A hot-weather story on a cold and snowy day

It's snowing. It's been snowing here for three days now. As I sit in my squeaky rocking chair in the big-windowed alcove where I blog, I can see only black, white and gray outside the window. Black branches rimmed with thick lines of white. A gray squirrel puffed up and huddled in a treetop. The wind scoops the powdery snow off the roof of our neighbor's house and scatters it in small explosions in the air.
In a little while, I will have to go and shovel. Again.
But before I do, maybe we need another little getaway. Somewhere warm, this time. How about Mexico?
Playing Chinese checkers
with the Mexican military
The first time Joey and I went to Mexico--we have been there twice--I was astounded by the commerce. By the people who mobbed us on the sidewalk, trying to sell us baskets and pottery; by the children who followed us, plaintively trying to sell us Chiclets; by their thin, tired mothers, who sat on blankets surrounded by silver jewelry; by the middle-aged men who took our arms and guided us across the street, unasked, and then wanted money for it; by the photographers who took our picture as we read on the beach and then got angry when we did not want to buy the images.
Yes, we were in Acapulco. I am really not sure what I had expected. It was 1989; I'd never considered going to Mexico before; I'd never been anywhere warm. It was a spur-of-the-moment, let's get away from Duluth in endless winter, Sun Country is having a sale, kind of trip. I guess I had not expected anything, really, except warmth and sunshine.
We stayed at the Hotel Tortuga. Our room had a balcony that overlooked a narrow dirt path that led to a tin-roofed shack and a yard with chickens and a donkey. I liked to hang over the balcony and stare into the yard and wonder who lived there; occasionally, you'd see a small child dart by, but mostly it was very quiet except for the roosters.
The dirt path was bordered on the far side with a high wooden fence. Vendors from the main street walked down the path and stood in front of the wall with great regularity. Once, when I was out on the balcony, snooping on them, one of them turned and waved.
Later, I met him on the street. He was selling baskets. I did not recognize him, but he remembered me. With hand gestures, laughter and smiles, he indicated that he had seen me earlier, on the balcony. This was embarrassing, because I had only just realized why they all kept visiting the wall -- the vendors had to pee somewhere.
His baskets were decorated with giant straw flowers and fol-de-rol, and I tried to walk away, but he stopped me. He dug around for awhile on his cart and came up with an absolutely plain straw basket, beautifully and tightly woven. I smiled broadly and bought it. And vowed to stay off my balcony for the rest of the trip. (A note on the craftsmanship: That basket is almost 20 years old, and it is still in good shape.)
For three days, Joey and I hung out on the tourist beach by our hotel, reading in the sun, buying sweet blue and red drinks from a cart, admiring the aquamarine sea, wondering if we would ever dare to try parasailing (we wouldn't).
But the guide book indicated another beach, a local beach. A quieter beach. And so on our third or fourth day, off we went.
This beach was, indeed, far less touristy. Mexican families lounged in beach chairs. Small children ran and shrieked in the sand. There were juice carts here, too, but nobody took our picture, and nobody asked us for money.
We decided to take a glass-bottomed boat tour of the lagoon. We packed into the turquoise boat with dozens of Mexican families and it chugged out into the impossibly blue-green water, headed for a small island.
A man poled next to us in a small flat-bottomed boat, loaded with souvenirs. Joey and I laughed.
The island was small and rocky. Most of the families spread their towels out on the rocks and opened up their lunch baskets. Joey and I decided to take a walk. We followed a path over the rocks and to the top of the hill, where we came across a small cinderblock building, and young men. Young men with guns.
We stopped.
They smiled.
We smiled back. We were afraid not to.
They looked very young. Two had machine guns slung over their shoulders, and two wore pistols strapped to their hip. They spoke a bit of English. We spoke a bit of Spanish. They wanted to know where our husbands were. Back at the hotel, we said. Napping. (From what we knew of husbands--which we didn't have--that seemed plausible.)
We chatted for awhile. They had heard of Minnesota. They knew it was cold. How were we liking Mexico?
After a while, one of the men went into the building and came out with a Chinese checkers set. Ah. A true common language!
We played game after game. Each of them wanted a chance to play with each of us. The sun beat down. We were hot and laughing. We were playing Chinese checkers with young men with machine guns. We assume they were National Guard, or possibly the local police, but the details of who they were and why they were armed were never made clear.
When it was time to go, we stood up and made our goodbyes. The men were polite--except for one. He tried to detain us. He wanted to meet us later. No, no, we said. Our husbands...
He followed us down the path, over the rocks, to the beach. He tried to stop us from getting in the boat. But there were many people around, and even though he had a gun, we weren't afraid. Adios! we said. Gracias para Chinese checkers!
And we got back in the boat and headed for the mainland.
The rest of the trip was a blur of touristy events: We went to Festiva night at the hotel, where men in embroidered pants played guitars and sang. Someone plopped giant velvet sombreros on our heads and took our picture; that one, we bought, if only to destroy the evidence. We went to a bullfight. We went to watch the cliff divers. We took a cab to a nearby village that was famous for its sunsets, and lounged in woven hammocks and drank Coronas.
And every now and then, we looked at each other with amazement and said, Did we really play checkers with five men with guns?
A note on the photos: The top photo I took on Saturday morning in our park.
All the others are from that trip; most were taken by Joey. You can see the Peeing Wall behind me in the balcony picture, and if you look hard you can see the little house at the top of the steep path, and you can see the donkey.


















