We have only good memories of Oaxaca from 2003 when we excurted to the archaeological sites of Mitla and Monte Albán, visited a few churches, walked the pedestrian mall, and ate dinner on the Zocalo. This time we wanted to see more of the sites (churches and museums) in city center plus daytrip to a local market or two, stroll on the pedestrian mall, and eat on the Zocalo.
Oaxaca has lots churches. We visited as many as possible. The highlight for us was the Ex-Convento of Santo Domingo. The church still functions as a church, but the former convento is now a fabulous museum called Centro Cultural Santo Domingo, combining great exhibits with the massive, simple architecture of the ex-convento, and surrounded on two sides by a botanical garden.
A couple of nights we ate dinner on the Zocalo or just had drinks. Oaxaca is very lively after dark with good people watching: vendors, tourists, musicians, kids with balloons, and folks out for an evening stroll.
The vegetarian restaurant scene was good to us; set lunches at Trigo Verde and a couple of dinners at La Manantial Vegetariana where we had traditional Oaxacan mole, vegetarian style.
Here are the photos:
The family tree of St. Dominic painted on the ceiling of Santo Domingo.
Church dome.
Teatro Macedonio Alcalá at night.
Tlayuda - Oaxacan Pizza - on the Zocalo.
Zocalo at night.
Pedestrian Mall at Night.
Templo San Felipe Neri has an Art Nouveau interior from an early 1900's renovation.
Another awesome lunch at Trigo Verde.
The beautiful fountain and clothes washing station at the Ex-Convento of Santa Clara, now a hotel.
Some shots from Centro Cultural Santo Domingo.
The Textile Museum.
Vegetarian Mole at La Manantial Vegetariana.
Finally, one afternoon Sun-Ling got stung by a bee and her hand swelled up more than a little. If it's not dogs, it's bees.
Sun-Ling and John have been traveling the earth since 2008 while blogging, eating vegetarian and vegan, and riding public transportation. We love uphill day hikes, 20th-century architecture, Roman ruins, all bodies of water, local markets, shopping for groceries, aqueducts, miradors, trip planning, blablacar, and more.
Search This Blog
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Recent Post
Qatar: Doha
Doha is another bonus visit for us. We picked a long itinerary that gave us 18 hours in Doha, then Qatar Airways canceled the original fligh...
Most Popular Posts of Last 30 Days
-
Last week we hauled our canoe and tent over to Merchants Millpond State Park and enjoyed some very fine camping and paddling. One day we p...
-
From Bishkek it is an easy bus ride to Almaty, capital of Kazakhstan until 1997, still the largest city in Kazakhstan, about two million peo...
-
First full day in Alishan, we hiked the much hyped Fencihu-Ruili Old Trail, which had been used by villagers to get around for hundred of ye...
-
Doha is another bonus visit for us. We picked a long itinerary that gave us 18 hours in Doha, then Qatar Airways canceled the original fligh...
-
The Seoul City Wall was built in the 14-century. In the past 30 years the "fortress wall" has been restored and revitalized with a...
-
Hehuanshan (Mount Hehuan) at 3400+ m.a.s.l has a full service hotel run by park services and is only three hours of bus ride from Taichung t...
-
We will be flying from Yangon to Vientiane via Bangkok on Feb 3rd, which is the last day for our Burmese visa. We are expecting to get a ...
4 comments:
Seven moles? So have you tried all seven? I read in your link there is controversy about the 7th and it's not vegetarian, chicken. Sorry about the bee sting, S-L.
Luckily it's not your ring finger. I was stung once on a finger tip when I was little. It turned into a purple mushroom, very painful. Don't remember any special remedy. Hope your swell and pain subside soon.
John your night shots are superb. May I learn from you when you return?
I really like the 1st shot from centro cultural santo Domingo. Where do the blue light on the floor come from? The lower walls don't seem to be painted blue.
@Crash - The only mole we tried was in a vegetarian restaurant. The sauce was chocolate-based with hot peppers and other spices, and lathered over strips of fried soya (or was it seitan?).
@WQZ - Thanks for the kind words about my night shots. I have a few tips I will share with you when we return...The blue light shows up when I use an automatic setting on my Lumix camera called "high dynamic". The effect is somewhat like HDR - I like to call it a "faux HDR" setting. Recently I've been using that setting a lot on cloudy days as it brings out the blues (as you noticed) in the cloudy sky.
@everyone - SL's hand is back to normal
Post a Comment