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Showing posts from May, 2022

Meet and Greet with the Ejido

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 Description here of the Ejido and how they started and how they function. Purpose of meeting. Photo of old road and proposed new road

The public restroom in the nearby Pueblo means togetherness

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 My little pueblo does not have a restaurant.  It has a couple of pizza places that will deliver but no indoor seating.  The nearest restaurant is in Teabo about 8 km away.  It has a lovely and quaint restaurant that is on the rooftop of the owner's house.   It's a simple and inexpensive menu with very friendly service and often times at lunch time during the middle of the week, I might be the only customer.   Today I had a friend with me and we ordered the same thing.  Battered chicken breasts.   This is what we got, plus tea to drink for 200 pesos total include tip (about ten bucks) After we finished eating my friend went to the bathroom and came back grinning.  She is a Mexican national, but still said that she'd never seen a public restroom designed this way when labeled as Unisex: I suppose I'm imagining that since the toilets don't have seats, they are primarily intended as urinals?  However, I was too embarrassed after seeing myself, to ask my lady friend, wh

Survey of the Ranch and the road to Rancho O'Nicheen

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 May 2, 2022 When I went to see the ranch for the first time, I came very close to just passing and not considering it.  The road from the pueblo out to the ranch was about 4 km long, and twisting, and narrow and almost beat your brains out from so many boulders and rocks in the road.  It literally took 20+ minutes to drive the 4 km.   However, I had a vision for repairing it and decided to pursue the ranch if I could get the permission of the local town Ejido counsel to let me make it better.   The surveyor came a few days ago to survey the boundaries of the ranch (shown in red) and at the same time, made a survey of the existing road from the ranch to the pueblo.  3.9 km long.   This is the original road going from the pueblo to the ranch: Here's a photo of what it looked like from the car: and to try and experience the horror of the 20-minute drive I made a short video so I could remember years from now the nightmare it was , back and forth. The ranch itself is comprised of 2 ad

The former Mayan Owner of the Rancho Onicheen

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May 2, 2022 The Rancho Onicheen was previously owned by a 92-year-old man and his 90-year-old wife.   Both of them Mayans and neither speak Spanish.  Both of them grew up on the ranch and his family owned approximately 90 hectares and her family owned the 20 hectares adjacent to it.  They lived there for their entire lives and raised their children on the ranch in the one room house with a few additional palapala huts as sleeping quarters. This is me with the owner in the second photo, and with him and his daughter and son and granddaughter in the first photo. The granddaughter does speak Spanish. We are all standing on the same porch of a feed store in the pueblo: