Sunday 26 November 2017

San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chamula and Zinacantán:Part 7 of South East from Mexico City

An Old Colonial City and Two Towns of the Tzotzil Maya Indigenous People

25-Nov-2017

From Oaxaca to San Cristóbal las Casas

Mexico

We enjoyed a leisurely start, our airport pick-up not arriving until 10.30. Women professional drivers have been a rarity on our travels and today’s was the first to be accompanied by her twelve-year-old daughter. Saturday morning childcare can be problematic.

Oaxaca’s small, smart, new airport is thirty minutes south of the city and we were there far too early - no taxi company wants to risk a client missing a flight. Although our driver had less English than we have Spanish and was probably less familiar with airport procedures, she was determined to be helpful, accompanying us to the (closed) check-in desks, finding out what time they opened and showing us to seats where we could wait - all unnecessary, but we appreciated her kindness.

After a long wait we took off on time, heading east and a little south. The visibility was perfect as we flew over the lagoons and islands of the Pacific coast. The turbo-prop ATR-42 (always a comfortable plane, though on this occasion the air-conditioning was overly aggressive) covered the 500km to Tuxtla Gutiérrez in less time than we had spent at the airport.

Tuxtla Gutiérrez, the Capital of Chiapas State (which occupies Mexico's bottom right corner), is three times the size of San Cristóbal - but it is not marked on this map. On this scale it is a few mm west of San Cristóbal de las Casas
Chiapas
State

At Tuxtla’s equally small and new airport we almost had the baggage carousel to ourselves, and Al, our guide for the next few days, found us easily. The airport was swarming with police, which was worrying until one of them pressed a leaflet into my hand and we discovered they were all there publicising a campaign against domestic abuse of women. ‘Fair enough,’ I thought, but why target the airport?

Tuxtla Gutiérrez airport, 20km south the city, was the southernmost point of our Mexican sojourn and the lowest so far, so we traversed the car park basking in tropical warmth. It would not last. Once inside the air-conditioned car we set off for San Cristóbal de las Casas, an 80km journey, and every one of those kilometres took us further from the balmy Pacific and higher into the mountains.

San Cristóbal de las Casas: Arrival and a Chilly Dinner

San Cristóbal

Our first impression of San Cristóbal was of an attractive, tidy colonial city nestling among the hills. When we arrived the sky was blue, the sun was not quite thinking about setting but at 2,200m (7,200ft) there was already a nip in the air.

Our hotel was in the main square…

Main square, San Cristóbal de las Casas

…at its heart, surrounded by grass and trees, was a café that might once have been a bandstand. On the edge of the square we paused to watch a street entertainer doing remarkable things with a diabolo...

The central square, San Cristóbal de las Casas

...and then strolled up a pedestrian street lined with cafés, restaurants and tourist shops – and the odd impromptu stall laid out on the pavement.

San Cristóbal de las Casas

We dined in a restaurant on the square. Margaritas and a mole seemed a good idea, but the temperature had plummeted, the restaurant was unheated and the door open, so we found ourselves concentrating on the cold more than food. The mole, covering a piece of pork rather than chicken, was probably the poorest I had eaten, it certainly did nothing to raise my opinion of moles, and the slishy ice in the margaritas melted reluctantly in the arctic atmosphere. Not a great night out.

We stayed at the Hotel Cuidad Real in the main square of San Cristóbal de las Casas

26-Nov-2017

San Cristóbal de las Casas: A Walking Tour

Breakfast in the hotel’s covered hall was an extensive buffet but again there was no heating. I ventured a taco with a bean filling in the hope that I might be adjusting to corn dough. Lynne chose fried plantain with vegetables, which she pronounced good. There was plenty of fruit and some delicious little pikelets.

Al arrived to conduct our walking tour, but first we paused to watch a procession in honour of the retiring bishop wind its way round the square. We might have popped into his 18th century cathedral, but it was closed and covered in scaffolding after the recent earthquake. The surrounding corrugated iron fence was a source of local controversy; donated by central government as earthquake relief, there were many who thought it would have been better employed as emergency roofing for the poor. As ever in Mexico, the corrugated iron had attracted graffiti, tags at the end of the church….

