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November 24, 2008

Page 3 Features, Weather, Sports, Exchange, Community Calendar

The Almost Twice Weekly Newspaper for the Jaltemba Coast

 

  Pride in the Details:                       

                      Efren Garcia

 

Story and pictures by Tara Spears

 

As more foreigners blissfully purchase their piece of paradise along the fabulous Mexican Pacific coast, an oft heard question on the streets and in cafes is “Can you recommend an honest, good remodeler?” One local craftsman, Efren Garcia Esparza, is in demand because of his trademark quality work, reliability, and fair prices.  “My specialty is doing kitchens and bathrooms,” said Efren through a translator. “My wife taught me early (in our marriage) about the importance of a nice kitchen. A woman unhappy with her kitchen is a woman who won’t cook- and I like to eat!” he explained with a grin. After 17 years in the Riviera Nayarit area, Efren’s company, Construccion Garcia, has a long list of satisfied customers. Besides kitchen and bath improvements, Efren also builds entire houses or additions.

           Kitchen Before:                                                                            Kitchen After:

             

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Aside from the six years that Efren was a construction apprentice for a large builder in Puerto Vallarta, he has lived in the La Penita, Nayarit area. “I learned the steps for tear down and building the old fashioned way: by sweating and getting my hands dirty.  I’ve always been a perfectionist,” said Efren. “I decided the best way to achieve the quality work I like to do was to run my own company.  That way I could control the way the work was done and select the top materials. So I started my own company 17 years ago and I’ve never regretted it.”  Choosing to focus on residential building, Efren has a crew of five skilled craftsmen that meet his standards. He and his men are outstanding finish masons. “My walls and counters are STRAIGHT!” he explains. “I have excellent electricians and window makers that I subcontract when the project needs it.”

    

                                             Construccion Garcia’s Skilled crew

 

Don’t worry about not speaking Spanish: Efren’s brother and two employees are fluent in English. He also has contracts in English. After Efren meets with a client to determine their needs, he works up a proposal that will give the cost of labor, materials, and clean up. “I was so impressed that Efren took the time to discuss options as the remodeling progressed- he did mock ups of potential layouts, possible tile patterns- it was clear that he wanted us to be happy with the results,” says homeowner Jamie Decker. “The company is very reliable and really delivers quality construction.”  A look at a few of Construccion Garcia completed projects illustrate Efren’s philosophy:  “I am proud of every job I do; each project has its own memories. I like that my clients become good friends.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

              

Efren likes to relax with his wife of 22 years, Alejandra, and their three children: Luis, Susana, and Ismael.  An avid soccer fan, Efren has played in a men’s soccer league for years.  Growing up as one of 12 children on a rural Nayarit farm, he learned the importance of hard work at a very young age. “I would be thrilled if my sons want to come into the business,” he said, “But only if it is what they truly love. Right now it is important for my children to get an education so that they will have choices.” The Riviera Nayarit area is fortunate to have a quality craftsman like Efren who is committed to making clients happy, one home at a time.

Contact Efren: 327-274-0795 or English: Johan (email) sunwatts@gmail.com

 

 

        

Wife Alejandra                                                Craftsman Efren relaxing

 

To contact Tara:  terri_sprs@yahoo.com

 



 

Mexican Jungle Wildlife        

                                          By Tara Spears                               

 If you have ever dreamed of a going on a safari to see exotic animals, there is no need to leave this continent.  The jungles of the Riviera Nayarit are teeming with interesting mammals, including big cats; hundreds of bird species; massive and weird looking reptiles, amphibians, and more varieties of insects than you can imagine.   Local jungle adventure tours provide a narrated highlight of fauna-but for the more daring, a solitary hike away from any roads will also yield lots of interesting photos and up close experiences.

The lush, warm climate forests are a dense thicket of tropical trees, shrubs, vines and herbaceous plants that provide habitat for a profusion of wildlife: about 40% of all species live in jungle environments!  Because an encounter with the big cats was a regular occurrence, the ancient Mexican people expressed their respect for these noble predators in their art and religion.  These once plentiful cats are now endangered due to the encroachment of man and loss of habitat, but they are still out there. You are unlikely to see one as they hide well, are mostly nocturnal, and avoid encounters with humans which they can smell from very far away. The Mexican wild cats are a beautiful group of mammals.

jaguar1.jpgMx. Jaguar    (famous black jaguar, top of article)

The largest carnivore in Mexico and Central America is the Jaguar (Panthera Onca or Tigre) which can grow to over 2 meters length. The magnificent feline which adorns so many advertisements about Mexico is actually very rare and its population continues to decline dramatically. The Mayans used a jaguar-shaped altar for important sacrifices.

