Saturday, June 28, 2025

From Canada to Cabo part 4: Far from home

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Christina Whiteley and family in Canada
Christina Whiteley and her family in Canada. (Courtesy)

I’m writing this in my room at the chalet we’ve rented with family for the week on Mount Washington, Vancouver Island. I can hear all the cousins running around playing, singing songs and sneaking the occasional cookie from the counter. My heart is full every time we get to spend time with family like this.

The hardest thing about living in Mexico is being away from our family. We had been  blessed to have our family living close to us in British Columbia over the past few years, which made it even harder when we left.

Christina Whiteley family photo
Visiting family in Canada. (Courtesy)

We flew back to Canada this week for our daughter Izzy’s 7th birthday because she was missing her cousins, and even though our new Christmas traditions on the beach –  drinking mimosas, watching the whales breach – seem like a dream, whenever Izzy sees snow, she misses it. When we chose Cabo, it was partly because it’s  easily accessible – only a 4 and a half hour direct flight away, or if need be, a long road trip home for a couple of months in the summer. 

At first, our family was really upset and worried for us, but over the last year they have seen us thriving in our new life and have truly come to support us. When we go back now to visit, we just pick up where we left off and when they come to visit us, we get to enjoy vacation time with them, which is so special.

Canada has changed a lot over the last few years. People often wonder about their safety in Mexico, but I have to say that I don’t feel entirely safe in Canada anymore either. Homelessness and drug addiction have had an impact on safety in many Canadian cities.  When we flew back to Vancouver Island last summer, there was a bank robbery in Victoria the day after we landed there and six police officers were shot.

We took our daughter to Vancouver to see family, and I had to remove her from the restaurant twice because I was uncomfortable with the unpredictable behavior of a couple of people in the area who clearly suffered from mental health issues. I have so much compassion for them, and I know they aren’t getting the support they need, but I am not willing to put my family at risk.

Christina Whiteley family
Family from Canada visiting in Cabo. (Courtesy)

When my in-laws (who are in their 70s) came to visit us in Cabo they said, “Wow! We feel safer here than we do in downtown Victoria. We won’t even go down there anymore because random people are being stabbed.” It’s devastating to see what’s happened to the city I fell in love with, the one I lived in as a young adult.

Whenever I’m back in Canada and see how the cost of living keeps going up, I wonder  how most people are able to keep going. I remember at one point, while I was running a business, supporting a team of over 2000 people online, and failing at vegetable gardening, I asked my mom how my grandmother had ever managed.

She reminded me that it didn’t used to be this way. We were meant to raise our kids together in a family space with a village around to support us. My dream has always been  for our daughter to grow up in an outdoor environment, to be able to test her confidence and expand her imagination, riding bikes with friends and playing games running through the forest like we did. But we can’t raise our kids the way we were raised, because we are raising them in a different world. 

We have seen a huge change in Izzy since we moved to Cabo. She is happy, outgoing, engaging, and carefree – like most kids her age should be. She spends more time with us, she is excited to meet new people and chat with them and we love our weekend adventures exploring the Baja and beach days.  

Is it hard for our family to live far away while our daughter is so young? Absolutely, but we make up for it. We go the extra mile. We take the extra trip to connect with family. We make extra time and effort to be present and create a special experience for everyone.

These are the times we will look back and remember as we age. I don’t ever want to rush through them and miss out on the little things, because sooner rather than later, they become the big things.

Christina Whiteley, founder of Life Transformed, is a bestselling author, speaker and business strategist who leads the 6 Figure Profit Plan Mastermind and hosts corporate retreats where she resides in Cabo San Lucas. She and her husband Ryan, who is a realtor, live for road trips and weekend adventures with their daughter and their dog, Larry.

Experts sound alarm about water scarcity in Mexico

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dry water faucet
Mexico has been facing increasingly severe drought conditions for a number of years. (Shutterstock)

Scarcity, overexploitation, contamination and lack of water access will cause social and economic conflicts if Mexico’s water stress is not addressed in a timely manner, members of the nonprofit Water Advisory Council (CCA) warned on Tuesday.

Mexico is experiencing increasingly serious water shortages after years of poor rainfall, the experts said.

Cutzamal dam, Valle de Bravo
The Cutzamala dam system that supplies Mexico City has dropped to below 50% capacity. (Crisanta Espinosa Aguilar/Cuartoscuro)

Mexico City’s government announced last week that it would reduce water pressure as water reserves in the major Cutzamala reservoir fell below 50%, the lowest level recorded in its history. The Valley of Mexico, which contains around 15% of Mexico’s total population, has seen drought conditions for the last four years.

Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said she would create a task force consisting of Mexico City, México state and National Water Commission officials to find ways to improve water efficiency and reduce waste.

Annual rainfall levels in Mexico have fallen from 10,000 cubic meters in 1960 to only 4,000 since 2012. It is now ranked 24th for water stress by the World Resources Institute. Water stress occurs when the demand for water is greater than the available supply

“To guarantee future demand, the Mexican [government] needs to update the legal and regulatory frameworks that govern water management, as well as modernize the country’s hydraulic infrastructure,” stated the Mexican Institute for Competitiveness (IMCO) think tank in a report last month.

Water shortage in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon in summer of 2022
Many Mexicans do not have access to running water and must wait for weekly tanker deliveries instead. (Photo: Gabriela Pérez Montiel/Cuartoscuro)

“It is necessary to take into consideration the different technical characteristics — particularly geophysical ones — and challenges that the country currently presents in terms of water, such as the population increase, the growth of the urban sprawl, the evolution of droughts, as well as the variation in the rainfall.”

IMCO also recommended that the government take steps to improve water infrastructure — a topic that has been at the forefront of the recent discussions around Tesla’s investment in Nuevo León. The report also criticized the failure of the government to accurately measure water usage, relying instead on estimations instead of verifiable data.

Mexico is a country that is particularly vulnerable to droughts, with 52% of its territory located in an arid or semi-arid climate. Although droughts are recurring phenomena, they have increased in frequency, intensity and duration over the last decade. Fourteen of Mexico’s 32 states are located in arid or semi-arid areas. 

Seventy-one percent of the 8,491 droughts experienced in 2021 were classified as “severe” with another 26% classed as “extreme”. Three percent were “exceptional,” which led to a total scarcity of water in reservoirs, streams and wells. 

CCA president Raúl Rodríguez asserted that water is a matter of national security, requiring urgent action in the face of increasing issues in trying to supply populations, as well as uses in the field, industry, and conservation.

Water use in Mexico is dominated by the agricultural sector, which in 2020 was responsible for 76% of all water consumption in the country. A further 9% is used by industry, which is licensed to extract water directly from rivers and aquifers. These figures do not reflect the amount of water that is clandestinely extracted or used in illegal industrial operations. 

According to data from the national statistics agency INEGI, 21.3 million Mexicans have no access to running water.

With reports from EFE and Aristegui Noticias

Artist rediscovers mysterious recipe for ancient ‘Maya Blue’ dye

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artist's recreation of Maya Blue pigment
The turquoise blue pigment on Maya artifacts has withstood erosion for over a millennium. (Photos by Mark Viales)

An indigenous sculptor from a small village in Yucatán has recreated the ancient Maya process of extracting blue paint from a native plant via a chemical reaction.

Luis May Ku, 48, saw years of research finally pay off in January, when scientists in Italy and Mexico confirmed that his formula was genuine, making it officially the first time that the world has seen the traditional Maya Blue pigment made in almost two centuries.

Luis May Ku with Maya Blue pigment
Luis May Ku poses with his recreation of an ancient Maya dye known today as Maya Blue.

Perhaps even more impressive is that this happened within the confines of a self-made laboratory.

The ancestral pigment is known for its unique resistance to weathering, allowing it to appear relatively untouched after more than 1,000 years. It was made and used by Mesoamerican cultures during a period extending from about the eighth century until just after the mid-19th century.

Fantastic pre-Columbian murals and pottery fragments discovered around important archaeological sites show evidence the color was considered exclusive to the gods or to those chosen for ritual sacrifice.

Studies show that the Maya often applied the revered pigment when depicting Cháak (the rain god). Pre-Columbian archaeological sites like Chichén Itzá and Bonampak in Chiapas feature murals with it. Maya Blue was even exported to Cuba by the Spanish in the 1860s.

This is where the dye’s trail ran cold, however. Knowledge of the technique for making the dye disappeared during the colonial period. The pigment would not even be remembered again until the 20th century, when mineralogist Herbert E. Merwin reported in 1931 that he’d seen a vibrant, mysterious color — a bright blue with undercurrents of green — in murals at Chichén Itzá.

Over nearly 100 years, archaeologists and scientists, curious about the forgotten pigment, did numerous chemical studies on samples from pre-Hispanic items and eventually determined that Maya Blue was made from Indigo suffruticosa, palygorskite and calcium carbonate, but how it was made remained a mystery.

