Ajijic lets down its hair
Colorful floats seen rolling through Ajijic during the Tuesday, February 26 Carnaval included the one carrying a merry band of dancing harlequins.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
Colorful floats seen rolling through Ajijic during the Tuesday, February 26 Carnaval included the one carrying a merry band of dancing harlequins.
After 15 months in the making, Chapala’s Municipal Transit Department (Movilidad Municipal) is finally ready for prime time.
Chapala police and state authorities were called to the scene of two new shooting incidents, with one fatality reported this week.
Local motorists should plan to avoid the Libramiento bypass early Sunday, March 10 when the road will be closed between 7:30 and 10:30 a.m. for a five-kilometer foot race.
Movilidad Chapala, the municipality’s independent traffic department, is gearing up for full implementation of its regulations, set to take effect March 11.
Chapala area first responders were kept busy during the final days of Carnaval festivities, attending to a slew of highway accidents and other mishaps.
In keeping with running his administration under the motto Gobierno de la Gente (government of the people), Chapala Mayor Moisés Anaya was one happy camper when he arrived at the Ajijic Malecón Wednesday, February 27 to give a pat on the back to good citizens who took charge of refurbishing the wooden benches lined up along the waterfront.
Two men will serve lengthy prison sentences following their recent conviction for the 2017 kidnapping of an Ajijic businessman.
A long-time lakeside foreign resident fought off a would-be carjacker who assaulted her while she sat in her SUV parked on Ajijic’s Calle Independencia on Sunday, February 10.