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Well Christmas is over and Boxing Day is winding down. We have been shopping, cooking and cleaning for days and now we can relax.

All the presents have been distributed and gratefully received, meals have been cooked, Skype calls to absent friends and family members have been made and wrapping paper has been saved or thrown out.

Toasts have been made and we can now look forward to New Year’s Eve with friends and family.

We had 9 people for Christmas Eve which ended up11. We had not entertained in our home for some time so it was important to me that everything was spit spot. Silver, copper and brass was cleaned, new blinds for the terrace were bought, noche buenas (poinsettias) were purchased and the house was cleaned from top to bottom and the pool was cleaned lights were hung and all the best silver, china, crystal and linen was cleaned and trotted out.
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Last night (December 16th) we went to the annual performance of El Cascanueces or, in English, The Nutcracker.

This has become an institution with our family and in fact they had to stage three performances last night to accommodate those for whom this amazing production has also become an institution.

It is held at the Auditorio de la Ribera in La Floresta and we have been attending every year since we first arrived in Ajijic, Lake Chapala in 1994 and our children have played various roles over the years. They are no longer participating in The Nutcracker but we still are moved to tears and laughter every time we attend.

This year the Instituto Loyola de Chapala continued the tradition of El Cascanueces.

The play follows the traditional Nutcracker sequences of the opening party with the wonderful magician, the battle between the soldiers and the rats, the snowflakes, the woods of sweets, the Russians, the Spanish dancers, the Thai and, of course, the Chinese dancer sequences. (more…)

There is a wonderful new boutique on the Carretera Chapala-Ajijic in San Antonio Tlayacapan right beside Panino’s Restaurant.

They are open Monday to Friday from 11:00 am -7:00 pm and Saturday from 11:00 am – 6:00 pm.

Parking is available and they speak English

Their phone # is 766-2127

The owner is a young girl named Romina S. Partida.

When you walk through the doors you might think you were in Toronto, Paris, London or New York. The boutique is paneled in deep rich mahogany and is extremely pleasing to the eye. All the hangers are also made of wood and the clothes are spaced out to easily see what is available.
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This year the Guadalajara October Festivities are from October 8th to November 8th.

The Octubre Fiestas Guadalajara will join the celebration of the Bicentennial of Independence and the Centennial of the Mexican Revolution, so it will be special recognition of the traditions and typical places of Mexico.

This is the 45th event of the holiday, which this year will be called “Mexican Traditions” will take place from October 8th to November 8th in the city of Guadalajara, Jalisco. It is announced that there will be many surprises, great performances and much of Mexican culture to experience and enjoy.

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Fiestas de San Andres in Ajijic

The Patron Saint of Ajijic, San Andres, the Fisherman, is honored for the last 9 days of November every year. These Fiestas are also called “The Fiestas de Noviembre”.

Gardeners, waiters, construction workers and the employees of a local hotel, the Nueva Posada, participate in the early morning and evening pilgrimages to the church in the plaza to mass, igniting loud skyrockets which tradition has it will frighten away evil spirits.

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The Mexico They Never Left

by Roger Toll, former Editor of Mexico City News (Delta Sky Magazine, February 2006)

Near Guadalajara, the lakeside town of Ajijic has proven irresistible to many Americans. Here’s why.

If the cherished ideals of human unity and harmony between cultures remain hard to achieve, maybe we’d best look to a basic biological concept for a solution. Symbiosis, the dictionary says, is the life association of two dissimilar organisms for mutual benefit. I thought of this on a recent visit to Ajijic (pronounced “ah-HEE-heek”), the prettiest of several towns laced together by a two-lane highway running along the northwest shore of Mexico’s largest lake, Chapala, 45 minutes south of Guadalajara. It is midsummer, the rainy season, where the air is soft and the surrounding mountains turn an exuberant tropical green. The setting is bucolic, Old World, with a rustic church and peaceful plaza, and a gazebo waiting for a band to arrive. Cobblestone streets slow traffic to a genteel crawl, and people come and go, murmuring a polite “buenos dias” as they amble by.

It is a scene replicated in thousands of towns throughout Mexico. But in one way, Ajijic and its lakeside neighbours–Jocotopec, San Juan Cosala, San Antonio Tlayacapan, Chapala–stand alone, not only in Mexico, but in the world. For they are home to the largest population of Americans and Canadians living outside their own countries. This being Mexico, no one is quite sure how many foreigners there are, nor does anyone seem to know the total population of these lakeside towns. But guesses place the foreigners at about 10,000 during the high season of winter, amid a total population of 60,000.

