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The fight against cancer gets support in the destination through the arts, sports and special promotions at hotels this month as part of a worldwide health initiative.

The month of October has been dedicated to the prevention and fight against cancer on a world level—originally dedicated to breast cancer, over time it has evolved into a generalized prevention campaign. Several hotels in the Riviera Nayarit are participating actively in the so-called month of Pinktober.

Resorts including the Hard Rock Hotel Vallarta and the St Regis Punta Mita Resorts encourage donations and are lending helping hand to this movement via the arts, sports and special promotions. It’s hoped it will continue to permeate the local citizens’ lives.

The most important events are “races with a cause,” which both hotels are currently promoting. The first race will be hosted by the Hard Rock, which will take place on Sunday, October 19th, departing from the front of the hotel. It will be a 5k race for both men and women with a registration fee of $290 pesos.

The St Regis will sponsor its own 5k race on Saturday, October 25th. This one will be in Punta Mita with a $150 peso registration fee exclusively for staff personnel. The proceeds will be donated to foundations that fight against breast cancer.

Each hotel has launched a different promotion. For example, the Hard Rock Hotel began the “Get in bed for the cause” campaign, which donates 25% of the nightly rate for the guest that decides to participate in the service. Other activities include different sales with the earnings going to the cause.

The St Regis is offering a “Pink Menu,” one of the most colorful events around featuring a very special menu. They will also host several other events for charity, including a nocturnal SUP race.
For more details, please visit the hotels’ official websites:
http://es.hrhvallarta.com/.

http://eventospuntamita.com/pinkoctober/.

downloadJoin the Angeles en Libertad (Angels in Freedom) on Sunday, October 19, 2014 by packing up all your used paper products and donating them to be recycled.

The Angels in Freedom will be in the Main Plaza in El Pitillal beginning at 5:00 pm and invite you to join the Grand Fiesta with entertainment by popular local artists.

All forms of paper products will be appreciated including books, newspapers, magazines, notebooks and more.

Angels in Freedom was born on 15 April 2013 in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico and founded by 3 women with the dream of being recognized by the promotion of values through projects that benefit society. They are currently a group comprised of 10 women dedicated to altruistic non-profit to achieve a transformation in our current society and our future generations.

For more information, please contact Perlo of Angels in Freedom by cellular at 044-322-192-1315 or email Daniela De Vega at: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Learn more about Children With Cancer/Canica Vallarta

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boca-tomates-puerto-vallarta 543d710f05518There are many places you can visit in Puerto Vallarta, and there is always more than enough to eat. For me, this makes a perfect combination! Eating out is very affordable and much more common here than in Germany. Many locals even dine out daily, be it at restaurants, bistros, bars, or one of the numerous taco carts in the streets. The range of possibilities is extensive, yet tourists often choose only the most popular destinations or stay at the beach that is closest to their accommodations. But how boring is that?

Yesterday I visited a lovely place called “Boca de Tomates”. It is situated about 10 km northeast of Puerto Vallarta and impresses with its tranquility and traditional charm. For me, getting there was more a safari than a normal trip, and I just loved it—driving in a jeep on a sandy, bumpy road surrounded by swamps and with almost no one around made me feel quite adventurous, though my Mexican companions just laughed at me for saying so. During the ride we stopped once, so I got the opportunity to take some photos of the swamp, where I saw some crocodiles snoozing in the sun. We came to the conclusion that these creatures have a really hard life trying to decide whether they should be dangerous or lazy each day. That particular day, however, they obviously decided on the latter.

The sandy path ended at a spacious parking area in front of the “El Pirrus” open air restaurant. Here you can taste the rich selection of seasonal fish and seafood. Everything is prepared fresh; you can choose the frozen fish on site and decide how you want it prepared. I decided to share with my friends two giant Red Snappers, which were marinated and grilled before our very eyes. This traditional way of preparation is called “Pescado Zarandeado” and very common in this area. You can put the meat in tortillas, together with vegetables, rice, lime juice and salsa, roll it up, and you have a delicious seafood taco. I also grabbed at the chance to try the homemade sodas that are sold in almost every restaurant here, “limonada” and “naranjada”. They are similar to Sprite and Fanta, but are homemade with fresh fruit and are therefore very refreshing and tasty.

Did I mention that the restaurant lies directly on the beach? You can gaze at the sea and the mountains while enjoying your food. You can watch the sun slowly setting, painting the sky red, yellow and purple. In fact, it was one of the most beautiful sunsets I have seen in my whole life! In just a small attempt to convey the beauty to you, I gladly share a photo I took that day. Watching the sunset is not the only entertainment, either. Musicians offer their services for a few pesos per song. And I was amazed at their talent! I heard songs from different traditionally Mexican music styles: Banda, Mariachi and Norteña, and I liked it a lot. Slowly but surely I am getting to know the Mexican culture, and I am looking forward to discovering as much as I can!

About the Author

Marén Römisch is from Germany and studies International Business and Languages in The Netherlands. She is currently doing an exchange internship in Puerto Vallarta and writes about her insights into Mexican culture from her European point of view.

The opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author and are independent from the views of Puerto Vallarta's Tourism Board.

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CAR RivieraNayarit

Sitting at a bright-red table overlooking an estuary in the fabled village of Mexcaltitan in the Riviera Nayarit, we threw bits of tortillas in the air to acrobatic sea birds to catch mid-flight.

