The hotel outside Chichen Itza epitomized the entire region in a way. Mayaland Hotel was indeed within the home of the Maya, but it was closed indefinitely. Until the Covid pandemic shuttered the adjacent entrance to the archaeology park, Mayaland was just a short walk away for overnight tourists. Now, like the ancient city and towering temples it looked out upon, its best days were most likely behind it. The Maya are an indigenous people that have inhabited southeast Mexico and northern Central America for millennia. Their pre-Hispanic civilization was renowned for its large cities and towering temples that remain today as archaeological sites in various states of excavation, preservation, and reconstruction. While these cities each have their own unique histories, all the Maya ultimately shared the same fate at the hands of sixteenth century Spanish invaders and missionaries: conquest and subjugation. Nevertheless the people ...
Visiting cenotes while traveling through the Yucatán Peninsula was never high on my priority list. Birdwatching, exploring Mayan archaeological sites, snorkeling, beachcombing, and cervezas at sunset were the activities that most excited me as I planned my six-day road trip in Mexico. But on the route from Playa del Carmen to Chichen Itza, there were more than a dozen cenotes on the map, all advertised with prominent signs on the road as I soon discovered. So before setting out in the car, my husband and I picked two cenotes to check out: Chichikan and Ik Kil. Ik Kil cenote near Chichen Itza. Cenotes are sinkholes in the limestone earth that have filled with fresh water from rain and the region's natural aquifer. Rivers on the Yucatán Peninsula only flow underground, and the cenotes are often glimpses at, and entrances to, these waterways. The idea of swimming or tubing in this cold water had never appealed to me, especially in a dark, creepy ca...