El FuerteBlogs we like

  1. An Adventure in Copper Canyon, Mexico, Chapter Three – Mayo Indian Danza del Venado

    Blog: Hole In The Donut - 27 March 2010

    I was still oohing and aahing over the town of El Fuerte when the owner of Rio Vista Hotel, Chal Gamez, invited me to join a group bound for a native dance performance by indigenous Mayo Indians. The hotel van jounced along a potholed asphalt road barely wide enough for two vehicles, passing through desolate [...]

    Read the full post

  2. An Adventure in Copper Canyon, Mexico, Chapter Two – The Colonial Town of El Fuerte

    Blog: Hole In The Donut - 25 March 2010

    Eager to discover whether my decision to bypass Los Mochis and instead catch the Copper Canyon train from the colonial city of El Fuerte was a good one, I set out to explore the town. What had seemed a maze-like route between the bus station and Rio Vista Hotel the night before was an easy [...]

    Read the full post

  3. An Adventure in Copper Canyon, Mexico, Chapter One

    Blog: Hole In The Donut - 23 March 2010

    The first time my bus was pulled over by the Federal Police, the officer who boarded walked right by me without a glance. He asked the young man behind me where he was going and demanded to see his ID. All the way to the back, he questioned and checked the papers of young men. [...]

    Read the full post

  4. The Town Time Almost Forgot – Alamos, Sonora, Mexico

    Blog: Trans-Americas Journey - 12 January 2010

    After driving across the Copper Canyon and resting up at Torres del Fuerte hotel in El Fuerte we veered off the pavement once again and hit the back roads headed for Alamos. Sure you can get there on the highway but there’s also a network of good dirt roads that connect El Fuerte and Alamos on a route that takes you through the Sonoran desert and past a few isolated villages often on stretches of the original Camino Real. The trick is knowing which way to go.

    Read the full post

  5. You Can Get There From Here – Copper Canyon, Chihuahua, Mexico (Part 8)

    Blog: Trans-Americas Journey - 10 December 2009

    We’d taken the el CHEPE Copper Canyon train. We’d used our feet. We’d even conquered two of the most dramatic driving roads into and out of individual canyons in order to visit the towns of  Batopilas and Urique. All that was left was to drive from one end of the Copper Canyon region to the other.

    Read the full post

  6. All Aboard El Chepe – Copper Canyon, Chihuahua, Mexico

    Blog: Trans-Americas Journey - 9 November 2009

    It’s easy to get swept up in the awesome mountain scenery that reveals itself around every bend, but the train that takes you through the Copper Canyon (Barrancas del Cobre in Spanish) is a marvel in and of itself: 408 miles of track with 86 tunnels and 37 bridges (one spans a chasm at more than 1,000 feet above the canyon floor). During one unbelievable eight mile stretch the train make a series of three 180 degree turns (one over a bridge and two in tunnels) in order to change altitude by more than 1,000 feet–a mind-blowing rate for a train.

    Read the full post

  7. The Copper Canyon railway

    Blog: Itinerant Londoner - 29 April 2009

    As well as the natural wonders, the other reason the Copper Canyon is famous is for the Ferrocarril Chihuahua al Pacifico (CHEPE for short), better known in English as the Copper Canyon railway. The Sierra Madre Occidental is the huge mountain range that runs down the western side of Mexico, dividing the central plain from the [...]

    Read the full post