Thursday, November 26, 2015

November




























Evboy has been here for a little vacation.  The days have been lovely and easy.  A little hiking, biking, sunset watching, doctor visiting, patio sitting, international waterski championship enjoying, cable stringing, dog loving, eating and drinking. A perfect 10 days.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

A short post about our Sunday food shopping



We had to run in to "town" (Chapala) on an errand this morning so we stopped for eggs benedict, bacon and cappuccino at a French restaurant next door to the open air market.  Evboy is coming down, Evdad wanted to stock up on good food before he gets here so we don't have to waste precious time doing the mundane.  Breakfast with a generous tip was 300 pesos=18 dollars.

I stopped for a big bag of vegetables to make salsa and snagged a pineapple, too.  85 pesos=5 dollars

We bought a kilo (roughly 2 pounds) of bacon, and a half kilo of homemade sausage. 127 pesos=7.61 dollars

We moseyed around the corner to our favorite beef butcher to buy a couple of steaks and ended up with the entire filet.  After Ev cut off 8 steaks, we bundled up the rest into a packet to make carne guisada or a stir fry. 333 pesos=19.96 dollars

I bought 18 gladiola stems and she wrapped them in the white nubes for me. 110 pesos-5.70 dollars

Ev is sitting right next to me-he, of course, can remember the prices.  He said for you to stand by-tomorrow he'll take a picture of his (40 peso-2.40 dollar) 5 carnita taco plate  that he usually finishes off with a 20 peso hamburguesa. He says, "now THAT's a deal"

This is our life.

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Meanwhile, back at the Ponderosa.

Click on the pictures. For some reason, they're being cropped.  Our little village of Ixtlahuacan isn't a tourist attraction, though it is regionally known to throw good parties.  I learned this from a taxi driver (where all reliable information is generated).  We have a panteon, or cemetery, across the highway.  My friend Karen and I went to check it out the week before Dia de los Muertos to see it as families were preparing for the celebration.  It was a beautiful cool and clear day.  Not much was happening, but there were a few graves being tended lovingly and the maintenance men were cleaning up the grounds. The graves are so wonderful, everybody does what they can afford.
 This one might be my favorite.


 Having a little sink hole problema.





 The papel picado this family is hanging on their child's grave is much like Buddhist prayer flags.

When we got home from Patzcuaro we heard that Ixtla's DdlM party had been cancelled due to rain. Ixtla doesn't have a newspaper, we've always wondered if the whacky church bells were sending out morse code because everyone seems to know what the heck is going on except for us.  Turns out, all important village announcements are made by a guy driving around with a speaker on his hood.   We stumbled on the rescheduled celebration by accident.There was a Catrina contest, a desfile of allegorical cars and a beautiful exhibit of altars.This young lady's mother was pushing for a win.  The young lady wasn't having it.
I asked this young lady if I could take her picture and it turned out to be a dude. He made his costume out of loteria fabric and Barbie dolls.
 Her costume was made out of chip bags.
 I'd be so freaking crabby if I was dressed like this for hours.  She was loving the attention.


In Mexico, safety always comes first.  The men were cutting down a big sign wired to poles.  The driver backed the truck up with the basked loaded and extended. No one flinched.

The altars.  They must include certain elements, I intend to know more by next year. I noticed salt, mirrors and booze in each one. You can read that one gal is noted for having the first answering machine in Ixtla. Yeah!




The murmurings are back. They disappeared over the summer.
Finally, we walked home in the dusk.  The streets are always filled with kids: roping, pitching pennies, throwing rocks at each other, playing marbles, tormenting the dogs.  Just bein' kids.