Then in January, from his home in Dzán, Yucatán, a village of 6,000 people, May received the call from Dr. David Buti at the Institute of Science and Cultural Heritage in Florentino, Italy and Dr. Rodolfo Palomino Merino at the Autonomous University of Puebla, and May’s dream came true.

Both academic institutions had confirmed his samples containing palygorskite, calcium carbonate and indigo had caused an “intercalation between the indigo molecules” — a type of chemical reaction — that resulted in an authentic Maya Blue.

Yucatan community mixing pre-Hispanic formula for Maya Blue
Members of the Dzán community in Yucatan assist in mixing the formula for Maya Blue.

“I was ecstatic because it was the return of a pigment that had not been seen in the world for almost 200 years in its traditional form,” May said. “Maya Blue was used by my ancestors exclusively in ceremonial practices, and even then, it was in limited supply. It was the color of the gods, and only the elite were permitted to use it.”

He traveled from village to village where he lives, looking for the right variety of indigo, called Ch’oj in the Mayan language and añil in Spanish. In the end, what he sought turned out to be right under his nose.

In the back garden of the Cobá, Quintana Roo’s municipal cultural center, where he works as a primary schoolteacher, a curious shrub caught his eye.

“The kids had fashioned it into one of the goalposts for soccer games,” he said. “I asked my dear friend, the caretaker, Don Justino, to please protect it for me as it could be an important part of our cultural heritage.”

Don Justino said he would keep his promise because he always used its leaves to treat severe stomach pain, a traditional medicine passed down from his grandparents. Although he was unaware of its use as a dye, he still surrounded it with fencing to keep it safe for both of them.

“All knowledge of Ch’oj had passed down for generations as a medicinal plant, but its use in Yucatán as a pigment was, seemingly, lost forever,” Luis May said.

“The only memories villagers had of a blue plant involved their grandmothers using it to whiten clothes. Before washing traditional white garb, a particular plant was left in a tub of water overnight and then stirred. The dirty clothes would replace the plants and swirl in the water for a short time,” he explained.

“The key point here was if the clothes were left too long in the mix, they would eventually turn blue. Left for the appropriate time, however, it would merely whiten them.”

This was the clue May needed, and in November 2019, around seven helpers from Cobá mixed his cocktail in a large concrete vat filled with water.

At first, only white foam appeared on the surface of the water. But after an hour, it began to turn blue, which was met with collective cheers.  Luis realized, however, that the tone was too pale and that more work was needed to perfect the pigment into an authentic Maya Blue.

“In Cobá, we had extracted the blue tint from the plant, yet the Maya Blue I mixed in my laboratory at home in Dzán was the missing piece,” he said. “I was on my own when it happened. It changed from a pale blue into a vibrant turquoise.”

When he saw the color’s intensity, he said, he knew he had it.

Yucatan sculptor Luis May Ku with indigo
Sculptor Luis May went from village to village searching for the indigo variety used in the ancient recipe.

“I jumped with joy. I repeated the process, and it provided the same tone,” May said. “I experimented with different natural additives. Sometimes I froze them or let them rot before using them. Let’s say I used many techniques that failed before I finally found it.”

May would not reveal the crucial details of how he rediscovered the pigment, preferring to keep it as a family secret. He admitted dismay at a lack of funding to pursue his research from the Mexican government; his sole financial backer has been the British Museum in London.

He claimed he would have shared the recipe with his people had government officials not “used him” for propaganda instead of genuinely supporting his project.

“Photos were taken of me with some scientists, and I was promised my sample would be analyzed in the laboratories at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), something that never happened. The financial aid they told me I deserved, that would spur on my research, also never arrived.”

While the knowledge of how to make Maya Blue may have been lost for centuries, May notes that awareness of the Ch’oj plant never really left the Maya people on the Yucatan Peninsula.

“I have a theory that could perhaps link the modern application of Ch’oj with its use in pre-Hispanic times,” Luis said. “My wife and I are teachers at a bilingual primary school (Maya and Spanish). Sometimes we set exercises regarding Mayan botany, and one day, my wife found an old book that mentioned Ch’oj as a plant used for the treatment of epilepsy.

“According to this old book, once the plant was removed from the water, the afflicted would have their clothes washed in the mixture for a short period, and then put them on, wet and all. The belief was it could clean the body. The concept of purification from the simple touch of the blue color had transcended through time into this book containing treatment for epilepsy.”

“These are memories from an ancient past that have survived until today,” he said.

