Friday, August 28, 2015

Musical mariachis and hatching tortugas, Isla Mujeres Mexico

Warm Caribbean nights.  

Great music.  People-watching, oh, and baby turtles!  Could it get any better?

On Tuesday night, the Mariachi Band of the Fifth Naval Region (Mariachi de la Secretaría de Marina) performed in Centro as part of the annual Isla Fest, a summertime celebration of the anniversary of Isla Mujeres.  

Four vocalists - great voices
Four vocalists, Lieutenants Nancy Armenta, Victoria Tapia Master and Gustavo Lopez, plus the leader Captain Eduardo Navarro Graciano, lit up the stage with their huge smiles and rich voices. 

Lawrie and I arrived a few minutes ahead of the scheduled start time and were surprised that there were so few people in the audience.  

By the time the group started – precisely at eight o’clock, military time – the chairs were filled with navy and city officials and numerous locals.  

And then the music started. Wow! You could tell the group of eighteen musicians had been together for quite some time.  Everyone was relaxed and performing at their peak. It was a great way to spend an evening. 

As for the tiny turtles, as most of you know, we live in a house on the beach in Mexico, and summertime is turtle nesting time.  
Kim Bailey & Celeste Reed - Nashville 

The next night, Wednesday evening, as we were getting settled to enjoy a glass of wine and watch the sunset, we heard a voice yell: “Hey, he’s got a baby turtle!” Lawrie and I dashed out to the beach to see what was happening.  

Three visitors from Nashville had caught a local canine in the act of gulping down a hatchling. Too late! He licked his lips, checking around for another tasty treat but, the Nashville folks were fiercely guarding the nest. 

Bert Bailey - grinning like a little kid.
Unfortunately, this year, none of the eggs from the nests along our stretch of beach have been collected, allowing numerous neighbourhood canines to dig up eggs and sometimes the babies.  

SEMARNAT, the government office responsible for the ocean and shores around Mexico, in conjunction with the local turtle farm, have hatched approximately 33,000 baby turtles this summer.  A record-breaking 130,000 hatchlings are predicted for this year, creating a huge space problem.  The turtle farm is overflowing with nests, baby turtles, and eggs.  There just isn’t any more room for eggs.  Lucky for us, because of the overcrowding, we were able to experience a hatching firsthand, to see the baby turtles digging their way to the surface. 

Celeste Reed, taking babies to the water
Typically, we wouldn’t interfere with the process, but we didn’t want any more of the babies to become snack food for the lip-licking canine.  We spent the next thirty minutes gently scooping up about one hundred hatchlings as they struggled upwards towards the fading light of sunset.  

Our shoreline currently has a two-foot deep buildup of Sargasso seaweed, drifting in from the mid-Atlantic.  It is a weird phenomenon this year affecting all of the Caribbean beaches.  As the babies scrambled towards the ocean, they were faced with a mountain of seaweed, so our little group of humans gave them helicopter rides over the obstructions into the water. 
Seaweed drifting in from the Atlantic
Then, in the gathering dusk, the sharp-eyed frigate birds spotted the tiny bobbing heads, diving from great heights to snatch up a few of the babies.  The turtles face a long and arduous life of avoiding predatory fish, boat propellers, fishermen’s nets, illegal hunting, and entanglement in plastic trash. It isn’t easy being a turtle – about one turtle in a thousand will live to maturity.

Lawrie checked the nest again this morning.  A few more late arrivals managed to dig out and disappear under the cover of night, hopefully finding their way over the mound of seaweed to the sea and not towards the bright lights of Cancun.

Hard not to grin when you see baby turtles!
Now, if we could have arranged for the Mariachi band to perform at our house while we sipped wine and watched the turtles hatch - that would have been a five-star night!    

Hasta luego, Lawrie, Lynda, Sparky, and Thomas

Friday, August 21, 2015

Driving in Mexico – It’s like a video game!

Driving in Mexico is a bit like a video game, a test of your reflexes and hand-eye coordination.  
It can be entertaining and fun, if not a little bit nerve-wracking.  
The traffic is fast, signals or stop signs are merely suggestions and staying in one lane isn’t always the safest choice.  
Ya gotta keep your eyes open and go with the flow.  Don’t drive too fast.  Don’t drive too slowly.  Just go with the flow.  

