D.F. equals Distrito Federal
One of the biggest perks of this job is all the friends we
make who disperse around the world. Last
January, we got to spend a few days in Paris with a friend from my orientation
class who was posted there. And this
January, we got to spend a few days in Mexico City with friends from Belize who
now work there. Our friends were kind
enough to let us stay with them in their fantastic Polanco apartment and
explore their new city for a few days.
Neither Andrew nor I had previously visited Mexico City so it was all
new to us. And after a year in little ol’
Belmopan, it was a wonder to all our senses.
Museums! Theaters! Grocery stores with aisles and aisles of
CHEESE! Oh, the civilization!
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So many jello molds! |
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So many flowers! |
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So many wheels of cheese bigger than my head! |
We were only there for a long weekend, but we covered a lot
of ground to try to take in as much civilization as we could. We started with taking in some ancient
civilization by visiting the National Museum of Anthropology. It was an impressive – and huge! – collection
of artifacts that could have kept us busy for a full day. But we hit the highlights and moved on to
another national museum, Chapultepec Castle.
It was a Sunday, when all the national museums have free entry for
Mexican nationals and residents, and they came out in droves. I think the entire population of Belize equaled
the number of people we encountered in the museums we visited that day.
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Aztec artifacts at the National Museum of Anthropology. |
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A beautiful iron gate at Chapultepec Castle. |
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Oh the humanity! |
We spent our second day walking through some of the artisan
markets and neighborhoods around Zócalo plaza, where the Metropolitan
Cathedral is located. It was hard to
find a right angle or straight line on the cathedral or any of the old
buildings surrounding the plaza – a sign of the earthquakes and shifting ground
in this part of the world. The markets
surrounding the plaza were fascinating too.
Do you need a part to repair some small electronic device? There’s a street that has nothing but parts
and wires and anything you might need for your job. What about fabric? Want to make a dress? The next block over from the electrical
repair street is storefront-after-storefront of fabrics.
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Checking out an artisan market. |
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And I do mean artisan. These guys were making guitars on the spot. |
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Zócalo plaza and the Metropolitan Cathedral. |
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An amazing pipe organ inside the cathedral. |
Two full days in Mexico City and we barely made a dent in
all there is to do there. But we had
some amazing meals, got to visit with good friends, and had a full dose of big
city life to hold us over until we’re back in a city with more than 15,000
people again.
D.F. also equals Dense Forest
Less than a month after visiting Mexico City, I visited a
village on the complete opposite end of the spectrum called Red Bank. It’s a Mayan community about 2 hours south of
Belmopan, and from January-March every year, flocks of scarlet macaws call the
forest around Red Bank home. I went down
for the weekend with a few other friends to check out the show. I’d happened upon a flock of macaws last May
when I spent the weekend at an Audubon Society camp in the Cockscomb forest, but
when a friend was organizing this trip, I wasn’t going to pass up an
opportunity to see them again. And I
wasn’t disappointed. After spending the
night in a thatch hut “bed and breakfast,” we got up early to meet our guide
and take an hour-ish hike into the forest.
As we neared a clearing we could hear squawking, and then, right on cue,
there they were. Flying rainbows above
the forest canopy. We watched them from
a few viewpoints for a couple hours and then headed back. Some days in Belize are magical, and seeing
scarlet macaws flying free was one of those days.
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First bird spotted on the hike was... a toucan. |
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You don't see flocks of macaws flying around like this every day! |
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Their colors are spectacular against the green forest. |
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Looking out over the village. |