Mark Viales writes for Mexico News Daily.

Mexican banks stable, analysts say in wake of US banking crisis

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Mexican Stock Exchange building
Despite the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in the U.S. sparking financial panic around the world and raising concerns about possible effects on Mexico, analysts reported that banks here remained solid. (Wotancito / Wikimedia Commons).

As financial turmoil shook the United States, Mexican banks had a bad day on the stock market on Monday but are in good health overall, according to analysts and the head of an industry group.

The value of banks listed on the Mexican Stock Exchange (BMV) dropped Monday in the wake of the recent failures of the California-based Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and the New York-based Signature Bank.

Santander México shares suffered the biggest slump, declining 5.38%, while Gentera stocks fell 4.66%. Among the other bank shares that took hits on Monday were those of Banco del Bajio (-3.54%), Banorte (-2.17%), and Banregio (-1.94%).

The newspaper El Economista reported that the collective value of BMV-listed banks declined 16.45 billion pesos (about US $883.7 million).

Jacobo Rodríguez, director of analysis at the investment company Black WallStreet Capital, attributed the fall in the value of bank stocks to “contagion in the mood of investors.”

In other words, U.S. investors’ negative outlook spread south of the border. However, expressing a view shared by other analysts, Rodríguez said that Mexican banks “are not in a bad situation.” 

stock graph
Mexican stocks did not face a significant slump, which analysts here attributed to stricter banking regulations.

Jorge Sánchez Tello, Director of the Applied Research Program at the Foundation of Financial Studies, based at the National Autonomous Technological Institute (ITAM), stated that the Mexican banking system is solid and that the failure of SVB isn’t affecting Mexico because the bank had no business interests in Mexico.

Gabriela Siller, director of economic analysis at Banco Base, tweeted that the collapse of SVB wasn’t expected to generate a “contagion effect to the banking system of Mexico.”

“Regulation is stricter in Mexico, which is why contagion to Mexico was avoided during the 2008 financial crisis in the United States,” she added.

Daniel Becker, president of the Association of Mexican Banks, said in a radio interview that local banks are in a strong position. 

“Due to regulation and [banks’] capital levels there is no cause for concern in Mexico today,” Becker said. “We have to be attentive … but Mexicans today should be reassured that banks are in a position of strength that doesn’t put their deposits at risk.”

The news outlet Bloomberg Linea reported that Mexican banks have “adequate levels of capitalization and solvency” and noted that the analysts it consulted believe that Mexican banks are in a “solid” position.

In a report published last November, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) noted that “Mexico has a robust financial system” that “appears resilient to severe macrofinancial shocks.”

For many years, Mexican banks “have maintained high capital and liquidity buffers,” the report stated.

The value of the Mexican peso, which traded below 18 to the U.S. dollar in early March, fell about 2.5% on Monday as investors’ appetite for risk assets waned amid the events in the U.S., but the currency recovered some of its losses on Tuesday morning.

In the early afternoon, one dollar was worth about 18.60 pesos, according to currency conversion website xe.com.

With reports from Bloomberg Linea, El Economista, El Financiero, López-Doriga Digital and Reuters

Most Mexicans do not want to relax gun control, survey finds

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guns
The majority of weapons confiscated by authorities in Mexico have been traced back to sales in the U.S. (Shutterstock)

Despite high levels of crime across many areas of the country, most Mexicans are not in favor of relaxing strict gun control laws, a new report by the Chamber of Deputies has revealed.

As part of a wide-ranging government study undertaken in October, almost 70% of those surveyed did not believe that easier access to guns would make their communities safer — with 67% stating that keeping a firearm in the home would make them feel less safe.

Ecatepec de Morelos, Edomex
Regions such as Ecatepec reported the highest levels of insecurity in the country. (Gzzz/Wikimedia Commons)

Only 30% of respondents felt that carrying a weapon would improve personal safety, with the overwhelming majority stating that they felt a gun would put them further at risk of violence.

This desire to restrict access to guns was strongest in municipalities that had the highest levels of violent crime. 

Opposition parties have previously proposed legislation to lower barriers to gun ownership in Mexico — a suggestion which proved controversial at the time. 

“People are defenseless. [Criminals] arrive at homes and businesses, and they murder women [and] men — Mexicans who can’t defend themselves because there is not a proper control and registry so that they can have access to powerful weapons,” said PRI leader Alejandro Morena last June. 

