Tag Archives: huatulco

Poker of Queens

By José Palacios y Román

Any time is a good time to bring together talents. Just as in ancient times, Alexandria gathered wise men in its library; beautiful Athens, thinkers and philosophers; Florence was the cradle of the Italian Renaissance with artists, political scientists, inventors; and so, more recently, Silicon Valley, with technologists and innovators…

In Huatulco, four talented local women who love the art of painting and who have come to paint through different paths will converge to exhibit half a dozen of their most recent works on Friday, November 14th at 6:30 p.m. at the Copalli Art Gallery in the Tangolunda hotel zone. Each one will present their own creative proposal, creating a synergy that fosters recognition, enjoyment, and reflection, sharing their most recent creations with the local population, seasonal residents, and visitors or tourists.

The four female figures resemble each other and join together to share the exhibition title “Poker of Queens,” a symbolic game where, like a Tarot deck, there are hidden messages, subtle intuitions, chance, and the connection to other realities. The conjunction of the painters: Edna Guzmán, Julieta Valadéz, Aranza León, and Alma Drew, each with her own unique style, offers original pieces with the healthy desire to come together and exhibit their paintings, carefully chosen for this art show.

With this first exhibition, the Copally Art Gallery inaugurates the 2025-2026 season of the Weekend Art Show series for three consecutive years. This edition focuses primarily on local artists. This time, the artists are Edna Guzmán, recognized for her extensive career; Julieta Valadéz, from a family of artists and expressive in her painting; Aranza León, trained in academia with great creative force; and Alma Drew, versatile in her proposals and tireless in her pictorial work.

The opening will feature live music by Ilhui LomeVal, a welcome cocktail, and the presence of the four artists for a shared love of art. Poker de Reinas will be on display from November 14th to December 6th, 2025.

Los Pream to Open the Winter Season of Amigos de la Música Huatulco

By Jesús López Aguilar

From Santa María Tlahuitoltepec and heirs to the Ayuujk Jää musical tradition, Los Pream is a collective of musicians whose artistic paths are as broad as they are diverse. Through their evolution, they have forged a new sonic identity rooted in the rhythmic foundations of the Mixe communities of Oaxaca’s Sierra Norte, blending these with improvisational elements from genres such as jazz, funk, Balkan, and suun.

The Mixe musicians — Vladimir Medina (keytar), Konk Balam (guitar), Mario Rubén Cardoso (trumpet), Andrés Vargas (trumpet), Facundo Vargas (trombone), Oscar Martínez (tuba), and Jonás Uriel (drums) — make up Los Pream. Most are conductors of philharmonic orchestras and accomplished composers who merge the musical traditions of their homeland with global sounds.

During their recent European tour, Los Pream performed with Africa Express, a project led by musician and producer Damon Albarn, best known for his work with Blur and Gorillaz. Critics praised the group for their bold and innovative fusion of sounds, as well as their electrifying performances and commanding stage presence.

In Albarn’s own words, following their performance at the 2024 Bahidorá Festival in Mexico: “We needed a brass band — something to strengthen the Africa Express show. Los Pream brought an essential sound throughout the entire performance and creative process… A group like theirs was exactly what the project needed.”

Los Pream embodies a rare fusion of tradition and innovation. Their music celebrates cultural diversity and creativity, offering a window into the evolving Ayuujk sonic identity.

They will open the Winter Season of Amigos de la Música Huatulco with a Gala Concert on December 6 at 7:00 p.m. at Hotel Dreams Huatulco. The concert will take place outdoors, in the seaside garden of this stunning venue.

Nothing Wasted: The Beauty of Leftovers

By Jane Bauer

I once met someone who told me their least favorite food was leftovers. When you hear the word leftovers, you might picture day-old pizza or a casserole that has overstayed its welcome. But leftovers can be the start of something delicious—far beyond simply heating them up for another round of the same old, same old.
Here are a few dishes that are enhanced by leftovers:

Leftover: Stale Bread
Solution: French Toast
In French, it’s called Pain Perdu—“Lost Bread.” I’ve always found the name poetic. It conjures an image of a piece of stale bread sitting on the counter of a Parisian apartment. This isn’t bread for the birds or the trash, it’s magic waiting to happen.

