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| Toasting our arrival on the Playa Olas Atlas |
In late February, Dan and Caroline were kind
enough to Invite me and my wife, Nicola, to stay with them for a few days in Mazatlán.
On Caroline’s suggestion, we timed our visit with the Carnaval although I did
wonder whether we’d been invited to stay a full week. Nevertheless, that what Nicola
assumed when she booked the trip. Either way Dan and Caroline were generous
hosts the entire time making us feel completely at home.
Except for living as students for two months
in Shanghai for two months in 1984, the understanding of a place my wife and I
have gained through travel has always been superficial. We arrive. We utilize
the public transit. We eat at local restaurants. We visit the local highlights.
We leave. With our visit to Dan and Caroline, we were able to gain a deeper
understanding of what it’s like to be immersed in a culture by living in it for
half the year for seven years.
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| The "Girls," Ruby and Ginger |
During our visit, I accompanied Dan on a
number of walks. I would take Ginger and Ruby, two midsized cinnamon-coloured dogs
that Dan and Caroline were fostering. Their goal was to socialize the two dogs
so that they could be safely adopted into a new home. The theory was that they
were sisters however no one can be sure without DNA testing. They certainly acted
like sisters rough-housing and defending one another against perceived threats
(especially Ginger.) Ruby’s favourite trick was to hold Ginger’s back leg in
her mouth and attempt to pull her down. It never worked but they both enjoyed
the game.
While I held the leads of Ruby and Ginger,
Dan held Chico, a huge lab/mastiff cross and Luna, a short haired white dog
with brown spots who looks like a hefty greyhound. As we walk, Dan says hello
to all his neighbours. They all smile back and wave. Mazatlán is an
exceptionally friendly city and the expectation of anyone who meets your eye is
that you will acknowledge them with a hearty “hola” or, if not a “hola” at
least a friendly smile. Nicola and I found this to be a sharp contrast to the
haughty indifference of those living in Mexico City.
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| Dan and Caroline's Street |
Dan and I pass “Burro Park” with paths that
cross at alternative corners forming four diamond shaped patches of largely
dead grass. At one end of the park is a basketball court on which we not only witnessed
basketball being played but also girls and women dancercising. One morning, Dan
charged me with holding his dogs, Luna and Chico, while he cleaned the park of
garbage using leather work gloves and a large plastic bag. He inserted two of
these bags into two garbage dispensers built with metal strips that provide the
illusion of containing garbage but allowed much of the refuse deposited within to
slip through the cracks. This whole process took ten, maybe fifteen minutes
tops.
Interestingly enough, the park was still
largely devoid of garbage when I helped Dan take the dogs out for a walk on our
last day on Mazatlán. Perhaps there’s some truth the Broken
Window Theory
after all. Or else, the people in the area respect what Dan’s efforts and are
following his lead.
Dan pointed out the nets on the basketball
hoops. He told me that he’d replaced them. He said he’d asked Jorge, who lives next
to the basketball court, to purchase the nets for him. Then, Dan reimbursed the
man for the 300 pesos he claimed they cost. A year later the basketball nets
were again in tatters and Dan offered to replace them again. Jorge told him
where they could be purchased and Dan discovered the price to be 150 pesos, not
300. Dan says, “You know Len, these guys’ll
lie right to your face.” I guess a certain level of poverty results in a
certain
level of desperation. Or maybe, at first, Dan was the outsider and now he’s
not.
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| New Mazatlan Olympic Swimming Pool |
We arrived in Mazatlán on a Wednesday. On
Thursday, Caroline took Nicola and I swimming at the new municipal swimming
complex located next to the university. It had been decades since I’d been lane
swimming for the Masters’ Club in Edmonton and even longer for Nicola. We met
Caroline’s friend Sarah on the bus on the way. I was impressed with the
complex. It had a 25 metre diving pool and a 50 metre lane pool. I’ve never
been in a pool so technologically advanced. Instead of edges, the pool sloped
at the end to prevent backwash. The pool was deep throughout and a shallow
ledge allowed the swimmer a place to rest at each end. Yet, there wasn’t a
clock at the end of the pool so the coach of the club filling the majority of
lanes next to us was forced to yell out interval times to his swimmers.
I had an interesting conversation with Sarah
on the bus returning from our second day of swimming. She told me that she really
likes the ex-pat community of Mazatlán. She says it doesn’t matter what a
person did before arriving everyone gets along with everyone else. Like church,
I suggest and to my surprise, she says, exactly.
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| Street in old section |
She told me that she was writing a book in
German or about Germany, I forget. She said that when she needed to interview a
butcher, she was able to find just the person in Mazatlán. He’d lost the use of
his legs (or lost his legs, I’m not sure.) Anyway, she asked the man how safe
it was to eat the meat in the city. He replied that, in a modern slaughter
house, approximately 27 people will touch an individual piece of meat but where
he buys his meat, that number is just three. He said, “you figure out which is
safer.” Sarah told me about the reader’s theater. One of the expat actors for
the theater had performed on Broadway and for that reason, or others, the
theater would be packed for every performance.
