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FOR RENT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Guayabitos residential home

Available this season

Pool, 3 bedrooms, lots of deck

Call Dorothy @ 327-274-3356

 


 

 


 






 

 

 

 

 

January 26 2008 Page 2

 

Jaltemba Features

 

Helping the Community through the Gift of Language:

Jesus E. Montes

By Tara Spears

 The first thing that one notices when meeting this soft spoken man is his sincerity. Growing up in La Peñita, Jesus “Chuy” Montes has experienced the growth of the area from sleepy rural Mexican village to an international mecca where presently on a walk down the main avenida one can overhear Spanish, English, French, and other languages.  “My friends would say, ‘If only I could speak English, I could get a better job’ and since I knew English, I started teaching them informally,” explains Chuy. “Four years ago I opened a language school in order to offer more than tutoring: to provide an affordable, long-term opportunity for the townspeople to study a foreign language.”

  The name of the school is CIENI, which is the abbreviation of ‘Centro de Ingles y Espanol Nuevo Idioma’ but also reflects Chuy’s philosophy.  He believes that people working together to embrace a second language benefits the individual, the community, and the visiting foreigners. It is his dream to foster comfortable communication between various cultures because that is how true friendship can be formed. To achieve this goal, CIENI offers a broad range of class times to accommodate work schedules and personal preferences: from 8 am to 9 pm, Monday thru Fridays.  In addition to the schedule options, CIENI provides various levels of language instruction, from basic, introductory  lessons through advanced study. 

 

 

Chuy grew up in a family of mechanics, but he decided early that he enjoyed academics more than working with his hands.  He has been self supporting since he was 16, first learning mechanics with his father and two brothers, then trying sales before achieving his dream of teaching.  “I continue studying language because I want to provide the best quality instruction to my students” he replies earnestly.  It is Chuy’s dedication to the students and their future that sets CIENI above other schools in the area.

  

Director Chuy in the CIENI language school office at Martin Pinzon Calle #3,  La Penita.

(The street is next to the Coca Cola Company on the east side of highway 200 on the south end of La Penita)

 

 

 

“I enjoy meeting people and getting to know them,” said Chuy.  “It is so exciting when a student says ‘I get it!’ and achieves understanding.  For many people, especially older people, learning another language is very difficult.”  As an educator, Chuy suggests beginning as early as possible to acquire another language. All of his classes, from age 6 through adult, practice conversational English and Spanish.  “I don’t accept ‘I can’t’ in myself or from my student,” he says. “Learning a language is often a slow process.”  Chuy’s goal for the future is to expand CIENI to provide additional language instruction in French and German.

Chuy has actively volunteered at La Mision Church, serving as its coordinator of religious lessons for years. In addition, lately he has been doing translations for the Los Amigos La Penita civic group as a means of giving back to the community.  When Chuy is not teaching, he relaxes by playing in the band “AS”.  He first learned to play guitar in secondario and continued practicing.  Over the next twelve years Chuy has taught himself to play keyboard, drums, bass- and he is presently learning violin!

This dynamic young man puts his heart into whatever he does, whether it is teaching, music, or volunteering. Chuy’s vision and commitment to his hometown guide his life, and make living in the Riviera Nayarit a better place for everyone.

Spanish lessons: Mon/Wed/Fri 8, 9, 10, 11 am or

                           Tues/Thurs 8-12 am.

English lessons: Mon thru Fri:  1-9 pm

Instructional materials provided.

Spanish/English Translation by appointment.

Contact Chuy:  322-274-2197 or email:

cieni@live.com.mx

 


            Incoming!

Pacific Ocean Brown Pelicans

                   Tara Spears

     First in a series of four seabird articles

 

One of the first things a visitor to the Pacific Ocean notices after the dazzling water color is the seabirds.  Whether flying in dense formation or bobbing in flocks on the water, the chunky pelican is distinctive.  The Riviera Nayarit is home to many permanent resident species of seabirds besides being in the migratory flyway for dozens of other types of migratory birds.  One doesn’t need to be a serious bird watcher to enjoy the antics of these amazing creatures.