Scaffolding on the Cathedral of St Christopher, San Cristóbal de las Casas

….but more artistic endeavours along the side.

More artistic graffiti outside the Cathedral, San Cristóbal de las Casas

The charms of San Cristóbal de las Casas lies less in places to visit than in the streets, which were strangely quiet on a chilly Sunday morning.

San Cristóbal de las Casas
Do not be fooled by the blue sky and sharp shadows; at this height the day warms up slowly

The centre, where the majority of the 160,000 inhabitants live, retains the original 16th century grid pattern and many of the original colonial buildings. Some still have single occupiers, other have been divided up…

Colonial building, San Cristóbal de las Casas

...while yet others have been converted into hotels with attractive gardens lurking behind the façades.

Hidden garden, San Cristóbal de las Casas

Further from the square we reached the market, passing stalls selling fruit…

Fruit stall, San Cristóbal de las Casas

….shoes, clothes and more fruit…

Fruit, clothes, shoe stall, San Cristóbal de las Casas
The black skirt of the woman walking out of the picture left is typical of Chamula (see below)

…shiny things and much more.

Stall selling shiny things, San Cristóbal de las Casas

The market is expanding from its official site and colonising the pavements. Ad hoc stalls are not always welcomed by shopkeepers and regular stallholders - I doubt the pharmacy (below) is delighted to have a fruit and veg stall sprawling across its doorstep.

Impromptu stall outside a pharmacy, San Cristóbal de las Casas - and more of the black skirts of Chamula

Since 2003 San Cristóbal has been one of Secretariat of Tourism's pueblos mágicos - others include Cholula (visited last Monday) and Chiapa de Corso (tomorrow) – and was declared the 'most magical' in 2010. Much of the ‘cultural magic’ is associated with the indigenous peoples who comprise a third of the city’s population.

The traditional hierarchy - Spanish at the top, mestizos (those of mixed descent) in the middle and indigenous people at the bottom – remains largely intact. Mestizos have increased vastly in number and importance since the 16th century and almost everybody we have come across so far on this journey is probably of mixed descent but before San Cristóbal we had not knowingly encountered anyone claiming to be indigenous. Here they account for about a third of the population and in the neighbouring municipalities of Chamula and Zinacantán almost 100%. Most are Tzotzil Mayas, but the Tzotzil are not a homogeneous group, women from Chamula wear skirts of heavy, black, hairy wool (‘they look like turkeys' said Al, somewhat ungraciously) those from Zinacantán wear more colourful clothes while some from both communities have abandoned traditional dress, yet still consider themselves indigenous.

Street corner, San Cristóbal de las Casas

From the market we turned left and left again to return the way we had come, but a couple of blocks over.

The Santo Domingo steps were also the venue for an unofficial market. The church and former convent were built in 1546, but a later makeover turned it into a fine example of colonial baroque. Like the cathedral it was closed after the recent earthquake.

Santo Domingo, San Cristóbal de las Casas

Further along the retiring bishop had just finished saying mass by the cross on the cathedral square.

The cross and the Cathedral Square, San Cristóbal de las Casas

The sun had now worked its magic in the cloudless sky, and as our hotel was nearby we dropped in to deposit unwanted clothing before continuing further south, passing the house of Don Diego de Mazariego who founded the city in 1528 (or perhaps the site of his house – the phrase ‘sitio y casa’ on the plaque seems ambiguous).

'Sitio y casa' of Don Diego Maraziego who founded San Cristóbal in 1528

Al's driver was waiting for us at the Iglesia del Carmen and took us to Chamula, in the hills some 10km to the north.

Chamula

The small town/big village of Chamula is the main population centre of the much larger Municipality of Chamula where 99% of the 77,000 citizens are indigenous people speaking Tzotzil as their first language.

We stopped by the graveyard, which looks almost Christian, but not quite despite the white painted chapel. The planted pine fronds come from traditional beliefs while the crosses are colour-coded – black for old people, green or blue for adults and white for children or women who died in childbirth.

