Sayaca tradition flourishes
Ajijic’s Sayaca and Sayaco masked dancers spark the carefree and sometimes reckless enjoyment of the town’s Carnaval festivities.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
Ajijic’s Sayaca and Sayaco masked dancers spark the carefree and sometimes reckless enjoyment of the town’s Carnaval festivities.
In 2009, Lake Chapala was designated as a wetlands site of international importance under the Ramsar Convention.
The long-awaited completion of reconstructing Chapala’s Avenida Madero is due by the end of February, according to David Zamora Bueno, chief of Jalisco’s Department of Infrastructure and Public Works (SIOP).
The Foundation for Lake Chapala Charities (FFLCC) was established in 2009 to provide U.S. taxpayers with a channel for making donations to lakeside area non-profit organizations that are eligible for charity deductions by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
The Chapala government is under fire following the exposé published January 23 on the front page of the Guadalajara daily Mural.
Héctor España Ramos will close out a chapter of family history with a final event at Manix Restaurant on Calle Ocampo.
Noted archeologist Dr. Peter Jiménez Betts, Ph.D. will present a lecture on the Wixárika/Huichol culture Friday February 2, 11:30 a.m. at the Old Billy Moon estate in West Ajijic.
St. Andrew’s Anglican Church has literally taken to heart the Biblical precept to “love your neighbor as yourself” by providing a new home to two local organizations that have been displaced from a nearby venue.
The Chapala office that issues official certificates of clean criminal records in Mexico has resumed service after a recent closure for remodeling.