Crack an egg into a bowl, pour in a little milk, and add a dash of cinnamon or vanilla. Beat with a fork until blended. Slice your bread, then heat a frying pan and add just enough fat—butter or oil—to keep things from sticking.

Dredge the bread in the milk mixture until the outer layer absorbs some of the liquid—don’t let it get soggy. Fry until the slices turn a beautiful golden brown. Plate and drizzle with syrup.

Super hack: Have a jar of jam that’s been sitting in your fridge forever? Add the jam to a small saucepan with a bit of water. Simmer slowly, stirring until you have a warm jam sauce. Add more water as needed to reach your desired texture.

Leftover: Corn tortillas
Solution: Chilaquiles (a.k.a. Nachos for Breakfast)

One of the best Mexican breakfasts is, in essence, a celebration of leftovers. Tortillas are typically sold by the kilo—a lot for just a couple of people. You can wrap them in a dishtowel and place them in a plastic bag to stretch their life another day, but really, tortillas are best eaten fresh.

So what to do with the extras? Make totopos—corn chips. Cut the tortillas into quarters. Heat about an inch of vegetable oil in a saucepan. When it’s hot, drop in a few pieces and fry until firm, but not brown. They’ll continue cooking after you remove them, so if they’re already brown in the pan, they’ll end up overdone. Place on paper towels to drain.

Now you’re ready for chilaquiles. Heat about half a cup of your house salsa (because of course, you always have one). When it’s hot, toss in a handful or two of totopos, stirring gently until they’re coated in the sauce. Plate immediately—don’t let them linger or they’ll get soggy. Top with cheese, sliced onions, avocado, and a dollop of cream.

Salsa Roja
8 Roma Tomatoes
1 jalapeño
3 garlic cloves
½ teaspoon of salt
Roast or boil ingredients. Blend. Season to taste. For extra heat add a couple of chile de arbol (small dried chiles).

Leftover: Boiled or roasted potatoes
Solution: Bauernfrühstück (Farmer’s Breakfast)

My last name is Bauer and as a girl my father would often make this dish on Sunday mornings. This German dish is all about turning yesterday’s potatoes into today’s comfort food. —it’s a rustic skillet of fried potatoes, eggs, and whatever else is on hand.

Slice up your leftover boiled or roasted potatoes. Heat a generous spoonful of butter or oil in a frying pan, and toss in the potatoes until they start to crisp and brown at the edges. Add chopped onions, peppers, or bits of ham if you have them.When everything smells irresistible, pour in a few beaten eggs and let them set slightly before stirring. You want a balance between soft and crisp, not scrambled.

Season with salt and a generous amount of pepper, maybe a sprinkle of fresh herbs if you have some around.

Each of these dishes celebrates the beauty of using what’s left—transforming the forgotten and the stale into something comforting and new. A reminder that good food doesn’t begin with perfection. It begins with creativity, care, and respect for what we already have. In the kitchen, as in life, nothing needs to go to waste.

Jane Bauer is the owner/operator of Café Juanita and the Chiles & Chocolate Cooking School.

El Sueño Zapoteco A.C. / Bacaanda Foundation: Smart Rural Schools That Transform Lives

By Britt Jarnryd

With nearly 17 years of uninterrupted work, El Sueño Zapoteco A.C. / Bacaanda Foundation works tirelessly to open paths of opportunity in the most vulnerable rural communities along the coast and in the southern Sierra of Oaxaca. Recognized as an authorized nonprofit organization in Mexico, the United States, and Canada, it is committed to a clear purpose: to provide children and young people with a dignified, equitable, and quality education.

Today, that dream has taken shape through the Smart Rural School project—an innovative initiative designed to strengthen learning in Spanish and mathematics by incorporating technology, ongoing teacher training, and educational mentorship as essential pillars. This comprehensive model combines digital tools, pedagogical development, and financial support for rural teachers, dignifying their work and reducing teacher turnover—one of the main challenges in rural areas.

