Big Tree, Big Festival, Big Ride – Tlacoluca Valley, Oaxaca State, Mexico

The Titanic Tule Tree

About five miles outside the city of Oaxaca is the tiny town of Tule–home to one humongous tree. The Tule Tree is nearly 120 feet in circumference (including its many buttresses), somewhere between 119 and 141 feet tall (depending on whose measurements you believe) and is said to be the “stoutest” tree in the world.

The Tule Tree is so massive that it was originally believed to be multiple trees but DNA testing (they do that on trees?) proved it to be a single tree that’s been slowly growing for between 1,200 and 3,000 years (its exact age has proved elusive).

In 2001 the Tule Tree was submitted for consideration as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. So far, nothing. But never mind. The Tule Tree gets plenty of love from the locals who festoon it with Christmas tree decorations, stuffed animals, clothes, you name it.

From a distance the massive Tule Tree looks like a mini forest.


You pass the town of Tule on your way from Oaxaca city to the Mitla and Yagul archaeological sites and it makes a pleasant break. We can recommend Restaurante Tule for lunch. The name is not very imaginative, but the beer is cold and the food is good.

Yes, that's ONE tree. Note the tiny people on the right for scale


Tlacolula Festivities

Our time in Oaxaca coincided with the annual Feast of the Christ of Tlacolula in the town of Tlacolula for which the valley is named (or vice versa, we’re not sure). The festival (like most in Mexico) is a multi-day affair and we caught the Candelaria parade through town featuring what seemed like the entire town dressed up as one religious icon or another. The paraders ambled from church to church, stopping at each to perform a brief devotion. It was like a beer and tequila fueled connect-the-dots of the towns most sacred places.

A big-head paper mache figure in the Candelaria parade celebrating the Feast of Christ of Tlacolula.

Women parading with floral arrangements on their heads which spell out the town name as part of the Feast of Christ of Tlacolula.


Check out our video, below, and see the paper mache and floral costumes and processions of the Candelaria in Tlacoula in action.


Rancho Pitaya Horseback Riding

Maybe the greatest way to appreciate the beauty of the Tlacolula Valley is on horseback and we know just the people to make it happen. Mary Jane Gagnier used to run Casa Sagrada, a well-known guesthouse and horse ranch in Teotitlán del Valle. For reasons that are neither here nor there, she is no longer associated with Casa Sagrada. But that’s good news because she, along with her partner Bobby Ortiz, has taken the opportunity to create a new and improved riding operation and guest house just a few miles away.

Meandering through the column cactus and the picturesque hillsides of the Tlacoluca Valley during a day of horseback riding with Mary Jane Gagnier and Bobby Ortiz of Rancho Pitaya near Oaxaca city.


It’s called Rancho Pitaya and it’s got three rooms in a traditionally constructed adobe lodge, each with a huge private patio with views of the valley plus hand painted tiles and convenient kitchenettes. Rancho Pitaya also has an open air gourmet kitchen with a chef on hand. This is good because you’ll be working up an appetite out there on the trail.

Both Mary Jane and Bobby are accomplished horsemen and both excel at competitive endurance racing (basically an overland marathon for horse and human). Do not miss a chance to get Bobby talking about his days as a jockey (if he doesn’t bring it up, prod him for the “monkey” story). And don’t say no to one of Mary Jane’s margaritas. Mary Jane is also a published author on Oaxacan culture including the food and the rug weaving which the valley is famous for.

Meandering through the column cactus and the picturesque hillsides of the Tlacoluca Valley during a day of horseback riding with Mary Jane Geiger and Bobby Ortiz of Rancho Pitaya near Oaxaca city.


Mary Jane and Bobby (along with chief handler Gregorio Morales) have carefully built a stable of more than 10 horses that are fit and extremely well-trained but not lobotomized. During our all-too-brief outing Karen rode WMA Zebulon (aka Zeb) and Eric rode Chocolate (a sweet, sweet stallion) and they proved strong, agile and responsive on trails that wound through stands of column cactus,around and over green hillsides and through still, dry canyons. Just a joy to ride–especially in the super-light, super-flexible synthetic endurance saddles Mary Jane and Bobby use and especially in this gorgeous valley.


