Thursday, November 26, 2009

Day 4 - Chichen-Itza

Chichen-Itza
"Mouth of the Well of Itza"
*Please see below for pictures of temple and background.
Sacrificial Well

This is the alter where they threw off the sacrifices.



Dave called this the long green mile. This is the path that took the virgins from the temple to the well.
Today the tour bus picked us up at the Resort at 7:45 am and we headed out of town for about 2 1/2 hours to see one of the new 7 wonders of the world. It is an ancient Mayan temple that was built in about 600 - 900 A.D.

Possibly the best known construction on the site is Kukulkan's Pyramid. El Castillo (Kukulkan-Quetzalcoatl), a square-based, stepped pyramid that is approximately 75 feet tall. This pyramid was built for astronomical purposes and during the vernal equinox (March 20) and the autumnal equinox (September 21) at about 3pm the sunlight bathes the western balustrade of the pyramid's main stairway. This causes seven isosceles triangles to form imitating the body of a serpent 37 yards long that creeps downwards until it joins the huge serpent's head carved in stone at the bottom of the stairway. Mexican researcher Luis El Arochi calls it "the symbolic descent of Kukulkan" (the feathered serpent), and believes it could have been connected with agricultural rituals. This temple was built over a second smaller temple. When you clap your hands you hear the sound of the Quetzal bird.

This area became an important religious center and is known for the well where they sacraficed young girls (between 4 and 12 years of age). There is a path that leads directly from the base of the temple to the alter where they threw the girls off into the well.

To find out more about this wonderful place, please click on the link below to read about the history and facts.










Day 4 - Mayan Lunch

Lunch
We were taken to a restaurant near Chichen-Itza (Mayan ruins). We had a traditional Mayan meal including traditional dancers for entertainment. The food was fabulous. The menu consisted of a fish dish, pork that was cooked in banana leaf in ground (delicious), chicken that was prepared with paparika, and of course hot corn tortillas, rice and beans. The sauce that we put on it all was made from habenaro pepper. Very tasty.

The grounds were lovely. We could not figure out why there was this nice swimming pool in the middle of the area. Perhaps for fiestas.


Can't believe that they were dancing with bottles of beer on their heads. They also put trays of glasses and bottles. It is common for the women of the Mayan tribes to carry great loads of good on their heads. I guess they have translated that talent into part of their traditional dances.

This is the traditional Mayan dress for women. They are brightly embroidered with flowers on a white lightweight fabric.
We expected to see the Padre come out of this old church. Notice the two bicycles in front of the mission. Perhaps the Missionaries were there visiting???? ;-)



This veranda is typical of the tropical landscape here in Mexico and also Central America. The red tile floor is wonderful as it can be washed off each day.

Day 4 - Ik-Kil

Ik-Kil
Limestone Sinkhole fed by Spring



This is a sink hole in the limestone that is prevalent in this Mexican state. The sinkhole is 150 feet deep and filled with a natural spring. The water is about 65 degrees and very clear. It was 90 steps down to the pool and as you can see by the pictures, I decided to have a Mango frozen pop instead of swimming. Very good.... Also, Dave loves to get me talking on the phone to Erin. Seems like almost every picture of me is on the phone. Gracious, what does that say about me????
Dave took the pictures of the hole. It was very impressive. People were jumping off the ledge and into the cold water. We took our bathing suits and were ready to go but when they said how cold it was we decided not to partake..



Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Trip to Cancun Day 2

Well, we woke up this morning in Paradise. Dave and I headed to the "Workout" room and took advantage of that facility. Here is a brave couple parasailing. We hope to do this later in the week.


The person is standing in the pool but it looks like she is coming out of the ocean. The bumps that you see in front of her are lounges that you can lay down on and be in the water. Really neat....


Here we are at the Market. We rode the bus from our resort and wandered around this very huge market place where you can purchase authentic Mexican handicrafts, etc. I was taking a break and talking to Erin about what the kids would like under this tree with a nice gentleman who told us he was 90 years old and had been in the US during WWII. We talked to him for some time and enjoyed the goings on.




