.

           puma

The Puma or Mountain Lion ranks second in size of the wild cats in Mexico. Its fur is uniform brown and unspotted. The puma is a panamerican species, able to live in extremely varied habitats from Canada to Chile and Argentina.

With one meter in length, the Ocelot (Manigordo) is the largest representative of the small wild cats. The ocelot lives and hides on the ground and rarely climbs trees. He is found in primary and secondary growth dry forests and hunts at night. His diet consists of birds, monkeys, rats and other small mammals or reptiles.

The Margay Cat (Caucel) is smaller than the ocelot and spends most of his life on trees. It is the most accomplished climber of these wild cats because its ankle joints permit to rotate its foot through 180 degrees and it moves around treetops with the ease of a squirrel.

 

The Jaguarundi (León Breñero) is unspotted and with its long sleek body, short legs and small head it looks like a cross between a cat and a weasel. The Jaguarundi hunts day and night and is also an excellent swimmer. It is the wild cat which is best adapted to human changes to its habitat.

The Riviera Nayarit jungles support a wide variety of other mammals: some exotic critters, others that you might see NOB.

  badger.jpg  coyotes.jpg

Armadillo                                                badger                                           coyote

spider monkey.jpg    whitetail deer.jpg  wildboar.jpg

Spider monkey                                             deer                                            wildboar

Many tourists visit the area just to go birding.  They are not disappointed since the Riviera Nayarit coast lies along the Pacific Flyway, the route that Northern migrating birds follow. Best of all are the native bird varieties that live in the jungle.

amazon parrot.jpg            chachalaca.jpg       cojolite pheasant.jpg

Amazon parrot                   chachalaca                                cojolite

 

mtn dove.jpg        mx bobo.jpg        mx spotted owl.jpg

Mtn. dove                               Mx. Bobo                                                       Mx. Spotted owl

blk iguana.jpgTropical jungle reptiles that call our area home:

         PassPort's Avatar   grn iguana.jpg

          Black iguana                                                   gecko                                      green iguana

The magic of the Riviera Nayarit jungle, with all of its exotic wildlife diversity, is just another reason why living or visiting the area is a memorable experience. 

 

Contact Tara:   terri_sprs@yahoo.com


 

Thanksgiving Dinner!

Xaltemba

 Thanksgiving Menu

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Seatings

5:30 pm & 7:30 pm

$200 per Person

Traditional Thanksgiving Roasted Turkey

served with homemade gravy

Sides

Dressing

Pecans, granny smith apples, fresh mushrooms and thyme

Green Beans

Fresh green beans stewed with garlic, onion and vine ripe tomatoes

Sweet Potatoes

Baked with Macintosh apples and brown sugar

Corn Soufflé

Fresh corn off the cob sautéed with onion and baked

Potatoes Isabelle

  Riced potatoes and steamed carrots, butter and cream

Salad

Crisp fresh spinach tossed with pomegranate, mandarin orange slices, roasted pine nuts,

Manchego cheese croutons served with warm bacon and citrus vinaigrette 

Homemade Cranberry Sauce

Dessert

Fresh baked pumpkin pie topped with hand whipped Chantilly cream


Mexican Transvestite Fiesta Rocks Indigenous Town
Reuters
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A man dressed in the traditional costume of a Zapotec woman attends a mass at a church in the town of Juchitan in southern Mexico, November 22, 2008.

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Pedro Martinez (L) braids the hair of a friend dressed in the traditional costume of a Zapotec woman.

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A man, dressed in the traditional costume of a Zapotec woman, plucks his eyebrows.

