MEXICO
February 27 – March 4, 2008
The pictures from this trip can be found at
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/n0e8rft77mnfeot/ObzzcALRyx
Wednesday, February 27
We
went to San Francisco Airport in a private limo—we had a coupon with a very
good deal and with three of us (including my father), this was no more
expensive than the shuttle van. At the
airport we met Ryan’s parents Ron and Alberta, his grandmother Katherine, and
his brother Kevin and sister-in-law Katie.
His (great) aunt Margaret had fallen and hurt her ankle and was unable
to make the trip.
We
flew Alaska Airlines to Los Angeles International, where we met Steph, Ryan, Jenn, Emily, friends
Art and Kim, Daria, and Camille and her daughter
Brooke. We all got on the Alaska
Airlines flight to Zihuatanejo, flying right along
the east shore of the Sea of Cortez (Gulf of California). Mark was already at the airport when we
arrived, having flown in through Dallas and Mexico City, and met us as we got
through customs.
Steph
and Ryan rented a van, the rest of us got into two big SUV taxis. We stopped at a WalMart-like
store in town for groceries and supplies.
(We didn’t know the resort rooms didn’t come with Kleenex, napkins, or
paper towels.)
We
drove to Troncones Beach (http://www.zihua-ixtapa.com/zihua/beaches/troncones.shtml,
http://www.troncones.net/), about 30
miles north of town, along a two-lane road and then a side road to the beach,
where the road was unpaved. We checked
into the resort, the Casa de la Sirena (House of the
Mermaid, http://www.casadelasirena.net/). Dad, Kevin, Katie, Art, and Kim were a short
way down the beach at Mi Casa Su Casa (http://www.hoteltroncones.com/index), which is actually a hotel with a bar and restaurant and
which takes credit cards. Because of
various delays, dinner at Casa de la Sirena was
served after dark, so my little travel flashlight was essential.
There
had been an offshore storm, and the ocean was very rough the entire week. The tap water is not drinkable, there was a
water dispenser in the room and we also bought bottled water.
Troncones
is a small village centered around tourism, at least
in the winter (October to March).
Surfing is good at the area though apparently not at Troncones
itself—the beach is too rocky. (Bumper
sticker: “Troncones is a small drinking village with
a surfing problem”)
Dad’s
room at Mi Casa Su Casa did not have a kitchen or even a refrigerator, so he
ate almost all his meals at the hotel restaurant. He took cabs to and from the Casa de la Sirena when he needed to be there. We had bought crackers and cheese for him for
snacks but there was no place to keep the cheese.
Thursday, February 28
For
breakfast we fixed some instant oatmeal we had bought in town the day
before. It wasn’t very good.
On
Thursday and Friday, most of the ladies had manicures and pedicures.
Steph
and Ryan were in town all day, working on the photographer, music, flowers, the
officiant, etc., for the wedding. They had intended to pick up the supplies that we didn’t know the day before that we would
need, but didn’t have time and were late even so.
Lunch
was at the Casa, very informal. We had
planned to engage two cooks for the week but only one was available so those
staying at the hotel were on their own for most meals. Chips and some fixings (dips etc.) were
served at the Casa at 4 PM most days.
The
rehearsal dinner was at the hotel restaurant.
Some other guests had arrived—Alex and Alicia from Arizona and a friend
who now lives on Aruba. The Alaska
Airlines plane with Amy, Ali, and Steph (White) Berner had to turn around and go back to Los Angeles, so
they did not arrive until very late.
Sandy
had a very good massage. The lady spent
some extra time working on her back so we gave her a small extra tip, but she
thought that was all she was being paid.
Stephanie had arranged to prepay all the massages, manicures, and
pedicures, including regular tip, so we surmounted the language barrier and
straightened out the misunderstanding.
Friday, February 29
Sandy
had to pay $400 cash for the mariachis for the wedding, so somehow we were
running out of cash. ($50 for groceries
and supplies + $100 to Jenn + I had $100 = ?) Nobody takes
traveler’s checks so I had to arrange to go into town with the Casa owner to
cash some. He dropped me at Banamex while he did his errands. It was the day before payday and the bank was
very crowded. They use a take-a-number
system and there were 100 people ahead of me.
It took over an hour. They cashed
my checks but would not take one of Ryan’s that he had signed over to me.
As
a result of this errand I had to miss my planned surfing lesson. But apparently the conditions were not good
for novices anyway.
Mark
and I walked to the hotel for breakfast with my dad. Mark took his computer but the wireless
connection was almost unusable. While we
were eating, Amy, Ali, and Steph (W) B. came in—they
had arrived late the night before.
Later
in the day I was able to use Ryan’s computer and the wireless at the Casa to
catch up on my e-mail and the news.
Most
people walked to lunch at the hotel but I did not have time as I had to be
ready for the ride into town.
Mark
and Jenn went to dinner at Costa Brava while Sandy
and I baby-sat Emily.
My dad took their place at the Casa dinner. Ryan gave him a ride back to the hotel. Steph and Ryan gave
the guests gifts; we got a lovely local painted wood platter. Emily was tired and fussy but eventually went
to sleep. Sandy and Steph
worked on the wedding gown, which had not been properly fitted.