An illegal smuggling tunnel between Nogales AZ, and Mexico.
Tunnels such as these are often used to smuggle weapons into Mexico, where they can be sold on the black market. (US Customs and Border Patrol)

Despite the resounding push-back against gun ownership, almost 55% of those surveyed stated that they felt “low” or “no” levels of safety in their communities — especially those in the western and central regions of the country, where cartel violence is often fiercest. This insecurity was most strongly felt by those over 35 years of age.

In regions with the highest levels of violence, just over 50% of respondents said that they had heard or experienced gunfights in the last three years. Official figures also show that 65% of all homicides in the country involved a gun. 

Overall, 76% of women and 69% of men said they feared they would be likely to suffer violence at the hands of armed criminals, although only 20% of all respondents had actually been victims of such an attack.

Despite the fact that Mexico has comparatively strict gun ownership laws, firearms often cross the border from the United States, where “lax regulation … and the lack of controls on the Mexican border, create the perfect conditions for the internal market of illicit weapons to grow and continue to grow,” said the report.

The Chamber of Deputies’ findings also suggested that weapons already in Mexico should be bought back from owners and that the number of firearms made available to state security forces should be reduced. However, data from 2019 to 2021 indicate a significant decline in weapons surrendered in government buyback programs compared to the previous three-year period. 

The investigation was undertaken by legislator Juanita Guerra Mena, president of the Citizen Security Commission, with assistance from the Center for Social Studies and Public Opinion of the Chamber of Deputies.

With reports from Sin Embargo

Mexican alpinist sets new climbing records

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Viridiana Alvarez summits Lhotse
Viridiana Álvarez on her climb towards the summit of Lhotse in Nepal. (Viridana Álvarez/Instagram)

Mexican mountaineer Viridiana Álvarez has become the first woman from the Americas to climb the world’s five highest mountains — Everest, K2, Kanchenjunga, Lhotse and Makalu. 

Álvarez rose to fame in 2019, when she was awarded the Guinness World Record for being the woman with the fastest ascent of the top three highest mountains with supplementary oxygen, taking only one year and 364 days to reach the three highest peaks.

Alvarez presents her 2019 Guinness World Record
Álvarez was awarded a Guinness World Record in 2019. (Viridiana Álvarez/Guinness)

Alpine climbing is a style of fast ascent, with little equipment to slow climbers down, and is often used by mountaineers who are looking to get to the summit as quickly as possible. This style of climbing recently allowed her to summit Everest without oxygen, making her only the 9th woman in history to achieve the feat.

Born in Aguascalientes in 1987, Álvarez wasn’t always a climber. She started as a runner, and after finishing a 10-kilometer run, decided she wanted a bigger challenge. She then ran a half marathon (21 km) before completing a full marathon (42.1 km) a few months later. 

Looking for a greater challenge, she decided to do an Iron Man triathlon consisting of a series of long-distance swimming, cycling and running races. After completing the competition, she decided to move on to climbing, reaching the summit of Pico de Orizaba, Mexico’s highest mountain, at age 30.

Inspired by her success, she went on to climb the world’s highest mountain, Nepal’s Mount Everest in 2017. One year later, she climbed K2 in Pakistan, becoming the first Latin American woman to summit the second highest — and most dangerous — mountain in the world. 

In May 2019, she made history when she reached the top of Kangchenjunga, the world’s third highest peak, breaking the existing record of two years and two days set by South Korean alpinist Go Mi-Sun.

Currently, Álvarez is seeking her next world record — summiting the fourteen highest mountains in under than nine years.

With reports from Guinness World Record and El Sol de Durango

Mexico sends 250 big cats to Indian conservation center

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A rescued Tiger awaits transport to India
The big cats will be re-homed at a reserve in Gujarat, India. (Twitter @azcarmx)

Around 250 rescued tigers and other felines are on their way from Mexico to India, as part of a scheme to prevent extinction in their native country.

The Association of Zoos, Breeders and Aquariums of Mexico (Azcarm) and the Ostok Sanctuary, an animal rescue center in Sinaloa, worked for months to arrange the animals’ transfer to a conservation center in the Indian state of Gujarat.

cartel tigers seized in Guerrero, Mexico
Some of the big cats faced abuse before being rescued. (FGE Guerrero)

“We undertook intense work with India’s [Greens] Zoological Rescue and Rehabilitation [Kingdom] to carry out this important transfer of around 200 tigers,” Azcarm’s president, Ernesto Zazueta, said in a statement.

He added that the center had committed “to release this species into the wild so that it can repopulate areas where it has practically disappeared.”