Unfortunately, there wasn’t any readers’
theatre being performed while we were in Mazatlán. However, we did see a movie,
“Three Identical Strangers” with Caroline and Dan in the same, small “black
box” performance venue used for the plays. Fifty or sixty chairs sat on risers faced
a large white screen suspended from the ceiling at the front. We found four of
the few unoccupied seats about a third of the way up the risers. A few minutes later,
the “projectionist,” plugged his iPhone into the appropriate cable and the
movie began.
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| Central Square and Church |
There was a little hiccup partway through the
film when the projector stopped working. We could hear the sound but see
nothing. The “projectionist” checked the connection on his phone, tried the
remote for the projector perched on a platform above the audience yet couldn’t
diagnose the problem. Caroline suggested we just listen to the movie. Being a
documentary, we didn’t necessarily need the video and she did get murmurs of
approval from the 30 or 40 others in attendance. We’re in the process of
contemplating Caroline’s suggestion that the projector suddenly flicked back to
life and then out. That’s when Dan realized he’d been knocking the cord
attached to the wall plugin next his knee. We all cheered and continued viewing
a very good documentary about identical triplets separated at birth.
The next day Dan took Nicola and I to the dog
sanctuary where he and Caroline volunteer. Caroline stayed at home to complete
contract work she does for a website. Dan had arranged to pick up a number of
other volunteers at a local plaza. These included Bill, Donna and Simone. Bill
had been selling tickets for the movie we’d attended the previous night. Donna
was a retired lady and Simone was a sunburned German half a generation younger
than the rest of us.
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| Lupita's dogs |
The dog sanctuary is located on the outskirts
of Mazatlán, on the way to the airport and not far from the local prison. Lupita,
a fit, middle-aged Mexican woman, owned the land on which the sanctuary is
located. It had once been her family’s dairy farm. Now, she shared rooms above
an open car port with forty dogs. (Not a typo.) The rest of the dogs are housed
in different fenced areas according to their compatibility. A few that
generally get along with everyone are allowed to roam the courtyard. Of
particular attention for Nicola and I was a little dachshund with shiny, light
brown eyes. Knowing that our daughter might be looking for a dog when she moves
to Victoria, I asked Dan about her availability. Oh, she’s one of Lupita’s, Dan
says. Lupita’s allowed to keep eight for herself.
Dan made sure everyone who came to the
sanctuary had a job. Bill and I walked dots to the end of a dirt road, the
location of a few crudely built hovels around which children played amongst roaming
chickens and dogs tied to posts. Municipal police stood in the back of blue
pickups, their faces hidden by balaclavas holding large automatic weapons
prepared for attacks by any unseen enemies.
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| Some of the other dogs. |
After the walk, Dan assigned me to remove
rust from the frame of one of the old dog beds. Once the rust was removed, I
was go spray paint them black. Nicola washed dogs and then held a tiny poodle
suffering shivering from cold after receiving a treatment for mange and a bath.
Once a job was finished, Dan was quick to assign another. He checked on my work
with the dog bed frame a number of times, demonstrating the preferred method of
spray painting which I claimed to know but obviously didn’t. Quick strokes, he
told me. Otherwise, you get buildup and drips.
When the dog bed was painted and drying, Dan
instructed me to wash Tofu, a large mastiff tied up in the entrance area to the
sanctuary just inside the gate where our cars were parked. He suggested
that we bring Tofu into the common area to accomplish this task. Stefany, a
very slim middle-aged woman in dreadlocks said she wouldn’t bring Tofu into the
common area. Last time, they’d allowed Tofu in with the small dogs, she said there’d
been a serious altercation. Oh my god, I thought. What kind of task had Dan
assigned me? Simone, the “young German woman” had been bitten three times since
we’d arrived. (Caroline told us later that this was very unusual.)
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| Nicola with puppy at market |
So, we decided to wash in the entrance area
where he was tied up. Donna, another very committed volunteer at the dog
sanctuary, found a hose that would extend as far as the entrance and, with some
apprehension, I held Tofu while Nicola and Sefany bathed him. Tofu loved the
attention and showed absolutely no signs of aggression toward me or his
bathers. Upon completing the task, Dan suggested I take Tofu for a walk.
Accompanied by Nicola, I began my tug-a-war with this massive beast as he
attempted to drag me in all different directions off the road. They should sell
this as a workout, I joked with Nicola. We got nowhere near the end of the road
where I’d taken the other dog before we thought it best to return. So, like all
our other experiences in Mazatlán, our trip to the dog sanctuary proved to be a
very positive experience.
On the Saturday, we attended the Carnival Queen Coronation (Reina del Carnaval) which took place in the Venados Stadium where the local baseball team, the Venados de Mazatlán (Mazatlán Deer) play. Dan had attended one of the games which he said he enjoyed. He told me that when the team hadn’t paid the city rent for the use of the stadium, the water had been shut off. A number of singers and a small acoustic group played warm up to the event and then, a walkway down the middle of field was lit and out came the 2018 Carnival Queen in a long white gown waving to the crowd and crying as she made her way from the stage down the walkway and out of the stadium.
