Silver (and Gold) City – Taxco, Guerrero State, Mexico

Many people come to Taxco, a Pueblo Magico about 90 miles southwest of Mexico City, to buy sterling silver jewelry in this town which was made famous and fat from the silver deposits that once surrounded it.

With the silver mostly gone, Taxco has done a remarkable job of morphing it’s mine-town roots into a reputation as a great place to buy creative jewelery designs in (you guessed it) sterling silver.

An overview of the winding streets and Colonial architecture in the hillside town of Taxco, one of Mexico's Pueblo Magicos.


Tourists looking for a few pieces for themselves or as gifts rub shoulders with major importers looking to buy pounds of jewelry at a time to sell in the US or Europe. There are dozens of stores and sellers happy to oblige any customer.

But we think there’s an even more compelling reason to visit Taxco: cake. And cookies and pies and buns and breads…

Every afternoon around 5:00 a red VW Beetle (circa 1970-something) rolls into the Plaza Borda in central Taxco, Mexico with a 4’ wide basket heaped with a dozen varieties of freshly made pastries, breads, cookies and confections. The crew of female vendors can barely set the basket on its stand before they’re swarmed by locals eagerly pointing to their favorite goodies (all less than US$1).

Luckily, the red VW returns with more lovingly-packed baskets strapped to its specially-designed roof rack until every morsel is sold. This is why the pastry ladies of Taxco made our Best Food & Beverages of 2010 list.

The Santa Prisca church anchors Taxco's Plaza Borda which is named after Jose de la Borda who built the church with his own money back in 1758.


Work up an appetite for all those treats by taking in the architectural madness of the Santa Prisca church which anchors the Plaza  Borda which is named after the church’s creator Frenchman Jose de la Borda. After making fortunes in Mexico, Borda decided (as rich men in the 1700s did) to build a church.  The whole project was completed in just seven years but Borda spend nearly his entire fortune to do it, financing the project himself and retaining complete artistic control.

The result is an elaborately carved Churrigueresque-style exterior and a lavishly gold leafed interior. It was mind-blowingly fancy in 1758 and remains fantastical today.

The ornate pink stone Churrigueresque-style towers of the Santa Pisca church.

When the Santa Prisca church was built in 1758 it was one of the most ornate (inside and out) in the world. It's still a standout of Churrigueresque architecture.

Cobble stone streets and Colonial architecture are just two of the (charming) reasons why Taxco was granted Pueblo Magico status by the Mexican government.


No matter what lures you to Taxco, don’t arrive in a big pickup truck like ours. The streets are steep, slippery and eye-poppingly narrow and curvy. Creeping through town looking for our hotel was a white-nuckle trip in our truck and we nearly got jammed into a tight spot more than once. Needless to say, we didn’t fit into most of the parking lots either.

Even one of the world’s smallest cars, the ubiquitous VW Beetle, has to break out the fancy moves in order to negotiate the streets of Taxco as our Beetle Ballet video, below, shows.


The VW Beetle (with or without sombrero) is perfectly suited to the narrow and winding streets of Taxco.


The best way to explore Taxco is on foot up, over and around the steep streets. We ultimately arrived at the base of the enormous status of Jesus that looks down over town from up on top of a hill.

From this vantage point we really could see “my house.” That’s because in Taxco we stayed at Mi Casita. This 12 room hotel feels like what it is: someone’s house (the hotel was the family home of the charming women who now run it–say hi to Marta for us!). Every room is unique and full of antiques and airy patios and plants. Room #4, which is referred to as the “secret to love” room has the most romantic views over Taxco which sparkles like silver at night.

Every morning fresh baked goods, juice and bottomless coffee are served as well, just in case you didn’t already feel at home.

VW Beetles are perfectly suited to the narrow and winding streets of Taxco.

A plaza in Taxco, Mexico.


While in Taxco we also sampled some noteworthy pozole (white, green or red versions of a hominy-filled soup made with pork or chicken). First we went to Restaurant Santa Fe on Hidalgo Street where the red pozole was smoky and rich and wonderful (45 pesos or US$3.50 for a huge bowl) and the green pozole tasted more “green” than anything we’ve ever had. Just terrific.

Pozoleria Tia Calle right on the main square (Plaza Borda) presented itself as a contender too and the red and green pozoles were good here but we walked away preferring Santa Fe’s pozole (plus it was cheaper). Weirdly, Wednesday is the only day of the week that Pozoleria Tia Calle serves both red and green pozole–the rest of the week (closed Tuesday) only one version of pozole is served.

