• Alessandra Totti
  • Alessandra Totti

Mexico! 🇲🇽

A 24-day adventure by Alessandra Read more
  • Trip start
    January 30, 2026
  • First Tacooos

    January 30 in Mexico ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    After 12 long hours on the plane to mexico city, Harold’s friend (Raldo) picked us up from the airport by car and invited us to eat at this amazing taqueria “Taqueria de los Güeros”. We tried taco al pastor, taco de cabeza, de tripa, lde longaniza. Amaaaazing food and only costed 20 pesos each (1 euro).
    we are very tired and tomorrow we’re catching our next flight to Cancun!
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  • Playa del carmen

    January 31 in Mexico ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

    After having chilaquiles for breakfast at the airport we took our flight to Cancun and the views fro the plane was amaziing! Finally the sea! I was expecting it to be much warmer here but I hope the next days will be better!Read more

  • Chill day in playa

    February 1 in Mexico ⋅ 🌙 16 °C

    Today was very chill. We went to the supermarket to buy some stuff and went for breakfast. We had Chilaquiles con huevo en salsa verde. Portions are always big here and you get full so fast! Then we walked a bit around and had tacos birria for lunch in the house of a family close to our airbnb. It is very common for families to have their own business trying to sell food. The food here is amazing really. We then went to the beach near us (Playa punta Esmeralda) and had a Michelada, which is a mix of corona beer and tomato juice or other type of juices. We had one with tamarindo. it was a bit too cold to swim but was nice to chill on the beach! We then went for dinner with Harold’s friend Julian, his wife and small child. We had tacos again and went home pretty early because tomorrow I have to wake up at 6 am to go diving with the shaaaarks!Read more

  • Leaving Playa

    February 6 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    We left playa del carmen, travelled to Cancun to take our flight to Villahermosa. The plan is to travel from Villahermosa to Palenque to sleep on the jungle and see the famous ruins. The last days in playa I have done lot of diving, saw the bull sharks, swam next to a crocodile that was chilling under the sun in a cenote. I don’t have the pictures yet but Harold’s friend Julian, my diving instructor, gave me the Gopro during the dives. Diving in the cenote was kinda scary but also interesting. The spaces are not too big so buoyancy control is really important to not hit the rocks. There are no fish but what is interesting is the rock formation of the cenote itself which generated during thousand years. The cenotes are literally caves and tunnels which connect different cenotes one to another and to the sea. They are a big source of water for the population as well. Here it is possible to do cave diving which requires a course and it’s considered tech diving. Overall being with Julian as a guide was very comforting and I could trust him fully during all the dives so it was very nice!Read more

  • Into the wild Palenque

    February 10 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    We stayed the past three days in Palenque in the state of Chiapas. We slept in a cabin in the nature, hosted by La Ventana (ig: palenquelaventana). In that place live Benjamin and Nancy with their 3 children. There is no electricity in the place except for few sockets and wifi is turned on only for few hours in the evening. The bathrooms are compost-based so the impact on the environment is minimal. The family cultivates almost all the food they eat (delicious), moreover they try to preserve biodiversity. We tried 3 different types of bananas that I haven’t seen in any other place. During our stay we had a very nice discussion with a guy (Johali) who gives courses on how to produce and extract honey from native bees. He works in partnership with la Ventana. When we met him, he was building wooden boxes for his bees. He showed us all the different types of bees that established in that place. All of them are native bees from Mexico that he is trying to reintroduce in the environment. He learned all by himself and it was a pleasure to listen to him and discuss about the indigenous communities in Chiapas and how they try to preserve their way of living far away from the capitalistic world. We also found out that in the rural villages around us alcohol is prohibited and people follow the rules of the village. There is basically no trust in the government and law enforcement so people make their own rules. As an example if someone comes in the village completely drunk disturbing the inhabitants, he will get fined and “arrested” closed in a cabin until he is sober.
    Benjamin and Nancy also shared a special mayan dance and ritual with us that they do every sunday ( I think) to call their ancestors and connect with the pachamama. It was an amazing experience to see this different type of life.
    We also went to see the mayan ruins in Palenque, which were beautiful!
    Next destination: San Cristobal de las casas
    Extra: I have added a photo of the crocodile we saw swimming in the cenote and Harold trying scuba for the first time helped by Julian.
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  • San Cristobal de las casas