As a group, seabirds almost always have webbed feet that aid their movement on the water’s surface as well as aid diving for dinner. This is an example of adaptation to living and feeding in the sea. All seabirds have evolved physiologically and behaviorally due to their ocean diet. Many seabirds feed on the ocean’s surface, as the marine currents often concentrate food such as krill, fish, squid or other prey items within reach of a dipped head.  The plumage of most seabirds is less colorful than that of land birds, being restricted to variations of black, grey, or white. Another survival adaptation is to live in colonial groups, so seeing a solitary pelican is usually an indication of illness or injury.

Pelicans are easily identified by their large bills and stretchable pouches. The pouch is used to capture fish, which the pelican usually swallows immediately. Although the brown pelicans are the smallest of the pelican species, they are still large seabirds and can weigh up to eight pounds (almost 3 kilos), with a huge wingspan of over 6 feet (2 meters)! Males are usually larger and heavier than females. Adults are gray to brown with white and yellowish heads. Sexual maturity is reached after three to five years. In the wild, brown pelicans may live 15 to 25 years.  The sexes look similar, though males are slightly larger, with short, dark legs, long, broad wings, a large, heavy all-brown body, white neck, pale yellow face, and a huge bill that is paler at the base and tipped with yellow. The pelican picture at the beginning is a sexually active adult, while the picture to the right of this paragraph is an immature bird, but both are the same species of brown pelican.

 The pelicans primarily eat fish of little value to humans, as well as salamanders, shrimp, and crayfish. During breeding season, the birds often forage at night, locating fish by touch. While small fish are the major part of their diet, they can eat surprisingly large ones. Brown pelicans also eat some invertebrates, such as squid. They are a familiar sight around fishing ports within their range, where they roost on piers, docks, and fishing boats, ready to catch fish scraps. White Pelicans are notable for their habit of cooperative foraging—coordinated flocks of swimming birds encircle fish or drive them into the shallows where they become concentrated and are more easily caught. Brown Pelicans are highly social year-round and breed in colonies of up to several thousand pairs. While some American White Pelican populations in Texas and Mexico are permanent residents, most are migratory, moving in daytime flocks.

Local island sanctuary: Isla Peña

 We are very fortunate to have a beautiful little island in Jaltemba Bay that is a breeding spot for several species of seabirds, including the brown pelican. Pelicans nest in colonies for safety. Both sexes build the nest which is a scrap or debris mound on the ground, or a stick nest in a tree. Nesting on islands is preferred. Pelicans usually lay two or three eggs. Both parents care for the naked, helpless chicks. They feed their chicks by regurgitating a kind of “fish soup” until the chicks are two weeks old. During breeding season, pelican colonies are sensitive to disturbance by tourists and fisherman. Adult birds can be frightened off their nests, and newly hatched chicks can die quickly in the blazing sun. Their skittishness is understandable: For centuries, many fishermen have considered the birds as competitors for fish, and in the past, the fishermen often raided pelican colonies to kill the birds.                   

Pelican Myths:

The indigenous peoples of Mexico revered many birds as ancient gods, and pelican feathers have appeared in many carvings and ritual garments. Additionally, because of an early Western Christian myth that the birds split open their breasts to feed their starving chicks, pelicans have long been a symbol of mercy and altruism.

Contact Tara: tara.sprs@yahoo.com

 

 

 

South Beach Guayabitos - Latitude 21

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Great place - Day or Night

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And Flaminco Dancing!

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Los Amigos de la Peñita Honours the School Directors That Have Made Its Plastics Recycling Program a Resounding Success

 

La Peñita de Jaltemba, January 19, 2009

 

On January 19, Los Amigos de la Peñita hosted a reception to thank the Directors of the schools in La Peñita for their participation in their plastics recycling program and to launch the next phase of the program.