Around 50 lions and leopards were also included in the transfer. Zazueta explained that the big cats had been abandoned, rescued, or confiscated from Mexican zoos. Mexico has seen several such cases in recent years, including the rescue of around 200 emaciated felines from Mexico City’s Black Jaguar-White Tiger Foundation in July 2022.

Although big cats can reproduce successfully in Mexico, thanks to the country’s climate and breeding programs, “the best place for these animals is where they are native,” Zazueta said.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) estimates that there are less than 4000 tigers left in the wild. The big cats are threatened not only through loss of habitat but also by poachers who hunt them as trophies or for use in traditional Chinese medicine.

Arranging the transfer was “a long and intense process,” Zazueta said, requiring documentation from national and international environmental authorities and rigorous health checks to ensure the animals were fit enough to withstand the journey.

The tigers will now undergo a quarantine period before entering an adaptation program designed to reintroduce them to the wild. Zazueta stressed that their new home is a spacious, natural conservation center, closed to the public, where the animals will be well kept.

“We already have 100 more specimens that we will move in the same way,” he added. “Here in our country, there are not many spaces to give them a home, and there is not enough private or public budget to sustain so many rescued, abandoned and seized big cats.”

With reports from El Financiero and Proceso

Charming home for sale in enchanting Pátzcuaro

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Lake Pátzcuaro in Michoacán
Lake Pátzcuaro and Janitzio Island at sunset. (Depositphotos)

Step back in time and immerse yourself in the wonders of magical Pátzcuaro. This pueblo mágico, dating back over 400 years, is a place that welcomes you with open arms.

Located in Mexico’s central highlands, the city sits on the edge of beautiful Lake Pátzcuaro, with the dazzling island of Janitzio. As you explore the bustling markets, shop the many galleries and chat with the friendly locals, you’ll feel the undeniable pull to become a part of this dynamic community.

View of Lake Pátzcuaro from the town. (Tourism Ministry)

With its time-honored traditions, Pátzcuaro’s colonial style and Purépecha culture make it a city of soul, not just sights and one of the top tourist destinations in Mexico. Pátzcuaro is perhaps best known for its magical celebrations of Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), but is also home to wonderful restaurants and a thriving music scene.

If you’re considering Pátzcuaro as your home away from home, Casa Alma might be the perfect place for you. Nestled in the heart of the town, at the end of a private gated street, just steps away from the main square, lies this charming home that seamlessly blends traditional Mexican colonial architecture with stylish modern finishes.

As you step inside this 2-bedroom, 2.5-bathroom oasis, you’ll be greeted by an open floor plan that effortlessly flows from room to room. This spacious layout  is perfect for entertaining guests and flows outside to a tiled terrace with built-in B-B-Q and a relaxing waterfall with a pond. A modern built-in gas fireplace is flanked by beautiful shelves to display your favorite treasures.  

Exterior of Casa Alma Pátzcuaro
Exterior of Casa Alma

The adjacent dining area is the ideal spot for entertaining friends and family. But the showstopper of the house is the fully-equipped modern kitchen, a chef’s dream, with  quartz counter-tops and complemented by an Italian-tiled back-splash.

This exceptional house has two luxurious master bedrooms. The ground floor suite has a garden view and a large bank of closets. The en suite bathroom has a double vanity and a shower room with a copper soaking tub and separate water closet. Additional closets and drawers add to the ample storage that is present throughout the entire house.

Living room Casa Alma
Inviting Casa Alma living room.

The second-floor master bedroom offers views of the town and surrounding mountains from its large sliding windows. It has a single vanity, shower and separate water closet. A complete wall of closets and drawers compliment the luxurious bathroom. Both of the bedroom suites have radiant heating for those cool Pátzcuaro winter mornings.

Casa Alma kitchen
Kitchen of Casa Alma

The second floor includes an office/TV room that has expansive views of the city and lake. The stone gas fireplace will keep you cozy on cool nights. Venture up the second flight of stairs to the rooftop terrace with its panoramic views of the Centro Histórico, the lake, and the iconic Estribo. A perfect spot to sip your morning coffee or enjoy a glass of wine at sunset.

Pátzcuaro is just forty minutes from Morelia, the beautiful colonial capital of Michoacán, with its world-class restaurants, shopping, excellent healthcare and international airport. And just a little further afield you can access Pacific coast beaches, Mexico City and Guadalajara by car or bus in about  3 hours.

