Saturday March 12.
All this time on the hot Caribbean flatlands made us hanker for some fresh
mountain air and exercise. We initially decided we wouldn’t go to Olivia’s
house in Xico since she is not there—she is working in LA for two weeks—but
when we saw that the seventh highest peak in Mexico—Cofre de Perote, 4210m
(13,812 ft)—is at her back door, we decided to go. She
arranged for her neighbor Stephan (Italian) to let us in, and her friend Juan
Carlos Giot to take us hiking on Sunday.
On our way out of
town we tried to find the beach that Mike vaguely remembers from 40+ years ago,
but had trouble finding a route across the highway to the waterfront, so we gave
up. We were delighted to see the rising and varied topography on the drive up
to Xalapa! We drove around and around the city trying to find our way to the
zocalo and looking for street parking in the centro, but
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Xalapa |
the city is hilly and
the streets are not in a grid and most of them are one way and there is no
street parking. When we finally got back to where we started, we pulled into a
pay parking lot, asked directions and walked. The historic center of Xalapa is
charming. The hillside setting makes the zocalo a mirador. We found a hip café
with multiple small rooms furnished with antiques. We sat in the rooftop
terrace and had tuna and salmon sandwiches on baguettes and watched a young
artist couple who were drawing. Xalapa is a university town; they might have
been students. Xalapa also has lots of book stores. I browsed for the Prison Verde book while Mike browsed for
an art book in Spanish. We also stumbled upon a public gallery (named for Diego
Rivera—don’t they know any other Mexican artists?) and saw a photography
exhibit focused on documenting life in several towns in southern Mexico. We
also went to the museum of contemporary art which was near where we
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Our fav at the Museo de Arte Contemporaneo |
parked. One
textile piece with purple and gold thread woven around sticks in forming cloud
shapes was our hands down favorite. We would have liked to go to the museum of
anthropology which features the massive Toltec heads, but it was out of the way
and there just isn’t time for everything. The drive out of town wove around
some beautiful parks and lakes. It is definitely a city we could spend time in.
Xico is a smaller
town further up in the mountains. We parked in front of the church. It does
have a plaza in front, but not the usual layout with adjacent government
buildings; the palacio del govierno
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Xico |
is a modest building on the central street
a block down the hill. We got there too late for the tourist office, but were
referred to the Casa Cultural which is a block further down. The fellow who
welcomed us in didn’t have a map, but he knew Olivia and drew us a map to get
to her house. Then the director gave us a personal tour of the exhibit. The
Casa focuses on the history of folk dance and festivals in the region and
cultivates a living tradition, teaching the dances, costumes, characters and
masks to children.
We had called
Olivia’s neighbor Stephan and as arranged met him in front of the church at 6 and
followed him to Olivia’s house. She lives up the hill just beyond a fancy
resort hotel called Aguas
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Olivia's kitchen |
Benditas. The house is new and has interesting lines,
including a curved wall with a semi-circular stairway and two curved windows.
The windows and deck facing down hill look out on trees, while the windows on
the uphill side look across cow pasture to the Cofre de Perote peak. We were
very comfortable there and availed ourselves of her washing machine as well as
stove, shower and bed.
Olivia’s downstairs
renter Billy is a 70-year old American who has lived in Mexico for more than 30
years. He used to work in the states three months of the year (summer) and earn
enough to live in Mexico the other nine months. Ever since the crash of 2008 he
has lived in Mexico full time. He knows how to live on very little. He reads
and bikes and walks a lot.
Sunday March 13.
Another awesome climb! Perhaps the most beautiful to date. (How many times have
I said that?) At 9am we parked our van in front of the iglesia in Xico and went with Juan Carlos in his little VW beetle.
That was amazing! The road was in really poor condition and required a high
clearance truck, but Juan Carlos was such a skillful driver, and took it so
slowly, and Mike and I got out three times to lighten the load, that he only
scraped bottom once. This is a public road that goes up to several tiny pueblacitas, each with a handful of
campesino houses and lots of cows, goats,
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Cofre de Perote |
sheep and pigs. It took us over two
hours to drive less than 20km. We parked at the end in front of some houses
where we were greeted by three boys and their horse. They were eager to know if
we spoke English, and where we were going.
The
trail—completely unsigned—starts at 2,600m, traverses several cow pastures,
across barb wire fences, traversing up through the scrub, into a young pine
forest. There had been a massive burn here 25 years ago, and reforestation and
soil conservation are in progress. The forest was sweet smelling in the warm
sun and the views of Cetlálpetal, dressed in bridal white down to her ankles,
were stunning. The recent snow storm was a freak event this time of year (read:
climate change). Just to prove that it is a real mountain, the Cofre also had a
little snow left in the shadows. We continued climbing up past two huts, and
then a little alpine scrambling to reach the summit. Where we were confronted
with two dozen cell phone towers and three trucks that had come up from Perote
with workers and visitors. There were cement stairs up through the complex to
the true summit, complete with the trash of windfallen cell towers.
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Cetlalpital from the summit of the Cofre |
Cofre Perote was a
perfect day hike: enough altitude and gain to feel the mountain air,
acclimation and exercise, but not so much to feel crummy or exhausted. On the
trip down it started to cloud over and cool off. We were back in Xico, for
cerveza and dinner at a local restaurant run by Jauan Carlos’ friend (actually,
it appears that most everyone in Xico is Juan Carlos’ friend). The pizza was
again mediocre, but the company was excellent.
Juan Carlos is a
really interesting guy. He is an avid climber and mountain biker, a sculptor
and a videographer—the latter is his primary source of income. His sculptures
are mechanical, made from seeds and other natural products he collects from the
forest, and with wires that make the eyes open and close, or the wings flap, or
a range of other complex combinations of movements. Some are operated by hand,
like marionettes, and some are battery operated. One bicycle goes round and
round when you turn the crank. One old lady wakes up when you drop a coin in
her can. I wish I could show you this great stuff, but I can’t find it on the
internet. It is not even liked to his facebook page, which is all just climbing
photos.
Great post Sharman. Sounds like an awesome trip.
ReplyDeleteGreat post Sharman. Sounds like an awesome trip.
ReplyDelete