A favor de empedrados
There’s a movement afoot in Ajijic. Literally. It involves village natives from different walks of life, age groups and employment fields, people who don’t share the same political and social ideals.
There’s a movement afoot in Ajijic. Literally. It involves village natives from different walks of life, age groups and employment fields, people who don’t share the same political and social ideals.
“I’m starving,” my granddaughter declared as she jumped into the car when I picked her up from summer camp at Tobolandía one day last week.
“It was a dark and stormy night …” The crack of thunder and a bolt of lightning stir you from deep slumber.
For the last couple of years we’ve all heard a lot of talk about putting up an uninterrupted man-made barrier between Mexico and the USA.
Small in stature, measuring just 34 centimeters from head to toe, La Virgen de Zapopan is a spiritual giant in Jalisco’s Roman Catholic community, deeply trusted as an intermediary for divine protection against strife, disease and pestilence, deadly storms and natural disasters.
Who needs to deal with the ravages of old age on a day when your agenda is chock full of appointments?
The cost of avocados in local markets has skyrocketed over the last couple of months.