 

The plastics recycling program that Los Amigos put in place, in cooperation with the Delegación Municipal, was launched on April 10th, 2008 and includes all fourteen schools in La Peñita and La Colonia.  Presently, there are 4,000 students that participate in this program.

 

“We are extremely pleased with the success we have achieved to date,” said Zobeida Barrera Lozano, National President.  “Tons have plastics have been collected to date; much of this material previously littered the street of La Peñita.”

 

The next phase of the program will involve the establishment of a network of loctions in the community where individuals can drop off their plastics.   Recycling baskets have been placed on the Avenida and along the beach.  Los Amigos is working to find locations where individuals can drop off larger amounts of plastics that they have collected.  A list of locations that have already been identified is attached.

 

“It’s gratifying to see the community get behind this initiative,” added International President Ken Snyder.   “On February 8 from 2:30 to 6:00,  we are hosting Fiesta La Peñita - a gala fundraising event in support of Los Amigos de La Peñita..  It is events like Fiesta La Peñita that have enabled us to initiate the recycling program as well as to carry out other activities like a major beach clean-up, the development of the children’s park in Colonia Pescadores and our new scholarship program”

 

Tickets for Fiesta La Peñita are available at  http://www.losamigosdelapenita.com or at Xaltemba Restaurant,  Daniel’s Backstreet, Latitute 21 or  Coldwell Banker - La Costa.

 

Los Amigos de la Peñita is a community service organization comprised of residents of the local community.  Los Amigos exists to serve the people of La Peñita, the surrounding Colonias, and the community at large through it’s participation in activities designed to improve the lives of area residentsLos Amigos holds its meetings in the Restaurant/Gallery Xaltemba at 7:00 p.m every second and fourth Monday of each month.  All are welcome.

 

For more information, consult the web page  www.losamigosdelapenita.com, contact  publicrelations@losamigosdelapenita.com  or call

Spanish: Zobeida Barrera Lozano at 327-274-0268

English: Ken Snyder at 327-274-2900

What kind of plastic containers can you bring in?

Milk, Yogurt, Pop, Cleaning Products, Water, Mineral Water, Cooking Oil and Car Oil. 

 

No need to separate them into colours, to have tops for them– although they need to be empty.  Clean and crushed bottles preferred.  Car oil containers should be as clean as possible.

 

Where can you bring them?

Gimnasio Carlos -  Bahai de Bandaras #13

 

Mateja’s  - On the Beach

 

Bavarian Gardens - Carretera Tepic-Puerto Vallarta, KM 95

 

Crazy Nelly’s  - Carretera Tepic - Puerto Vallarta KM 95.8

 

Hinde y Jaimes - Emiliano Zapata #57

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

Los Amigos de la Peñita  -  Ayudando A La Comunidad Embellecer la Playa

 

La Peñita de Jaltemba, el 25 de Enero, 2009

 

Más de 150 personas se presentaron el sábado, 24 de enero para ayudar a limpiar la playa de La Peñita de Jaltemba como parte de una campaña de limpieza organizada y patrocinada por los amigos de la peñita. La playa entera fue limpiada-desde el estero hasta el cementerio. 

 

 ¨Los Amigos de La Peñita han decidido hacer de ´la campaña de limpieza de la playa´ un proyecto de prioridad para el 2009¨, dijo Zobeida Barrera Lozano, Presidenta Nacional. Una limpieza y revitalización de la playa es esencial para la adecuada promoción turística de La Peñita a nivel nacional e internacional y para que los habitantes de La Peñita estén orgullosos de su comunidad.

 

El día de limpieza es tan sólo uo de los programas y campañas a realizarse por la organización.  El comité también incluyendo como parte  de su iniciativa el mejorar el área al final de la avenida. Esto incluye: reemplazar el empedrado al final de la avenida y de la calle Circuito Libertad, tener letreros para  mantener la playa limpia, pintar una publicitaría artística en la pared al sur de la playa barriendo las calles empedradas,  la banqueta y removiendo la arena de la calle y, dependiendo de la aprobación de la delegación, colocando rocas al lado para prevenir que los carros se estacionen en la playa.  Los amigos invertirán un gasto aproximado de 30,000 pesos en esta iniciativa.

