The journal of B. Jay Antrim: What Guadalajara was like 169 years ago
Not long ago I was contacted by a reader of the Guadalajara Reporter who lives in the United States.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
Not long ago I was contacted by a reader of the Guadalajara Reporter who lives in the United States.
By John Pint
Tres Mujeres is a small tequila distillery conveniently situated alongside Highway 15, just 30 kilometers west of Guadalajara.
Three short but blustery storms, each followed by 12- to 16-hour apagones (blackouts): No need to check the calendar, without a doubt it’s summertime in rural Jalisco!
In 2011, bat researcher Leonel Ayala told me about a cave at the eastern end of Lake Chapala near Jamay.
Jalisco has the fourth-largest obsidian deposits in the world but until now no excavations have ever been carried out to study in detail the process by which a chunk of this volcanic glass was transformed into useful artifacts by pre-Hispanic people.
If you have a dog-eared copy of the very first version of my book “Outdoors in Western Mexico,” published in 1998, you will find a chapter – deleted in subsequent editions – dedicated to Qanat la Venta, a curious kind of underground aqueduct located ten kilometers west of Guadalajara.
I have the fortune of living close to an award-winning Mexican nature photographer who is becoming recognized – by prestigious organizations such as National Geographic – as one of the world’s great photojournalists.