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Pinar de la Venta launches do-it-yourself interpretive trail with ‘virtual signs’

The Guadalajara metro-area suburb of Pinar de la Venta lies on the northern edge of the Primavera Forest and has numerous woodsy stretches good for hiking.

Nature lovers in the community urged the subdivison’s administrators to clean up some potential trails overgrown with weeds and the suggestion was well received. As a result the 650-meter Andador de la Amistad was recently inaugurated.

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This trail is a loop. It’s a bit curious because the first half of it consists of a wide, smooth path through oaks and pines while the second half follows a deep, jungly arroyo where walking is not exactly easy.

It was precisely this aspect of the route which made me think it might make a good interpretive trail: quite a variety of plants and trees can be seen over a relatively short distance.

Several interpretive trails I’ve seen in Mexico quickly “went to the dogs” as the explanatory signs were destroyed either by weather or vandals.  So, I thought, why not put both the signs and their locations on the internet, along with photos of what you are supposed to be seeing?

I decided to upload my “virtual signs” to Wikiloc.com, which can be downloaded as an app to smartphones, for a very small fee. If your iPhone battery doesn’t die on you (as mine did), Wikiloc will lead you along the trail and at each station, one click will give you the name of what you are looking at and show photos as well.

If none of this makes any sense, forget the app and just clip this article or print out an annotated map of the trail which you can find on my website, RanchoPint.com (look for Andador de la Amistad).

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Station 1 of the Interpretive Trail takes you under a row of eucalyptus and casuarina trees, both from Australia and not Mexican at all. While the eucalyptus is easy to spot, the casuarina, with its long, wispy “needles” could easily be confused with a pine tree, which it is not.

2 27 16 11cThe trail heads north from here and after 40 meters, you’ll be walking directly underneath several gallitos (Station 2). This is Tillandsia, a kind of bromelia called Air Plant in English and not a parasite.

The next important tree along the route is a tepame (3) or Fern-leaf acacia in English. Then you will find oak and pine trees (4) followed by a clethra (5), a very commonly seen tree in the Primavera Forest.2 27 16 11a

At a sharp curve we come to Station 6 and a plant called Barba de Chivo (Goat’s Beard). This produces a bright red flower with long “whiskers” which hummingbirds adore.

The trail now descends steeply, passing an embankment cut where you can see plenty of jal, volcanic rubble including small pieces of pumice (7). In the jal, which gives Jalisco its name, there is a big ant colony (8). These are leaf-cutters, which operate a fungus farm underground. The little red pellets you see all over the ground are the waste product from these farms.

Next you will walk right underneath muérdago or mistletoe (9) which is killing the tree above you. The muérdago produces an extremely sticky seed which birds inadvertently carry off to other trees. Muérdago is an extremely aggressive parasite which is spreading like wildfire in these parts.

After rounding the bend, we head south, back the way we came, but now in an ever ascending arroyo. Here we find higuerilla (10), the castor oil plant, which Guinness says is “the most poisonous plant in the world.” It’s also very common, growing on just about every empty lot in Guadalajara. The seeds contain the deadly poison ricin. Six, if chewed, can kill an ox.

Inside the arroyo we find lots of gorgeous white flowers (in January and February) called Heterocentron axillare Naudin (11), possibly agria in Spanish. There are also plenty of delicate Polished Maidenhair Ferns (12). Beneath a grove of bamboo (13), we may spot Ganoderma mushrooms growing on an old log. These mushrooms thrive only on dead wood, which they help turn into earth.

The arroyo rises steeply and we come to the last station where we find Gordolobo (14), a medicinal plant from which a tea is made to fight colds.

How to get there

Take Avenida Vallarta west to the Periferico. Continue eight kilometers and make a u-turn to enter Pinar de la Venta. Check Wikiloc.com under “Andador Amistad Pinar Coche” to find your way to the trailhead (N20.72428 W103.52780) and find “Andador Amistad Pinar” on Wikiloc for the Virtual Interpretive Trail. 

Driving time from Guadalajara: about 15 minutes. 

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