Frida Kahlo Haunts Mexico Still (Through Tourist Trinkets)

The Frida Kahlo museum in Mexico City was fun to visit, in part because it was the home where Kahlo was born and where she died and also where she and her husband, Diego Rivera, worked. A lot of their stuff is still there.

The museum is the only site in Mexico City where we saw a lot of gringo tourists. Kahlo is a big attraction for Americans, and presumably for Euro-tourists as well.

The trinket-industrial complex has seized on Frida mania and now makes all kinds of Kahlo-related objects. You can buy Frida mermaids and Frida piggy banks and lots of other Frida-faced stuff.

It's weird, but vaguely funny.

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Boating In Mexico City

Amira and I Ubered down to Xochimilco, which is one of the 16 boroughs of the city. Before the Spanish arrived, this area was on the shore of Lake Xochimilco. The Aztecs built an elaborate series of canals and artificial islands here, which are still functioning.

The locals offer slow, leisurely rides in colorfully painted Mexican gondolas, which are called trajineras. Each boat has what is essentially a picnic table with wooden chairs on either side. Amira and I got one to ourselves.

Mexicans take full advantage of these boats by having floating picnics and parties. If the size of a party exceeds the capacity of one boat, they lash them together. We saw one floating event with four boats conjoined. 

It gets better. Smaller boats offer a wide variety of services, from meals to treats to booze and bands. Each service is provided from a boat, which is attached to the other boat. We got some grub from one boat and some surprisingly good pulque from another.  (If you're seeing this on the web site, click on the photo to see the rest of the pictures.)

This activity is on the top of our list for recommendations for what to do in Mexico City.  

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I Love Mexico City

We walked around 4.5 miles for our accidental pilgrimage (and the same distance back). During that time we got to see one small part of the city, which has amazing culture, restaurants and other big city attributes, but which has an awesome vibe. We're already planning to come back and spend some serious time here. 

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Efficient Locomotion

Pilgrims come from all over Mexico, in many cases loaded into cargo trucks, which are decorated with Virgen iconography.  

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