Chamula cemetery

The Mayan Cross and the Church of St John the Baptist

Outside the house opposite was a green-painted Mayan cross, indicating the inhabitants had some standing in the community. The cross has been used since antiquity as a representation of the Mayan World Tree. I wish I knew more, but anything on the internet by proper archaeologists or anthropologists lies drowned beneath an ocean of drivel about Mayan astrology and pseudo-Christian speculation that the cross indicates the Mayan's special deal with God (it is all in the Bible if only we read it correctly).

Mayan cross, Chamula

The market square is dominated by the Church of St John the Baptist. We realised St John’s might not be a bog-standard Catholic church as we approached past a stall selling chickens for sacrifices.

Sacrificial chickens, Chamula

Below is a photograph of the outside, but photos inside the church are strictly forbidden – as in 'don’t even think about it'. Entering the church was one of those moments when you realise you have stepped outside your previous range of experience. There were no pews, or seats of any kind, the floor was covered in pine fronds, fresher and greener than those at the cemetery, the few windows let in little light and the intense gloom was pierced by the twinkling of hundreds, possibly thousands, of candles.

St John the Baptist, Chamula

Along the walls, glass cases containing crude images of the saints sat behind spaces for candles. Some of the saints were plaster images, others papier maché, some but not all, had names we recognised. ‘They are the old Mayan Gods,’ said Al, ‘made to resemble Christian saints.’

Some individuals had swept aside the pine fronds and were sticking lighted candles to the floor one by one, until eventually they were kneeling behind several rows of ten or a dozen thin, flickering candles. Other people were consulting their shaman, sitting on the floor while the shaman murmured incantations or chanted while feeling their pulse, or casting bones, depending on their preferred diagnostic tool. Coca Cola and a local firewater apparently called posh were sometimes involved as were chickens, their condition being terminal whatever the human's prognosis. Al informed us they were not permitted to kill the chickens inside the church.

The only regular services are baptisms held at the font. Occasionally, Al suggested, a priest will stand at the front – the altar is not the focus it is in other catholic churches – and lead a service, though most will ignore it and continue their consultations with the shaman.

At Chamula the veneer of Christianity is so thin as to be transparent, and we left the church feeling privileged to have been allowed to peer through it.

Chamula Market

Outside in the market place the hard certainties of commerce were more familiar. It would be full of tourists, we had been told, but today we were the only foreigners. Al warned us that the locals dislike tourists and hate being photographed and then sent us off to take some pictures while he wandered round the stalls greeting friends.

As markets go, the produce was not the most interesting…

Chamula Market

….but we were fascinated by the traditional black skirts, some hairy some not so.

Traditional Tzotzil skirts, Chamula Market

The material could be bought at many stalls….

Textile stalls, Chamula Market

….and everyone else seemed to be selling oranges, piled into neat little pyramids.

Oranges and a hairy skirt, Chamula Market

A few men were also in traditional clothing, a long shaggy tabard, black for most but white for village elders.

Chamula elder outside the church

Meeting up with Al, we returned to the car. Despite appearing to have many friends here, he had little respect for the indigenous people, having earlier been snarky about the hairy skirts (and they are not flattering!) he now pointed out the comfortable houses and large cars on the village outskirts. ‘Drug dealers,’ he said, ‘You don’t get those from subsistence farming.’

Chamula has its own police and its own rules, acting like an unofficial autonomous district, but Al’s real beef was with the way Chamulans act outside Chamula; people in St Cristóbal obtain permits and pay rent for their market stalls and then find village people laying out unlicensed stalls in front of them. ‘When indigenous people have grievances,’ he told us, ‘they go about solving them the wrong way.’ There was, no doubt, some prejudice in what he said but we would soon experience 'the wrong way to deal with grievances'. He was equally scathing about the inept response of the authorities to these problems.

Zinacantán

Zinacantán was a short drive away in the adjacent municipality. Although also a Tzotzil village the people dressed very differently and the atmosphere was more relaxed. There was little to see in the streets on a Sunday morning, though we did pass a band on their way to some event.

