Drain Lake Chapala! That was the bright political idea in the 1800s
Don’t imagine that man’s destruction of his natural environment is just a 20-21st century phenomenon.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
Don’t imagine that man’s destruction of his natural environment is just a 20-21st century phenomenon.
As sirens began blaring at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, personnel and visitors at Chapala City Hall calmly but swiftly poured out of the front door and gathered on the median strip outside under the supervision of Civil Protection and Fire Department officers.
Chapala Mayor Alejandro Aguirre made much ado about the benefits rendered to his constituents in his second Informe de Gobierno (state-of-the-municipality report), delivered on September 13.
Chapala’s faithful will honor patron saint San Francisco de Asís with nine straight days of festivities running from Tuesday, September 26 through Wednesday, October 4.
The Lake Chapala Society (LCS) will host its second annual Intercultural Celebration of Life and Honoring Death Festival on October 29 and 30.
The final stage of the restoration of Ajijic’s iconic Capilla de Nuestra Señora del Rosario was initiated on September 19, raising hopes that the image of its spiritual resident will return home by the end of next month after a four-year absence.
Healthy seasonal recuperation of Lake Chapala and adequate water supplies for the Guadalajara metro area (ZMG) are in peril due to current drought conditions throughout the state of Jalisco.
There’s finally a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel in the prolonged renovation of Chapala’s central thoroughfare.
This year’s Regatta de Globos Ajijic got off to a slow start, but by 5 p.m. the soccer pitch was a sea of humanity enjoying the food and libations, while visiting with friends and relatives and watching the visual spectacle.