 

“Es muy grato ver tanta gente, tanto habitantes locales como visitantes internacionales presentándose para ayudar y queremos ampliar nuestros gracias a todos, “ añadió Co-Presidente Internacional Ken Snyder.  “El 8 de febrero de 2:30 a  6:00 de la tarde tenemos Fiesta La Peñita – una fiesta de gala para recaudar fondos para apoyar los proyectos de Los Amigos de La Peñita. Eventos como Fiesta La Peñita nos ha hecho posible programas como la campaña de limpieza de las playas de La Peñita, y los otros como la programa de reciclaje, el desarrollo del parque en la Colonia Pescadores y el programa de becas para estudiantes.

 

Los boletos para la Fiesta La Peñita están disponibles en http://www.losamigosdelapenita.com ó en los Restaurantes Xaltemba, Backstreet de Daniel, Latitute 21, Bavarian Gardens, Hidden Paradise  ó en Coldwell Banker La Costa de Coldwell.

 

Los Amigos de la Peñita es una organización de servicio comunitario compuesto de residentes de la comunidad local. Los amigos existe para servir a la gente de La Peñita,  a las colonias que le rodean y a la comunidad en general a través de su participación en actividades diseñadas para mejorar las vidas de los residentes.  Las reuniones de Los Amigos son en el Restaurante/Galería Xaltemba a las 7:00 pm el segundo y cuarto lunes de cada mes. Todas las personas son bienvenidas.

 

Para mas información consulte la página  www.losamigosdelapenita.com  email a publicrelations@losamigosdelapenita.com  o llame a

Español:  Zobeida Barrera Lozano at 327-274-0268

Inglés:  Ken Snyder at 327-274-2900

 

 

Agoda is the on line company that we book through when we travel.

 

Mexico Book Club's January Book Recommendations
Ed Hutmacher - MexicoBookClub.com
 


For more information on these or other books with Mexico-related themes, please visit MexicoBookClub.com.

A new year always brings a rededication to read more books. From the biography of a literary legend to a true-crime thriller to books for Mexico travelers, here are a handful of recommendations you might want to dig into this January.

Elena Poniatowska: An Intimate Biography by Michael K. Schuessler (University of Arizona Press; 2007; Non-fiction) — Author, journalist and poet Elena Poniatowska is a living literary legend in Mexico. With scores of books, essays and articles to her credit, she is perhaps best known for her novels Hasta no verte, Jesús mío (1969; "Until I see You, My Jesus") and La noche de Tlatelolco (1971; "Massacre in Mexico"). Born in Paris in 1933 (her father was French-Polish and her mother Mexican), Poniatowska's family moved to Mexico City when she was nine. By the time she was twenty, Poniatowska was making a name for herself in the male-dominated world of Mexico City journalism. Her skill as a journalist and novelist was her ability to combine fact with fiction, allowing the voice of the Mexican people to be heard through her writing. Many of her characters are women whose lives are ruled by men in a world made up of double standards. This superb biography is a great read for anyone interested Mexico's journalistic-literary scene of the past 50 years.

Trail of Feathers: Searching for Phillip True by Robert Rivard (Public Affairs Publishers; 2006; Non-fiction) — There's nothing as suspenseful as a true-crime thriller, and this fascinating tale of a Mexican misadventure is a page-turner from the get-go. "If I'm not back in 10 days, come looking for me," he said, then waved goodbye through the open window as the taxi disappeared from view up the steep, winding street. No one who knew True ever saw him alive again. When Phillip True, a journalist chasing down a story, disappears in Huichol Indian territory in Mexico's forbidding Sierra Madre, newspaper editor Robert Rivard goes on his own long journey to discover what happened to him — and why. True's life and death in Mexico is not exactly a warning, but it is a reminder that there are cultural elements that can trip up the most seasoned travelers. It doesn't matter the size of a person's heart or the pureness of intentions.

