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- From: mvb@chopin.udel.edu (Maurice V. Barnhill)
- Newsgroups: rec.backcountry
- Subject: Re: Yucatan Ideas Sought
- Message-ID: <By0xDw.A3t@news.udel.edu>
- Date: 20 Nov 92 16:49:08 GMT
- References: <122440208@hpfcso.FC.HP.COM>
- Sender: usenet@news.udel.edu
- Organization: University of Delaware
- Lines: 52
- Nntp-Posting-Host: chopin.udel.edu
-
- In article <122440208@hpfcso.FC.HP.COM> jbaker@hpfcso.FC.HP.COM (Jim Baker) writes:
- >I'm looking for suggestions on locations in the Yucatan penninsula for
- >camping, snorking/scuba, Mayan ruin touring, and as little tourista exposure
- >as possible. My current thoughts are:
- > - fly to Cancun
- > - bus to Playa Del Carmen (try and find inexpensive lodging)
- > - day bus trips to Tulum
- > - day trips to Cozumel
- >
- >Can anyone suggest other locations? Variations? General "heads-up"s?
- >Jim Baker
- >baker@fc.hp.com
- I can't comment much about snorkeling but I know a bit about the Mayan
- ruins, so here goes. There are three major ruins readily reached from Cancun,
- Chichen Itza, Tulum, and Coba'. The first two are very crowded but worth the
- annoyance. Chichen is a very large site, largely cleared and restored. You
- can get guided tours in English, and you can and should go inside the major
- pyramid. Tulum is one of very few (perhaps the only major site) Mayan centers
- that had walls, and so is well worth seeing. The site is relatively small, but
- it is on the Caribbean and there are beautiful views from the wall along the
- sea. My favorite by far is Coba. The site is huge and generally uncleared
- except around the front of a few major structures. There are trails from
- one site to another, and every "hill" you see is an unexcaveted building.
- There are still many stelae intact, compared to very few at the other sites.
- There is also an overgrown Mayan road with a trail along the top for access.
- Altogether, very nice.
- There are small ruins at Cancun and Cozumel, but they aren't very much
- to look at.
- Further afield, there are several sites (especially Uxmal) in the northern
- Yucatan which are worth visiting. So is Palenque, in south-eastern Chiapas.
- There are some cheap places to stay at Playa del Carmen, but the quality
- isn't terrific.
- When we were on Cozumel, we hired a taxi to get around, so I don't know
- much about the bus system, if any. You get to Cozumel on a passenger ferry
- from Playa del Carmen, arriving at the major business district. The taxis are
- in a line, and you take the next one. Most drivers do not speak English,
- so you need Spanish. I suspect that there would be dive shops on Cozumel
- although we did not look for them. Diving is a major tourist industry on Isla
- Mujeres, which you might want to look into.
- As far as "turista" is concerned, DRINK NO WATER no matter what you are
- told is safe. If you drink soft drinks (completely safe), use no ice (sin
- hielo). Water is probably OK after being treated with iodine, but the ice
- continually pours cysts and such into the drink faster that the iodine can
- kill them. Beer, etc., is OK. Iced drinks are usually not OK, especially
- outside the major, expensive hotels. Avoid all vegetables unless you see them
- peeled or they are thoroughly cooked, since washing vegetables contaminates
- them. With reasonable care, however, there is no problem.
-
- --
- >|< Maurice Barnhill < | >
- < | > mvb@brahms.udel.edu University of Delaware >|<
- >|< FAF00911@UDELVM.BITNET Newark DE < | >
-