Band on the run, Zinacantán

Our main visit was to a shop, an Aladdin’s cave of brightly coloured textiles…

Textile shop, Zinacantán

Some of which were made on site using a primitive and uncomfortable form of weaving.

Weaving, Zinacantán

In the backroom chicken thighs were being grilled over a bucket of glowing charcoal...

Grilling chickens, Zinacantán

... and tacos were coming off the hotplate. We helped ourselves to tacos, dropping some coins into the basket. They were the best we had eaten.

Making tacos, Zinacantán

Back to St Cristóbal

The drive back to St Cristóbal brought beautiful views across Zinacantán (unfortunately marred by the blue plastic sheet protecting the earthquake damaged church) and the hills behind.

We arrived in time for a late lunch, a ham sandwich, chips and beer at a pavement café.

We left the café about 3 o’clock when it was still warm in the sun but the shade temperature had started to tumble. We returned to our hotel to reclaim the outer clothing we had abandoned earlier and took a stroll to buy some chocolate and other gifts. On our wanderings we discovered that posh is spelt pox, the name meaning ‘medicine’ in Tzotzil. Distilled from cane sugar, wheat and corn it is flavoured (with hibiscus or strawberry in this photo) for the commercial market. I doubt it would sell in English speaking countries with that name!

Pox on sale in San Cristóbal

After dark the temperature plummeted and we were keen to avoid the freezing dinner of yesterday. It was not easy, San Cristóbal has many restaurants, all had their doors wide open and none had any heating; some locals even sat at tables in the street, huddled under their ponchos. We found this incomprehensible and were becoming desperate when we eventually discovered another ‘Italian restaurant’ (i.e. a pizza and pasta joint) with (sometimes closed) sliding glass doors and inside a pizza oven to sit beside. We enjoyed yet another meal of pizza (Lynne) and pasta (Me) and a cheap bottle of La Mancha red - I would have appreciated a change, but I needed the warmth.

South East from Mexico City

Friday 24 November 2017

Oaxaca (2), Cooking a Mole: Part 6 of South East from Mexico City

Cooking with Chef Gerardo, Santo Domingo Church and the Cultural Museum

Introduction

Mexico
Oaxaca State

Having acquired a reputation in some quarters as someone who will eat anything, I should make it clear that the ‘mole’ in question is a Mexican sauce, not a burrowing, velvet-furred member of the talpidae.

After a leisurely breakfast we were picked up by a cheerful young man called Oscar who, unlike yesterday’s pick up, knew who we were and what we were doing. He had more difficulty with his second pick up, but eventually located an elderly American lady with a small back-pack, waiting on a street corner.

We were astounded to discover the small back-pack contained an even smaller dog. Being allergic to dogs, I was not delighted with it even being in the car, but that aside who would think it a good idea to bring a dog to a cookery class? Oscar apparently liked dogs, cooing over the small beast and asking its breed. Teacup schnauzer, for such it was, is not one of the three schnauzer breeds recognised by the British or American Kennel Clubs whose attitudes can be summed up by a contributor to petforums.co.uk ‘There is no such thing as a teacup schnauzer, that is just a way of marketing particularly small dogs in order to line unethical breeders pockets.’ That tells us something, and not just about the dog.

Mercado La Merced (Merced Market), Oaxaca

Oscar drove us to Merced Market, located Chef Gerardo and made the introductions. Gerardo already had an American family in tow - parents and two teenage daughters from San Diego - and he led the seven of us to a mole grindery (to invent a name).

Mole grinders shop, Oaxaca

Moles are complicated sauces and many people lack the time or equipment to grind up the ingredients, so they bring them here. The contents of plastic buckets (I am sure it was all good food, but Lynne and I were reminded of the pigswill buckets that used to accommodate the leftovers from school dinners) were poured into the top, the grinder was switched on and the liquidised version flowed or oozed, depending on content, into the bucket below. We were not overly impressed with the hygiene, buckets and machines being perfunctorily hosed down between batches, but I suppose they would swiftly go out of business if they regularly poisoned their customers.