If you’re looking for a home that offers the perfect balance of Mexican modern with touches of colonial charm then look no further than Pátzcuaro and Casa Alma for a one-of-a-kind investment opportunity. Come and experience the magic for yourself – you won’t be disappointed.

For a virtual tour, video and more photos please visit Casa Alma.

For more information, Liliana Elena Gonzalez Castro of Mexatua is the listing agent for Casa Alma, Pátzcuaro, Michoacán. The asking price is US $399,000.

Ebrard launches campaign to defend Mexico’s reputation in US

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Mexico's Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard, center.
"We are not going to allow Mexico to be pushed around," Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard told Mexico's diplomats in the U.S. at a ministry meeting led by Ebrard in Washington D.C. on Monday. (SRE)

Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard has instructed Mexico’s ambassador and consuls in the United States to begin a campaign in defense of Mexico in light of the “unacceptable attacks” on the country by Republican Party lawmakers and ex-officials.

Ebrard met with Ambassador Esteban Moctezuma and 52 Mexican consuls at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington D.C. on Monday.

Mexico's Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard and Mexico's diplomats in the U.S.
Ebrard asked Mexico’s ambassador to the United States Esteban Moctezuma and all U.S. consuls to hold informative meetings with the Mexican community and political actors, and to submit a weekly report. (SRE)

“We are not going to allow Mexico to be pushed around,” the foreign minister told the diplomats, according to an English-language press release issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE).

Ebrard, the statement said, told Moctezuma and the consuls “to begin a widespread information campaign in defense of our country after the unacceptable attacks by legislators and former officials of the Republican Party.”

“In order to prevent a narrative based on lies that harms our country … gain[ing] force,” the SRE statement said, “… Ebrard asked the ambassador and consuls to hold informative meetings with the Mexican community and political actors, and to submit a weekly report.”

“At the request of the consuls, informational materials will be made available at the consulates and provided to the local media,” it added.

U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham is at the forefront of a group of Republicans calling for the United States to declare Mexican cartels foreign terrorist organizations, setting up justification for military attacks on cartels inside Mexico.

 

Ebrard’s instruction to diplomats came after Senator Lindsey Graham said he would introduce legislation to “set the stage to use military force if necessary to protect America from being poisoned by things coming out of Mexico” and former attorney general William Barr expressed support for Congressman Dan Crenshaw’s proposal for the U.S. armed forces to be used against cartels in Mexico.

“America can no longer tolerate narco-terrorist cartels. Operating from havens in Mexico, their production of deadly drugs on an industrial scale is flooding our country with this poison. The time is long past to deal with this outrage decisively,” Barr wrote in The Wall Street Journal.

Other Republicans have also advocated the use of the U.S. military to combat Mexican criminal organizations such as the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and the Sinaloa Cartel.

President López Obrador threatened last week to launch an “information campaign” in the United States so that Mexican residents “know about this treachery, this aggression from the Republicans toward Mexico.”

Mexico's Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard in Acapulco
At an event in Acapulco on Sunday, Ebrard told audiences that U.S. forces would only be sent to Mexico “over my dead body.” (Marcelo Ebrard/Twitter)

“If they continue with this attitude we’ll insist that not one vote from Mexicans, from Hispanics, [is cast in favor of the Republican Party],” he said.

According to the SRE statement, Ebrard and the U.S.-based diplomats “reviewed the recent attacks by several legislators and former Republican Party officials, who have sought to blame Mexico for the fentanyl crisis in the U.S. and who have in some cases gone to the extreme of proposing that the U.S. intervene in our country.”

However, Mexico has in fact been “the United States’ main ally in the fight against fentanyl”, Ebrard said.

“Proof of this is that, so far in this administration, Mexico has seized a record amount of the drug — more than six tonnes — that has prevented hundreds of thousands of potentially deadly doses of fentanyl [reaching the United States],” Ebrard said, adding that the fight against fentanyl has cost the lives of hundreds of Mexican security force members.

“With this cost in human lives, how is it that these men dare to question our commitment or, even worse, to call for intervention in our country?” the foreign minister said.

At an event in Acapulco on Sunday, Ebrard declared that U.S. forces would only be sent to Mexico “over my dead body.”

Mexican military seizing fentanyl and crystal meth
Mexico has been the U.S.’ “main ally in the fight against fentanyl,” Ebrard told the convened diplomats on Monday, and said it has prevented hundreds of thousands of potentially deadly doses of fentanyl from reaching the United States. (Cuartoscuro)

“We will never allow the force of another country, whoever it may be, to be used in our territory,” he said.