After shopping at the market we were told at the Resort that there was a good "authentic" Mexican restaurant near where we would be and so we tried to find it. We were reading the map, trying to find street signs (which were very speradic) and thought we were lost. As we turned a corner to cross a street we ran into a couple of Mormon Missionaries. Lo and behold, they could speak Spanish (gasp) and we were able to be guided to our restaurant for lunch. We invited them to join us but they said that they had things to do. We should have gotten a picture with them but did not. The food was good here but as usual they served too much and it was rather heavy for the hot weather. After we left the restaurant we had to walk what seemed like miles to, get this, Walmart. We picked up some supplies for the studio apartment and headed back via the bus.






































Trip to Cancun Day of Arrival



The following four pictures are of the evening that we arrived in Cancun, at our resort. Dave took these picutures from our balcony. This is part of our TimeShare and it is really beautiful. Each night they turn on the lights under the fountains that are under our balcony. We are on the fifth floor and it is beautiful. We have spent hours sitting out on the balcony listening to the waves hit the shore and enjoying the wonderful breeze that comes our way.



Gettysburg for Dave's Birthday

Dave and I had a wonderful mini-vacation for his birthday. We went
to his favorite place in the world, Gettysburg. Here are just a few of
the pictures that we took of the trip. We spent three days on the
battlefield. I now understand why he has such a passion for this
place. Some of the battlefields are haunting.
















