All with good reason though. Have been back from Mexico a day and a half and it was a most excellent experience.
I wont bore you with all the details since you can probably get most of it from the photos but there is some things not conveyed in those which I will mention here.
Firstly there’s the matter of bogroll. In Mexico, instead of flushing it with the rest of your business, you generally have to put it in a bin beside the the toilet. The official reason is that their sewage systems aren’t up to it, but I’m convinced that it’s because Mexicans like to examine their own leavings. You do get used of it after a while however, and when I got back to places with proper sewage systems, I still found myself instinctively looking for a bin. Kinda like when you spend a time in a foreign language area, it feels strange going into a shop and asking for stuff in english. You kinda feel bad doing it.
Speaking of which, I think Mexico really helped my spanish. I think my brain has even got to the point where I can construct and understand sentences in my brain without having to translate from english first. I even managed to haggle with an indigenous women, to buy a shirt at a market in San Cristobal, though that was more a matter of shouting numbers and her laughing at me.
Coconuts were quite common in Isla Mujeres (en. Island of Women) and Zihuatenejo and they remained an item of fascination for me for some time until I opened one. They’re really hard to knock out of trees, and it was hard to get a ripe one. Managed to get one in Zihuatenejo though, from the hotel. They aren’t as hard to open as popular media makes out. I had the other husk removed in 10 minutes with nothing but my hotel key and my hands. Nothing like the hours it took Tom Hanks in Cast Away. Getting at the milk was also quite easy. Really should have got a photo of it.
Also in Zihuatanejo, we went surfing in the pacific. Specifically, in Troncones. The waves were about 4 foot, clean and well spaced. It was my first time on a hardtop board and it seemed a lot more controllable than anything I’ve ever been on before. We had a instructor as well, mainly due to not knowing the area, the pacific being unknown territory and some people not having surfed before. He drove what looked to be a gutted VW Beetle (which are very common in Mexico, esp. as Taxi’s in Mexico City). The roof was made of palm leaves. One side of the windscreen there was a bunch of bananas and on the other side coconuts. The passenger seat in the front was a tree stump. It was an experience in and of itself.
Also while we were in Mexico, Tabasco got flooded. We actually went through Villahermosa the day before it happened, and it was already in a bad state at that stage. Each side of the road looked like a big brown lake and it wasn’t far from the level of the road. We were actually on a boat trip on the river that burst its banks the day it did, but we were further upstream. It wasn’t even at the high water mark where we were. The Mexican Embassy in the UK have setup up a HSBC account for donations. Details are on that page. *prods people*