Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Monterrey-Vegas flights increases

Aeroméxico has doubled the number of flights it operates between Monterrey and Las Vegas. There are now four every week. This is not in response to the arson attack on a Monterrey casino in which 53 persons died. Identified by security videos and fingerprints, five who started the fire are now in custody. They explained that matters got out of hand, that they only wanted to frighten the owners, who had refused to pay protection money. The owners are said to have fled to the United States.


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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Anniversary

A year has passed since financially troubled Mexicana Airlines stopped flying. The carrier sought protection under bankruptcy laws and has been attempting without success to reorganize. Also no longer flying since 2010 is Aviacsa, a smaller carrier that also served cities in the United States. Newer Mexican airlines and foreign firms have taken over many routes that otherwise would have been abandoned. Both airlines say that they will return to the skies, but industry observers tend to doubt this.


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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Five held after casino attack

Five people have been arrested and supposedly confessed to taking part in the arson attack on the Casino Royale in Monterrey that left 52 dead last week. While no foreign tourists were involved, the incident is expected to affect the travel industry. The casino and others like it are more betting parlors and bingo halls with slot machines. While far from clandestine, they operate on the fringes of the law, protected by injunctions and possibly corrupt judges. Now a crackdown is expected. The late afternoon attack last week may have been in reprisal for failing to pay protection to a criminal gang.


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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Friday, August 19, 2011

Lions and tigers and bears, oh my!


Story & Photo By Stan Wawer

Lions and tigers and bears, oh my! Lions and tigers and bears, oh my…! I always wanted to use that phrase from the “Wizard of Oz” as a story lead but the opportunity never presented itself until now.

The Wild Animal Sanctuary in Keenesburg, CO is a 320-acre refuge for lions, tigers, beers, wolves and other large carnivores. In fact, the sanctuary houses 75 tigers and a new lion viewing area is under construction and scheduled to open in November.

The sanctuary is just 30 miles northeast of Denver off I-76 toward Ft. Morgan. The final three miles to the sanctuary is reached by a bumpy dirt road. Albeit close to Denver, it is remote but on this Monday morning it already was getting crowded. The sanctuary is open to the public from 9 a.m. to sunset seven days a week in the summer and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. every day in the winter (Oct. 1 through April 30). Educational tours are offered to individuals, families, groups and schools that want to learn more about the captive wildlife crisis. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for children ages 3 to 12. The Wild Animal Sanctuary is America’s largest non-profit sanctuary, with a $2 million operational cost per year.

According to one of the sanctuary’s employees, it has been open to the public for seven years but a carnivore sanctuary since 1980. It is one of the only places where you can view prides of African lions, magnificent tigers, bears and other large carnivores living freely in wide open spaces. There is no smoking, no dogs and no running anywhere in the sanctuary.

The vast majority of the animals residing at the sanctuary were confiscated by law enforcement agencies after they were found being kept illegally in people’s basements, apartments, garages, barns and other horrible places.

“The problem is getting out of hand,” said Pat Craig, the sanctuary’s executive director, ”as people are beginning to take these animals out into the countryside and let them go — just like people have done with dogs and cats for many years — only now, these animals can end killing someone.”

Tigers are so popular that there are more privately owned tigers in the United States than remain in the wild around the rest of the world, according to animal rights organizations.

The Wild Animal Sanctuary has more than 290 lions, tigers, bears, leopards, mountain lions, wolves and a few smaller carnivores, including servals, bobcats, lynx, foxes, coyotes and a coati mundi.

Some of the expenses incurred each year include $450,000 for 434,000 pounds of specially blended raw meat for all of the carnivore diets; $75,000 for 260,000 pounds of fruits, vegetables, eggs, grains, dairy and other assorted foods for the bears and other omnivore diets; $62,000 for 16,000 gallons of fuel and propane for running equipment, going on rescues and heating all of the enclosures during cold months and $25,000 for 150,000 kilowatt hours of electricity to power machines, doors, water heaters and other items used to keep areas warm and prevent water tanks and dishes from freezing.

According to Craig, the three main points of the sanctuary’s mission is to rescue captive large carnivores that have been abused, abandoned, illegally kept or exploited, to create for them a wonderful life for as long as they live and to educate about the causes and solutions to the captive wildlife crisis. “These things are what we commit to for the animals and for the humans who help to make a positive difference for them,” Craig added.

TWAS has an adoption program. You can learn more at www.WildAnimalSanctuary.org. You also can make a donation, which helps support the rescue and education programs and care of the animals.

I visited the sanctuary with my wife and two granddaughters (ages 5 and 2). My granddaughters were fascinated by the tigers splashing themselves in the water and the bears, especially the two young black bears engaged in a king-of-the-hill wrestling match.

Lions sleep 17 to 20 hours a day. The best time to view them is near sunset when they are most active. They slept through our entire visit. They didn’t even stir when a rabbit ran all around the enclosure.

I learned about The Wild Animal Sanctuary from a friend who is director of the Denver Convention & Visitors Bureau. The visit to the sanctuary turned out to be serendipitous and so much more than I expected.

I’ll leave you with one more quote — this one from Spence Conley, spokesman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service — about the dangers of owning a wild animal.

