Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta About Minatitlàn. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta About Minatitlàn. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 20 de junio de 2008

La Maria













Last night I went down the park with my mother and my son, we had a delicious fruit ice cream of guanabana, a tropical plant that some say it comes from Asia, some other from America, what I know for sure is that this tree live happily here in Mexico and South America.










There was a handcraft vendor from Chiapas carrying her child in a Rebozo, a large piece of fabric for many uses for women, available anywhere in México, its the best way to carry a child and its easy to breastfeed them this way, besides it srenghted the ties between mother and child since baby its always close to her.




There was a dancing school right across the street, salsa dance, and there was a big lady dancing in front of the window by the way ^-^



We bougth some nice bracelets she was selling, my son likes them and so do I :)), Its a beautiful Mexican handcraft.








sábado, 26 de mayo de 2007



Derivated from the nahuatl name, “Mina place”, in honor of the revolutionist Francisco Javier Mina.

Minatitlán is a city in the southeastern part of the Mexican state of Veracruz. It serves as the municipal seat for the surrounding municipality of the same name; it stands on the railway and on Federal Highway 121. The city had a 2005 census population of 109,791, while the municipality had a population of 151,983. The municipality has an areal extent of 4,123.91 km² (1,592.25 sq mi) and includes many small outlying communities such as Cosoleacaque.

Much of the city sits on reclaimed marshlands, and many new homes built on this reclaimed land have a tendency to sink as much as several feet before settling. Much of the surrounding undeveloped land is marshy, especially toward the northeast en route to Coatzacoalcos.

There is a large Zapotec indian (often referred to colloquially as "Tec(o/a)s" or "paisan(o/a)s") population in Minatitlan. They are easily recognizable in their traditional Zapotec clothing. Most speak Spanish, but their traditional Zapotec language is still in common usage among them.

There`s another city with the same name Minatitlán in the state of Colima, on the other side of the country.

One of Mexico's six oil-refining facilities is located there. The refining complex processes 291,000 barrels a day and produces diesel, fuel oil, and gasoline. The local economy basically depends on the petroleum industry. But some fruits are also cultivated in the area.