Published on March 12th, 2017
10MEXICO: Butterflies DRIPPING from the Trees!
Whew! Fair warning: This turned out to be quite the hefty package of mots and pics, so grab a cuppa your favorite beverage, and settle in for a long read.
I finally knocked down my near 500 Mexico pics to (a somewhat more manageable) 214. But still…
Far too many to post here, so I’ve culled further and will (necessarily) drop them into scattered collages and slideshows – in two separate posts: A; Those amazing butterflies, and B: The incredible food in Mexico City.
So let’s get started – about those bazillion butterflies – yes, yes, literally DRIPPING from the trees!
But before we get to all the pretty pics – let’s back up a bit with a quick nutshell of the nitty-gritty on how I managed to get there, rubles, accommodations ‘n such.
For starters, the initial impetus for this (decidedly impromptu) adventure (detailed here) was a long-ago promise to myself that “SOMEDAY” I would witness this amazing, nowhere-else-on-the-Planet butterfly spectacle with my own baby-blues. Years and years passed (as annoyingly they are wont to do) and I’d utterly forgotten that promise until this past January when I stumbled across a stray video about this year’s annual Monarch migration in Mexico. OMG! Yes, yes – those butterflies are only dripping from those tree branches until early March, so – suffice I was hell-bent on realizing my long ago travel dream THIS YEAR!
Still… I’d dropped quite a boatload of rubles skipping around the Balkans for 6 full weeks just a few months ago, so I honestly couldn’t afford to linger for weeks on end exploring all the many corners of Mexico. In short, if I hoped to realize my dream this winter, it would have to be but a brief dash to Mexico City and then straight up into those mountain forests to gawk at those butterflies with no time to spare.
And as it turned out – my 6 night dash proved to be the PERFECT little adventure. Plenty of time for the butterflies, plus some amazing Mexican eats – and the tab didn’t break the travel piggy-bank:
Operation “Mariposas” Nitty-Gritty |
RT. bus from Cuenca down/up the (8,000+ foot) hill to/from Guayaquil: $8
RT. air GYE-CDMX: $430 RT. airport transfers: $20 CDMX hostal 3 nts. (2 w/ private room/shared bath, and the final night a 4-bed female dorm ‘cuz they didn’t have a private available). Hostel Mundo Joven Catedral (practically ON TOP of the Metropolitan Cathedral in the heart of Mexico City): $60 Angangueo private room, 3 nts. Plaza Don Gabino Hotel – a bit of a splurge for me, but suffice there’s few alternatives in the tiny hamlet of Angangueo: $148 Excursion to El Rosario sanctuary (1200 pesos, split 4 ways with a trio of folks I met at Don Gabino, plus 50 peso sanctuary entry fee): $18 Full day excursion to Cerro Pelón sanctuary – a 1.5 hrs. ride away, including $50 to Graciela, my driver, plus 550 pesos for a (mandatory) guide and horse for the 1.5 hr. trek up to the butterflies: $80 Evening Mezcal Tasting (more on this in another post): $25 Afternoon Mexico City Food Tour (ditto – mucho more pics and details to come): $60 Transportation: A mere 5 pesos (25¢) subway ride to the “Observatorio” bus station on the outskirts of CDMX plus rt. comfy 3.5 hr. bus to Angangueo: $11 Plus… a bit for stray eats say… $60 at most The requisite fridge magnet plus small gifts (sweet treats for Cuenca chums and the Ecuadorian lass that cared for mi gata Dulce while I was gone) 1 nt. accommodations in GYE on the return (I arrived at 9 pm – not wise to weave through those foggy mountains up to Cuenca after dark): Mundial City (a stone’s throw from both the GYE int’l airport and the terminal terrestre – my perrenial “go-to” whenever I need to overnight in Guayaquil): $25 with breakfast Total: $975 |
O.k. so, call it a grand. Question is… were those butterflies worth it?
YOU BETCHA!
Indeed, so incredible that it’s honestly impossible to convey just what it feels like to be in the presence of such an amazing natural spectacle. Photos simply don’t do it justice.
I might also add that it takes a slew of zoom lenses, tripods and whatnot to truly capture the close-up majesty of it all (both at Rosario and Cerro Pelón, folks are necessarily not permitted to get too very close to the trees laden with butterflies). And alas, I have neither a tripod, nor an uber-zoom lens on my (otherwise fabulous) Sony MX100-II.