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| The history of Mexico in dance. |
The 2019 Carnival Queen followed an entourage
of beautiful boys and women into the stadium from the direction where the 2018
Queen had disappeared. Upon reaching the stage, they disappeared and then
reappeared on a high platform at the back. The queen sat in the middle while
her female entourage stood on either side. Then, we enjoyed a dance performance
celebrating the history of Mexico with changing costumes and backdrop to
represent the different eras. And then, fireworks, an intermission and the
featured performance by banda musicians and performers with a number of
singers, electric guitars, keyboards and brass. They played a lively set of
songs that the crowd loved with very few remaining in their seats for the
entire performance.
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| Old time crusher |
What visit to Mexico is complete without a
visit to a tequila distillery? Not being located in the tequila region, the
agave liquor we drank couldn’t be called tequila but it was. Situated in the
quiet hills just north of the city, the Los Osuna distillery was a lovely
retreat as well as an educational experience and a taste sensation. Jorge, an older man with excellent English,
guided us through the distillery nestled under the cool shade of tropical fruit
trees. We passed various machines used to crush agave over the ages. Vivaldi
played from speakers located next to these large wooden barrels where the agave
is left to ferment. Jorge told us that the music was good for the yeast. He
said different types had been tested and classical was considered the best. I
was skeptical so Nicola googled it later that night and discovered this claim
to be true or at least true enough that other distilleries did the same.
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| The vats serenaded by Vivaldi |
At the end of the tour, I wondered about the
location of an industrial size distillery like we’d seen at the Jose Cuervo
distillery in Tequila where we’d been a number of years ago. The, I realized,
this was it. Real artisan stuff where the workers apply the labels by hand and
write the lot number on each bottle.
We retired to the inevitable bar area that’s
part of every distillery and brewery we’ve visited (and we’ve visited many.) Seated
at benches behind a table constructed from a giant slab we sampled shots of the
distillery’s different types agave liquor. To our surprise, we all preferred
the younger Reposado to the older and more expensive Anejo with the lower
alcohol content to that made for export to the U.S. American laws require hard
liquor to have 40% alcohol per volume whereas their award-winning “tequila” is
only 37%. Stupid. Suffice it to say, Nicola and Caroline each purchased a
bottle of the Mexico Reposado.
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| Garden |
Dan and Caroline didn’t try to entertain us
all the time. One afternoon, we spent on Stone Island which isn’t an island besides
a rocky outcrop at one end of the peninsula. The beach stretches for miles
thirty some miles all the way to the airport. Dan suggested we visit the garden
just past the RV park situated on the beach filled with large motorhomes from
North of the border. The garden was closed but Nicola and I snuck in anyway.
Lush green vegetation surrounded two large pools. It was a nice retreat from
the usual bustle of Mexican life. Eventually, a gardener approached and said
something in Spanish and then made a call on his cell phone so we decided it
was time to leave.
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| Restaurant on beach |
We hung out for a couple of hours reading our
books, drinking beers, and munching on fried shrimp, tacos and fresh salsa in a
seaside restaurant. After a swim in lovely warm water protected from waves and
chop by the bay, we walked to the beauty of Mazatlán’s colonial downtown. We
spent a couple afternoons wandering the lovely old plazas with buildings
freshly painting in vibrant primary colours, visiting the shops and museums
and, of course, sipping margaritas.
Caroline told us that the Carnaval fireworks
were a must to see however she and Dan would not be attending. They’d stay with
the dogs who would be spooked by all the noise. We were told where to buy
tickets to reserve a rooftop view so that’s what we did. Dan said the fireworks
show commemorate a famous sea battle.
On the night of the Carnaval Combat Playa
Olas Atlas, dense crowds filled the coastal road called the Malecon and we were
relieved to have a spot on the roof of the Puerto Viejo Restaurant. Like almost every other firework display we’ve
been to, this one didn’t start on time. When, it did, it was of an intensity
like I’ve never seen before. Rockets swooshed and banged from different locations
on the coast and barges in the bay. When it finally ended, we all had to wipe fireworks
debris from our hair and shoulders. Amazing!
On our last night in this lovely city, we
watched the parade from the balcony of a restaurant at a table that Caroline
had reserved. As the sun set on the horizon over the water, Dan told us to
watch for the green light. “There’s a green light that will flash just before
the sun goes below the horizon,” he said. Unfortunately, on this particular
evening, it didn’t make itself visible to us.
The parade started after dark beginning an
acrobatic troop twirling batons, hula hoops and metal bars lit with fire. Very
impressive. Very professional. Not a drop made by one of them. Then the floats
appeared, lit from their multi-tiered top to bottom with carnival queens both
past and present waving from the decks with an entourage of beautiful men and
women. The most spectacular floats came at the end, one with an entire mariachi
band perched on a balcony built over the front of one of the floats. All the
floats were towing a generator.
In sum, our visit to Mazatlán was great.