Mexican Days: Journeys Into the Heart of Mexico by Tony Cohan (Broadway Books, 2006; Non-fiction) — Tony Cohan fired the imagination of every armchair traveler north of the Rio Bravo in his 2000 bestseller On Mexico Time, a seductive chronicle of discovering a new life in 1980s San Miguel de Allende. But Mexico has changed considerably since then, thanks in large part to a horde of touristy, well-to-do North Americans like Cohan who have turned once-remote colonial pueblos into chic expatriate havens. In Mexican Days, Cohan embarks anew into Mexico's heartland, hoping to rediscover the lost authenticity and charm of his adopted homeland, "...to see how the puzzle of old and new fit together." Well written, evocative and perceptive, he gives readers a sympathetic portrait of Mexico, without ignoring its political problems, its poverty or the changes that have marred its landscape and its culture.

Mexican Cinema: Reflections of a Society, 1896 – 2004 by Carl J. Mora (McFarland & Company Publishers; 2005; Non-fiction) — Much can be learned about the culture of a country by examining (and viewing) the films made there, particularly so in Mexico where uniquely Mexican values and symbolism are depicted quite differently than in Europe or the United States. Mexican Cinema is primarily a reference book, but Mora's intelligent narrative and comprehensive review of Mexican films is a captivating chronicle of Mexico's history, politics and social mores viewed through the medium of cinema. Especially enjoyable is reading about the groundbreaking films from Mexico's Golden Age, the 1940s, out of which some of the world's greatest cinematic art was born.

The Mexico Reader: History, Culture, Politics edited by Gilbert M. Joseph and Timothy J. Henderson (Duke University Press; 2002; Non-fiction) — The Mexico Reader should be on the shelf of every Mexico aficionado or in the suitcase of every Mexico traveler. It's that good. There's nothing in this hefty paperback (792 pages) that isn't informative, enlightening or entertaining. The considerable collection of articles, essays and excerpts explores what it means to be Mexican, tracing the history of Mexico from pre-Columbian times through the country's epic 1910-17 revolution to the present day, leaving no political, cultural or social stone unturned. Already considered a classic, readers will find themselves referring to The Mexico Reader for a lifetime.

Ed Hutmacher is Editor in Chief of Mexico Book Club. For more information on books with Mexico-related themes, please visit the website at MexicoBookClub.com.



New Classified Ads

Car Trailer For Sale

16 feet car trailer with brake on both axels.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Very strong and ride very good. The trailer is plated in Québec Canada and is also legalise here in Mexico.

27 000 pesos.
 
Stéphane at elrefugio rv park in lo de marcos (villas tlaquepaque)

or cell 322-111-5390 or skype at stephane.rvpark
 
 

 

 


 

FOR SALE 5TH WHEEL TRAILER

2000 HITCHHIKER PREMIER

35 1/2’ BAY WINDOW  TRIPLE GLIDE                                        

NUWA products are known for their quality and craftsmanship.

Large queen bedroom with full closet.

Front loading Simplicity washer.

Full frig and freezer, microwave, 3 burner gas stove/oven

Lots of cabinets + pantry

2 recliners + love seat (hide-a-bed)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

27” TV set in Oak cabinetry with computer station, VCR & DVD

This is a well maintained unit inside and out, and

Is being sold furnished with linens, dishes, pots and pans,

Small electrical appliances as well as a “beer” frig.

 7 years remaining on a 10 year import tag.

Asking  US$ 19,000.

ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED               

 

Email: fire117@hotmail.com

Location:  Site # 52 La Penita RV Park

 

Go to our classified Ad Page


 


BEACH PARTY! Always Fun Every Sunday!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 













 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

For problems or questions regarding this Web site contact editor@jaltembasol.com

 

 

 

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