Ever since Americans began migrating to Ajijic in the 1950s, detractors have said it’s where old gringos go to die. Granted, most of the foreigners are retired, though more and more younger people have made the move after corporations began offering early retirement. Reduced incomes become a lot more elastic in the Latin American economy, and the lakeside’s perfect, spring-like weather, with average temperatures ranging between 67 and 78 degrees Fahrenheit (19-26 Celsius) year-round, seems like a dream to long-suffering veterans of harsh winters or sizzling summers. Comfortable, stylish homes, even Spanish Colonial gems, are half the price of their equivalents back home, and employing a full-time gardener and a maid or cook is no longer an unjustifiable luxury. Labor, goods, and restaurant meals are impressively inexpensive. Life is comfortable and relaxed, and there’s little cause to hurry anywhere.

“I’m on the younger side of the expatriate curve here,” says Kevin Collins, a wry, 49-year-old former advertising executive from Toronto who moved here a decade ago. “But the average age of foreigners is coming down pretty quickly, probably around early 60s by now.” We meet over drinks in the sprawling garden of La Nueva Posada, the town’s best hotel, whose bedraggled charm is reminiscent of a setting in a Graham Greene novel. Collins, who moved to Ajijic with his wife and two children, has lowered his golf handicap to 6 after years of playing three times a week at the nearby nine-hole golf club. He has also become the area’s top real estate agent.

“People get fantastic medical attention in Guadalajara, which is probably why we have so many older gringos tottering down the cobblestone streets here,” Collins says. “Any other place, they wouldn’t get such good attention for so little money.” Besides, he says, the elderly can be well cared for in their own homes because help is so readily available, loyal and inexpensive. “Mexicans are very warm and caring by nature,” Collins adds, “and they value and respect the elderly.”

Retirees often find they are rejuvenated by the prevailing live-and-let-live attitude of Mexican culture. Foreigners give themselves permission to go a little eccentric–what the British call “going native”–painting their walls in bright Mexican pinks and yellows, for example, or wearing arty, bohemian clothes that might have been frowned on when they were dressing for their neighbors back home. One senses a zest, a youthful spirit won back after years of tending to corporate or family imperatives, a feeling of being freed by distance to become what their fantasy dictates. Some take to playing roles in a string of theater productions, while others start painting. (D.H. Lawrence lived and wrote in the Lakeside towns in the 1920s–just one milestone in Ajijic’s thriving art scene.) The entrepreneurial Norte-americanos open shops and restaurants as ways of keeping busy in the relaxed small-town ambience.

Walking along cobblestone Constitucion Street early one evening, I encounter two seventy-somethings in colorful dresses and long gray-blond hair who pull up to a curb on a cherry red ATV like two 18-year-olds. “Come on in,” they say as they stride into Tom’s Bar. “There are some fun people who come here, and they serve great sandwiches.” Tom’s is a small dive that has blossomed into a popular American and Canadian watering hole. Due to a satellite hook-up and a new television, it is the place to watch weekend games in the robust company of expats. I sit at the bar beside Fred, a 48-year-old building contractor who was passing through town and decided to stay. He’s been in Ajijic now for 17 years.

Many foreigners, armed with a social conscience and strong community action skills that they’ve imported along with their cars, throw themselves into the long list of organizations that have helped make Ajijic one of the most communally active towns in Mexico. “With all the charity and fund-raising events, the foreign community has launched a lot of programs that support crippled and orphaned children, old people, scholarship and health programs, and so much more,” says Teresa Kendrick, author of Mexico’s Lake Chapala and Ajijic: The Insiders Guide. Kendrick came from Austin, Texas, to Guadalajara on vacation 11 years ago, and stayed for a spell. Three years after that, at age 42, she moved to Ajijic, where she had found her Eden. “Take stray animals,” she says. “When I got here, there was an abject neglect of dogs and cats. Now we have an excellent pound, and animal-care groups train kids in school to care for animals. It’s common to see well-fed dogs with collars and leashes out walking with families. It’s been a really positive change.”

Gringo retirement dollars have had a huge impact, and the Mexican population appreciates the economic benefits, even if at times it means putting up with some angry or impatient Northerners who haven’t yet acculturated to the slower pace of life and different norms of behavior. “Unfortunately, we always get some rude foreigners with nasty tempers,” says Kendrick. “They want everything now and in the way it’s done in the States, so they don’t really fit in here.” But most people, she says, blossom in the warmth of the community and learn to adjust their expectations.

Ajijic’s mayor, Ricardo Gonzalez, believes communication between the two communities is ‘very beautiful because each side respects the other.” Foreigners, he says, have improved the area’s education, environment and health, especially in the area of nutrition, and have led efforts to clean up the town. “We have lived here for many generations so we don’t change too fast but we are learning many useful things from them that improve our lives,” he says. According to the mayor, people don’t feel envy towards the foreigners’ relative wealth, because that money flows into the economy. “We have full employment, and our salaries our higher than elsewhere in Mexico,” he says.