The program’s goals include expanding meaningful learning, encouraging the use of technology in teaching, developing digital and socio-emotional skills, and ensuring that teachers remain in their communities. In addition, systematic evaluations track academic progress, guaranteeing continuous improvement in educational outcomes.

Each classroom is equipped with a smart screen, iPads (one for every two students), educational applications, satellite internet, and digital programs for Spanish and mathematics. Thanks to joint efforts and the commitment of our partners, all of our rural schools are now connected to satellite internet—opening the doors of knowledge to the world.

For the 2025–2026 school year, the program is being implemented in 52 rural schools, benefiting 57 teachers and more than 550 students. The results are evident: improved reading comprehension, stronger logical-mathematical thinking, more motivated teachers, and school communities strengthened by hope.Yet much remains to be done. We invite you to be part of this dream:Sponsor a school and transform the life of a community.

Contribute to the monthly cost of satellite internet that keeps the connection to learning alive.Support teacher training or sponsor a rural teacher, ensuring their development and permanence. Every donation plants the seeds of the future. Join El Sueño Zapoteco A.C. / Bacaanda Foundation and together let’s continue building an Oaxaca where education transforms lives and keeps dreams alive.

 

Huatulco’s Next Wave: Adapting to Mexico’s Changing Tourism Priorities

By Randy Jackson

Each year, when we arrive at La Bocana for the first time, boogieboards tucked under one arm, we stop to see how the forces of nature have reshaped the beach since our last visit six months earlier. The sand is never the same; sometimes subtly shifted, sometimes dramatically reformed. But we always adapt. We watch the waves, find the rhythm, and surf. Huatulco, too, is shaped by forces of change, not only hurricanes and earthquakes but shifts in national policy and priorities. These changes may not be as visible as a redrawn shoreline, but they carry consequences just the same.

A New Presidency, Old Currents

This year, Mexico marks the first anniversary of President Claudia Sheinbaum’s term. She has been celebrated for breaking gender barriers and bringing a more academic tone to politics. But for resorts like Huatulco, the most significant shifts began earlier. The rethinking of tourism as an economic driver, along with the changes implemented by agencies like FONATUR, took root under the administration of former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. So far, Sheinbaum appears poised to follow those policies.

The Fourth Transformation

To understand how Huatulco fits into this national realignment, it’s helpful to revisit what AMLO called the Fourth Transformation, his sweeping effort to redefine Mexico’s relationship with markets, foreign investment, and development itself. Drawing on three foundational periods in Mexican history—independence from Spain, the 19th-century Reform movement, and the Mexican Revolution—AMLO positioned his administration as the next great change. AMLO’s Fourth Transformation (4T) marked a departure from decades of neoliberal policies, aiming to reclaim national sovereignty and redistribute power away from economic elites, allowing the state to play a more active role in development.

Whether the 4T will live up to its historical billing remains to be seen. Still, President Sheinbaum has made her stance clear: “We are going to deepen the transformation, not reverse it.” For Huatulco, like other destinations born under FONATUR’s original vision, the Bob Dylan refrain still applies: The times, they are a-changin’.

FONATUR’s Rise and Retreat

Mexico continues to invest heavily in economic development, but large-scale, master-planned tourist resorts are no longer the centrepiece. When FONATUR was created in the 1970s, its mission was to plan, finance, and build integrated tourism destinations in remote coastal areas. The federal government would install airports, roads, water systems, and other infrastructure, setting the stage for private investors to bring hotels, restaurants, and jobs. The result was supposed to be a trickle-down boost for nearby communities.

In the 1980s, FONATUR transformed a string of untouched bays along Oaxaca’s coast into the resort of Huatulco. For some time, the concept seemed viable. But like the beachgoers adjusting to new surf, FONATUR found itself navigating shifting economic currents. The global tourism market for beach resorts became crowded, and other destinations, such as Caribbean all-inclusive resorts, and even competing FONATUR projects like Cancún and Los Cabos, offered cheaper and easier alternatives to Huatulco.

