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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkTravel & Outdoors 

Saints Peter & Paul Battle it Out in Mexcaltitan, Mexico
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June 5, 2012
The tiny island of Mexcaltitan, which is known as the ‘Venice of Mexico,’ is less than a mile around and sits in the middle of a Nayarit coastal lagoon of the same name.

Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - A traditional and magical festival will take place on June 29 in Mexcaltitan, a northern Riviera Nayarit fishing village, that every year celebrates the island's patron saints: San Pedro and San Pablo.

Teams representing the saints will engage in a battle, and the winner will most likely be St Peter, who is known as the cornerstone of the Catholic Church. They may be a little too heavy at times, but they're in no way cheating. That's what the people say in Mexcaltitan, a town which could be the mythical starting point for the pilgrimage of the Nahuatl tribes in search of Tenochtitlan.

Since the arrival of the Spanish and evangelism, this small island in the wetlands of Nayarit has honored both apostles. And even if the Huitchilopoztli God ever commanded its people to undertake a pilgrimage in search of an eagle - or for more realistic effects and a more precise interpretation made by the Boutorini Codex, a heron devouring a snake - now San Pedro and San Pablo are the guides every year.


The festival is colorful and unique. Shrimp-fishing characterizes this region, which is known as the 'Venice of Mexico,' and the Saints sail out very early, followed by a procession of parishioners from around the island to bless the waters so that the traps they've set get as close as possible to the three ton per night record that was set in the past. The mangroves create the shrimp's habitat and provide the material to build the elaborate levee systems that have been used for fishing since immemorial times.

A shorter-than-usual mass is celebrated, followed by a battle in which the townspeople are split up in to two teams, each representing one of the two saints. The teams compete in a race all around the island, before taking part in a pagan celebration.

Each team then chooses their best sailors for another race, this one aboard enormous canoes carrying the image of their respective saint. They'll circle around Mexcaltitan, propelling the canoe with sticks that are submerged to the bottom of the channels, like they do in the trajineras in Xochimilco - not with paddles like it's done in the rest of the country. Every year, San Pedro's team will invariably win.

"No, we're not cheating. It's just that San Pedro is even more miraculous and it's better to commend fishing to him, as we don't want to annoy him. The strongest contenders are always placed on San Pedro's team, and this is why he always wins... but we're not cheating, the competition takes place like any other," said Hector Apodaca, a guard at the Museo del Origen, which was built to celebrate the island's designation as 'The Cradle of Mexican Culture.'

The joy, cheering and festive environment that surrounds the races is only the beginning of a party as traditional as any, which includes dancing and eating, as well as fireworks during the night, all framed by a natural environment of incomparable beauty.

HOW TO GET THERE
Mexcaltitan is located 21 miles northeast of Santiago Ixcuintla, approximately 1 hour from San Blas and 2 from Tepic. From Santiago Ixcuintla you must take the road towards Sentispac, and continue on towards the La Batanga pier, where you'll have to take a boat to the island.

WHERE TO EAT
Eating at Mexcaltitan is a whole new experience. This is the place that gave birth to the original recipe of the 'cockroach shrimp', and in no other place can they be found as crunchy, the ideal snack to go along with a beer. Fish in the zarandeado style, shrimp tamales, shrimp pate and aguachile from Nayarit complete the feast.

WHERE TO STAY
It's recommended to sleep in San Blas when visiting Mexcaltitan, as the travel to and from the island can be made with ease. In San Blas, one can find a room in comfortable hotels like Garza Canela, Hacienda Flamingos and Casa Mañana, among others.