Jaza's World Trip

Mérida

I wasn't planning on staying in Mérida — I was going to just head straight on to Valladolid — but I'm glad that I ended up spending two nights here. Mérida is the gateway to the Yucatán Peninsula. It's very safe, fairly sleepy, quite hot, and a bit on the expensive side. It also has great people to meet at its hostels, and it has impressive Maya ruins, such as Uxmal, relatively nearby.

The main square of Mérida.


I'd heard that Mérida is a city of fine arts and of classical entertainment, and that this has led to the people being a bit on the snobbish side, and to food being a bit on the expensive side. Unfortunately, this is all true: but it wasn't as bad as I anticipated. It's still possible to have some cheap, uncultured fun in Mérida, if you know where to look.

Hand-made sisal hammock

The Mérida area is famous for being the best place in Mexico to buy hammocks. The good Mexican hammocks are the ones that hark back to an ancient Mayan tradition: hand-made; dyed with natural, local plant products; and woven from the sisal fibres that are easily obtained from the native cactus plants. A local pointed me to one of the top hammock outlets in Mérida, and I picked myself up a beauty of a genuine Yucatán hammock.

Filed in: MéridaFor saleSouvenirs

Drinking coffee because it's there

All the hostels here in Mexico give you coffee with your breakfast. I usually don't drink coffee at all, because I hate the taste, and because I don't like the idea of becoming a caffeine addict. But lately, I've started drinking the hostel coffee. Here's a few reasons why.

Filed in: MéridaYuck

What did I tell you about bus tours?

I know, I know: you told me not to go on them, and I should have listened to you (yes, that's you, wise Filson family!). But Noam asked me to come with him on the tour around Mérida, and I didn't have anything else to do today. So, 100 pesos later, I was on the double-decker tourist bus, listening to the sterile American voice coming through my headphones.

Filed in: MéridaTours

Noam from Boston

I met Noam when I checked in at Nomadas this morning. He's a laid-back, good Jewish boy (like myself) from Boston: he's from the same neighbourhood as my cousins, but he doesn't know them. He's been in Mexico for 2 months, and now he wants to go to the UK, and do a masters in anthropology at Oxford.

Nomadas Hostel, Mérida

This wasn't the best hostel I've stayed at so far (in terms of comfort and value), but it is the one that I've most enjoyed staying at. This place has a rough, outdoor feel to it: people can choose to sleep in hammocks in the back yard; taking a shower involves getting cosy with several hundred sleeping mosquitoes; and the leafy abundance gives the place a resort / hippie-retreat feel. This hostel itself is, in my opinion, one of the top attractions of Mérida.

Filed in: MéridaAccommodation

Deitel C++ en Español

Saw this in a bookshop in Mérida. It wouldn't mean much to the non-geekified among thee, but to me, it looked pretty cool. Deitel's C++ How to Program is one of the more famous books on programming that's available on the market today. I never imagined that I'd see it in Spanish. But I guess that a book like this is available in pretty much any language.

Filed in: MéridaNaughtyBooksFor sale

Long way to Mérida

Just finished about 17 hours' worth of bus rides, to get from Veracruz to Mérida. This trip was way too long: I should have gotten a plane instead. Ah well: at least I saved on a night's accommodation, by getting a night bus and sleeping all the way.

Filed in: MéridaTediousBus trips