Stories/ Painting/ Song Lyrics Anthology


The book is titled: SAUDADES Anthological Contemplations on Persons, Places, Identity, and Time.

It will feature the work of artists that originate from nine countries including Brazil, Cuba, England, Iran, Mexico, the Netherlands, Peru, Spain and the United States.

I am indebted to my friend and colleague – the immensely talented filmmaker/artist/creative force Amy Serrano, who is leading this project.

There will be multimedia events – perhaps around the nation and overseas – to come.

Though I have certainly experienced saudade and a great amount of my overseas photography portrays aspects of it, I confess I did not know the word until the brilliant and multicultural Amy Serrano posted a call for artists that explained the word. 

I borrow from her background information:

In English, saudade is often explained as a word, impossible to translate, yet quantifiable as an emotion that encompasses a wholly relatable configuration of bittersweet emotions.

These involve a distinct strain of profound melancholic yearnings that may be for a person, a place, an identity, or a time that has gone, and may never return. 

Saudade is also a word for a deep-seated longing about an idealized experience that has not yet happened, and perhaps never will. 


Aspects of saudade may include one or more these emotions: a profound sense of longing for a lost love or the homeland, bittersweet nostalgia, deep loss, a sense of "missingness,' dynamic regret, a gaping hole, transcendent emptiness, mysterious incompleteness, poignant sadness, an elusive wish, a singular absence, having "the blues," an ardent wistfulness, a haunting emptiness, a desperate yearning, and/or indolent dreaming.




Saturday, November 2, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 11

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO




It is common for families to display photographs of the dead during Dia de los Muertos.

Friday, November 1, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 10

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO



The cemetery, founded in 1829, also is known as Panteon General.

Thursday, October 31, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 9

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO




The weather in late October is perfect in Oaxaca – warm and dry.

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 8

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO




Graves have been cleaned and are intricately decorated and covered with bouquets of flowers, candles and the favorite foods and drinks of the deceased.

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 7

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO




Entire families and friends spend the nights out of their homes and next to the grave of their loved ones, conducting a vigil to connect with the dead by singing, eating and drinking.

Monday, October 28, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 6

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO




In the days leading up to Dia de Los Muertos, graves and crypts are decorated with marigold flowers, petals, candles, foods and drinks.

Sunday, October 27, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 5

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO



The atmosphere becomes more magical later at night, as families sit by the graves, some playing guitar, some singing.

It is a night of remembrance and celebration that their loved ones will return home for the night.

Saturday, October 26, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 4

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO




The graveyard stays open late, so loved ones can sit by the grave for most of the night.

Panteon San Miguel welcomes visitors who do not have a family member buried within its walls.


But it is important to be respectful – all of these photos were shot with a telephoto lens a long distance away from the families.

Friday, October 25, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 3

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO



Families eat with the spirits of their dead loved ones and leave plenty of food and drink behind for them.

This picture shows a potful of pollo en mole negro

Thursday, October 24, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 2

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO




Some families bring instruments to play the favorite music of their departed loved ones.

Others hire roving five-piece bands to provide the live music.

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS -- 1

PANTEON DE SAN MIGUEL -- OAXACA, MEXICO



Panteon San Miguel is about a 20-minute walk from the Zocalo in central Oaxaca City.

Visit it Oct. 31-Nov. 2 to see Dia de Muertos festivities in action.

Sunday, June 16, 2019

TODAY WE CELEBRATE 200,000 READERS -- AND A THIRD OF A CENTURY WITH SOULMATE HEIDI

HARD TO BELIEVE THAT IN LESS THAN A DECADE, 
MORE THAN 200,000 UNIQUE VISITORS ARE READING THIS BLOG


We have published more than 2,300 stories with pictures.

We have posted these daily to Twitter and Facebook, to boost exposure.

More than 500 of the articles have focused on human rights, such as advocacy for people with disabilities.

Nearly 1,000 have explored urban design, planning, zoning, architecture, landscape architecture and transportation engineering issues.

We are nearing our 1,000th story on travel – to Turkey, France, Africa, Spain, England, Italy, Argentina, Uruguay, Panama, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Guatemala, Mexico, Canada and far beyond.

We couldn’t have done this without the support of our partner of more than three decades – Heidi Johnson-Wright.  

She is my cherished wife, travel partner and advocate for a better quality of life for wheelchair users.

She has contributed more than 10 percent of the articles in this blog, ranging from travel pieces to memoir-like essays to music and book reviews.



Visit her blog at: