The flight to Mexico City was an hour late but, all in all, for a low-cost airline Volaris did us well. Fed up with the overpriced pre-paid taxi counters we decided to follow the advice from the couple we met at Copper Canyon and used Uber. We’ve never had much need for, or experience of, Uber as it doesn’t operate in our home town. The ride was very cheap and no sooner had we arrived at the rendezvous the guy was there…..perfect. 20 minutes later we were checking into our hotel in the centre of town and we had a great view across an attractive park. This was a pleasant upmarket area within 20 minute walk of the Zocalo and the wide street in front of us had several street performers including two full bands.

It was getting late so we set off in pursuit of an eatery. The first attempt looked ok but was some kind of chain that turned out to have, and yes you’ve guessed it, loud music, annoying video screens plus we hadn’t noticed the grumpy baby on the next table when we ordered our drinks. It didn’t take long to decide to just finish the drinks and move on. The waiter demanded a tip just for delivering 2 drinks. Needless to say, he got a tip but it wasn’t money. Eventually we stumbled upon a tiny Italian in a quiet back street. It was actually pretty good if a tad pricey but by then we didn’t care.
Next morning we set off fairly early to go to The Pyramids at Teotihuacan. It’s about an hour by car or, supposedly, just over an hour by bus from one of the main stations. Maybe we are getting lazy, but when we added on the time to get to the metro, worked out how to use it, got to the bus station and then spent, supposedly, just over an hour on the bus we decided it we would just take the advice from our friends was take an Uber again and we didn’t regret it. Our suspicions were that the driver would at some point in the journey suggest that he could wait for us and bring us back for a cash sum. Sure enough he did and we got a comfortable return ride for an acceptable sum to us and a good days work for him.



Teotihuacan was Mexico’s biggest ancient city covering more than 20sqkm. The remains cover approx. 2km and were pretty spectacular. The Piramide del Sol is the world’s third largest and was completed in 150AD. The smaller Piramide de la Luna was completed around 300AD. We spent 3 hours walking around the entire site and we didn’t see it all.
Next day was spent exploring the parks, museums, beautiful old buildings and the Zocalo. We quickly decided that we really liked Mexico City. It had a laid back ambience, polite people and lots of simple things that we either take as granted in the UK or think we should be able to. Smoking for instance. Very few people in Mexico smoke and the main pedestrianised shopping street is even a smoke free zone.


People throughout Mexico have been very well behaved. Wearing of anti-Covid masks is required and almost 100% adhered to. We’ve been temperature scanned pretty much everywhere we’ve had gallons of sanitiser squirted into our hands. The standard of driving is very good and very tolerant. In the UK we have just changed The Highway Code to make pedestrians King. In Mexico it’s clearly been that way for some time, not necessarily by law but possibly just out of respect. Wi-Fi is readily available in most public spaces for free. The parks are beautifully kept, there’s very little litter and the people seem to be happy and content.
That evening we met with John and Yesenia who we previously met in The Copper Canyon. She is an American Citizen, born of Mexican parents in the US, but temporarily working in Mexico City and the country that she loved. They had promised to take us out for some street food and drinks and to show us a bit of Mexico City. We started off with some tacos at a famous street eatery and then headed off to Plaza Garibaldi which is famous for Mariachi Bands.
It was buzzing with beautifully dressed bands everywhere who give performances to whoever wants to pay for a song but everyone around is welcome to listen and enjoy. We walked through to a smaller plaza and found a place she had been meaning to visit for some time. The show was about to start and there was no cover charge for the table. Perfect, a couple of drinks and some cabaret……how Benidorm can it get!

It was excellent, showcasing traditional songs and dances as well as the Mariachi Band. Once the show finished a live band kicked off and the stage became a dance floor which quickly filled by people of all ages eager to dance. Not just Mexicans but visiting Columbians, Puerto Ricans and a couple of hapless Brits without a single Latin Rhythm in their bones. Nobody gave a s**t, it was time to party and have fun.
Our last surprise was the order of Mescal, a version of Tequila, and Neil’s glass contained the worm. We had a superb night and laughed at the entire evening as we walked back to the hotel.