Friday, November 20, 2009

Thanksgiving


A Thanksgiving Lesson

November 20, 2009 by Chip Wood

Did you know that our Pilgrim forefathers tried communism when they first landed at Plymouth Rock?
How’s that for a dramatic beginning to a story? Years ago, when I used to give a lot of talks to high school classes, this was one of my favorites. It always got the students’ attention. And I have to admit, I also enjoyed seeing some liberal teachers get so upset with me they almost lost their lunches.
Here’s the story I told those students in those long-ago presentations.
The Pilgrims who arrived at Plymouth Rock in 1620 were incredibly brave and hardy souls. They were motivated by the noblest of virtues. They vowed, each and every one, to be as selfless as possible—to always put the needs of the group first. They agreed to own everything in common and to share everything equally.
And their naïve piety almost killed the entire colony.
We all know how the adventure begins. A group of devout Christians, seeking religious freedom for themselves and eager to "advance the Gospel of the Kingdom of Christ" in the New World, sets sail from Plymouth, England in 1620. An investment consortium known as the Merchant Adventurers of London paid the expenses for the trip, including chartering the Mayflower and its 40-man crew.
The deal was simple: The Pilgrims agreed to establish a colony in northern Virginia where they would plant crops, fish the waters and hunt in the forests. They would return a certain percentage of each year’s bounty to London until their debt had been repaid.
Things went wrong from the start. First, the syndicate changed the deal, drastically reducing the amount they would loan the Pilgrims. The brave adventurers were forced to sell many of their own possessions, and much of their provisions, to pay for the trip. As a result, they landed in the New World badly short of supplies.
Next, the small ship they had purchased in Holland, which was to accompany them to America so they could fish the waters off the coast, had to be abandoned in England.
Shortly after they set sail, the ship, badly misnamed the Speedwell, became "open and leakie as a sieve," as its captain reported. They returned to Dartmouth, where the boat was dry-docked for three weeks as repairs were made.
But to no avail. After leaving Dartmouth, the group sailed less than 300 miles when the captain decided the Speedwell "must bear up or sink at sea." This time the ships put in at Plymouth, England, where it was decided to go on without the Speedwell. On Sept. 16, 1620, the Mayflower set out alone to cross the Atlantic.
A month later, when they had reached the halfway point, fierce storms battered the ship and threatened the lives of passengers and crew. Many wanted to turn back for England. But if they abandoned the journey, they would lose everything they had invested. The Pilgrims decided to trust in God and sail on.
Despite the storms, the hazards, the crowding and the poor food, only one Pilgrim died during the voyage, a young servant. His death was balanced by the birth of a son to Stephen and Elizabeth Hopkins, who named their child Oceanus.
There were 102 passengers on board the Mayflower—50 men, 20 women and 32 children—along with a crew of 40. The captain set a course along the 42nd parallel, a bearing that would carry him to Cape Cod. From there he intended to swing south and follow the coast to northern Virginia.
A little over two months later, on Nov. 19, land was finally sighted and the captain turned the ship south, toward Virginia. However, they soon encountered such "dangerous shoals and roaring breakers" that they turned back to Massachusetts. It was then that the grumblings of dissent turned into a full-fledged roar. Many of the passengers insisted on landing in Massachusetts, where "none had power to command them."
The Pilgrim leaders decided to meet the explosive situation by asking each male on board, except for the crew, to sign a formal document that would lay "the first foundation of their government in this place." Thus the Mayflower Compact was born.
The Pilgrims were a diverse lot. Many of them were illiterate. Yet in creating the Mayflower Compact they showed an extraordinary political maturity. They agreed to establish a government by the consent of the governed, with just and equal laws for all. Each adult male, regardless of his station in life—gentleman, commoner or servant—would have an equal vote in deciding the affairs of the colony. Of the 65 men and boys on board, all but 24 signed the agreement. The only ones who did not were the children of those adults who did sign, or men who were too sick to do so.
The first decision made under the covenant was to abandon efforts to reach Virginia and instead to settle in New England. The first explorers landed at Plymouth on Dec. 21, 1620.
Weather delays kept the majority from seeing their new home for nearly two weeks. On Jan. 2, 1621, work began on the first building they would erect—a storehouse.
Because provisions were so scanty they decided that the land would be worked in common, produce would be owned in common, and goods would be rationed equally. Not unlike the society Karl Marx envisioned of "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need."
Unfortunately, thanks to illness, injury and attitude, the system did not work. Pilferage from the storehouse became common. Suspicions of malingering were muttered. Over the course of that first, harsh winter, nearly half of the colonists perished. Four families were wiped out completely; only five of 18 wives survived. Of the 29 single men, hired hands and servants, only 10 were alive when spring finally came.
The colonists struggled desperately for two more years. When spring arrived in April 1623, virtually all of their provisions were gone. Unless that year’s harvest improved, they feared few would survive the next winter. The Pilgrim leaders decided on a bold course. The colony would abandon its communal approach and permit each person to work for his own benefit, not for the common good.
Here is how the governor of the colony, William Bradford, explained what happened then. This is taken from his marvelously readable memoir (if you can make adjustments for the Old English spellings), History of Plimoth Plantation:
The experience that was had in this commone course and condition, tried sundrie years, and that amongst godly and sober men, may well evince the vanitie of that conceite of Plato & other ancients, applauded by some of later times;—that ye taking away of properties, and bringing it in communitie into a commone wealth, would make them happy and flourishing; as if they were wiser than God.
For this communitie (so farr as it was) was found to breed much confusion & discontent, and retard much employment that would have been to their benefite and comforte. For yet young men that were most able and fitte for labor & services did repine that they should spend their time & strength to worke for other men’s wives and children with out any recompense.
Once they replaced communal efforts with individual responsibility the differences were dramatic—and life-saving. Men went into the fields earlier and stayed later. In many cases, their wives and even their children (some barely past the toddler stage) worked right alongside them. More acres were planted, more trees were felled, more houses were built, and more game was slaughtered because of one simple change: People were allowed to keep the fruits of their own labors.
The Pilgrims arrived deeply in debt to the London merchants who sponsored them. They worked for more than 20 years, as individuals and as a community, to pay off the crushing burden. In 1627, they borrowed money to pay off the Merchants Adventurers. By 1645, they had paid off the entire debt to the company which had advanced them the sums to pay off the Merchants.
When their debt had been paid in full (at the astronomical interest rate of 45 percent per year), the company that had advanced the sums wrote the Pilgrims:
Let it not be grievous to you, that you have been instruments to break the ice for others who come after with less difficulty. The honour shall be yours to the world’s end.
As we celebrate this coming Thanksgiving Day, some 380 years after the Pilgrims celebrated the first of this uniquely American holiday, let us remember the sacrifices they made… the devotion they showed… and the lessons they learned.
Until next time, keep some powder dry.
—Chip Wood