Grinding up tomatoes, Oaxaca (and I seem to have caught that wretched dog in the mirror)

Walking back to the market we picked up three more would-be cooks, a Chinese girl (mid-twenties), and a slightly older Canadian/American couple who made their living crewing yachts down the eastern seaboard, round the Caribbean and beyond.

Originally associated with a monastery the Mercado la Merced is not Oaxaca’s biggest, but it is clean, well-organised and big enough for me. We have enjoyed cookery classes before, in Laos and Ho Chi Minh City, and both started with a visit to the market ‘to buy the ingredients’ although in reality it was just a tour, little or nothing was actually purchased. Chef Gerardo however had his wallet out at the very first stall where an elderly lady was surrounded by huge piles of corn dough, both blue and white.

Piles of corn dough (though there's none of the blue in the picture) Merced Market, Oaxaca

Gerardo ordered some of each and her swift and sure stroke cut off the right amount – to the gram – with hardly a glance. I think she must have done it before.

We moved on to buy fruit and veg…

Chef Gerardo and some fruit and veg, Merced Market, Oaxaca

…and then to the grasshoppermonger and prickly-pearist who was pealing the cactus’ fleshy lobes with appropriate care.

Grasshoppers and prickly pears, Merced Market, Oaxaca

We passed through the cheerful café..

Café, Merced Market, Oaxaca

…and the meat section without further purchases but halted again at the cheese. Oaxacans are proud of their cheese, described by Wikipedia as ‘similar to unaged Monterey jack, but with a mozzarella-like string cheese texture.’ Oh dear! It is many years since I last encountered Monterey jack, but I well recall its plastic texture and minimal flavour, and while real (i.e. Italian) mozzarella is a subtle delight, mozzarella-style cheeses made elsewhere are universally inferior, often being prized for their stretchiness rather than their flavour. Oaxaca cheese is made by the same rolling and stretching pasta filata " technique as mozzarella, the finished product a white spheroid with a structure somewhere between a ball of wool and the plasticine ‘telephone lines’ I spent happy hours rolling out in infant school. It is sold under its own name, not as ‘Mexican mozzarella’, and I respect that, but I prefer a cheese that makes a statement while Oaxaca’s flavour is so subtle as to be elusive.

Oaxaca cheese, amid other goodies, Merced Market, Oaxaca

Chillies originated in Mexico and are taken very seriously. Vasco da Gama introduced them to Asia where they were adopted enthusiastically, but in Asian markets there are usually only one or two varieties and their purpose is only to generate heat. In Mexico many varieties are appreciated for more than just their pungency; the larger dried and/or smoked varieties, to the left of Chef Gerardo below are mild, but distinctively flavoured. Mexicans, though, are not averse to heat, but often add it from bottled sauces rather than cooking it into the dish like the Indians or Thais.

Chef Gerardo among the chilies, Merced Market, Oaxaca

Gusano de maguey, the ‘worm’ found in some bottles of tequila or mezcal, is actually a moth larva, and is often eaten as a crunchy snack without first being steeped in alcohol. Here the prized red gusano have been threaded onto strings, a fiddly job I am glad I did not have to do.

Gusano de maguey, the 'worms' found in bottles of Mezcal are sold as crunchy snacks, Merced Market, Oaxaca
Gusano de maguey, Merced Market, Oaxaca

La Cocina Oaxaqueña - Cooking Soup, Tamales and Mole

Gerardo and Oscar, who miraculously reappeared, drove the assembled company the short distance to La Cocina Oaxaqueña, the school set up by Chef Gerardo in 2000 to share his knowledge and educate people from around the world about the exquisite and world-renowned cuisine of Oaxaca (La Cocina Oaxaqueña).

Organising ten randomly assembled amateurs to cooperate in producing a three-course meal requires some skill, but Chef Gerardo has been playing this game for years and knows exactly what he is doing.

The next three hours involved a little cooking and a lot of preparation, which is normal for these classes – and the fate of every commis chef in the business. Lynne and I started by cutting banana leaves into rectangles to wrap tamales, stripping off the stalks to use as ties, while others wilted them on a hot plate. There were jobs for everyone, but I have difficulty remembering all that I did, never mind anyone else.

