Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Signs around Bucerias, Part 2

By Jack Brummet
Mexico Travel Editor

As I was shopping for dinner and walking to the gym, I shot a bunch of signs around town...

Click signs to enlarge.


Some of the street signs around town are sponsored.  This calle is brought to you by Corono Extra.


The front wall of a courtyard along Calle de Lazaro Cardenas (the street we live on)


A funny (and sad due to the content) sign at a fish taco joint.  A day later, they put up a corrected one.  I liked this version better.


The best beauty parlor sign ever.

The dumpoy Marilyn in front of Billy's gym.  It is about 22-25 feet tall.

The address sign in front of our house.


The back doctor.

Now that looks like a fun day care center.

A motivational conference poster.   Wow.


A mural at the Sal y Fuego Hotel

another mural at the Sal y Fuego Hotel


Politics.  Es hora de cambiar!


The Calcetin Solitario (Lonely Sock) Laundry

Telephone ad.  Don't know what the palm means...

Because there are so many dirt roads, most cars here are dusty.  Many have dust writings.

Mega Fria!

There are few franchises here, but Curves is one.  With a hand painted sign.



We couldn't figure out if this is a joke, or a warning sign saying "don't do this."
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Monday, April 09, 2012

Drawing: Obit

By Jack Brummet
(with my embarrassing Spanish, and assistance on the teeth by my nephew Otis)

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Sunday, April 08, 2012

Easter Dinner in Bucerias at the Trini and Ishmael Lopez home

By Jack Brummet, Mexico Travel Editor

We went to Easter dinner at our friends Trini and Ishamel Lopez's house today.  The live across the arroyo on the hill above Bucerias.  We brought along our entire crew--Keelin, Dave Hokit, Maureen Roberts, Eric and Megan Sanchez, and their two kids, Otis and Olivia.  The Sanchez's departed for the airport and San Francisco after dinner.

On Thursday, the Lopez extended family (eight of them) comes to our house for dinner (I'm cooking).    And on Friday The Ericksen-Curran family arrives (and we depart for Seattle on Sunday). 












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Photographs and video from Good Friday's crucifixion procession (Santa Via Cruces) in Bucerias

By Jack Brummet, Mexico Travel Ed

We first saw Santa Via Cruces maybe six years ago.  Many towns and cities have a full blown pageant on Good Friday.  This is more a religious instructional exercise than any sort of entertainment.  Probably 150-200 people followed the procession as it wound its way up the hill.  The procession stopped 12 times for song and prayer at each of 12 stations of the cross along the way.













Station of The Cross Stop No. 8
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Vegetables in Bucerias

By Jack Brummet, Mexican Cuisine Editor

This is a pile of vegetables that were the snack and salad/verdure part of the dinner I cooked last night for the Sanches, Curran-Brummet, and Hokit-Roberts families.  There was also a big pot of four chili carne, another pot of beans, and a mess of sauteed mushrooms.  The availability of vegetables has much improved since our first trips here in the late 90's, and it's wonderful.

We discovered--via Eric Sanchez--a great new snack:  sliced cucumbers sprinkled with lime juice, salt, and a mild chili.  Amazing.

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Friday, April 06, 2012

Banda Music in Sayulita, Nayarit

By Jack Brummet, Mexico Travel Editor



On the beach in Sayulita today, there were thousands of Mexican tourists. The Americans and Canadians have largely cleared out (this is true of our other visits here...in April, the Americans stop coming and the Mexicans have their beaches back).  A couple clips of the drum band (and of whom I unfortunately failed to get a great clip of) and the marching band (tuba, three trombones, three trumpets, two drummers, two clarinetists, and a flugel horn player) are below.  The drum band clip includes some pretty enthusiastic booty shaking by an audience member.

I am going to write in detail about this later, but Sayulita--far different than we experienced before, when it was a pretty sleepy surfing village)--is a lot like Fort Lauderdale in the day.  By noon or so, most of the younger folk were clutching and swilling quarts of Pacifico and Modelo. 

Banda Buchona
The tuba player, soloing for KeeKee (I think he was sweet on her)

 

The unnamed drum band and their booty-shaking fan

Today, there were at least two bands playing, and sometimes competing.  Interestingly, neither of the bands even passed the hat. . .or sold CDs...




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Thursday, April 05, 2012

A painting for Good Friday/Black Friday I saw today in Sayulita, Nayarit

By Jack Brummet, Mexican Travel Editor

A fascinating and probably controversial painting I saw today in a gallery in Sayulita (a town maybe 20 miles up the coast from Bucerias, about which more later tonight...).

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Faces No. 283 - Gringos!

By Jack Brummet



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Poem: Joshua Brought The Jericho Walls Tumbling Down

By Jack Brummet



Jericho was locked down tighter than a submarine.
It made Helms Deep and Fort Knox look porous.

Joshua studied the walls, trying to find a way in,
When a man with whirling gaslight eyes appeared.

"Hey you! Spook! Are you for us, or against us?"
The spook whirled around, rattled his sword

And grew ten feet tall and five feet wide.
"I am the General of all Generals."

It was The Lamplighter himself. "Take the shoes
From your feet on my holy ground,

And follow the ark, with seven priests with seven trumpets.”
Joshua told the peasants, "All right, beat feet!”

Seven priests tooting seven horns led the parade
Around and around and around Jericho

Like Sambo marched the tigers around the tree,
Or the way the earth spins in the dark around the sun.

They marched in silence six long days.
On the seventh day they lit out at dawn

Behind the seven priests and seven trumpets
And marched around the city seven times.

After the seventh orbit, the priests blew a cadenza
And Joshua said to the people, "Shout"

They roared louder with each passing minute,
And the walls came tumbling down.

They destroyed everything with a heartbeat:
Every man, woman, animal and bug,

Young, old, red, yellow, black and white,
Fell on the sword.

Joshua was the Lord’s boy now.
He became famous throughout the country

And put the hairy eyeball on anyone
Who even thought about resurrecting Jericho.
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Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Bucerias Travel Pals

By Jack Brummet, Mexico Travel Editor

On the first week of our trip to Bucerias, Nayarit, KeeKee and I have been joined by the Sanchez family--Megan and Eric, my sister-in law and brother-in law, and their two children, Otis Valentino and Olivia Jane (four and two).  On Saturday, our travel pals since the mid-80's, Maureen Roberts and Dave (known in Bucerias as Senor Daveed) Hokit, arrive.  This will be the fourth time we've been together in Bucerias.  And then, the Friday after that, Dean Ericksen, Mary Curran, their children, Declan, Augie, and Althea arrive along with some friends of theirs from Athens, GA, arrive.   On Friday, we surrender our casa to them and move across the street for two days.  On Sunday, April 15th, after two weeks here, we head back to Seattle. 

Eric

Otis Valentino

 Olivia Jane

Megan Curran Sanchez (it's barely possible to get a pic w/o a youth entangled in some fashion).

My number one travel partner, Keelin (with Trini Lopez, one of our local friends)
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