The Santa Prisca church presides over the heart of Taxco, Mexico.


We also treated ourselves to the local cocktail which is called a Berta and is served at the Berta Bar, a festively-painted locals haunt right on Plaza Borda. A mix of tequila, soda water and a bit of honey this fairly delicious concoction is like a less sweet and all-natural version of a paloma (which is made with tequila and grapefruit soda).

Another lovely little plaza in Taxco, Mexico.


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La Quebrada Cliff Divers – Acapulco, Guerrero State, Mexico

The La Quebrada Cliff Divers have been icons of Acapulco since the group officially formed in 1934 after the owner of the cliff side Hotel Mirador blasted out a section of rocky coastline below his hotel to create a dramatic death-defying gulch for the divers to leap into as a show for tourists.

A veritable Who’s Who of celebrities and politicians have watched the spectacle over the years and ABC’s now-defunct “Wide World of Sports” even featured footage of their feats in its show opening for years.

A classic and spectacular dive from a La Quebrada Cliff Diver in Acapulco, Mexico.


More than 75 years later, however, we feared the La Quebrada divers may have become a cheesy side show. We were wrong. The La Quebrada Cliff Divers remain spectacular–sexy, fearless athletes who leap nearly 100 feet past a deadly jagged cliff face five times a day. Wearing nothing more than a Speedo they plunge into the narrow gulch welcomed by surging surf which fluxuates between six and 16 feet deep. It’s nuts.

Once in position, La Quebrada Cliff Divers take a moment to prepare themselves and wait for the right conditions in the churning waves and surge below.


Hollywood’s glitterati may not be flocking to Acapulco to see the divers anymore, but these guys have become stars in their own rights. An international film crew was shooting a GE commercial featuring the divers while we were there.

Being a La Quebrada Cliff Diver is still an honored profession with skills passed on from experienced divers to new recruits. The divers perform various shows each day and we watched more than a half dozen performances (including spectacular night time dives with flaming torches) and we were wowed every time.

A double-double from the spectacular La Quebrada Cliff Divers of Acapulco.

A night diver takes our breath away.


The following composites of photos are a kind of time-lapse display of the various stages of two of the most amazing daytime dives we saw.



You might see some of the following dive sequence in a GE commercial that’s currently on television. Note the camera in the lower left-hand corner…


This sequence shows a spectacular double dive sequence… 


And here’s our video of some of the daytime diving….


The following composites of photos are a kind of time-lapse display of the various stages of two of the most amazing nighttime dives we saw, including the gorgeous finale dive with lighted torches.


And here’s our video of some of the night diving…


Two young La Quebrada Cliff Divers work the crowd for tips.

This statue commemorating the La Quebrada Cliff Divers of Acapulco looks down on the gulch and the divers' ongoing feats.


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New Cool – Acapulco, Guerrero State, Mexico

We almost didn’t get to Acapulco at all.

As we drove north from Mazunte and Puerto Escondido toward Acapulco our journey was halted at a small town called Copala just short of our destination when we encountered a missing chunk of highway which had been undercut and washed away by heavy rain.

Uncertain whether or not the lone front-end loader would be able to clear the debris and create a passable way through the break, we consulted our trusty Gia Roji road atlas and decided to try to drive around the break on a network of dirt back roads.

Three hours later we were right back where we started from having discovered (the long, hard, dusty, bumpy way) that there was no way through using the back roads. Miraculously, the front-end loader had done the trick and traffic was moving slowly and carefully through the missing section of road. A couple of hours later we reached Acapulco.

Too much rain + not enough infrastructure = this as we TRY to get to Acapulco.


It was immediately obvious that there’s a reason phrases like “past-its-prime” and “back in the heyday” are trotted out when describing Acapulco. In the 1950s Acapulco was the first real Mexican resort destination and it became the much-publicized playground of Elizabeth Taylor and John Wayne and almost every other star of the era worth his or her salt.

Today, Acapulco has a weird rudderless feel with old and new, good and bad, slum and slick, tourism and terrorism (15 decapitated bodies were discovered in Acapulco as we post this) all mixed up in a haphazard way that gives the impression that no one’s at the helm. The main drag is teetering dangerously close to becoming a kind of Mexican Vegas strip (or, worse, an even lower-rent Cancun) with an increasing number of big resort hotels and chain restaurants and nearly constantly clogged traffic. There’s no apparent downtown or center. The beaches are nowhere near Mexico’s best.

Yet there’s still a whiff of what used to be. It’s fascinating and disconcerting at the same time.

