Guadalajara Reporter

Wednesday
Jan 16th
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John Pint

Why don’t the potholes ever go away? Chamba’s Law explains this and many other Mexican mysteries

Why don’t the potholes ever go away? Chamba’s Law explains this and many other Mexican mysteries

For months I watched the woodpeckers hollow out the telephone pole in front of my house to build their new home. The problem was that the hole they were working on was their fourth attempt at nest making and I wondered just how many holes that pole could take before it snapped. I wondered if male woodpeckers face the same problems as male weaver birds (Ploceidae), which have to “try, try again” until their lady loves say, “Yes, this is perfect for my nest.”

A weekend at Mascota: Visiting the Psychedelic Bell, the new museum and magical San Sebastián yoga master

A weekend at Mascota: Visiting the Psychedelic Bell, the new  museum and magical San Sebastián yoga master

Mascota’s eminent archaeologist, Joseph Mountjoy recently informed us that the town’s already outstanding museum has been completely upgraded and expanded. We decided this was a perfect excuse to revisit Mascota, which lies about 150 kilometers west of Guadalajara and Lake Chapala. We also planned to take a peek at the nearby mountain village of San Sebastián, whose charm is legendary.

Trekking across the Primavera: A forest with hot and cold running water, tasty guavas & exquisite orchids

Trekking across the Primavera: A forest with hot and cold running water, tasty guavas & exquisite orchids

Every year Bosque la Primavera organizes at least one long trek across the forest. This year it was a sixteen-kilometer hike on March 24, starting at the western edge of the Protected Area, crossing the famed Río Caliente and ending at the little town of La Primavera, which lies 15 kilometers due west of Guadalajara, alongside the highway to Tepic and Nogales.

Itch mites: What’s that tunneling under my skin?

Itch mites: What’s that tunneling under my skin?

Have you ever discovered red marks on your skin which itch something awful, much worse than a mosquito bite? I have on many occasions and when I would show them to country folk here in western Mexico, they told me I had güinas or aradores, nearly invisible little creatures that literally get “under your skin.”

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