Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Why I Love Guanajuato




As the end of our Guanajuato trip approached, it was the first time I could remember that I really didnt want to leave. What's not to like?  Sunny days, long relaxed lunches, music concerts, the Jardin de la Union, attempts at speaking Spanish.  Everyone seems to love Guanajuato, and the Mexicans are justly proud of this jewel of a city.  http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/482/

Only a few of my friends and family have been to our wonderful spot, so Im writing this for those of you who often wonder about my frequent visits to this part of Mexico.

I usually sleep in a bit, have my coffee, check my email, all of this while sitting in the lovely living room (sala) and looking out at the incredible view.




Most mornings we have breakfast on the terrace, which always includes fresh fruit, usually pineapple or papaya, with limones (small limes) and freshly squeezed orange juice.  We sit outside looking down towards the town.  It was on our last morning while soaking in the beauty, that I tried to remember why I was going back to Toronto.



At some point during the day, I sit outside on a patio which now has a functional fountain, just to look at the garden.  Ive planted some gardenias and jasmine, which arent doing that well, but Im coaxing the plants along and hope that one day their scents will join those of the lemon-scented geraniums which do so well here.



One morning we had coffee at the home of a Mexican American who recently finished a first draft of a novel.  She is also working with an archeologist here, and collaborating on an exhibit with a museum in Los Angeles, on the culture of the Chupicuaro, who first settled in Meso America 2500 years ago.

Last week we had drinks with Cuahtemoc Trejo, a professional flute player whose latest project is his recording and concerts played on a crystal flute from the time of Maximilan in Mexico.  We heard him play at the university and we were enthralled with the music and the unusual sound of the instrument. http://macchinatempo.com/

During our 12 days here we attended four concerts, two of the symphony orchestra, a wind quintet at the Gene Byron museum, and the crystal flute concert.

We also heard of an upcoming puppet theatre presentation based on the Magic Flute which will be presented next month, led by a professional German Canadian Mexican who makes her home in Valenciana.  She and her family live close to a well-known mime artist, who teaches and sometimes gives performances at his house.

After the orchestra concert a few nights ago we went out for drinks with friends and met someone new, an Israeli Mexican who is a professor at the math institute. http://www.cimat.mx/  His 16 year old son is an expert juggler who will be attending a major juggling conference in Israel this spring,

We also shared a comida (lunch) with Americans who live here full time, having recently retired. They started coming down here for a week or two at a time, which expanded to a month at a time, then two months, then it got to the point where they just needed to stay longer. They now live in the middle of the town, don't have a car, and among other things, are very active as volunteers with an organization that mentors and provides support and university scholarships to very poor but high-achieving Mexican students. 

I really could go on and on talking about what seems to be an endless array of people doing interesting and creative things with their lives.

On our last day we visited with our friend, an American woman who came here as a student and met her husband, had her six children here, and stayed to become a well known bicultural matriarch of her large influential Mexican clan. 

There is so much to see and do here, and numerous ways to live a creative and social life filled with beauty, art, colour, and sunshine. I look forward to singing a concert next fall when we're back a the beautiful Gene Byron Museum. http://museogenebyron.org/



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