A visit to an extraordinary Chiapas zoo
During a short visit to Chiapas, I had a chance to visit one of the most celebrated zoos in Latin America.
During a short visit to Chiapas, I had a chance to visit one of the most celebrated zoos in Latin America.
At 3 p.m. October 19, Roberto David Barrios Alamillo and his wife Rut Castro Medina arrived to get a few hours sleep at a shelter that, at 4,300 meters (14,107 feet) altitude, is the staging ground for those hardy souls preparing to climb the northwest slope of Pico de Orizaba, which towers at 5,636 meters.
Not long ago, volunteers working at the Guadalajara U.S. Consulate donated a playground for the benefit of low-income families that attend a Family Development Agency (DIF) center in the north of the metropolitan area.
The Center for Non-Figurative Art (CIANF), an abstract art gallery and school located eight kilometers west of Guadalajara in Pinar de la Venta, recently opened “Abstract/Fusión,” an exhibit showcasing the work of four artists from Jalisco and four from Oaxaca.
Visitors to the Phil Weigand Guachimontones Interactive Museum got a special treat last Sunday. Beside an altar created for the Day of the Dead, they found four large harps set up, and, at noon, they were able to enjoy a concert by harpist Santiago Di Morales and five of his students from the Suzuki Centro de Artes in Guadalajara.
Last Saturday, Signos secondary and high school held its fourth annual Primavera Forest Festival, an event which filled the school grounds with visitors throughout the day and evening.
Jalisco archaeologists are digging up strange and fascinating things near the town of Arandas, located about 100 kilometers due east of Guadalajara.