The music of Silence

the most beautiful sound on earth... absolute silence and yet, you hear music
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Thursday, June 27, 2024

Mexico City Day 6

Museo Soumaya

Decide to go to Museo Soumaya in the am before we fly back home. 
Museo Soumaya with the thinker outside

The thinker conception inside
Chanced into hello Kitty Cafe and dragged Bill into absolute cuteness Cafe 😂
Cuteness overload

After that we ventured into the museum which is quite impressive. It's a free museum with the owner buying a ton of Rodin and other sculptures casts (they are not final sculptures but concepts). 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Thinker
The first one to greet us is David, albeit much smaller
Fake David.. I think his hands aren't right

Piety, very similar to original
Room full of conception casts
It's interesting to see some details missing in the casts compared to the final statues

The bigger hand sculpture is final with smaller iterations
The cast to the left vs the original

Other interesting exhibits that caught my eye
Renoir sculptures

Portrait by Renoir

Dali scultpures


Chinese ivory sculptures


Couple of Monets, not quite typical

She seems famous in the Mexican Art section

Watches
More watches

Cute trinkets

It was a great museum visit to conclude our 5 days Mexico City trip. Chatting with others, Bill is right that we got lucky with our timing. We didn't really get heavy rain in the day time. We only got heavy rain in 2 evenings and it cooled off the city and clean off the pollution so it's really pleasant. The weather is perfect. 
My thoughts for this city is it has a lot to offer as it has seen a lot in time. For a very small city, it packs a lot and can get overwhelming. 

Random Mexico sights
Muneca Lele

Gridlock observed at Auditorium for an hour on a rainy night, seen from our room

Colorful Mexican sights

Mexico City Day 5

 Pyramid day (Teotihuacan)

Sun Pyramid selfie

Mexico city museums and sights are closed in Monday. So we choose to do a tour for the pyramids. There are a lot of history for the pyramids that I can't keep straight in my head. Wikipedia link is attached.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teotihuacan

As the pyramids can get crowded and there's traffic getting there, it's recommended to do it as early as possible. 

Entance

We got picked up at 615am and the tour company is very good at with coordination and communication. 

Small tour group
The pyramids are impressive. Very well maintained and the guide Gerardo is very knowledgeable (archeology professor/researcher) so got a lot of information from him. 

The History of it (and some of it might not be accurate)

The Teotihuacans had a disaster of volcanic eruption and had to relocate north

Pic showing building falling, volcanos erupting, ppl fleeing
They Found the mountain behind the pyramid of Moon with portable water and stayed there 

Moon Pyramid on the left, Sun Pyramid on the right

They worship god Quetzalcoatl with the understanding of the cycle of moon (13 months), cycle of sun and hence they have the pyramid of the moon and pyramid of the sun. 

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quetzalc%C5%8D%C4%81tl

The main temple is initially built to worship Quetzalcoatl and they cover the area under the main plateau with obsidian (which is provided by the people going back to the initial town to retrieve the lava hitting lakes). They use the obsidian to observe the stars and sun to predict seasons. 

View from the main pyramid to the altar which should be covered in Obelisk

Also, they attract quetzals birds (migrating birds) by throwing seeds on the ground and building the pyramids in a way that when you clap at it, it mimic the sound of the birds. They also built the pyramid in such a way that the birds will see the pyramids and think that there's food and water underneath. 

Clapping towards the stones between the 2 lines bounce in a way that mimics the birds

The pyramids are in power and collected taxes from the people in the city in order for them to get water for agriculture and drinking. This bridge divided the peasants vs the ones in power. 

Bridge that divides the power and peasants

And they open the 5 reservoirs (each one for each summer month) to provide water for irrigation of crops to the outer city once taxes are paid. 

Waterway and far right, there's a water hole

The area that we walked on is called the "The avenue of the dead" and during the times, it's a waterway. 

Looking down the avenue of the dead

The top layer stores the portable water and they added cactus sap and limestone to the reservoir floor to prevent water from sinking through. The white in the picture below is the only place that shows the water-proofing layer that's fortified every year. The water also served as a way to observe the stars

Only exposed area showing the waterproofing area

And there are apparently multiple layers in the waterway as well. It brings water for drinking, water for irrigation and sewage water that's all separated. But it's not explained how they are segregated. 

Also, they have a 52 year cycle where they sacrifice 8 kids in the moon pyramid that was educated with all the scientific knowledge and tore down and restored part of the top area of some of the structures in the avenue of the dead. 

Documentation of a puma with claws open, between lines of blue (water), lines of red and light blue, with circles (seeds) 


Below surface layer showing a temple

Hence most of the archeological sites are actually underneath ground that they are still exploring. They will build a big stone structure and collect the energy in the obelisk in the middle. It's supposed to represent the moon energy for the crops. And they will push it down the moon pyramid as a way to fertilize the water with minerals from the rock for crop irrigation. 