I
walked to the little store near the junction of the beach road and the access
road to the airport highway and bought Kleenex and some Pepsi Light. The wedding rehearsal was on the beach, and
we picked the location for the chuppa.
Saturday, March 1 – Wedding
day
There
was no formal breakfast as such. Sandy
cooked bratwurst and eggs for most of us.
We ran out of eggs but Camille had more.
I borrowed Steph’s computer again and got a
good connection at the Casa. I
interrupted my computer session to help the Casa owners install a printer on
their new Vista computer. (They had a CD
with only XP drivers so they would have to download Vista drivers from the HP
web site; but apparently Vista knows how to download its own drivers, so once I
turned the computer on and connected the printer cable, the printer installed
itself.)
I
walked back to the little store for more Kleenex and Pepsi Light. I took a quick swim and a nap.
I
changed into my new suit for pictures and the wedding. The Sur family had pictures taken at the
hotel at 4:00; dad rode to the Casa with the photographer. Steph had some
trouble with her gown and we were late starting our 4:45 photo session at the
Casa. We were at least 15 minutes late
starting the wedding but the guests sitting in folding chairs in the hot sun on
the beach held up. The intended officiant, Francisco, would not perform a Jewish wedding so
his nephew officiated.
The
ceremony itself was very beautiful, on the beach in the late afternoon
sunshine. I walked Stephanie down the
“aisle” of mats on the sand. There was
hardly a dry eye in the house, including the bride and groom.
The
post-wedding photo sessions also ran late.
Appetizers,
drinks, and dinner followed. Although I
had rehearsed the father-daughter dance with a professional instructor in San
Jose and with Stephanie, we could not do the planned “twirls” because of her
gown. The Casa owners joined us after
dinner for dancing. Emily slept through
the incredible noise.
Sandy
left the party around 10 PM. I left
around 10:30. After 11, I asked the DJ
to turn the volume down a bit. After
that, people began jumping or being pushed into the pool, including Steph, Ryan, and the photographer. All was quiet by 1 AM.
Sunday, March 2
Mark
left by taxi about 8 AM for the airport to return to Knoxville for work Monday
morning. I walked with Sandy, Camille,
and Brooke to the hotel for breakfast with dad.
We took a taxi back. Dad came to
the Casa for lunch, replacing Mark. We
had lots of leftover wedding cake and tarts.
Again I took a nap and a swim, followed by a shower. I borrowed the computer again and caught up
on the news and e-mail.
We
had dinner and a good live show at El Burro Borracho
(The Drunken Donkey).
Monday, March 3
We
had some more of the packaged oatmeal for breakfast. We walked to the hotel to make arrangements
for lunch—dad was going to bring a cab to the Casa at 1:00 and we were going to
go to Costa Brava. But we changed our
minds and went to the Inn at Manzanillo Bay (http://www.manzanillobay.com/), a few
miles to the north (where the surfing lessons had taken place). Jenn and Emily came
with us. Ryan and Steph
went into town with his parents and grandmother to finish paying the bills.
The
Inn has a spectacular beach on Manzanillo Bay where
surfing is better than at Troncones. The Inn hostess fell in love with Emily and
took her for a while. On the taxi ride
back, my camera disappeared
We
had the last dinner at the hotel. My dad
joined us and we found some Scotch for him.
Tuesday, March 4
We
walked to the Costa Brava, which is also taxi central, to ask whether my camera
had been found. Shortly thereafter the
taxi manager appeared at the Casa with the camera. He turned down a $50 reward but took $20 for
himself and $20 for the driver. It
turned out that all the pictures on the memory card in the camera were
gone. When we got home, I tried to look
at the card on the computer but still saw nothing. A professional data recovery service was able
to recover the pictures, which indicates that they were not intentionally
erased but perhaps the heat in the taxi had caused the problem.
The
taxi manager mentioned that he was able to provide taxis to take us to the
airport. I said that we had made
arrangements. He said his cabs had not
been reserved, and that cabs from elsewhere could drop people they had picked
up at the airport but could not take them back, and
vice versa for his cabs. After much
discussion among Mike (Casa owner), Ryan, and Steph,
it turned out we had indeed asked for foreign cabs and needed local ones. The manager arranged for four. So if I had not lost my camera, we would
probably have been unable to return to the airport.
We
continued packing. Sandy fixed breakfast
for Jenn and we minded Emily. We went to the hotel for lunch with Dad, Jenn, Emily, Camille, Brooke, Ron, Alberta, Ryan, Steph, and Grandma.
We took dad back to the Casa with his suitcase, where the cabs arrived
at 2 PM as scheduled. Somehow we got all
the bags and all the people loaded and got to the airport before 3:00.
Jenn, Steph, Ryan, Art, Kim, Camille, and Brooke flew to Los
Angeles. Besides us, Ron, Alberta, and
Grandma flew to San Francisco nonstop.
(Kevin and Katie had left on Sunday).
All flights were on time.
Although
there is a lot of poverty, the village really did not look third world. Most vehicles were clean and in apparent good
repair. The road was dirt but
maintained, at least during the dry season.
It
was a very relaxing week away from telephones, television, and radio. It was much warmer than we were used to for
February but not uncomfortably hot.
(Humid, though.) All in all, it
was a very good experience to add to our lives—especially the wedding.