On our last full day we set off for our first trip on the metro. Less than 10peso, about 36p, gets you anywhere in the vast city of over 20m people. It was quick, clean and comfortable although we did notice one difference in the normally Mexican psyche of politeness. When it comes to getting on/off the metro and getting a seat it’s the quickest, biggest and the pushiest that win the day. Neil just about came off best against a small woman almost half his height!
Anyway, back to the trip to the canals at Xochimilco. Mexico City was built on a lake which explains why a lot of the older buildings are twisted and lean in different directions like the Tower of Pisa. In pre-Hispanic days the inhabitants created raised fertile land, or floating gardens, to grow food and this resulted in a canal network, a small part of which still exists on the Southern edge of the city. Today it’s main focus, apart from a few garden centres is to provide leisure with colourful boats carrying families and groups who want to party. There are small boats who sell drinks & snacks as well as music from Mariachi bands and other musicians. At the weekend it has a fiesta atmosphere so we decided to go on Saturday. The boats can seat up to twelve so we hovered at the dock waiting for other small groups of foreigners or couples to join with but after 20 minutes we realised it wasn’t going to happen so we chartered our own boat and set of for one and a half hours. It was fun, and we got a good contrast of peaceful smaller channels alongside absolute grid locked full on party chaos!

We got back to Mexico City late afternoon and headed to the Zocalo to watch the flag lowering ceremony. The Zocalo is an immense open square and was recently used as a location in the James Bond Spectre film. There is a central flagpole and an absolutely huge Mexican flag which flies during the day. We watched as a team of military personnel expertly lowered the flag, carefully catching the edge so as not to let it touch the ground and then start spinning and wrapping the fabric so it could be carried away. It was so big it took 15 people spaced about a metre apart stretched along its length to handle it. The crowds didn’t need safety barriers to keep the required distance away – they just politely stayed put as directed by the soldier clearing sufficient space for the ceremony. What a contrast to India where we know that no one would resist pushing forward to get a better look!

As the flag was carried away there was a patriotic round of applause from the crowds and we felt moved by the spectacle. A fitting end to our stay in Mexico.
Is it safe?
A few people were concerned about Mexico as a destination as it suffers from serious drug gang warfare. Mexicans we spoke to admitted that it is a problem but rarely affects ordinary citizens or tourists. We never felt threatened or intimidated anywhere we went, not even a raised voice or argument. We were aware of a lot of police presence, tourist police (in very cute tiny smartcars) National Guard, State Police, Local Police and almost anyone with a uniform that can carry a semi-automatic rifle. In Acapulco there were a lot of pick-up trucks fitted with steel bars on the back to allow military personnel to stand and keep their balance whilst they tote their hardware. We were there during the Mexico Open Tennis Tournament which may have been the reason for so many. We felt their presence was to make the public feel safe.

