Returning South – Matamoros, Tamps. to Cd. Valles & Taninul Resort
Posted by SurfMexico Editor
Thurs. September 7, 2000
Today we initiate our return trip from the Texas border back south to Zihuatanejo, Guerrero. Our proposed route will take us through the Huasteca of San Luis Potosi, down the Veracruz coast, then inland to Oaxaca, over the hills to the Oaxaca coast and north to home.

Highway 101
At Km 120 cattle and goats were more in evidence, and we passed several outlets offering machacado (jerkied meat). The largest attraction in this area, as we mentioned on our trip north which took us along this same route, is the Bass fishing and bird hunting area of the Presa Vicente Guerrero, a large dammed lake to which access is afforded by at Km 80 and Km 64 of Highway 101.
Near Ciudad Victoria are stretches of well-irrigated citrus orchards, and roadside stands selling large sacks of the fruit to passersby.

Preserved chiles, fruit, honey
Past Guayalejo, still continuing along Route 85 toward Ciudad Mante, we were driving now through lush, fertile land thick with an unusual mixture of citrus, cypress, palms, bananas and firs. It became much hotter and more humid. Corn and cane fields abounded.
Sta. Isabela/La Gloria (Km 156) brought us to a few roadside stands offering a great collection of honey (both clear and with honeycombs), seeds, nuts, royal jelly, pollen, pickled jalapeños and chile piquin. We stopped to view the wonderful display and pick up some fragrant honey to take home with us.
We then passed through a series of extremely clean, well-tended and prosperous-looking Ejidos (communal farms) and orchards. The yards were swept, fences in good repair, the roadside was devoid of garbage, and flowers and hedges decked the homesteads.
At Km 120 of Highway 85 the mountain range began to fade off into the west. The terrain flattened out once more, but rather than a dry desert flatness, it was a lush, tropical stretch of sugar cane, swampy lands and sugar processing plants. We passed what also seemed to be fields of rice and alfalfa.

Round roofed houses of the Huasteca
Winding into the foothills we came around a bend and were confronted with several “cal” (lime) plants belching white dust that covered the surrounding vegetation and hillsides. We passed through several small draws in the hills, past a Sedena (Secretary of Defense) checkpoint at Km. 69, and into the state of San Luis Potosi.
We were now in the Huasteca – a beautiful, varied area of Mexico that is certainly worth a visit. In this whole area the shape of the houses changed. Most typical houses sported oval-ended, thatched roofs above white-washed brick walls. Even the “newer” places with metal or wooden roofs conserved the same shape as the traditional thatching.
At Ciudad Valles we looked for the Regional Museum, but unfortunately it was closed that late in the afternoon. We decided that it was time to find food and rest for the night, and took a short detour off our planned route to go to Taninul Resort, only a few miles east of town on Highway 80.
Arriving at the turnoff to the resort, we drove up the tree-lined driveway and were confronted with an enormous, sprawling colonial-style hotel surrounded by lush gardens. We checked in (we were the second of only two rooms occupied in the hotel that night) and immediately took advantage of the large pool fed by a natural sulphur hot spring. The water was bathtub-warm and arose gently out of the deep end of the pool (about 3 meters), bringing with it mineral-rich water and depositing a scum on the bottom and sides of the pool that was released in clumps when swimmers disturbed the water. It was a tremendously relaxing swim.
Behind the pool was the entrance to a small cave inhabited by masses of screaming parrots. They perched in the trees in front of the cave mouth and in the niches in the rocks of the cave itself.

Taninul Resort near Ciudad Valles, Mexico
Tomorrow, we’ll explore Taninul´s grounds in the daylight, and carry on through the Huasteca to the wonders of Edward James’s enchanted gardens at Las Pozas, Xilitla.