    February 10 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    After 8 long hours with the bus we reach San Cristobal de las casas. The town is located at 2200 meters and it is a bit colder here in the evening compared to where we were before. It is a colonial town, all houses are quite short and there are the usual churches which you can see in Portugal or Spain. It is surprisingly very clean and people are extremely nice. Eating in the restaurants it’s quite cheap compared to Playa. The artisanal market is very famous here: leather bags, leather sandals and textiles of various colours can be found. I buy a very nice drape with a Jaguar sewed on it, two t-shirts, a leather bag (for Analia), leather sandals and other gifts. We also find many a shop who sells stickers, t-shirts and books related to the zapatistas revolution. I bought a book since I am very interested in knowing much more about it. The city is quite small and after one day, you see much of it. On the last day there we meet Mike, a US citizen, 70 years old, gay, leftists, veteran who started randomly talking to us in a park. He told us so many different stories of his life, his travels and we discussed about the current situation in the US. He told us that now everything in Mexico is so expensive compared to what it was many years ago when he started travelling. He apparently travelled all south America, hitchhiking alone as well when it was not so touristic as it is now so chapeau to him for having such a courage. We talked for 3 hours and really the time passed by very quick listening to his stories. Ah one more thing he was in Heidelberg in one of the different US bases that were/are in Germany. I have added some photos of the colourful Murales that I found in the city and one with the sentence “quien nos cuida de la policia (who is protecting us from the police)”. We will take the bus in the night to go to Oaxaca (12h ride). Overall Chiapas was very nice (at least from the experience I had). There a huge left-wing sentiment here and Indigenous communities are trying to not be dismantled by gentrification and westernisation. I would have loved to discuss more with locals about it but unfortunately we don’t have much time left.Read more

  • Oaxaca city

    February 13 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    I was a bit slow with the updates because I don’t always find the time to write. In San Cristobal we took an overnight ADO bus of 12h to reach Oaxaca city. The airbnb we booked is in a very cute house with a nice terrace that has an amazing view on the surrounding mountains. Outside it’s 30 degrees, needless to say that we are suffering walking to the center of the city. The colonial center is very cute and colourful, I really like how Mexicans paint their houses with different bright colours. We also notice that all around the city there are many graffiti of skeletons and skull-painted faces. The first day we decide to try the typical oaxacan Tlayudas and Memeles in the market (Mercado de la Merced). Well oaxacan cuisine was praised by everyone I met but I haven’t really found those dishes specials. Basically Tlayudas and Memeles are based on a crispy tortilla with a paste of frijoles (beans) on top and melted cheese, cabbage and meat if you like. Probably the ones we tried on the market were not the best ones in town but we were hungry so it was fine. Later we went to a more fancy bar to try some cocktails with Mezcal, which were very good but the place was quite expensive and not really authentic. We started walking around the town and we noticed lot of music and people dancing. It seemed that there was a parade with people dressed up with different customs, like in a Carnival, but here they are called Calendas. Our host, Mauricio, explains us that lot of people like to marry in Oaxaca and every weekend there is a celebration in the city. It was very funny and there was loud music everywhere and people dancing and drinking. Since we are a bit tired because of the hot weather and the long night trip we go back home and I fall asleep. Well when I wake up I start feeling sick and it doesn’t ends well hahah I guess it was the food in the market.. Harold is fine so maybe it’s just the revenge of Moctezuma on the europeans that dare to visit Mexico. My evening is over and I just stay in bed trying to recover, while Harold goes out and buys something to cook. The day after I am still a bit sick, so I just eat a banana and drink some tea. We decide to not go outside because it’s too warm and I still feel not too well. All my plans to see a distillery of Mezcal and do a tour goes out of the window and at the end I just surrender to the fact that I need to rest and sleep. So basically at the end we didn’t try anything else of the famous oaxacan cuisine because we just took advantage of the kitchen and cooked everyday during our stay there (3 days in total). A reason also is that we were so tired of eating tortillas, meat, frijoles and cheese all the time. On Saturday we decide to go to a cultural center (Jicara) to see the presentation of a book about the life of Gustavo Esteva a “deprofessionalized intellectual” a writer and a professor in Oaxaca University. He was a marxist, anti-colonialist, against the westernisation of latin america and in favour of the campesinos and indigenous. The students who presented the book and knew the professor, were very knowledgable and it was a pleasure to listen to the life of this professor and philosopher. We ended up discussing a bit with them about colonialism in south America and expectations of the white men on this country. It was very interesting and we ended up buying a book written by Gustavo.
    On Sunday we decide to go to see the lucha libre, which is usually only performed in the weekends so it was our only chance to see it. Lucha libre has a long history in Mexico culture and it is a performance worth watching. So much drama, interaction with the public, people screaming and the fighters that start fighting among the public. It was a crazy experience but worth it to see it live. We eat some very good tacos from a street vendor (I was feeling better already and since I got sick already no need to worry anymore hahah) and then have a last walk around the town.
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    Trip end
    February 22, 2026