Maya Knowledge and Native Botany
The source of Campeche's iconic headwear is a cave outside of Calkini and a first step into the region's illustrious forested heritage and a chance to gaze at a sky you've never quite encountered like this.
The source of Campeche's iconic headwear is a cave outside of Calkini and a first step into the region's illustrious forested heritage and a chance to gaze at a sky you've never quite encountered like this.
Boating and clam digging in one of the world's most fantastic wetlands, and all followed up by a magic feast on the side of the swiftly flowing and mighty river.
Comprehensive custom tours into the biggest protected natural area and wildlife reserve on the Mexican Caribbean, with something spectacular for absolutely everyone.
Some of the most colorful and exciting and contemporary embroidery is being done in a workshop setting deep within a small town where birds still sing and they're just part of the exquisite sense of design and craft.
From cacao to chocolate bar: an immersion in Yucatán's chocolate-making tradition, handmade with history and family passion.
One of the most important and natural parts of a trip to Valladolid is a dip in the pool, and thus well into the Maya past, its people, culture, and place on the cultural profile of the world.
A mysteriously abandoned Maya village left behind a secretive and mysterious entrance into the underworld, and the enchanted, luxuriant pool within.
The leading traditional Maya kitchen and eatery in fantastic Santa Elena, there's lot to see, smell, eat, and learning just makes it that much more worth doing.
A famous community project to present one of the most lush and enchanting (and deepest) of cenotes to a wider public. What you get is practically, poetically, in-describable.