Ah, but to compensate, I do have a secret weapon in my photography savvy arsenal – an easy trick for making the most of tiny, far-away objects (like… um, bitty butterflies hanging from tree branches). The trick? C-R-O-P the bjeezus out of them! After all, most of us are shooting at mega pixel resolutions that far exceed what’s needed to display a sharp image online (e.g. on my own camera, I have it set for a “Medium/Fine” resolution which gives me images with a 3,648 pixel width – when I only need about 900 to display nicely enlarged in slideshows here on TravelnLass). In short, we’ve all got plenty of pixels to spare for cropping…
Like THIS:
BEFORE | AFTER |
And here’s the SECRET to how I did it (oh so easy-peasy in Lightroom):
Now then – on to the pics!
Let’s start with a collage of the Mexico City Metro. I’m somewhat proud that I’ve managed to navigate my way on many a convoluted subway in my solo travels. My first metro adventure was many years ago in Beijing of all places! And more recently I’ve hopped on subways in Munich, Istanbul (at night even!) and Athens. Nonetheless, the challenge of noodling out those many colored routes and stations in a foreign language always looms a bit daunting. Such was true of CDMX too (the most populous city in North America after all). But suffice (with the help of a map and counting down 11 “estaciónes” on my fingers) it turned out to be super easy!
And the reward? As I emerged from beneath the earth at the “Observatorio” station, not only was the bus station right across the street from the metro – but upon mumbling “tercera edad” (and pointing to my white pigtails), the bus ticket vendor likewise (as here in Ecuador) honored my dodderin’ “third age” status and my bus ticket to Angangueo was half price!
Which nicely segues to the slide shows – starting with…
and enjoy the full **62 pics** slide show!
The charming colonial hamlet of Angangueo:
Plus a few pics of my comfy digs there:
And finally, finally – what you’ve all been waiting for – those BUTTERFLIES!
El Rosario Butterfly Sanctuary
Cerro Pelón Butterfly Sanctuary
Phew! That’s a boatload of pics!
I hope you enjoyed the show. But my greatest hope, is that one day you’ll witness this amazing butterfly spectacle yourself. And in that spirit – I’ll polish this tome off with a handful of tips for when (not “if”) you do!
Tips for Visiting the Butterflies |
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Oh, and do stay tuned – with any luck, I’ll have even more pics and details of my O-M-G eats in Mexico City soon!
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I’ve seen the butterflies on TV, so that you have been able to be in the midst of them is great. Wow Factor? 10 out of 10.
Yes, yes Ted, I’d say 11 out of 10. You really have to experience it yourself – pics, videos, TV just doesn’t cut it. I hope you can visit one day, yourself.
Oh wow what an incredible sight this must have been, thanks for sharing with us! 🙂
Indeed Becky, “incredible” barely covers it. Truly a once-in-a-lifetime, nowhere-else-on-the-Planet experience. I hope you can one day witness the wonder of it yourself.
Love, love, love this post Dyanne and your last photo with your hands spread out and wide grin says it all! What an amazing and awesome adventure (I’ll bet you ran out of superlatives didn’t you?) and it’s a huge priority for *when* we get back for some return travels to Mexico.
Yes Anita, the experience truly defies superlatives. Even “amazing” falls short. You really must see this incredible natural spectacle for yourself. Definitely a “gotta-do” *when* you return to Mexico. Just remember – it’s only a few months each winter (Nov-early March, but ideally Jan. or Feb.) And do plan a couple few days in Angangueo to allow for cloudy/rainy weather.
YES, to seeing the butterflies–love your pix! I was there a week after you–I visited El Rosario from Queretaro with a guide from Tours By Locals. Fabulous experience! I’d been wanting to do this since I heard a report on NPR back in 1997 and with such a warm and dry winter in Mexico this year, we both hit it just right!
Right behind me, eh Kate? And likewise dallied a couple decades in doing it – yay for both of us!
And yes, as you and I can both now attest – sunshine is everything when it comes to those (otherwise) drab (but still a marvel) globs of butterflies dripping from the tree branches. When the sun shines – it’s suddenly a dazzling world of orange and black confetti!
What a great experience!
Indeed it was, James. Truly a once-in-a-lifetime, and I’m so glad I finally did it.