25 comments:
Great story. It is nice here. The nice thing with snow in March is you know it won't last long. I have never been to Mexico. I haven't travelled too far from home since having kids, but hopefully will go a little more when they are older and moved out.
Fascinating. I love any story where people get to go to the beach, enjoy the sun and drink Coronas. Damn, I could do with a beach holiday. There's no snow in Paris although there was hail yesterday. The Frog Queen and the froglets are in the Auvergne with the in-laws and there's a fair bit of snow there.
Brrrr.
You look so pale among all of those young Mexican men. That sounds like a fun holiday.
Scary story about the one gun-toting who followed you. I wonder, have we all felt in danger at some time? Other than the obvious and most likely danger of road accident?
You have had the most fascinating adventures. I have had Coronas with gun toting Americans but we all worked for the same Department at the time...lol.
Thanks once again for sharing your past - and your present with me.
I am sad to say that most of my trips to Mexico have been ruined by people pushing their wares upon me. I hate it! I want to wear a shirt that says NO! I don't want to buy anything!
You never know with young gun-toting guys. My bother was travelling through Guatemala and got pulled off a bus by guys with machine guns. They took his passport and held them all at gunpoint for hours....he was terrified. I'm so relieved I still have him....consider yourself lucky too!
You just never know when you are in a foreign country. Look at the case of our Canadian woman in the mexican jail for 2 years without even being charged with something....scary!
All that aside - it sure is wonderful to lay on a beach in the hot sun when you know your house is under the snow. Which btw - you have far more than we do!
We've been to Mexico-touristy places like Cabo San Lucas on the Pacific side and Costa Maya and Cozumel on the Caribbean. In Cabo, we saw three little girls in colorful dresses coming toward us and I thought "what a picture" until they tried to thrust little bracelets on us. We saw Cozumel twice, before and after the hurricane that destroyed much of the resort area. I photographed workers who were cleaning the beaches of debris, and they got kind of upset with me. Anyway--good for you going off the beaten path. That's when you really have interesting adventures.
That was a great adventure story! Men with guns are to be avoided at all costs, in my limited experience, but leave it to youth to be able to have some fun and live to tell the tale! Was it the confidence of youth, or would you do it again?
we had a more frightening experience on this trip than the encounter with the soldiers.
it took place in the village where we went to see the sunset.
i'll tell that some time, too.
You are SO much braver than I am. So much!
I read this story with a sense of danger in it. Probably my own imagination, because I have been to Mexico and never felt as if I were in danger, but that was in Baja California, Cabo San Lucas.
I do love the Mexican people and their smiles and generosity. I had always wanted to learn to speak Spanish, but never did.
I hope you tell us more of these kinds of stories. They are great!
This is one of the times when it's good to have a travel buddy. At least you prevented an international incident by being able to play Chinese checkers--I'd be in big trouble.
I love the way you leave those little teasers. . ."Maybe I'll tell you about that sometime." Just say when!
You do live dangerously, Laurie! What a story. Can't wait for that other, even more dangerous one, now.
Wow! Checkers with armed Mexicans. You are always surprising me with your adventures. Keep them coming!
Great story Laurie, it warmed me up on a cold day in France, I'm bored with the cold now.
I was pulled over at gun point in Northern Ireland, very scarey. A customer had given me a sack of sweepings from his jewellery workshop for me to take back to the bullion dealers I worked for for refining. I was pulled over at a check point and asked for ID, so I said "yeah sure I have my drivers license in the boot (trunk)". As I opened the boot I looked at the sack in horror, in big letters it said FERTILISER (a component used in bombs). I was dragged of to the side, they started stripping my car. I finally got them to make some phone calls to my office and the customer and stopped them from ripping open the bag all over the road. All my customer could do was laugh!
That's a great story Laurie. I found it impossible to enjoy the beach in Acapulco, you are constantly bothered by someone trying to sell you something. They can get very nasty when you refuse. My worst experience was outside the front of my hotel, when a very poor woman tried to sell me her baby. I was shocked and ran like crazy. I was told she was really setting me up for a pickpocket.
I visit family in Mexico, Laurie, and the contrast between the abject poverty and extreme wealth never fails to get to me. I've been taken to places that are so dangerous with people living in such appalling conditions. I don't know what the answer is.
Your stories are wonderful and can't wait to hear the next!
XO
WWW
Too scary for us! We'd rather be napping.
patience, i'm not brave. i'm stupid.
thanks, irene. i have another one coming up from that trip.... stay tuned....
faye, babaloo--joey made me more adventurous. but i saved her skin. wait til the next story...
leslie, i hope you meet nobody with guns while you're in london!
lehners in france: now that is a scary story. really. those checkpoints are not to be toyed with. glad they listened and made the phone call. wows.
jan, we never saw anything that dramatic. but yes, there are people everywhere trying to make money off the tourists. and yet when you look up that little dirt path and see the donkey and the tin-roofed shack and the barefoot kids, you can see why. very complicated.
but pickpocketing, no. that's definitely the wrong way to do it.
wisewebwoman: exactly so. they need our tourist dollars. but ....
riley and tiki: that's the best solution of all!
naptime!
The universal communication of Chinese Checkers. Who knew. Those pictures make me long for warm beaches.
You have certainly had some wonderful adventures!
I LOVE this story and the photos. I want to go to Mexico RIGHT NOW.
That first picture is brilliant!
sounds a great adventure laurie! Not one to forget.
Check my Mazatlan, Mexico blog for photo essays on this wonderful Mexican city. Loved your story and your energy!
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