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Full moon in Tepoztlan

November 22nd, 2010 3 comments

I’m sorry, I just can’t laughing at the absurdity, despite the lack of sleep. It’s full moon in Tepoztlan – a small ‘pueblo magic’ town about 60 miles or so to to the west of Mexico city – and boy, do I know that it’s full-moon here…

Yep, I have to say it – this town is crazy. But the right kind of crazy, perhaps – a happy kind of crazy, for the most part. My work for this trip is all but done here – a great workshop on the Labyrinth model of the skills-learning process yesterday evening, an identity/business-model workshop for an NGO today – but I’ll certainly be sad to leave here tomorrow.

The town square is usually invisible, hidden beneath the stalls of the market, with only the fountain discoverable seemingly by accident in the midst of the maze. For the past few days, though, it’s been cleared – I’ll admit I had no idea it was such a large open space – for a whole bunch of assorted ‘happenings’ vaguely centred around the town’s own centenary of its involvement in the last ‘viva la revolucion!’ a century ago. And that seems to have triggered even more not-so-quietly-joyous craziness than usual.

Sitting in the open square for a late breakfast we were interrupted by a small local equivalent of a mariachi band – one portable drum-kit, one trumpet, one rattle-player. Loud. My colleague’s toddler-age son wanted to join in – he’s all but obsessed by drums, he can hold a one-two-two-one-two-two beat consistently for at least a couple minutes before his attention wanders off to something else, which for a sixteen-month-old is pretty close to amazing – he jigged on the spot, and (this being Latin America) he was promptly invited to play the drums too. Enraptured. Then in the midst of that came a mad procession, looking like something only a bunch of hippies could cook up, with wafting incense-burners, various Inca-type figures, various mythical figures (including Pancho Villa, of course), most of them high up on stilts, some of them doing a synchronised kick-dance across the square to blaring music from the town band. But it wasn’t just a bunch of hippies – it was something that came from the town itself, in response to, well, just something, I guess.

Likewise when I walked back into town later to do some last-minute shopping before the evening’s work, I heard more loud blaring from the town square. Anyone interested in processes of ‘emergence’ should see – and hear – something like this. Without warning, the square was suddenly filled not just with a seemingly random mixture of brass-bands playing at least two different tunes to slightly different rhythms in a raucous yet infectious energy, but also with ‘chinelos’ – a particular tradition of dance and costume parodying the arrogance of the Spanish overlords. Heavy black wrap-round ‘dress’, a high crown-like headpiece with dangling jewelry, a mask with a European-white face, staring eyes and upcurved pointed beard, and tabard with beautiful tapestry/beadwork panels front and back. Dozens of dancers, appearing from either side of the square and from anywhere within the rabbit-warren of the market off to the side, mostly men (though difficult to tell with the masks, of course), some children too in their own costumes, all shuffling to the beat in a strange mincing walk/dance, moving slowly around the square, other ordinary-dressed families joining in, all preceded by a guy wildly waving a local flag. Two or three times round the square, then it stopped as suddenly as it had begun, the dancers just wandering off into the crowd. Most of the costumes looked newly-made, but apparently some had been handed down through the families for at least a couple of centuries. Bizarre – yet also an interesting form of quiet rebellion, in the times from which the tradition arose – and a proudly held tradition at that.

The one big downside of Tepoztlan’s craziness is its inordinate love of loud noise. Particularly thunderflashes – wheeee-flash-booom! Which is why I didn’t get much sleep last night. Someone perhaps only a house or two away was still letting them off at 1:30am. I woke up again at 3am, to be greeted a few minutes later by another enormous explosion close by. And since the bright moonlight was bathing the town and the hills all round, the cockerels started crowing with the all-night dawn. And some other raucous bird that from the sound I guess was some variant on a peacock. And just after 6am – still before dawn – the whoosh of firework rockets followed by, yes, more enormous bangs. Then the drumming started from up the road… well, you get the idea. :-)

Right now it’s perhaps a few minutes before dawn proper, when the sun comes peeking over the sill of the mountain-ridge directly in front of me in this office where I’ve been staying. The peak of Popocatepetl is just visible over another part of the ridge, the plume of the volcano just visible from this distance as a small white cloud drifting with the wind towards Mexico City.

