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Tag Archives for " Yucatan travel movie "
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Speed Bumps in Yucatan

I love this blog post in which those pesky speed bumps on Mexican roads are mentioned:

The towns have road humps called topes, which can creep up on us if we’re not vigilant. They’re pretty big speed humps and can jar the back if we’re going too fast, or the sign is overgrown with foliage.

Campeche Yucatan Peninsula Mex, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico

We encountered many of these speed bumps while filming the Yucatan Travel Movie. This is the Yucatan’s answer to “reduce speed ahead” signs. In Mexico, you have to reduce your speed or else the bottom of your car will get wrecked, in other words, the speed bumps are very effective, but also nerve wracking.

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More Than Cancun Restaurant Reviews

Here’s a great site with wonderful info on travel in the Yucatan, especially the Maya Riviera and Cancun:

Mexico’s tourism business is still recovering from the swine flu scare and is now being hit again by reports of drug-fueled violence.
The good news is with the number of visitors not yet back to pre-scare levels, travelers can still find great experiences at reasonable rates.

Cancun Mexico: Mayan Riviera Dining Review

He mentions places we visit in the Yucatan Travel Movie: Cancun, Playa del Carmen, and Cozumel.

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Incidents of Travel in Yucatan

I enjoyed this YouTube video which combines the music of Rimsky-Korsakov’s Schaherazade with intriguing sketches drawn by Frederick Catherwood used as illustrations in John L. Stephens’s Incidents of Travel in Yucatan, published in 1843. I enjoying seeing some of the ruins I had visited while filming the Yucatan Travel Movie such as the palace at Sayil. Compared to the sketch of the unexcavated ruin which appears to be semi-buried under a hill of dirt, the present-day ruin is lovely.

Incidents of Travel in Yucatan YouTube Video

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Song: The Battle for the Yucatan Peninsula

A 17-year-old St. Xavier High School Senior from the Louisville Kentucky area won a $16,000 academic and “travel adventure” scholarship for a project that included a musical composition, played on violin, about the Yucatan Peninsula.

The application process included creating a project related to this year’s expedition. William wrote a musical piece called “The Battle for the Yucatan Peninsula,” or “La Batalla por Peninsula Yucatan.

Achiever: William Thompson-Arjona | St. X student wins travel scholarship to Spain

His travel scholarship includes a trip to Spain and then to Yucatan to follow the path of the Conquistadors. In the online Courier-Journal.com newspaper article, William Thompson-Arjona describes the three attempts the Spanish made to conquer the Yucatan.

In the Yucatan Travel Movie, we go to Valladolid, a delightful colonial town that tourists seldom visit. Today it is a peaceful place but in the 1800s, it was the place where the Caste War began. In the Caste War, the Yucatecans tried to throw off the yoke of the Spanish conquerers . . . and almost succeeded.

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Reserve Rooms Now: Hotel Discounters Price War

If you’re planning Yucatan Travel in the near future, you might want to check out the following Miami Herald article on price wars among hotel discounters. I reserved a number of Cancun hotel rooms, which were highlighted in the Yucatan Travel Movie, through online hotel discounters.

Four major hotel discounters and deal-finders are enjoying record popularity, all because of a substantial drop in both individual and group bookings at America’s hotels.

Fierce price war breaks out among hotel discounters

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Beach Sand Replenishment at Cancun

A triangular strip of sand that looks like a number seven (7) attached to the the northeastern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula provides the world-reknown white sand beaches of Cancun’s hotel zone. Unfortunately, these beaches, so vital for the Yucatan tourism industry, were badly eroded during the devastating category five hurricane Wilma in 2005.

The Post-Bulletin says that:

As a result, local government started a $71-million beach restoration project in September 2009. Most of the work was done by the beginning of this year. All told, more than 1.3 billion gallons of sand was pumped from the ocean.

Travel Scene: Cancun Completes Beach Restoration

This is good.

The Yucatan Travel Movie visits Yucatan Peninsula travel locations within a day’s drive of Cancun.

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Yucatan Travel Movie Premier

Today I visited a theater to see if it would be a good fit for the premier of the Yucatan Travel Movie. I felt happy to see that the Beta version of the movie looked good on the much larger-than-my-TV screen. In fact, it looked great! I also felt happy and grateful that the manager of the theater kept watching and watching the video, entranced by the movie, long after we’d established that the movie looked and sounded good on her projector. The Yucatan Travel Movie should be ready in a month.

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Many Destinations Close to Cancun

From Cancun, you can find many destinations of interest, such as Playa del Carmen and Isla Cozumel as well as the ancient Mayan ruins at Tulum and Coba. The Yucatan Travel Movie shows what you can expect when you visit these locations. For example, do you know that the ancient Mayan ruins at Tulum are on a cliff overlooking some of the best beaches on the Maya Riviera? Or, that many people come to Coba for the birdwatching, rather than the ruins?

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