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I'm a woman entering "the third chapter" and fascinated by the journey.

Sunday, January 27, 2019

Maddening, Magical Merida


Yesterday, a friend made on my first trip to Merida in 2017 was thinking out loud about why she might not come back to this part of the world, though it ticks so many of the boxes of what she wants in a winter home: safe, affordable, warm, and full of accessible cultural activities. This year, the things that bother her (some of which I wrote about last year) have really bothered her: the barking dogs in most neighborhoods; the trash in the streets and on the sidewalks in so many areas;  the occasional burning of said trash, even in the city; the lack of promptness in many aspects of life; the crowds; the noise--from traffic, from the music that nearly every store plays at great volume, from celebrations that go on late into the night; from fireworks being set off for no apparent reason other than--hey, fireworks! 

I get it. Not being generally a city mouse, I find myself ready for quiet and green, open spaces when I head back north in the spring. The older parts of this old city are densely populated, and renovated homes sit cheek-by-jowl with piles of rubble as older construction is either rebuilt or replaced by concrete block--eventually.



Of course, old has its charms. Merida is full of historic churches



and the Beaux Arts confections that find their way into every tourist guidebook. (This one now houses an anthropology museum.)



And I must confess to being amused by this fierce watchdog wearing a pink pinafore.



Merida is a city of contradictions, as I suspect most are: wealth and poverty rubbing elbows as elderly beggars sit holding styrofoam cups in the city's restaurant and entertainment districts; beautiful colonial buildings reflecting centuries of exploitation and attempted genocide; civic pride in diversity at the same time that the descendants of the region's indigenous people are disproportionately impoverished; pampered designer dogs paraded on the Paseo while not-so-lucky canines and felines scrounge for garbage in less tony neighborhoods. 


And yet--this is a place that grabs the heart and the imagination. Every January brings a festival commemorating the city's less-than-admirable founding when the Spanish marauders of the Montejo family seized control of the Maya city known as T'ho and used the stones of its pyramids to build its cathedral, streets, and homes. For three weeks, the city's parks, streets, theaters, museums, and even shopping centers play host to arts events of most imaginable types, all of them free to anyone willing to brave the crowds (and the Plaza Grande does get crowded when Cirque du Soleil or Willie Colón performs).  Even during non-festival times, free live music is available in various parks every night of the week and on Sunday afternoons. Anyone who can afford a bus ticket (eight pesos unless one has a discount, in which case the fare is three pesos--or about sixteen cents) can find a bench, chair, or standing spot and get lost in music and spectacle--or join the dance, which lots of Meridanos seem to do.


A real lure of Merida, though, is the day-to-day life here. A walk in any ordinary area can reveal treasures, like a mural turning an ordinary small house into a tropical fantasy,





 or one of children playing that carries an important message, 


or a bronze sculpture of the spirit of ceiba, sacred tree of the Maya, out for everyone to enjoy in front of a government office tucked away on a mostly residential street.


The people are part of the magic as well. People here greet strangers on the street (rather like the Mid-Ohio Valley in Mexico, to be honest), and have no problem with elderly gringas admiring their children or their dogs. Strangers met on park benches share their stories and have thus far been totally kind despite the language barrier.  Taxi drivers share their insights and include language lessons as part of the fare. Downtown often features buskers, ranging from a truly amazing drum group to young breakdancers to living statues to a guitarist who lost his legs in a work accident in the US and shares songs and smiles in front of various theaters. A favorite example of the spirit of this place: heading back to the guesthouse, I admired the sunflowers of a neighbor who was sweeping her patio. In our mixed languages, I shared the sad information that sunflowers have a short season in Ohio and was informed that in Merida they grow todo el año porque hay mucho sol. Before I left, my new gardening buddy pressed two ripe seedheads into my hands, which I passed on to the owner of our guesthouse, who will now have sunflowers in her impressive tropical garden.


I can't not love this place.






Sunday, January 13, 2019

Flores de Yucatan, part 1

This winter finds me back in the Yucatan, which has far better winter weather than Ohio generally does (unless one is a fan of rain, mud, snow, ice, and gray skies with occasional bursts of sun). This morning my perambulation took me to Parque de las Americas, a large park in the Garcia Gineres neighborhood of Merida, home to bigger-than-average trees for this city. The park is worth its own post, but my color-hungry Northern eyes are focusing on flowers this week.

This lovely thing is growing in a neighbor's yard,


up a wall, and out over the sidewalk.


It was also full of bees, though none were willing to hold still long enough to permit much of a photo.


Thanks to the sharp eyes of a participant in a plant identification group on Facebook, this beautiful mystery-to-me plant was quickly identified as Petrea volubilis, or purple wreath vine, native to much of Central America, including the Yucatan peninsula. Not only are its flowers gorgeous in multiple stages of their existence,


they are attractive to butterflies and hummingbirds, as well as the bees I saw darting among the bloom clusters. The plant is also a traditional medicinal, with its leaves used as a wound salve and in the treatment of diabetes. In earlier times, its blooms were combined with those of another native shrub in a tea used as a morning-after drug by women seeking to avoid pregnancy.

The plant is useful even in death. Its wood is reportedly dry, fast-burning, and useful as fuel. Queen's vine (another common name for the plant) is definitely more than another pretty face.