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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkTravel & Outdoors | July 2008 

Guide Makes the Difference In a Visit to Mexico City
email this pageprint this pageemail usLaurence Iliff - Dallas Morning News
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Worshippers at the Virgin of Guadalupe Basilica in Mexico City. (Ariana Cubillos/Associated Press)

If you go: In Mexico, tourist guides are certified by the government after taking courses and exams. Three independent tour guides in Mexico City, all of whom speak English and all of whom know each other, are:

• Bernardo Ortiz Rojas, netouring@hotmail.com; 011-521-55-3248-2673.

• Fernando Ledezma Rios, fernandoledezmarios@yahoo.com; 011-521-55-2316-6491.

• Carlos Escalera, sklescaleraalcielo@hotmail.com; 011-521-55-2952-4922.
 
Mexico City - There was a time when the culturally rich Mexican capital was a lot more user-friendly for the average tourist with a guidebook, a subway map and a dozen words of Spanish. That is so last century, however.

The Federal District, its formal name, has become such a crush of traffic, people and illegal taxis where illegal acts occur, that even those of us who live here wish we had a driver, a guide and someone to watch our backs.

For $170 a day, visitors can have that and more.

Bernardo Ortiz, a certified Mexican tour guide for more than 25 years, is fluent in English and knows every millimeter of the capital.

For about seven hours, he will answer questions nonstop even while driving, walking or eating. And if there's something Bernie doesn't know, he'll find out.

Bernie is handing out the gold coins of the city's treasures as he steers you through centuries-old churches and palaces, fine-art museums and parks, bohemian neighborhoods and restaurants.

If you want a crash course in Mexican history going back thousands of years, go to the Museum of Anthropology in Chapultepec Park and Bernie will move you room-by-room and civilization-by-civilization.

He's also an expert on the Spanish conquest, European architecture, the war for independence, the Mexican Revolution, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, the Cristero movement, Roman Catholic religious sites, modern political history and where to get the best tacos and coldest Coronas.

Bernie knows all about popular culture, too. During a recent tour with him of the centro historico, which was the center of political and religious life for the Aztecs and their Spanish conquerors, he surprised me with this tidbit of modern history:

The century-old street organs, which were given to Mexico by Germany during the terrible poverty and devastation of the 1910 Mexican Revolution, have been modified given the difficulty of finding spare parts to keep them in playing condition.

The new versions of the street organs, played throughout downtown by uniformed men and women looking for a small tip, are little more than wooden boxes with fake handles and CDs inside playing music through a discreet speaker.

To find out whether the street organ is real or fake, one can hold a hand up to the front of the box, where air should stream out with each crank if it's real.

Having your own tour guide - as opposed to being on a bus with a bunch of other people and their needs - allows you to call the shots, make plans, change them, linger over lunch and skip another church, or leave town to see the Teotihuacan pyramids.

Many guides are waiting in their sedans and Suburbans to pick you up from the airport if you wish, take you to a hotel, tour you around town and make sure you get wherever you are going. You control the tour and the price.

No tour guide can guarantee that you won't be robbed or pickpocketed or otherwise have a bad moment or a bad meal, but they can reduce the possibility significantly.



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