Little or no warning - road closed.  Turn here!
Lanes narrow, or disappear without much notice.  Road work can appear suddenly without a lot of warning signs.  A typical construction zone might have one lonely worker waving a tattered piece of red cloth as you are about to run over him.  Watch out!  

And at the end of the workday, an assortment of graders, rollers, and vehicles are parked on the dark roadside, with no flashing lights or warning signs. 


End of the day park the equipment and go home.
On the highways, cars, vans, or trucks pass anywhere it is possible to squeak by.  Recently, on Isla, we were driving south on Aeropuerto Road, just starting up the little hill near Casa Cielo, when the taxi behind, and the taxi behind the north-bound vehicle both decided to pass at the same time.  It’s an amazing feat of physics, or perhaps time and space, when four vehicles can pass without incident on a narrow two-lane strip of road. 



We drive a golf cart as our everyday vehicle. It's fun and easy, but basic on standard equipment. An island turn signal is your arm stuck out to the left to indicate you are turning left, or maybe to tell the driver behind you it’s okay to pass, or sometimes to tell the driver ahead that you are going to overtake him/her.  Your right hand pointing to the right is usually the indication that you are turning that direction, or perhaps just resting your arm on the back of the seat. 

Recently, we were on a short and busy trip back to Canada.  We rented an average car, complete with standard safety equipment such as brake lights, seat belts, and airbags.  I enjoy driving and hopped into the driver’s side of the Hyundai Sonata.  Coming up to our first turn, I indicated with my left arm that I was turning left and slammed my hand into the closed window. Oh, right. This car has turn signals. All was well for a few more miles until I had a momentary glitch in my brain’s hard drive, and signaled right by slapping Lawrie in the face with my right hand. 

Internet - standard hand signal for right turn
I must admit we get a bit of perverse pleasure in confounding our Mexican friends when we use our left arm, bent at a ninety-degree angle, to indicate a right turn.  It’s the standard signal in most parts of the world …. just not here.   

Other drivers give us a “what the heck are you doing?” look, which makes us smile.  Small things amuse us!



Typical street in rural Mexico
In Mexico, pedestrians do not have the right of way, as they do in the USA or Canada.  

However, those wide yellow speed bumps (topes) are sacred!  They are typically located in extremely busy locations, such as across from the passenger ferry terminal, near the schools, and at the Chedraui grocery store.  

DO NOT drive through these crosswalks while a pedestrian is crossing.  This is the quickest way to irritate the police, and for you to donate cash to the Policemen’s Benevolent Society. 

Good luck with your new video game: Driving in Mexico
Hasta luego, Lynda, Lawrie, Sparky, and Thomas


Juarez Avenue at sunset on Isla Mujeres
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Friday, August 14, 2015

Una cerveza más, por favor

Isla Brewing
Real beer - on Isla?  Huh!
Yeah, I know I have had a few hundred gallons of beer here on the island, but that was, you know, just a cold drink for a hot day.  Now we have a real microbrewery on Isla featuring naturally fermented beer brewed to the Bavarian Purity Law of 1516.  What the hell is the Bavarian Purity Law, you say?  It’s really simple.  Only four ingredients are allowed: barley, water, hops and yeast, and oh yeah, lots of love and effort.

Jeff McGahee - closer to realizing his dream

Let me tell you about Isla Brewing, the brainchild and passion of Jeff McGahee.  Originally from Asheville, North Carolina, Jeff and his family are now well-known islanders.  

Jeff has been working on his dream for the past two plus years, and the results are worth the wait.  I was offered a sample of the pale ale the other day.  Very yummy!  Do not confuse this ale with Budweiser or Corona.  These ales are not a mixture of fermented rice and corn syrup used by the commercial breweries to make what they call beer.  This is ale - made with taste, lots of taste. 

Fermentation
Brewed in very small batches of around 360 litres, these ales have body, a hoppy taste, and subtle carbonation.  Initially, Jeff plans to make a Pale Ale, a Blonde, a Mica Ale, and a Porter.  I can hardly wait to try the other flavours.  Now I will be able to enjoy a local beer that doesn’t get beaten up by the spiciness of our traditional Mexican food. Lynda is anxiously waiting for her favourite, a hoppy IPA, India Pale Ale.

