Photos by Jody Paterson

Monday, January 22, 2007

Barn in the tulip fields



The colour is so intense from the tulip fields that you can usually pick out where to go even without a "tulip viewing" map - you can see them by their colour on the horizon. However, local hotels and stores all carry maps of the fields to make things easy.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Channel at LaConner



A channel separates LaConner from the open water. A good morning walk through the marinas, and an excellent place to watch the sun set.

Graveyard



The graveyard across the orange bridge at LaConner. I took an early-morning walk across the bridge, all of which was pleasant except for the piece of road leading up to the bridge - no sidewalks.

Aboriginal graveyard



Crossing the orange bridge at LaConner puts you at a wonderful aboriginal graveyard. Visitors appeared to be welcome. Some of the graves were covered with the memorabilia of a life, from baseball hats and plastic toys to certificates and articles of clothing. Very moving.

Tulips everywhere



The tulip fields run between LaConner, which is on a channel and just up the road from the Anacortes ferry terminal, and Mount Vernon, which is just off the I-5 freeway about an hour south of the U.S.-Canada border. I came over via the Swartz Bay-Anacortes ferry route, and went back through Vancouver and Tsawwassen. The Anacortes ferry ride is beautiful, but takes almost 3 hours, and the schedule is minimal in the early spring.

Tulip fields at LaConner, April 2006



Starting in February or so and lasting until April, the farm fields around LaConner, Wash. are ablaze in tulips, daffodils and iris. We went in April, so tulips were the only ones still blooming, but the display was gorgeous. You can wander around the fields for free although you'll likely have to pay a couple bucks to park.

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Beach at Playa del Carmen



The beach not far from our hotel, the Moongate, in Playa del Carmen. Great swimming here, especially early in the day.

Towel Art



Maids at Mexican hotels overall seem pretty good at towel art, but the woman who cleaned our room at the Moongate in Playa del Carmen was incredible. We came back to a spectacular new creation every day - elephants, mermaids, swans, elaborate hearts. A bit more of a tip and a note in Spanish admiring her talent inspired the woman to ever-greater towel art achievements.

Iguana at Tulum



An iguana at Tulum, Mexico. The ruins here are thick with iguanas - we probably saw 40 or more while walking through.

Cozumel causeway



The causeway at Cozumel, Mexico. We came over for the day from Playa del Carmen. Quite a rock-and-roll ride on the catamaran - we were pretty seasick upon arrival.

Snorkelling at Yakul



Snorkelling at Yakul national park, on the coast south of Playa del Carmen, Mexico. Great place for snorkelling, as the coast in this area can be really windy but this is a sheltered lagoon.

Pyramid at Chichen Itza



The big pyramid at Chichen Itza, Mexico. An amazing place, and so expansive that even hundreds of tour-bus visitors don't interfere with your enjoyment. Bring lots of water - very hot here.

Beach at Tulum



The beach at Tulum, Mexico - March 2006. Development is barrelling down the coast south of Cancun, but hasn't quite reached Tulum.

Vendors at Cozumel



Cozumel, March 2006. We rented bikes for an ill-conceived 64-kilometre ride around the island. It killed us that these vendors weren't selling cervezas, but fortunately we found a bar not far down the road.

Relaxing in Cozumel



Don't know who this guy is, but he's striking a classic Mexican-tourist pose. This is on Cozumel in March 2006, after the hurricane. Despite losing much of its roof in the storm, this bar was making the best of it.

Girl and Monkey



Playa del Carmen region, Mexico. We travelled here in March 2006. This little girl and her pet monkey lived on the road to the
Dos Ojos cenote.

About Me

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I've been an observer of the BC scene since 1982, first as a journalist for 22 years and then from inside the non-profit sector and almost 5 years of work in international development in Central America