Stature for moon energy collection

It's slightly vague but we think they also build the same thing for the Sun Pyramid every 13 months. The sun pyramid is the 3rd largest in the world. They have 22/7 ratio which is the PI number. And fits Da Vinci ratio for man. Hence Bill fitting the pyramid 😁

Bill fitting the pyramid
Sum pyramid profile fitting profile of the mountain behind

However, as the city grew, it got to a population that's not sustainable. It caused people not to want to pay the taxes as they are not able to survive. And the civilization quickly collapsed and go into warSubsequently they built another pyramid Puma and Serpents to cover the pyramid of Quetzalcoatl.

Main war pyramid
Original pyramid of Quetzalcoatl

Another interesting thing is they took kids young from the family to train to be warriors. After they grow up and understand empathy on survival difficulty, they have to kill a puma before being accepted as a warrior. That's the theory at least of those animals sound producing things that we keep hearing in the whole trip. 

Also they train kids in the chemistry and science. And sacrifice 8 of them every 52 years (2 in every corner of the moon pyramid) so that the knowledge is restarted again. 

Layers of red being excavated

The direction of the pyramid just slightly off the north pole

The tour ended at a pulque place where they showed how versatile agave is, from paper to threads to using them as a needle. 

We roam around Polanco after a nap as it's our last day. Had El Turix again, followed by Manila pato which is a Peking duck style taco. Also found El Moro in Polanco and it's way better than our attempt in Centro branch.

Manila Pato (Duck tacos)

Mexico City Day 4

 Roaming around the city day

Today is roaming day. We have a vague idea for what we want to see, but no real itinerary. There's an artist market in St Rafael that we want to see. After that we plan to walk around the city to look at sights that we miss, check out Roma Norte which is a gentrified area and just roam.

My conclusion is the city really come alive on Sunday when everyone is out and about!

Busy park at El Centro

There's an artist market every Sunday at San Rafael. 

Artists display at St Rafael
One of the artist display in San Rafael

We tried to take the bus in the AM at the Auditorium and discovered the road is closed. Looking on the internet, it looks like every Sunday 8am-2pm roads are closed for cyclists. It's quite the operation with cones setup in major intersection, police holding up banners to stop cyclists from crossing red light illegally from cross intersection. 

Cyclists stopped at intersection by police for the red light

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu%C3%A9vete_en_Bici#:~:text=The%20primary%20program%20is%20Paseo,about%2037%20times%20a%20year.

When they reopened a police car with sirens lead other cars through Reforma. 

Gentleman, start your engine!

So we took the subway to San Rafael instead, had breakfast at a tacos store and wandered around the artists market. 

Breakfast tacos at St Rafael

After seeing the artists, we walk to the Monument of Independence and discovered there's another event to support Paris 2024. 

Monument of Independence

We started walking towards the Benito Juarez monument and discovered the park is really busy on Sunday and the entire Belle Arts intersection is impressively crowded. 

Benito Juarez monument
El Centro on the weekend

Went to the House of Tiles and discovered it's a SanBorn and we stop for a drink in there and got a seat right away which is really lucky for a sat. The whole building is sinking so it's a little trippy sitting there and finding myself tilting forward in my seat. 

Casa de los Azuelejos (Blue house of tiles) with Sanborn

After the drink, we decide to take the bus from Reforma to the Monument of Angel Independence. 

Monument of Angel of the Independence

This is the Reforma street that we could see from the castle. So we hopped on the red bus and it stopped for a long time about 2 stops away from the monument. And we realized the locals are hopping off. Next thing we know, it did a U turn and we had to get off too. The locals must have a way to realize this bus isn't going to continue .. but there's no announcement etc. I am still puzzled how we are supposed to know. What's interesting is the red bus is very similar to the buses in Singapore. It's clean, nice and not very crowded. 

Red Bus run by the subway company

We walked to the monument and pass by a bunch of book stores setup on the side walk.

Book stores on side walk

We wandered to the stature of Cibeles. It's a replica of the same one in Madrid. The whole intersection is filled with interesting restaurants and bars. 

Stature of Fuente de Cibeles

We went to Casa 1900 Bakery and bought some pastries for our trip tomorrow to the pyramids. 

Casa 1900 bakery

Had a coffee in the La Bistro Palais as we got tired and it started really pouring! 

La bistro Palais

Got to Contramar and had an early dinner as it's walking distance in the rain. Enjoyed dinner a lot. They have spanish style pulpo with potatoes, followed with a nice fish in garlic and mushroom wine sauce and vongole angel hair pasta. They also had a wine from the valley that we have to find! 

Contramar dinner

After dinner we walked back to Reforma and took a bus back as the rain has slowed down a little. And 3rd times the charm! The bus got us right back to the hotel!