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Men dressed in the traditional costume of a Zapotec woman walk during a parade. (Reuters/Stringer)

 

Juchitan, Mexico - Attaching flowers to a ribbon headdress, pulling a lace slip under an embroidered skirt and draping a necklace of gold coins over his head, Pedro Martinez puts the finishing touches on the traditional costume of Zapotec women in southern Mexico.
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"When I get all dressed up like this my father always says, 'Oh Pedro! You look just like your mother when she was young," beams Martinez, 28, gluing on fake eyelashes in front of a mirror.
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Martinez spent two hours in the hair salon he owns getting ready for this weekend's festival of the "muxes," indigenous gays and transvestites in the town of Juchitan who have found a haven of acceptance in Mexico's macho society.
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The muxes (pronounced moo-shes), mostly of ethnic Zapotec descent, are widely respected in the southern town where a dance and parade that crowns a transvestite queen and celebrates the harvest has been held annually for the last 33 years.
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Anthropologists say the tradition of blurring genders among Mexico's indigenous population is centuries old but has been revived in recent decades due to the gay pride movement.
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Several dozen muxes were blessed by a Catholic priest at a mass before joining visiting transvestites and other townsfolk at a raucous party on Saturday night. The muxes wore either traditional local costumes or ball gowns and high heels.
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The beer-fueled fiesta continued into Sunday at a parade through town.
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Some of the muxes, a Zapotec word derived from the Spanish for woman, or "mujer", dress as women year round and others are gays who only don women's clothes at the annual party, or not at all.
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The area around Juchitan, a laid-back town near the Pacific, has a history of women playing leading roles in public life.
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"The legend here is that mothers pray for a gay son who can take care of them when they are old," theater director Sergio Santamaria, 56, said over a traditional breakfast of iguana soup and sweet corn tamales.
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DUAL-GENDERED GODS
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Native people in the Americas with ambiguous gender were often regarded as wise and talented, said Rosemary Joyce, a professor of anthropology at the University of California at Berkeley.
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"They were seen as have having a kind of spiritual power that comes from being more like the ancestors who are mothers and fathers at once, and more like the divinities who may be dual gendered," Joyce said.
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Anthropologists have found evidence of mixed gender identities across Mesoamerica, from Mayan corn and moon gods that are both male and female and Aztec priests who ritually cross dressed.
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The Spanish conquest in the 16th century and the Catholic Church snuffed out much of that tolerance.
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"The colonizing power was very rigid about sex. They came in and rapidly suppressed all these practices, which doesn't mean they went away. It means they went underground," Joyce said.
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While homosexuality has long been accepted in Juchitan, it is only recently that muxes feel secure enough to cross-dress and they have taken on causes like AIDS education, since the region has one of the highest HIV rates in the state of Oaxaca.
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"There have always been muxes, but before they would wear just a dress shirt with a feminine touch, like gold buttons. The transvestites are the new generation," said Santamaria.
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(Editing by Kieran Murray)

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SPORTS

Put up or shut up time for El Tri

In the more than two years since Mexico bowed out of the 2006 World Cup, El Tricolor has played in several games of critical importance. Still, for all the weight the '07 CONCACAF Gold Cup final and Copa Amrica semifinal carried, neither was as important and significant as Wednesday's 2010 World Cup qualifier in Honduras..More

 

 

Guadalajara  are now focused on the Copa Sudamericana

Internacional playmaker Andres D'Alessandro insists it is too soon to talk about Copa Sudamericana glory despite having clinched a 2-0 cushion in the away leg of their semi-final against Mexican giants Guadalajara. .More

 

For Team Mexico, the bobsledding is all uphill

These guys are unlikely sports icons. They rank somewhere between 28th and 32nd in the world. They were "Cool Runnings" before Disney decided to make a movie about bumbling Jamaican bobsledders…..More

 

Internacional beats Chivas in Sudamericana semis

Nilmar Da Silva and Alex scored second half goals to lead Brazil's Internacional past Chivas 2-0 on Wednesday in the first leg of their Copa Sudamericana semifinals series…..More

 

Men's darts Winners Crazy Nelly's Every Wednesday at 2 ...your invited

 

 

 


WEATHER

SAN Pancho Weather  www.sanpanchoweather.com

Weather in Mexico

Acapulco

Loreto

Puerto Vallarta

Aguascalientes

Los Mochis

Queretaro Airport

Cancun

Manzanillo

San Felipe

Cozumel

Mazatlan

San Jose Del Cabo

Cuernavaca

Merida

San Luis Potosi

Durango

Mexico City

Santa Rosalia

Ensenada

Monterrey

Tampico

Guadalajara

Morelia

Tepic

Guanajuato

Oaxaca

Veracruz

Bahias De Huatulco

Puebla

Zacatecas

Ixtapa Zihuatanejo

Puerto Escondido

 

La Paz

Puerto Penasco

 

 

Currency






Eric Nice Plays every Thursday at Mateja's

 

Mexico Spends $1.5 Bln to Hedge Falling Oil Prices


Julie Watson - Associated Press
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Mexico City - Mexico, the third-largest supplier of oil to the U.S., has spent $1.5 billion since July to hedge against falling oil income and protect public spending for 2009, Treasury Secretary Agustin Carstens said Thursday.