With a larger group we manually aerated the flour for the tamales before adding salt, baking powder, oil and chicken stock and then giving it a knead, using twisting and pinching rather than the folding technique of breadmaking.

We making tamales guided Chef Gerardo Aldeco at La Cocina Oaxaquena, Oaxaca
Kneading by pinching and twisting, La Cocina Oaxaqueña

Gerardo demonstrated the construction of the tamales, smearing out the dough and adding various extras - black beans, courgette flowers, grasshoppers – then folding and tying the banana leaves.

Chef Gerardo Aldeco takes us through the construction of tamales at La Cocina Oaxaquena, Oaxaca
Chef Gerardo demonstrates how to make tamales, La Cocina Oaxaqueña

The ingredients for the mole were assembled. I had opened the big smoked chilies with scissors and scraped out the seeds while Lynne skinned the almonds

The mole ingredients with the smoked chilis front right, La Cocina Oaxaqueña

It really is an (unnecessarily?) long list of ingredients - 4 different chilis and the inevitable nub of chocolate, not to mention 10 almonds, 15 raisins and 2 peppercorns between 10 people (should I be able to taste 1½ raisins and 0.2 of a peppercorn amid so many competing flavours?).

The recipe we were working to. The chicken is only an accompaniment to the mole, and was cooked by Gerardo's assistants

For the soup we shredded cheese, stripped corn from the cobs and painstakingly picked out the fine hairs…

Lynne removes all the fine hairs from the corn. La Cocina Oaxaqueña

…and eventually the soup and the mole were on the stove.

The soup and the mole are on the stove, La Cocina Oaxaqueña

At some point the little dog was spotted on a table drinking from our water glasses so he was popped into the backpack and on hung the wall. I did not fancy any water after that, but as Gerardo’s assistants were, by then, handing round cans of beer, it was no great loss.

Lynne pounded up the ingredients for a guacamole…

Pound that guacamole, La Cocina Oaxaqueña

…while Chef Gerardo demonstrated taco making…

Chef Gerardo makes a taco, La Cocina Oaxaqueña

…which is easy, though some of the party showed great imagination creating patterns in blue and white dough. The difficult bit is getting the floppy taco from your fingers onto the hotplate without a crease or, worse, a fold or, even worse, burnt fingers.

Not once did I place a taco flat onto that wretched hotplate
Chef Gerardo and the hot plate - I never managed to place a taco flat.

When all the work was done there was a group photo. Three hours had passed quickly and everybody had worked hard and earned their lunch. I have described what we did, sometimes sharing those tasks with others, but this was a complicated meal so it was impossible for everyone to have a go at everything, though we had learned a lot about the ingredients, some familiar, some entirely new to us.

The cooks, La Cocina Oaxaqueña

I can remember no names, but the boat people (to misuse a phrase) on the right were fun and the family from San Diego were delightful, the teenager daughters willing workers and prepared to try everything (teenagers are not always like that!). The Chinese girl (originally from Guangdong, now based in Hong Kong) had spent the previous year doing a masters at Cambridge and was in Mexico to attend a friend's wedding. Wearing a baseball cap sideways is not usually a sign of high intelligence, but do not be fooled, she was more articulate in her second language than many are in their first.

And then we ate. Everybody enjoyed the soup, I liked the tamales, the dough had taken on a pleasing savoury flavour, but Lynne was less keen, though she ate quite a few tacos with guacamole and a chilli dip. All were offered a glass of Agua Fresca de Horchata (Rice Water Drink) made by soaking rice in water and then blending with cinnamon before straining and adding condensed milk, sugar and chopped walnuts. I liked it, but I think I was the only one to finish a whole glass.

Eating the tamales, La Cocina Oaxaqueña (with my glass of rice water)

I was politely taken to task by Lucinda W in a comment on a recent post (Puebla style="font-family: "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 12pt;">) for my remarks (actually in the Cholula post) about mole. She was right, it was arrogant to dismiss the whole concept after only one experience, so I have tried again. Four days ago I ate mole poblano in a respected Puebla restaurant, today Oaxacan mole negro cooked by amateurs under professional guidance. Oaxaca boast six more indigenous moles, so there is much yet to explore, but sadly my second attempt has not changed my opinion: too many ingredients make a sauce that is fuzzy and confused. It do not dislike it, I just do not find it exciting, but I will try again.