An amazing place. I’ll be back here if I can.

But right now it’s getting close to the time when I need to pack up and be gone.

Sun up. Time to get to work. Another day in Tepoztlan.

Air-guitar

December 13th, 2009 No comments

There are guns everywhere in Guatemala City.

Even a little low-middle-class colonia such as the one where I’m staying has a guard-station with two security-guards, each with a shoulder-slung pistol-grip shotgun, checking each vehicle in and out through the gates.

In the shopping-mall, it’s pretty much gun-city. Just about everywhere there are uniformed security-guards, toting pistols and batons. Even the fast-food place I ate at the other day had its own armed security-guard, barely sixteen at a guess, opening doors politely and timidly for the clients, pistol at his side. His uniform was simply too big for him; he certainly didn’t look old enough to know how to use the gun for real. But in a city where the homicide rate is heading towards ten thousand people a year, and ‘protection’ rackets are big business in any unprotected area, the guns do mean something, I suppose.

So it was really nice to look out of the upper window of the upmarket café we were working in today, to see the car-park security-guard playing air-guitar on his shotgun, changing chords as he went. Pity I didn’t have my video-camera to hand – better luck next time, perhaps?

Categories: Society, The Outsider Tags: , ,

In Portugal

October 6th, 2008 No comments

Currently attempting a holiday in Portugal – which for me, of course, means taking the computer with me so as to try to break free of writer’s block’ on the current books!

Still, I am managing to take some time to play tourist. Or sort-of. Yesterday I took about a hundred photos of a megalithic site at Portela de Meizo, near the northern border with Spain; will attempt to upload one or two in the next few days. And today in Braganza, up in the north-east corner of the country, some drawings, including one of an Iron Age stone sculpture of a boar that’s literally been skewered by a ‘pelourinho’ crucifix – it’s up in the citadel, if anyone wants to go hunting for it. (There’s a larger boar-sculpture, still almost intact, in the small town of Murca, about halfway between here and Vila Real, straight to the west. Took some photos of that one on my last trip here a couple of years ago.)

Tomorrow a dowsing-related workshop in the small town of Vila Nova de Foz Coa – don’t yet know what I’m supposed to be doing, as they only told me about this afternoon, and it starts at 9am tomorrow! Watch This Space again, I guess?

More later, anyways – this pilgrim must head bedwards to rest his tired self and soul for an early start in the morning… :-)

Worsening my carbon footprint?

June 29th, 2008 1 comment

Oh well: I will admit it: I have succumbed: I have bought a car. Well, a bit more than just a car, actually:

campervan

This lumbering monster is a 1988 VW campervan, in surprisingly good condition for something that’s just under 20 years old. Just been out to the Cheltenham area again for the Belas Knap project, and it’s turning out to be a good beast to camp in. But somewhat of a beast to drive – no power-steering and the fabled VW lack of acceleration makes the endless roundabouts of some British towns damn’ heavy going…

Yup, it’s worsening my carbon footprint and suchlike: sorry… Fuel consumption isn’t wonderful, but isn’t bad, either: around 30mpg (GB – that’s 24mpg US) with a mixture of pottering along country roads and slogging through towns, so should be better with a decent long-distance cruise.

Good space inside, with plenty of (much-needed) storage, but actually not as big as it looks: it’s exactly the same length as Liz’s LandRover, and only very slightly wider. High, though, and the underbody water-tank reduces the ground-clearance, both of which are problems for the narrow lanes round Belas Knap – though we’ll sort that out somehow.

But something to travel in. See friends. That kind of thing. I’ve spent too long hiding behind a desk at the back end of Colchester… ‘sumer is a-cumen in’, it’s time to get out a bit, methinks…? :-)

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