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Bicentennial Fireworks Over the Zócalo – Mexico City, Mexico

This post is part 3 of 4 in the series Mexican Bicentennial

The Mexican government spared no expense in throwing itself a huge party to celebrate 200 years of independence from Spain, sparking some criticism that the money could have been used for more practical improvements like schools and roads. The fiesta reportedly came with a $40 million price tag and a big chunk of the budget must have been spent on the jaw-dropping fireworks display which served as the finale around midnight on September 15 in Mexico City’s main square, the Zócalo.

It’s being called the biggest fireworks display in Mexico’s history and we believe it. For more than 15 minutes the sky lit up and the ground shook as hundreds of well-choreographed pirotecnias were let loose. These included a bunch of fireballs that turned into spinners which were mounted on stands affixed to the façade of the massive Catedral Metropolitana on the Zócalo, turning the historic building into an architectural version of a castillo, the fireworks towers normally made out of bamboo which are part of almost every celebration in cities and towns across the country.

About mid-way into the fireworks show, the wind shifted and began carrying smoke and ash created by the massive display right over the crowd, at times obscuring some of the light and color. But even that didn’t really dampen the effect. See for yourself in our video, below, beginning with the “concert of flames” from the roof of the Presidential Palace.

You even get a glimpse of the brand new 2010 Miss Universe, Mexico’s own Ximena Navarrete, who was on a balcony just above us. Look closely near the end of the video and you’ll also see the distinctive white-haired Vicente Fernández on the balcony too–one of Mexico’s most iconic living singers.



And if you haven’t already seen it, watch our video of President Felipe Calderón delivering the traditional ode to Hidalgo’s Grito Mexicano which sparked the Mexican War of Independencein the first place…



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El Bicentenario with Felipe Calderón – Zócalo, Mexico City

This post is part 2 of 4 in the series Mexican Bicentennial

We’ve just walked four miles or so back to our hotel from the Zócalo in Mexico City where we were part of an awesome party. There were beauty queens, explosions, acrobats, a parade, politicians, musical icons and tens of thousands of other revelers.

Right now Mexico is celebrating 200 years of independence from Spain and we’ll be posting about all the fun in the next few days. For now, we leave you with Mexican President Felipe Calderón delivering the traditional ode to Miguel Hidalgo’s September 16, 1810 call to arms which sparked the Mexican War of Independence. It’s a speech  that’s delivered by the sitting President on the eve of every Independence Day.

Essentially, the President repeats a cry of patriotism (a Grito Mexicano) based upon the Grito de Dolores from the balcony of the palace, then he rings the bell of the National Palace on the Zócalo in Mexico City. Oh, then the crowd goes wild. Did we mention we were aobout 100 feet away from the President as he spoke?

Mexican President Felipe Calderón rings the bell on the balcony of the Presidential Palace and issues the Grito Mexicano as part of Mexico's celebrations marking 200 years of independence from Spain.

Mexican President Felipe Calderón rings the bell on the balcony of the Presidential Palace and issues the Grito Mexicano as part of Mexico's celebrations marking 200 years of independence from Spain.

Around 6:00 am on September 16, 1810, Hidalgo, a Roman Catholic priest, ordered the church bells to be rung and he gathered his congregation. He then addressed the people encouraging them to rise up with these words:

My children: a new dispensation comes to us today. Will you receive it? Will you free yourselves? Will you recover the lands stolen by three hundred years ago from your forefathers by the hated Spaniards? We must act at once… Will you defend your religion and your rights as true patriots? Long live our Lady of Guadalupe! Death to bad government! Death to the gachupines!

The English translation of the 2010 version of the grito, as delivered by President Calderón earlier tonight, goes like this:

Mexicans!

Long Live the Heroes that gave us our Fatherland!

Long Live Hidalgo!

Long Live Morelos!

Long Live Josefa Ortiz de Dominguez!

Long Live Allende!

Long Live Aldama and Matamoros!

Long Live National Independence!

Long Live the Independence Bicentennial!

Long Live the Centennial of the Revolution!

Long Live Mexico!

Long Live Mexico!

Long Live Mexico!


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