Saturday, September 07, 2013

El Salto Tour with Admire México Tours

El Salto Falls and Balneario on the road between Minatitlan and Manzanilllo

El Salto Tour with Admire México Tours

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Colima, Mexico Approves Same-Sex Civil Unions

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Lawmakers in Mexico's western state of Colima have approved a change in the state's constitution that legalizes same-sex civil unions.
Colima state spokeswoman Cecilia Ramirez says the legislature approved the constitutional change late Monday after seven of the state's 10 municipalities approved the reform.
Ramirez says the law provides gay couples with numerous social benefits similar to those of married couples.
She says a survey found Colima residents opposed instituting same-sex marriage but did support giving gay couples some legal rights.
Currently, Mexican same-sex marriages are allowed in Mexico City, the southern state of Oaxaca and the state of Quintana Roo, home to the resort city of Cancun. The northern state of Coahuila began allowing same-sex civil unions in 2007.

Monday, July 08, 2013

The Fauna of Nevado de Colima National Park

El Parque Nacional Nevado de Colima - La Fauna

The park is home to a great variety of wildlife, composed of various animals including: the hawk, cougar, armadillo, hummingbird, deer, javelina (peccary), coyote, raccoon, squirrel, mockingbird, parakeet, bobcat, and various reptiles. The Red Warbler deserves special mention, as endemic to Mexico,  has been chosen as a symbol of the national park and the jaguar while not a resident species in the park, often passes through it when moving from a mountainous area to another.

Thursday, June 06, 2013

Colima cleans up public spaces


As part of World Environment Day, the Colima municipal government launched a beautification campaign on Wednesday for parks, gardens, boulevards, and playgrounds around the city.

Mayor Federico Rangel Lozano said that his administration had also started an awareness campaign among the city’s residents to help combat littering and pollution.

“We hope that citizens will help out in cleaning up the city, creating a virtuous circle that will allow us to have cleaner and more pleasant public spaces” he said. Regarding the beautification program, Rangel Lozano said that he hoped there would be immediate results so that the campaign could be evaluated by the end of the month at the latest. “We want to show what a clean Colima looks like and leave a better environment for future generations,” he added.

He also praised the staff of the Public Services Department, “who have expressed their interest in taking part in this challenge” adding that he was confident environmental organizations would participate “in this great task, which will result in greater well-being for both residents and visitors to Colima.”

Colima article from The News

Tuesday, June 04, 2013

The Filipino roots of mezcal



The Filipino roots of mezcal
Published by Luigi on June 11, 2008

“Clash of civilizations” is a common rhetorical trope these days. But it is as well to remember that good things can — and often do — happen when cultures come together. A paper just out in GRACE gives an example involving agrobiodiversity. In it, Daniel Zizumbo Villareal — the doyen of Mexican coconut studies, among other things — and his co-author set out the evidence for the origin of mezcal, the generic name for agave spirits in Mexico.

It turns out that this most Mexican of drinks is unknown from pre-Columbian times, although of course the cooked stems and floral peduncles of various species of Agave were used as a carbohydrate source by the ancient populations of what is now western Mexico, and drinks were made from both these and their sap. But, apparently, distillation had to wait until a Filipino community became established in the Colima hills in the 16th century. They were brought over to establish coconut plantations, and started producing coconut spirits, as they had done back home. The practice was eventually outlawed in the early 17th century, and this prohibition, plus increased demand for hard liquor by miners, led to its application to agaves instead, and its rapid spread. The first record of mezcal is from 1619. Mexicans (not to mention other tequila afincionados the world over) have a lot to thank Filipinos for.

link to - The Filipino roots of mezcal - article

Abstract: No evidence exists of distillation in Mexico before European contact. The Philippine people in Colima established the practice in the 16th Century to produce coconut spirits. Botanical, toponymic, archaeological, and ethnohistoric data are presented indicating that agave distillation began in Colima, in the lower Armería-Ayuquila and Coahuayana-Tuxpan river basins, using Agave angustifolia Haw. and through adaptation of the Philippine coconut spirits distillation technique. Subsequent selection and cultivation of agaves led to their domestication and diversification. This did not take place in the lower river basins, where agave populations tended to disappear.

