BanderasNews
Puerto Vallarta Weather Report
Welcome to Puerto Vallarta's liveliest website!
Contact UsSearch
Why Vallarta?Vallarta WeddingsRestaurantsWeatherPhoto GalleriesToday's EventsMaps
 NEWS/HOME
 EDITORIALS
 ENTERTAINMENT
 VALLARTA LIVING
 PV REAL ESTATE
 TRAVEL / OUTDOORS
 DESTINATIONS
 TOURS & ACTIVITIES
 FISHING REPORT
 GOLF IN VALLARTA
 52 THINGS TO DO
 PHOTO GALLERIES
 LOCAL WEATHER
 BANDERAS AREA MAPS
 HEALTH / BEAUTY
 SPORTS
 DAZED & CONFUSED
 PHOTOGRAPHY
 CLASSIFIEDS
 READERS CORNER
 BANDERAS NEWS TEAM
Sign up NOW!

Free Newsletter!

Puerto Vallarta News NetworkTravel & Outdoors | October 2008 

Frolic in Nature and Taste the Culture in Riviera Nayarit
email this pageprint this pageemail usIrene Butler - Canwest News Service
go to original


Nothing compares to the thrill of witnessing the beauty, harmony and grace of the Humpback whales that inhabit the Bay of Banderas, and our videojournalists show us why Vallarta Adventures is unparalleled in the Banderas Bay area. Click HERE for more info.
 
Curtains of foliage drape the sides of narrow waterways deep in the mangrove forest. Our small boat manoeuvres past the bulging roots needed to hold these towering trees upright in the silt base.

"See the crocodiles?" says our guide José. He stops the engine and points to foot-long babies squirming on an embankment. Before I can ask where the Dundee-sized ones are, the water around us churns. Our boat pitches. What appeared to be a few large drifting logs blink at us with yellow eyes and propel away with swishes of their powerful tails.

After our tussle with the crocs we watch swamp turtles laze on root masses protruding from the brackish water. A pitch-black bird is oddly perched on a branch; its motionless wings spread like a fan.

That Anhinga," says José, "is drying his feathers after diving for his lunch."

The amazing wildlife reserve of La Tovara is the first outing my husband Rick and I undertake along the 180-kilometre coast of Riviera Nayarit from our grand hotel in Nuevo Vallarta (just north of Puerto Vallarta).

Our goal, with the aid of our rental car, is to seek out as many of the area's natural wonders and drowsy fishing villages that pepper the coastline as we can fit into a week's stay.

From La Tovara we veer off to the nearby port of San Blas for a glimpse of the town's glorious past. Milling about the colonial-era tax office and hilltop fort built in 1770, I imagine the activity when this was the seat of Spain's Pacific navel command. The original great cannons still stand guard like aging sentinels. At the foot of the hill we enter the massive stone shell of Our Lady of the Rosary Church. The church bells once rang to signal ships coming into port. The closing of the port to foreign trade in 1872 stirred the renowned poet Henry Longfellow (1807-1882) to lament their silence in The Bells of San Blas.

The next day's excursion brings us to the quintessential Mexican village of Bucerias. Shop owners give their best spiel as we pass by on the cobblestone streets. I purchase several pieces of intricately beaded native Huichol art in the open-air market.

At a sidewalk café our waiter keeps the tejuinos coming (a refreshing semi-fermented corn drink) as we while away the afternoon watching fisherman deliver their fresh catch. Benches by the water are filled with old-timers gazing out to sea. Families fill the streets by the time we dig into our specialty supper of grilled red snapper.

Children dash about while their folks chit-chat with friends. It is long after sunset before we pull ourselves away from this tranquil setting.

Our village hopping ends in San Francisco (also known as San Poncho). Well stocked with snacks from a local vendor of tart tamarind candy and jackfruit (tastes like a cross between banana and cantaloupe) we head for the beach. Between dense jungle and the turquoise sea we spread our mats on a patch of creamy sand.

This same stretch of beach is, at certain times, reserved for other than human visitors.

From mid-June to November the endangered Olive Ridley and Leatherback turtles are so intent on egg-laying, they barely notice that members and volunteers of a local conservation group are on hand to protect them during their mission.

They then collect and transport the eggs to a hatchery. I would love to be here in September and October to watch the hatchlings being released and see them scurry to their briny home. Being slightly past the winter season when humpback whales come to these warm waters to breed and give birth to one-ton calves, we cannot believe our good fortune when a few stragglers are seen off the coast.

We quickly make our way to Vallarta Adventures Center and are soon in an APEX (rigid inflatable boat) squinting over the horizon for a sign of these huge cetaceans. I gasp as the gigantic body of a lone humpback surfaces about 100 metres away, making our vessel seem like a toy. A blast of water sprays from its blowhole and a huge eye looks up at us before he submerges with a tail slap that rocks our small craft.

There could not have been a more perfect "tail end" to our Riviera Nayarit visit.

Travel Editor Vic Foster's guest this week is Richmond-based freelance travel writer Irene Butler. Travel the world on the Internet at www.travelingtales.com

If you go: www.visitmexico.com | www.rivieranayarit.com | Eco-turtles Group: www.project-tortuga.org | Vallarta Adventures: www.vallarta-adventures.com



In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for research and educational purposes • m3 © 2008 BanderasNews ® all rights reserved • carpe aestus