As for building a brewery on an island in paradise, it has not been easy.  Jeff has had to create much of the equipment here in a true DIY fashion.  If you get a chance to visit the brewery, check out the grain grinder – it’s powered by a ¼ inch drill.  Amazing.  Most of his brewing ingredients, except the water, have to be imported – sacks of barley, hops and special yeast.  Hell, I even brought down some live yeast from our friends’ brewery in Penticton, BC, Canada - The Cannery Brewing Company.  Sure, I declared it.

Jeff's creative dad built the control panel
Microbreweries are the hottest trend in the liquor business, and the huge demand for better products is prompting the Big Guys to want to play in the game.  It takes more than just a funny name and a jazzy label to make a great beer.  The beer has to be made according to the rules.  Too bad for you, Big Guys, but good for us; we now have Isla Brewing to satisfy our craving for great-tasting ales.

To find out when and where the ales will be available, give his Facebook page a [Like].  He’ll keep you posted on the latest developments.   

https://www.facebook.com/islabrewing

Soon, your visit to paradise can include great-tasting ales from Isla Brewing.

Hasta luego, Lawrie, Lynda, Sparky, and Thomas

A little while ago when the equipment arrived

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Friday, August 7, 2015

Pilates on a Moto, part two

Ismael and Pedro delivering, 8  framed photos
A few years ago, we designed an extensive exercise program that is now wildly popular in many countries: Pilates on a Moto.  
This is part two of the exercise program, focusing on more intense exercises and featuring a gradual increase in the degree of difficulty. 
All of the exercises in this program are designed to strengthen your core muscles: abdominal 6-pack, butt muscles, hamstrings, and calf muscles.  It is strongly recommended that you do each exercise for a minimum of fifteen minutes to ensure the very best results.

Balance and coordination
Exercise #1  Balance and Coordination

This exercise is designed for one person.  Begin by holding a long, heavy board in your left hand and get onto your motorcycle.  Then, start the moto with one hand. As soon as you have the motorcycle moving, balance the board on your lap in the vertical position while driving.  

If you do not have a heavy board available, an eight-foot step ladder is a satisfactory substitute. The key to the effectiveness of this exercise is to ensure the object is long and heavy.  This exercise is guaranteed to dramatically increase your balance and coordination. 


Strengthen Core Muscles
Exercise #2  Strengthen Core Muscles

This exercise is primarily for your passenger’s benefit.  It will increase the strength and flexibility of his or her core muscles. First, get on your moto. Next, have the passenger sit behind you.  

Then ask the passenger to pick up a large, heavy object, something awkward and weighing almost as much as the person.  Drive for fifteen minutes in traffic while your passenger clutches the object.  For the very best results, do this exercise twice with your rider holding the object first on the left side, and then on the right side of the moto. This is guaranteed to tighten your core muscles and a few other muscles too.


Total Family Workout
Exercise #3   Total Family Workout that Includes Your Pets

Are your lives too busy to find a few minutes of workout time with the family? Here’s the exercise for you. The only equipment required is one motorcycle and one helmet for each participating person. To perform this exercise, get on the moto, then have the smallest child stand in front of you, while other family members find a place to sit on the back.

A minimum of three people, plus one dog of any size, or a maximum of five people are required to get the greatest benefit from this exercise.  It will increase balance and muscle coordination, plus work on all the core muscles for everyone in the family, including Fido.  This one is a real winner!

Post-exercise cool down.
At the end of your workout, we advise a cooling-down period.  

The ideal way to cool down is to drive with a large fan balanced on one knee.  This will allow a two-fold benefit: air flowing around as you drive, and air directed at your face by the fan.  It’s very therapeutic.

We hope you enjoy your new Pilates on a Moto exercises.
                                             _______________________

This post was meant to be very tongue-in-cheek. We are in complete awe of our many island friends who are coordinated enough to carry the funniest array of large items their motos – with or without the help of a family member or friend.  It’s a talent that we just don’t have.

Lawrie and I can barely keep a moto upright, never mind adding extra people and cargo.  A nice, stable golf cart is our preferred method of transportation.

Hasta luego, Lynda, Lawrie, Sparky, and Thomas


Sparky: The true-life story of a Mexi-mutt

  Chapter 1 All alone in the world: November 2013 Hola, soy Sparky. Hi, I’m Sparky. I’m a short-legged mutt, born on the island of Isl...