From Resorts to Railways

Still, the lesson took some time to sink in. FONATUR continued launching new mega-projects, such as Loreto in Baja California. In 2007, Loreto briefly topped destination real estate sales charts. However, the 2008 global financial crisis and subsequent U.S. recession halted the momentum. Investors paused. Projects stalled. And gradually, Mexico’s tourism strategy began to shift.

Under President Peña Nieto (2012–2018), a sector-wide review led to a curtailment of FONATUR’s expansion. Funding to destinations like Huatulco focused more on infrastructure maintenance than growth. Then came AMLO, who dramatically reoriented the agency. FONATUR’s traditional role in resort development and maintenance was significantly reduced. Resources were redirected to the Maya Train, a controversial infrastructure project billed as a tourism initiative, although it is perhaps better understood as a regional economic development initiative. President Sheinbaum has embraced and extended this strategy, most recently announcing the Maya Train’s expansion into Guatemala.

For Huatulco, this confirms what many already sensed: the national spotlight has moved elsewhere. The cartoon image below may exaggerate the moment, but the message is real: while some of us wave tourists into the surf, a much larger wave of policy, budget, and priorities is cresting behind us.

Still, FONATUR isn’t gone. It remains a significant landholder in Huatulco, controlling the unsold parcels from its original 1984 expropriation. The question is whether it can be repurposed as a steward, rather than a builder, which is less about launching new resorts and more about maintaining what already exists.

A New Kind of Partnership?

A new pivot might align well with Sheinbaum’s emphasis on sustainability. For Huatulco to ride the next wave, a new kind of partnership is needed —one that brings together FONATUR, the state of Oaxaca, and local stakeholders at the same table. A coordinated strategy could target essential needs, such as water and sewage infrastructure. Revenues from FONATUR’s Huatulco land sales, combined with FIDELO’s operational expertise and input from local businesses, could support a development plan that is realistic, sustainable, and tailored to the region’s needs.

Surfing Ahead

Whatever form it takes, the priority must be to protect what sustains Huatulco’s economy while preserving the natural beauty that draws people here in the first place. If successful, it could offer a model for other FONATUR-born resorts navigating similar transitions.

As President Sheinbaum completes her first year in office, balancing domestic pressures and global uncertainties, this type of pragmatic regional initiative could represent a meaningful path forward. The wave of change is real, and while Huatulco may seem like a small fish in Mexico’s broader political sea, it is of significant importance to us Huatulcoites. And as the surfers at La Bocana know, timing and effort often make the difference between riding the wave and being pulled under.

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy: A Deep Breath of Possibility

By Kary Vannice

Most of us accept that a little discomfort can make us stronger. A tough workout, a deep stretch, or even fasting for a day leaves us feeling more resilient once the body recovers. But the idea of locking yourself into a pressurized chamber, inhaling pure oxygen, and subjecting your body to more pressure than normal seems, well, intense. But with Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), that’s precisely the point. By surrounding you with oxygen under pressure, it creates a challenge the body can’t ignore. Instead of shutting down, your system wakes up — repairing tissues, calming inflammation, and turning on healing pathways that may have been idling for years.

At its core, HBOT is really about giving your body more of what it already knows how to use: oxygen. Under pressure, oxygen can slip deeper into the bloodstream and reach places it normally struggles to get to. Imagine a dry sponge finally soaking up water — tissues that have been starved or sluggish suddenly drink in the fuel they’ve been missing. That’s why old injuries can finally start mending and tired muscles can feel alive again.

HBOT also encourages the body to grow new blood vessels, boosts collagen — the scaffolding that holds your skin, joints, and connective tissue together — and turns on the repair crews inside your cells. And it also calms inflammation, your bodies internal “fire alarm”. The result is a body where balance is restored, movement feels easier, and healing picks up momentum.

Even more impressive, HBOT nudges your bone marrow to release stem cells, the body’s own all-purpose repair team. Once they’re set free into the bloodstream, they travel to sites of injury or wear and tear, ready to rebuild what’s been damaged.

Another surprising benefit of HBOT is what it does for the brain. When your brain gets more oxygen, it’s like opening the windows in a stuffy room — suddenly everything feels clearer, fresher, easier to move around in. People often report sharper memory, better focus, and improved mental energy after a series of treatments.