A few investors and entrepreneurs are slowly working to breathe new life into Acapulco without discarding its still-marketable history and, increasingly, Acapulco is attracting Mexico’s hyper-hip jet set (it’s within easy long-weekend distance of Mexico City).

When we were in town we got a taste of some old cool, some new cool and some truly delicious (and historically correct) food.

Acapulco overview.


If you want a crash course in the who’s who of Acapulco’s star-studded past just wander around the Hall of Fame Saloon at Hotel Mirador. Ann Miller, John Wayne, Bridget Bardot, Eddie Fisher, Rock Hudson, Maureen O’Hara, Tito Puente, Susan Hayward, Harry Belafonte, Eartha Kitt, Elizabeth Taylor plus various princes, kings and queens…They all signed the walls with chalk and their inscriptions were later carved out and painted white.

Modern celebrities still trickle in to Hotel Mirador and more recent signatories include Pierce Brosnan, Gary Busey and Senator Tom Daschle (whose name appears to have been spelled wrong and corrected later–weird).

Just some of the autographs on the walls of the Hall of Fame Saloon at Hotel Mirador--part of Acapulco's star-studded past.


Why were all these A-listers at this particular hotel? The world’s coolest divers who still do their stuff into dramatic and tumultuous ravine below the hotel. Not to be a tease or anything, but these divers are so classic and death defying and sexy that we decided to dedicate our next post entirely to words, pictures and video about their amazing feats.

Iconic Hotel Mirador in Acapulco which, unfortunately, seems to be running on the fumes of its glittering past.


The Hotel Mirador is still regularly used as a location for movies and commercial shoots but that’s about as close to star-studded as the place gets these days. While we appreciate being put up at Hotel Mirador, it  must be said that while the divers have retained their allure, relevance and sex appeal the hotel has become a damp, dirty, poorly-staffed shadow of what it was when Frank Sinatra had his own private suite there (if you’re a Frank Fan, ask for room #131).

It’s a shame that someone with vision (and cash) hasn’t snapped up this cliff side has- been and put some new polish on what could absolutely be a gem once again.

That’s exactly what happened with Hotel Boca Chica.

Hotel Boca Chica in its latest and greatest incarnation.


First opened in the 1950s (yep, we’re back to Acapulco’s heyday), the Boca Chica featured the city’s first sushi restaurant and provided the location for the opening shots of the movie Fun in Acapulco starring Elvis Presley. After struggling for years the hotel finally closed its doors in 1997.

After months of meticulous restoration, with the help of one of Mexico’s most famous ’50s era architects, the Boca Chica (which is part of Grupo Habita) re-opened in 2010 and now offers a thoroughly modern and completely hip version of its 1950s self at surprisingly reasonable rates. Read our full review of Hotel Boca Chica for iTraveliShop.

The open-air 50s-fueled lobby of the newly re-invented Hotel Boca Chica in Acapulco.

The starlet-ready pool at Hotel Boca Chica in Acapulco.

Serene and sheltered Playa Caletilla below Hotel Boca Chica.


While eating on a budget in Acapulco can be a challenge, the only challenge you’ll face if you’re splulrging is choosing which world-class restaurant to try.

Eduardo Wichtendahl, owner/chef of Restaurant Zibu and the son of Susanna Palazuelos (a top caterer and author of Mexico: The Beautiful Cookbook) was gracious enough to invite us to his restaurant. Eduardo is an accomplished chef himself and with Zibu this Acapulco native has blended food and history in tempting and surprising ways that preserve authentic and unsung aspects of Acapulco’s past while feeding the present.

A classic cocktail in a classic town.


“Elizabeth Taylor did not discover Acapulco,” Eduardo said over dinner. Then he took us to school, explaining how Acapulco originally came into prominence and power as a port that received spices and other exotic ingredients from the Pilippines and other  Asian countries including Thailand.

These foods eventually made their way into the local cuisine and that historic melding is why Eduardo opened a “MexThai” restaurant. The fusion cuisine (Eduardo has lived and cooked in Thailand) at Zibu earned Eduardo a Mexican presidential award for innovation in 2008.

We can’t actually hand out any awards, but Eduardo’s octopus carpacio with cilantro and thinly sliced green apple, jicama soup (served cold, it reminded us of Indian raita), a desert of fried carrot strips over house made coconut ice cream,  jaw-dropping views over Acapulco Bay and his charming commitment to honor the past 100 years of Acapulco’s history earned rave reviews from us.

Acapulco Bay at night.


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