Early coconut distillation and the origins of mezcal and tequila spirits in west-central Mexico

The distillation technique spread to the foothills of Colima volcanoes and from there to all of western Mexico, leading to creation of tequila and other agave spirits. Two factors aided producers in avoiding strict Colonial prohibitions and were therefore key to the diffusion and persistence of agave spirits production: (1) clandestine fermentation in sealed, underground pits carved from bedrock, a native, pre-European contact technique; and (2) small, easy-to-use Philippine-type stills that could be hidden from authorities and allowed use of a broad range of agave species.


And if you have any doubts about the above article I suggest going to Ian Chadwick's authoritative site on Mezcal and Tequila - great site

Saturday, April 20, 2013

American scientist dies on Volcan de Colima



COLIMA, Mexico, in April. 18, 2013. - The American volcanologist Kelby Hicks died on the slopes of Volcan de Colima, where he conducted field research on the explosive activity of the Colossus. "We are doing a project with the University of England and Kelby was participating in this project" , said Nick Varley Volcano Observatory volcanologist at the University of Colima. 

Article in Spanish

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Colima Volcano Erupting

This is a screen capture of the University of Colima web cam erupting today. The volcano destroyed it's lava dome back in January and has been erupting regularly ever since. Here's a link to the web cam and you might get lucky.  Volcán de Fuego - Cam

U of Colima Cam

Monday, February 11, 2013

Organic markets in Colima


Verde Colima A.C. te invita al programa de


MERCADO VERDE

Productos ecológicos, música en vivo, frutas y verduras orgánicas, ambiente, talleres y charlas informativas...

El segundo sábado de cada mes de 4 a 8 pm en el parque de LA PIEDRA LISA

El tercer sábado de cada mes de 4 a 8 pm en el jardín principal de la VILLA DE ALVAREZ

Y tambien la Universidad de Colima por medio de CEUGEA (Centro Universitario de Educación Ambiental) patrocina el TIANGUIS LA COMUNA

El último sabado de cada mes de 10am a 3pm en el jardín principal de NOGUERAS

Verde Colima





Tuesday, January 15, 2013

An eruption of Colima's 'Volcán de Fuego'



COLIMA, Mexico, Jan. 6, 2013.- An eruption of 'Volcán de Fuego' , recorded at about two in the afternoon of this day, alerted systems Civil Protection of Colima and Jalisco, and prompted the evacuation of visitors to the National Park Nevado Colima.

In this regard, the director of PC-Colima, Melchor Ursua Quiroz, said they began recording more activity since last Monday, probably because of the rain that occurred from that day.

"According to the Scientific Advisory Committee, was a phreatic explosion that threw a lot of ash and pyroclastic material that apparently went to the la barranca de La Lumbre, reaching just over two thousand meters from the crater, so it did not cause problems" he said.

Regarding the ash , said mostly fell near the town of Atenquique, Jalisco, " where cars had to slow down on the highway Colima-Guadalajara, due to the dense cloud.

Related Posts with Thumbnails
Colima is a state in western Mexico. It shares its name with its capital and main city, Colima, Colima. Colima is a small state, sharing a border with the Mexican states of Jalisco to the north and east, and Michoacán to the south. To the west Colima borders the Pacific Ocean. In addition to the capital city of Colima, the state's main cities include Manzanillo and Tecomán.

Planeta Colima
Volcan de Colima Cam
Admire Mexico Tours
Meshico Magical Tours
Hostal Casa Blanca
Birding Comala
Comala Info
Hacienda San Antonio
Secretaria de Cultura
Colima the Arts
Project Amigo