Usuario invitado
21 de octubre de 2022
In the Colonial Mexican town of San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas, you won’t find a more interesting place to stay than Na Bolom, “The House of the Jaguar,” a research center turned hotel/guest house tucked into a forest of tall trees. Seven decades ago, Swiss photographer Gertrude Duby Blom and Danish archaeologist Frans Blom turned this 1891 stone and stucco complex into a museum, cultural center, guest house, and garden focused on the people, history, and environment of the Maya region of Mexico. Na Bolom’s guestrooms hide behind arches lining stone patios graced with trees and flowering vines. Inside your room, high ceilings and wooden roof beams show off Maya textiles and artifacts decorating white stucco walls. You can warm your feet in front of your room’s brick fireplace or grab a book off the shelf and read in a cozy wooden chair. Out your back window, morning light reveals shaded pathways winding through the garden’s trees and native plants. Na Bolom’s library and exhibits pull in overnight guests and scholars alike, so don’t be surprised if you meet a film maker, botanist, pianist, or playwright from Mexico or a half-dozen other countries, or a Lacandón Maya couple in town with their young children. Dinner at the long dining room table--or outside on the flagstone patio—brings you traditional Mexican dishes that range from chicken a la orange to quesadillas and enchiladas, and the promise of a classical Mexican breakfast the following morning will make you want to wake up early. Try the huevos rancheros, locally-harvested coffee, and fresh orange juice before you tour the in-house museum and the exhibits of Gertrude Blom’s photographs that line the courtyard walls. And when you’re ready, simply walk outside through Na Bolom’s huge wooden doors to explore the streets of San Cristóbal de las Casas and the Indigenous past and present that awaits you.
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