And this isn’t just theory tucked away in medical journals — HBOT is being studied and used around the world with results that are hard to ignore. In Israel, researchers have shown that regular HBOT sessions can actually lengthen telomeres (the little caps on our DNA that shorten as we age) and reduce the number of “senescent” or worn-out cells. It’s like hitting a refresh button at the cellular level, giving the body a younger profile than before. In the Netherlands, breast cancer survivors dealing with painful radiation damage found relief through HBOT, with studies showing less pain and more flexible, healthy tissue after a course of treatments.

China has been testing HBOT for people with Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia, and the results are promising — patients scored better on memory tests, showed improved brain blood flow, and even had signs of reduced inflammation. And across Europe, HBOT is being used in studies for long-COVID, where patients report clearer thinking, more energy, and better sleep.

Taken together, these studies show that hyperbaric treatment is more than an alternative, niche therapy.
Whether it’s helping an athlete recover faster, supporting an older adult in staying sharper, or easing the long-term side effects of cancer treatment, hyperbaric oxygen therapy is proving its value across continents.

Here in Huatulco, we don’t always have easy access to the most advanced medical technology, but hyperbaric oxygen therapy is one of those rare treatments that has found its way to our coast. Hyperbaric Huatulco opened its doors in the spring of 2025 in Santa Cruz Huatulco with a state-of-the-art chamber that holds 4 people.

For locals, it means support for things like stubborn wounds, injuries, or recovery after surgery. For visitors, it can be part of a wellness experience — a way to give the body a reset while soaking in the natural beauty of Oaxaca. And for anyone curious about living with more vitality, it offers a chance to explore a therapy that’s showing impressive results worldwide without having to leave our own backyard.

In the end, Hyperbaric Oxygen Treatment is really about giving the body a chance to do what it was designed to do — heal. With oxygen as its ally, the body remembers its own wisdom. And sometimes, that reminder is all it takes to feel stronger, clearer, and more alive.

http://www.hyperbaric-huatulco.com

Huatulco, an Enclave of Cultures

By José Palacios y Román

Long before the arrival of the Aztec (Nahuatl) people in the Valley of Mexico—and centuries before the Spanish conquest— the Oaxacan coast was home to thriving civilizations. The bays of Huatulco and their surrounding forests were dotted with human settlements and centers of high culture.

One of the most remarkable sites is the Copalita Eco-Archaeological Park, with its sanctuaries, ritual ball court, astronomical observatory, and sacred spaces for solar and lunar ceremonies. Archaeologists believe this was a cosmopolitan hub where diverse pre-Hispanic cultures—the Chontal, Zapotec, Mixtec, and even the Maya—converged. Much remains to be studied, but the late anthropologist Raúl Matadamas identified more than 180 unexplored vestiges in the region, including significant remains at the stunning Cacaluta Beach.

While written history only scratches the surface of this region’s cultural richness, Huatulco continues to evolve. Just fifty years ago, the local population relied primarily on fishing, corn farming, and seasonal coffee harvests. Today, tourism drives the economy, yet a new generation—rooted in ancestral traditions—is emerging with fresh artistic energy.

The natural beauty of Huatulco has long inspired artists from around the world, but it is the local painters who have given the region a distinct cultural identity. Masters such as Rafael Ortega, Abdías García, Edna Guzmán, Hergón, Heriberto Palafox, Susana Rubín, and Aranza León have established a lasting legacy, exhibiting in the few but growing number of local galleries.

Foreign collectors from Canada, the United States, and Europe have also played a role in elevating the region’s art scene, acquiring works that capture the pulse and emotion of Mexican creativity. Beyond its aesthetic power, art here has become a meaningful investment and a bridge connecting cultures.

For those eager to experience this creative spirit, the Copalli Art Gallery in Tangolunda offers a curated selection of works by local, national, and international artists. It stands as a testament to Huatulco’s unique blend of history, nature, and artistic expression—an open invitation to discover all this coastal enclave has to offer.

Info: http://www.facebook.com/copalligallery