The government bought so-called put options to sell 330 million barrels of Mexican crude, about a third of its current estimated annual output, for $70 a barrel, indicating that the oil-exporting country doubts its oil will consistently top that price next year.

The move guarantees Mexico at least $9.5 billion in extra income if its oil stays below $70 a barrel, Carstens said. But if its crude sells for more, the country could lose.

Oil is Mexico's biggest source of foreign income, and revenue from state oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos, known as Pemex, accounts for nearly 40 percent of federal spending.

While such hedging is common, Mexico this year spent at least 2.5 times more than it has in the past to cover potential price declines - exposing the depth of its concern over the impact of falling oil prices, said Allyson Benton, a Mexico analyst at the Eurasia Group consultancy in New York.

Congress approved Mexico's 2009 budget on Wednesday, boosting spending by 13 percent to jump-start its slowing economy amid the global financial crisis. The budget, which includes a 1.8 percent deficit, the country's first in years, assumes crude prices of $70 a barrel.

Mexican crude closed Thursday at $41.72 a barrel, Pemex said. West Texas Intermediate, a benchmark crude commonly used to cite global oil prices, was trading around $59.48 a barrel.

Fitch Ratings lowered its sovereign credit outlook for Mexico to "negative" on Monday, citing the potential effect of a U.S. recession, reduced capital flows and decreased oil income.

But the Treasury Department has said a stabilization fund containing $5.6 billion in windfall oil income will help Mexico maintain spending throughout the economic downturn.

Mexico began its current wave of hedging at the end of July, signing derivative contracts with "extremely credible" international financial institutions, Carstens said, declining to disclose their names.

"They're great traders," Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp., said of Mexico, noting the country had hedged exports earlier this year, selling at near record levels.

"If the economy continues to slow, they're looking like geniuses" in 2009, he said.

It wasn't clear if other oil-exporting countries have sought to lock in higher prices with similar hedges, in case they continue to slide in coming months. Many might hesitate to disclose such bets give the political cost of losses, analysts said.

Pemex produced about 2.8 million barrels of crude a day between January and September, exporting 1.4 million
.


 

 

NOVEMBER 2008
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
6:30 Karaoke @ Bavarian Gardens  
7 pm Most Wanted
@ Crazy Nellys
Market Day
Mens Golf
eric
Thanksgiving:
Xaltemba Restaurant

Thanksgiving   Benja's 

7 pm Dance with Ramon @ Crazy Nellys

7 Enrique Plays the Bavarian Gardens



 
7:30 pm Karaoke at Crazy Nellys

SOLD OUT
 
NFL @ Nelly's

 

 

DECEMBER 2008
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
6:30 Karaoke @ Bavarian Gardens  
7 pm Most Wanted
@ Crazy Nellys
Market Day
Mens Golf
eric
7 pm Dance with Ramon @ Crazy Nellys
7 Enrique Plays the Bavarian Gardens


7:30 pm Karaoke at Crazy Nellys
NFL @ Nelly's
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
6:30 Karaoke @ Bavarian Gardens  
7 pm Most Wanted
@ Crazy Nellys
Market Day
Mens Golf
eric
7 pm Dance with Ramon @ Crazy Nellys
7 Enrique Plays the Bavarian Gardens
Día de Nuestra
Señora de
Guadalupe

7:30 pm Karaoke at Crazy Nellys




6 pm Crazy Nelly's Anniversary Party

NFL @ Nelly's
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
  Market Day
Mens Golf
eric

22 23 24 25 26 27 28
Death of José
María Morelos
(1815)
  Nochebuenas 
Navidad

Los Santos
Inocentes
29 30 31
 

 

 

go to 2009 Calendar 

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