Friday, November 28, 2008

Our Time in Guanajuato (2 of 3) The School

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The front entrance to our Spanish School




The classroom building. Each class could hold a max of 5-6 students but most had less.



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Our favourite class.....cooking


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Laura holding the secret ingredient to almost all Mexican recipes.... soup broth... Luckily we found this vegetarian version because otherwise Laura would not have been able to eat any of our creations.


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The best part


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We are both now completely fluent in Spanish :P

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Our time in Guanajuato (1 of 3) The City




The house where Diego Rivera was born, now a museum containing many of his early, experimental works from when he was an art student in Europe.



The singers who lead large groups of (intoxicated) revellers around the city's many winding, narrow alleys.




Teatro Juarez


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Iglesia de San Francisco






Basílica de Nuestra Señora de Guanajuato




Museo del Pueblo


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El Callejón del Beso (Alley of the Kiss)- Famous because the only contact two young lovers from feuding families were able to have was from leaning across the extremely narrow alleyway from their balconies and kissing... or something. We have mailed you all souvenir Callejon del Beso teaspoons and t-shirts.

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Alhondiga de Granaditas-This building is a former granary which played an important part in the Mexican war for independence. The Spaniards barricaded themselves inside this building for protection against the rebels but el Pípila was able to crawl under the large wooden door and light it on fire, allowing the rebels to storm the building and win this particular battle. However, this was early in the war and four of the revolutionary leaders were later executed and their heads hung from hooks on the four corners of the building as a 'deterant' to any other would-be revolutionists. The heads remained there for 10 years until Mexico achieved independence in 1821. Today it is a museum, and great backdrop for outdoor concerts.



One of the hooks


A monument to the revolutionary hero El Pípila which overlooks Guanajuato



Guanajuato is a Unesco World Heritage site and as a result no new building has taken place since the 1980's. This also means that there are no neon or traffic lights in the entire city, just traffic cops with whistles. Because the colonial streets are quite narrow (almost all one-way roads) much of the traffic is hidden under the city in tunnels (also one-way), some of which used to be mines. In the rainy season some of these tunnels carry the rising river under the city to avoid flooding.


Aqueduct/ Museo Olga Costa Jose Chavez Morado















Trip to Cristo Rey (zoom way in to our google map to see the spirally route)





Guanajuato's Cristo Rey del Cubilete is the world's fourth (2nd according to our four year old guide book) largest representation of Jesus after Brazil's Cristo Redentor.

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Saturday, November 22, 2008

Day of the Dead in Guanajuato (Nov 1 and 2)



Look closely at the skull.



Lots of flowers for sale















At the cemetery









Lots of candy for sale as well



























WARNING:
We went to the Museo Momia (Mummy Museum) on November 1st, and the following photos may be disturbing to some...so scroll past with your eyes closed if you don't want to see them.













You have been warned