On Monday, Ebrard said that Mexico and the United States are working within the framework of the bilateral Bicentennial Framework to combat fentanyl trafficking and associated deaths as well as arms trafficking.

He also noted that Mexican and U.S. security officials would meet in Washington next month to identify additional ways to cooperate in the fight against arms and fentanyl trafficking.

Mexico News Daily

AMLO: ‘Mexico is safer than the United States’

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President Lopez Obrador of Mexico
His opponents made political hay with the recent killings of Americans in Matamoros, and a Los Angeles reporter attended his press conference to ask if Americans are safe in Mexico. But the president insisted that his country is much safer than the U.S. (Andrea Murcia Monsivais/Cuartoscuro)

Mexico is safer than the United States, President López Obrador said Monday without citing any hard data to back up his claim.

His assertion came in response to a question from a United States-based reporter at his morning press conference.

U.S. reporter Octavio Valdez
U.S. reporter Octavio Valdez told President Lopez Obrador at a Monday press conference that after the recent kidnappings of four Americans in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, many U.S. residents are wondering if it’s safe to visit Mexico. (Twitter)

“Is traveling to Mexico safe at the moment with everything we’re seeing, with all these [travel] alerts and these very regrettable events?” asked Octavio Valdez of Los Angeles-based television station Univisión 34.

“Mexico is safer than the United States,” López Obrador responded.

“There is no problem with traveling around Mexico safely. United States citizens know that, and of course our compatriots … [in the U.S.] know that. They’re well-informed,” he said.

His remarks came 10 days after four U.S. citizens were attacked and kidnapped in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, and just over two weeks after another American was killed in Nuevo Laredo in the same state when he came under fire from soldiers. Two of the foursome were found dead while one of the others was shot.

4 Americans kidnapped in Matamoros, Mexico
From left to right: Latavia McGee, Eric James Williams, Shaeed Woodward and Zindell Brown. McGee and Williams survived the attack and were returned to the U.S. Woodward and Brown were killed. The Gulf Cartel is suspected to be responsible for the attack.

Over 550 other U.S. citizens are reported as missing in Mexico, The Washington Post reported Friday, while the whereabouts of over 100,000 Mexicans is unknown.

The U.S. Department of State advises U.S. citizens to not travel to six Mexican states including Tamaulipas, to reconsider travel to seven others and to exercise caution when traveling to 17 entities, including Mexico City.

Campeche and Yucatán are the only states where “normal precautions” are advised, a fact pointed out to the president by Valdez.

If Mexico was as dangerous as the United States claims, López Obrador responded, large numbers of Americans wouldn’t be coming to live in Mexico City and other parts of the country.

“These past years is when the most Americans have come to live in Mexico. So, what’s happening? Why this paranoia?” he said.

López Obrador also noted that large numbers of tourists come to Mexico, despite warnings  from the governments of the United States and other countries.

Tourists in Punta Cancun
Tourists enjoying the beach in Cancún last month. The president pointed out that many foreign tourists come to Cancún despite travel advisories issued by their governments. (Elisabeth Ruíz/Cuartoscuro)

“Do you know how many flights land and take off [in Cancún] every day? More than 700. Tourists are arriving in Cancún like never before,” he said.

United States citizens can easily be found in the southern states of Oaxaca and Chiapas and in restaurants in trendy Mexico City neighborhoods such as Roma and Condesa, López Obrador added.

While he repeated his claim that Mexico is safer than the United States — and even added the determiner “much” — the president didn’t refer to any crime statistics to support it.

On one key measure — homicides — statistics show that Mexico is in fact significantly more dangerous than its northern neighbor.

Data published by the World Bank shows there were 28 homicides in Mexico per 100,000 people in 2020, compared to just seven per 100,000 in the United States.

In recent years, the total number of homicides has also been higher in Mexico — where there were almost 31,000 murders in 2022 — than in the United states. In terms of population, Mexico – where the 2020 census counted about 127 million residents – is about two-fifths the size of the U.S.

Homicide data for Mexico between 1990-2020.

 

A significant percentage of homicides in Mexico – up to 70%, according to a recent United Nations study – are related to organized crime, meaning that many of the victims are presumed criminals. Gang-related shootings in bars are relatively common, but targeted or random armed attacks in places such as malls, supermarkets and schools are rare.

While foreign tourists and residents have been murdered and abducted in Mexico, data indicates that most international visitors and residents are not affected by violent crimes such as homicide and kidnapping.

Mexico News Daily