“The foreigners seem to like our Mexican traditions, and we appreciate that,” Gonzalez adds. For instance, even though it is an unusual customs for Northerners, the community still celebrates the Dia de los Muertos, he points out, rather than Halloween. “Both our groups are benefiting from living together and exchanging our cultural ways. So, yes, I think the foreigners are learning a lot from us as well.”

Article reproduced as it appeared in Delta’s Sky Magazine (February 2006) — written by Sky contributing editor Roger Toll, who lives in Park City, Utah, is the former editor of Mexico City News.

El Hole in One Golf Range

Along with a much needed driving range El Hole in One, on the Carratera Chapala-Ajijic #89 in San Antonio Tlayacapan Tel. 766-4477 and email address: elholeinone@hotmaiil.com also serves wonderful food.

Eric invites other chefs to come and offer special contemporary menus along with Villagolf wine tasting with sommelier Javier Orozco on Saturday and Sunday.

Appetizers include:

Leek and toasted almonds with raspberries

Thai Salad with Fresh Crab Meat, jicama, papaya, coriander in Thai vinaigrette

Crostini Turkey cranberry roasted and sliced with egg plant and mascarpone caviar

Moroccan Kebabs Wrapped spiced Lamb in Pita Bread with grilled pineapple and fennel minted yogurt sauce

Main Courses:

Grilled Maui Maui with caramelized and chunky mango sauce, served on steamed ginger rice and tempura pumpkin flower and bok-choy

Tuna Fish Yellow fin tuna crusted in local grains and seared with chilpozontle salsa served with garlic ponzu sautéed spinach and corn cranberry gallet

Pork Black Malt Port Tenderloin medallions with spiced black grapes sauce served with sweet potato mash and market vegetables.

Beef Filet USDA Choice Beef filet wrapped with pancetta cooked in rich Barolo broth, served with parmesan asparagus risotto

Desserts include:

Mousse Double Chocolate Cognac mousse, served with chilpotle crust

English Ethn Mess Almonds , wild berries over baked meringue

Crème Brulee Granny Smith green apple and pink pepper corn flavored

Prices are very reasonable with the most expensive main course on this particular menu being $160.00 pesos.

Reservations are necessary and the menu changes often. Check Superlake for current offerings.

Buen Provecho

The rainy season (June 15 – October 15) brings many wonderful benefits to Ajijic, Lake Chapala and one of them is the waterfalls that are created above Ajijic and The Racquet Club in San Juan Cosala west of Ajijic towards Jocotepec.

These waterfalls can be accessed by going up the street beside the Ajijic Clinic and provide a beautiful opportunity to enjoy nature and the spectacular views of Lake Chapala and the surrounding area.

This outing is great hiking exercise for you, your dogs and children and you can take a picnic, enjoy a swim in the clear waters and marvel at the beauty from an elevated vantage point.

From San Juan Cosala you can proceed up the street between the church and the plaza through the trails and streets of The Racquet Club to the waterfalls that lie above The Racquet Club.

Another aspect of San Juan Cosala, that can be enjoyed year round, is the Thermal Mineral Waters which are good for your body and mind. The Balneario Motel has several (more…)

FIFA World Cup 2010

FIFA World Cup 2010

When we first arrived in Mexico to live it was June of 1994 and we were smack dab in the middle of World Cup fever. Being Canadians this was new to us. Although we, naturally, had heard about soccer, it was never the frenzy we found ourselves caught up in here in Ajijic, Lake Chapala.

We now know that soccer is huge everywhere else in the world with the possible exceptions of Canada and the United States.

This year the World Cup is being hosted y South Africa and they are playing against Mexico as I write this blog. It is the 19th World Cup being played.

When I went to Yoly’s Unisex Hair Salon this morning there was a laptop on the reception counter with the game on. Also at Superlake there was a TV on top of the ATM machines and a semi circle of staff glued to the game.

You will find for the next month that everything is focused on the World Cup and anything you need to get done will take a backseat to this phenomena.

This morning on CNN they had some female soccer players demonstrating different types of plays and positions and highlighting three of the best (more…)

If you are looking for a fun and interesting day trip the Tequila Express could be for you.

The National Chamber of Commerce, Services and Tourism Guadalajara welcomes you to the train tour which organizes and operates the Tequila Express, The Legend.

Culture, recreation, entertainment and much more awaits you on this magical journey.

The Tequila Express, The Legend is a train tour which was founded in 1997 to achieve 3 goals:

To Rescue and revive the passenger train.

To pioneer a new form of tourism.

To keep the three pillars of national identity: mariachi, tequila and rodeo.

The Tequila Express runs every Saturday of the year and makes a single trip per day (9:00 am – 6:30 pm) to visit Hacienda San Jose del Refugio (more…)

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