The day we left the hotel in Acapulco there were three of these trucks and dozens of menacing looking guys armed to the teeth. We asked if anything was happening and were told it was because the Governor had come to the hotel for a meeting. The guys looked serious but were actually very friendly, and Neil asked one them ‘aren’t you hot’? It was 33C, humid and he was wearing full battle dress, helmet and mask so all you could see was his eyes. A heavy nod of the head and a squint of his eyes said it all, ‘yes I’m hot, bloody hot and I could murder a cold beer’! We also thought at one point as we waited for the taxi to the airport that it was all going to kick off. There were some guys working on a neighbouring building and one started to use a nail gun. ‘Bang’ went the nail gun, ‘f’’k, what was that’? we said. The guards didn’t flinch. All in a days work.
Another thing we haven’t mentioned is Mexico’s love of the old VW Beetle car. They were everywhere, in various states of repair, and in Acapulco they are even used as taxis. We have no idea why they are so popular.
The next day it was time to fly home but not till 9pm. Neil blagged a very late checkout so we had a lazy morning, did most of the packing, caught up with emails and wrote some of the blog. We did have a very frustrating time trying to comply with the Covid entry requirements even though we thought these had all been dropped. BA wouldn’t let us check in a and choose seats until we had loaded the information required, Covid Vaccination Pass from the NHS app and Passenger Locator Form from Gov.uk onto another app called Verifly. At least we didn’t need to take a test, but bloody hell, what a pain in the bum!
Finally, after lots expletives we got it done and set off for a long lunch, including the odd beverage (well we did have a little Mexican money to use up), in the park before taking an Uber to the airport. Once at the airport we found the lounge which sadly was a very lacklustre American Airlines establishment. Time for a last Margarita but the barman was lousy, not even bothering to the shake the cocktail and the result was so awful we couldn’t drink it. We snacked on blue cheese and Palma ham (yummy) and Neil washed it down with a few glasses of mediocre red wine.
The plane took off bang on time and once we were given the all clear to flatten our beds Neil was gone, away with the birds fast asleep. Cheryl wasn’t sleepy and waited for the meal which wasn’t great. Never mind, she thought I’ll just have a big glass of red wine and hopefully I’ll be ready to sleep by the time the really bad film finishes. She hadn’t realised just how much her table sloped until the glass landed in her lap, all over the napkin, the blanket, her trousers and the edge of the seat – oops! Luckily most was absorbed by the napkin and blanket. Neil slept for almost the entire journey, waking up in time for breakfast, blissfully unaware of Cheryl’s drama.
We landed 30 minutes early, breezed through immigration and baggage reclaim, boarded the tube and were in Islington in exactly 2.5hrs from the wheels hitting the tarmac. It was a quiet evening in with Alex and Freddy with Cheryl keeling over at 10pm and Neil lasting until 11pm.
We fitted in a lunch in Richmond with Bill and Sue and finally our Mexican sojourn was to come to an end with the train journey from Waterloo to Axminster. It should all have been easy but quite a lot of stuff on this trip has not been and why should that stop now? The last leg of the journey home had a sting, a stressful sting. London Underground had a strike on Tuesday which had an ongoing effect on Wednesday, our journey home. We planned to get a taxi to Waterloo rather than risk the underground. Alex and Freddy tried to book a taxi and we had one more of those ‘oh shit’ moments….they were pretty much booked.
We jumped into Alex’s car and he drove us into really bad traffic and eventually got just about as far as he could before he incurred the wrath of London’s Congestion Charge. Just before we got to the limit Neil noticed a black cab with his light on. ‘Taxi’! he shouted. Alex stopped and Neil jumped out to hail the cab and grab the cases out of the boot. We jumped in, ‘Waterloo Station please’. It was now touch and go as we crept slowly through more grid locked traffic. It was going to be close we thought and then the traffic stopped again. We’re stuffed we thought. Then the traffic moved, we might just make it we thought. The taxi driver knew a few short cuts which helped a little as we watched google maps countdown our ETA which was only just before the train left. The stress was immense but we made it, found platform 8 and hopped aboard with less than 5 minutes to spare into First Class at the rear of the train.
Then after the train set off we heard an announcement that sounded like the train was to split at some point. Now we started to try and find out if we were in the right half of the train. Cheryl found another first class compartment at the end of the train. Eventually Neil found the guard at the very front of the train after passing through two more First Class carriages. The guard confirmed we were definitely at the wrong end of the train so at the next station we jumped out of the back of the train and hurtled to the front before it took off again. At last we could settle down and enjoy the journey.
Arriving at Axminster our friend Glyn was waiting to welcome us back and drive us home. We’ve had a great trip but it’s good to be back in the grey, cold drizzle again!


































































