“We get calls from people who have acquired an animal — it may be a wolf or a big cat or maybe even other animals, like monkeys — and they don’t know what to do with them,” he said. ”When the animals are puppies or cubs, they are wonderful and cuddly, but they are not trainable. And the next thing you know, the animal is jumping on your table to eat your turkey.”

All information is accurate at the time of publication but prices, dates and other details are all subject to change. Confirm all information before making any travel arrangements.

Airline protests airport fees


VivaAerobus, one of the new, low-fare carriers, plans to cancel eight routes as a result of increased airport use fees being implemented by Grupo Aeropuerto Centro Norte. A planned 27 percent increase charged passengers for using airports would amount to a third or more of the basic ticket cost, declared a statement from the airline. Affected are primarily routes from Monterrey to smaller cities in the north of the country.


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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Convention Center for Los Cabos


Now that Los Cabos has been designated the 2012 venue for the G-20 Summit, the building of a convention center is planned. The G-20 (Group of 20) brings together leaders of the 20 strongest economies in the world. An estimated 16,000 people are expected to attend the meeting, although no date has been set. On the tip of the Baja California peninsula, Los Cabos is Cabo San Lucas, San José del Cabo and the 20-mile corridor linking the two. The area is a prime playground for Hollywood and Southern California.


--Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Gloria’s back


Tourism Minister Gloria Guevara has returned home after a promotional trip that took her to half-a-dozen U.S. cities. Although the U.S. State Department recently predicted that, as a result of current economic problems, the number of Americans traveling abroad will decline by 40 percent, Guevara expects travel to Mexico will increase. She noted that all airlines have reported more passengers flying to Mexico, with Delta announcing that its increase had been 57 percent.


--Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Whale sharks


A new favorite with tourists is Holbox Island, reached by boat from Cancun. Aside from being pristine, and, until recently, almost undiscovered, Holbox also is an ideal place to swim with whale sharks. Whale sharks can be 40 feet long or more, making them the world’s biggest fish. Like real whales, they eat only plankton and other small creatures, making them no threat to scuba-diving tourists.


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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Monday, August 15, 2011

Recovery


The marine population of the Cabo Pulmo National Underwater Park has quadrupled since fishing was banned there 14 years ago. The park lies off the tip of the Baja California peninsula. It remains open to scuba diving and snorkeling. The increase in wildlife has been confirmed by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, CA.


--Jimm Budd

Reporting from Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Friday, August 12, 2011

Mexico-Canada bilateral


Mexico and Canada have signed a bilateral agreement that will allow any airline from either country to fly to any airport in the other country. This is expected to increase dramatically tourism from Canada. The number of Mexicans going to Canada has fallen sharply since last year, when Canada began requiring Mexicans to obtain visas, a long, costly and complicated process.


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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Delta – Aeroméxico


Delta Airlines has acquired a 3.6 percent interest in Aeroméxico, which may not sound like much, but now Delta has a seat on the board. The arrangement also will help Delta enter into Central and South America through codeshare deals. Delta also will join Aeroméxico is building a new maintenance facility.


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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Good Eats

From now through September, the classic dish to order in Mexican restaurants is chile en nogada, a stuffed bell pepper bathed in white walnut sauce sprinkled with bits of pomegranate. The dish was first served by nuns in Puebla to Agustin Iturbide during his brief reign as Agustin I. Iturbide has been credited with winning Mexican independence and then giving the country not only its flag but also its name. He died before a firing squad.

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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Monday, August 8, 2011

La Quinta reveals plans

La Quinta plans to open 15 hotels and inns around Mexico during the next three years. Investment will be between $60 and $80 million. Projects are scheduled for Mexico City, Ciudad Juárez, Puebla, Reynosa, Veracruz, San Luis Potosi and Cancun. More may be added. Although La Quinta is a Mexican term that translates roughly as “country home,” the chain is just arriving in Mexico.

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Jimm Budd

Repoirting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Friday, August 5, 2011

Cruise business sinking

The number of passengers arriving aboard cruise ships has declined by about 15 percent compared to last year, according to a trade association. The drop is blamed both of poor economic conditions in the United States — home for most passengers — and concern over violence in Mexico.

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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Restoring Xochimilco

A 400 million peso fund has been authorized for the restoration of the floating gardens of Xochimilco in Mexico City. The Mexican capital began as a settlement on an island in a lake. Farming was done by placing soil on rafts. Xochimilco is about all that is left, an area of canals through which gondolas are poled. Once a favorite tourist attraction, the gardens have deteriorated. Goal is to bring the area back to its former glory.

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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Border Tours


Gray Line Tours in Tucson now is offering an eight-hour excursion to the line where Arizona meets Sonora at Nogales. Called “Border Crisis, Fact or Fiction,” the $89 excursion features a visit to the fence separating Mexico from the United States, opportunities to talk with officials and residents and see the port of entry through which pass 70 percent of the winter vegetables sold in the USA. Although hundreds of illegal immigrants have died attempting to cross the desert north of Nogales, a Mexican reporter interviewing people on the Arizona side of the line told him life is so tranquil they do not even bother to lock their doors.


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Jimm Budd

Reporting From Mexico City

Member of the Society of American Travel Writers