Eating the mole (with chicken provided by Chef Gerardo's assistants) La Cocina Oaxaqueña

More to my taste was the mezcal we (well, some of us) drank with the mole. Once regarded as tequila’s country cousin, Mezcal is now taken seriously, particularly in Oaxaca State where most of it is made. Distilled from the cooked and fermented heart of any one of 30 species of agave (tequila is made only from the blue agave) it is light and clean on the palate, though smokier and stronger flavoured than tequila. Chef Gerardo’s was a colourless mezcal, but sadly the bottle is out of focus in my photograph, though the people across the table are pin-sharp. My apologies for the photographer’s incompetence and here instead is a small bottle we took home.

Mezcal

Despite our mole-y reservations, we thoroughly enjoyed the six hours we spent with Chef Gerardo. His enthusiasm was infectious and he marshalled his willing, if mixed-ability, workforce, with the dexterity of an experienced teacher (and I know no higher praise!)

Oscar delivered us back to our hotel around 3 o’clock and we immediately set off into the city centre to find the post office and dispatch some cards, an old-fashioned concept but enjoyed by some. The cards sped to their destinations, soem arriving the very next month.

Santo Domingo de Guzmán, Church and Cultural Museum

As planned yesterday, we visited Santo Domingo de Guzmán on the way back.

Founded by the Dominicans, church building started in 1575 and the adjacent monastery opened in 1608. During the revolutionary wars it was handed over for military use and was a barracks from 1866 to 1902. Eventually the buildings were returned to the church, though the monastery became the regional museum, and that was where we started.

The cloister of the former Santo Domingo de Guzmán monastery, Oaxaca

The vast building, constructed on several floors around a cloister with multiple corridors running the length and breadth of each section, houses an important collection of pre-Columbian artefacts, including the complete contents of a major tomb from Monte Alban.

Pre-Columbian figures, Oaxaca Cultural Museum

The captions are in Spanish only, and although we have a little knowledge of the language, it would have taken us weeks to get round the huge collection had we tried to understand them all.

More pre-Columbian artefacts, Oaxaca Cultural Museum

We moved through the art, costumes and assorted paraphernalia of the region and then reached the post-Columbian era. It is a magnificent collection and we would have appreciated some sort of audio-guide to the more important exhibits.

Post-Columbian artefacts, the Oaxaca Cultural Museum

The museum overlooks the former monastery garden, now an ethno-botanical garden, with thousands of local plants and views of the distant hills.

The ethno-botanical garden, Cultural Centre, Oaxaca

In this earthquake zone the church is appropriately sturdy. Santo Domingo de Guzmán (1172-1221), the founder of the Dominicans appears in the centre of the façade holding a model of the church.

Santo Domingo de Guzmán, Oaxaca

The inside is typically baroque…

Interior, Santo Domingo de Guzmán, Oaxaca

…the ceiling being particularly ornate.

Ceiling, Santo Domingo de Guzmán, Oaxaca

Despite our large lunch we ventured out in the evening to share a pizza and a bottle of Spanish red. The restaurant was full so they sent us up to the roof which was not quite fully occupied. It was chilly so we persuaded them to light one of their two space heaters – yes, I know it is environmentally indefensible, but we were shivering. Nobody else seemed concerned and the other heater remained unlit.

When we returned to the hotel I discovered I no longer had the credit card I had used to pay the bill. After a search of our hotel room I walked back to the restaurant my eyes scanning every inch of the pavement. I spoke to the waiter, who was sympathetic, conducted a search of where we had been sitting and came up with nothing. I repeated my search on the way back, convinced I must have dropped it as no one had come near enough to me to steal it. Back in our room with a sick feeling in my stomach I started looking for the number I had to phone, and then I found the card, in a section of my wallet I do not usually use for cards. It is hardly a large wallet; in vino stupid ass, as the saying doesn’t go.

South East from Mexico City