Puerto Vallarta Villas offer the perfect backdrop for your sunny Mexico vacation and an ideal launch pad for each day’s adventures. As you sit on your private patio, watching the morning sun play across Banderas Bay and planning your day, though, it starts to rain. Is this cause for whining? It is not. There’s plenty to do in this resort city, no matter what kind of weather the day brings.
Pay a visit to the Municipal Market. It’s covered and it’s filled with all sorts of goods, from trinkets to treasures. This is the place to shop for colorful local pottery and glass ware, clothing and accessories in leather, and beautiful silver jewelry crafted by Mexican artisans.
Map out your own private art gallery tour. Again, the works are under cover, and you can maximize your dryness if you ask a cab to drop you where Calle Morelos and Calle Corona meet, a block off the Malecón.
Get wet and like it! If you’re visiting Puerto Vallarta Villas from mid-summer through early fall, you’re likely to see some truly impressive storms, so rejoice in the chance to play in the rain like you did when you were a kid. Run on the beach, sit under a palapa, do a little rain dance in the plaza. It’s all good!
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
In Case of Rain – Enjoy Puerto Vallarta
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
See Old Puerto Vallarta with Artist’s Eyes
As you experience the resort lifestyle of Banderas Bay from the comfort of your Villa Rental Puerto Vallarta, you may be unaware that once upon a time, life in this modern city, where you can always find something to do, was calm to the extent of being downright sleepy.
Until the 1960s, when Liz and Dick started to put their imprint on the town, daily life in Puerto Vallarta was not much different than life in any other Mexican town. If you’re having a hard time believing it, just wander into that other time through the art of Manuel Lepe.
Today, Lepe’s work is highly regarded by collectors and fans of naïf art; he has become so well known, in fact, that his work is part of the child welfare program launched by UNICEF. In the 1960s, though, the artist was mostly a happy man reflecting on the simple pleasures that surrounded him in Puerto Vallarta.
You can get a glimpse of Lepe’s world through his work when you visit his former home and studio, today the Manuel Lepe Museum at 485 Jacarandas. It’s hard to find reproductions of his work for sale, but if you’re lucky, you’ll be able to enjoy one of his pieces in your Villa Rental Puerto Vallarta.