Dozens of great white pelicans floated by on the green water, while a family lustily sang Las Mananitas, Mexico’s birthday song, nearby.

Nayarit’s beloved “pescado zarandeado” — a whole snapper, caught that morning, grilled on aromatic mangrove wood and served with homemade corn tortillas, grilled scallions, cucumbers, tomatoes — plus a delectable shrimp paté with crackers were available. Icy cold Pacifica beers in hand, we marvelled that such a place still exists.

Never heard of Nayarit? It is Mexico’s 10th smallest state (out of 31) and incredibly diverse — birdwatchers, wildlife enthusiasts and those seeking the authentic, unsullied-by-tourism Mexico are drawn to it.

On a recent weeklong visit, we travelled through green rolling hills, endless sugarcane fields with fronds blowing in the breeze — and mango, banana, papaya and tobacco farms.

We were just a few yards from enormous crocodiles, inches from an exquisitely beautiful jaguar, viewed thousands of migratory birds in the emerald-green rainforest. We were also eating succulent dishes we had never heard of, and meeting fascinating people from all walks of life, such as elaborately adorned Huichol Indians still living their traditional lifestyle.

It’s easy to travel from one fascinating part of Nayarit to another. Nayarit’s southern border is just 10 minutes north from the Puerto Vallarta airport. The modern, intercoastal highway is serviced by comfortable, air-conditioned buses that stop in each town — with very reasonable fares.

If you want the mega all-inclusives overlooking the Pacific, luxury spas, fabulous surfing, world-class golfing and lie-on-the-beach vacations, it’s all in the Riviera Nayarit; but if you yearn for adventure, colonial architecture and art and a heady dip into other cultures, venture into the rest of the state and “know Nayarit.”

The Nayarit Colonial zone offers Spanish colonial architecture, history and museums of the capital city of Tepic (founded in 1542) as well as the delightful cobblestoned villages of Jala, Ixtlan del Rio and Bellavista. Tepic is a bustling, lively city perfect as a base for exploration of nearby Huichol Indian villages and other areas.

We enjoyed walking the lively Plaza de Armas with its enormous cathedral and beautiful Municipal Palace, as well as the Amado Nervo, Museo de las Cuatro Culturas (Museum of Four Cultures) and Juan Escutia museums, and gazed for a long while at a father and small son cutting, trimming and bagging sugar cane stalks at their street stand

Nayarit has several spectacular “enchanted lagoons” such as San Pedro, Tepetiltic and Santa Maria del Oro, where we spent the night in a rather swank, modern boutique 20-room hotel called Lago Encantado.

The morning there was breathtaking — with mist rising over the lake and layers of multi-hued mountains rising beyond. People come to these towns to fish, bike, water ski, boat, rest and to enjoy the area’s famous delicacies.

We started our Riviera Nayarit exploration in the large town of San Blas (founded in the 17th century,) renowned as one of the world’s most important natural bird refuges.

While birdwatching here is wonderful all year, its rich migratory display every winter season (November-April) brings an estimated 80 per cent of the migratory North American bird species to interact with local species, about 2½ hours north of the Puerto Vallarta airport. Caution — you will need insect repellent in this area!

In San Blas, we stayed at the very pretty Garza Canela, a garden-filled inn run by the four very friendly Vazquez sisters (one of whom is Betty Vazquez, an acclaimed Paris-educated chef, and the Culinary Ambassador for the Riviera Nayarit) and their brother.

This property caters to bird watching groups, provides very early breakfasts to birders, and is just a 15-minute walk from the town’s long sandy beach. The Delfin restaurant, with Chef Betty’s gastronomic marvels (written up in Bon Appétit and Gourmet) is well worth the trip. The Garza Canela sisters will help you book the services of a very reliable and knowledgeable taxi driver, Juan Martinez Velez, who regularly attends to international visitors and can be booked in advance for private trips in the area.

But there’s much more to San Blas — the nearby dense mangroves and hilly rainforest’s microclimate attract thousands of birds to mate, nest and feed in the nutrient-rich estuary. One morning, we arose before sunrise to climb up through the rocky paths at Tecuitata, through impossibly dense mango, jackfruit, banana and papaya trees, and as the first rays of sunlight hit us, so did the cacophony of sound — birds calling, singing, and cawing all around us, along with crickets and woodpeckers. Our bilingual guide, expert birdwatcher Francisco Garcia, called in excitement to us when he spotted a squirrel cuckoo.

The next morning, we skimmed the glasslike surface of the estuary in a small panga boat to enter the peaceful and beautiful La Tovara, a mangrove refuge filled with about 60 crocodiles, a multitude of turtles, lizards and herons, storks, hawks, eagles, egrets, ducks, falcons and more.

About a 45-minute drive from San Blas, small boats take visitors to the fascinating village of Mexcaltitan, mentioned above. This no-vehicle village of 1,800 residents is only reachable by boat; inside the estuary, this delightful town is completely walkable (after dining on that fabulous fish mentioned above — try La Alberca, about $25 per couple for enormous fish and shrimp lunch with beer). Everyone’s doors are open, children are outside playing, the church has an exceptionally bloody Jesus Christ statue, and there is a surprisingly well executed small historical museum (Museo del Origen).

Stroll the paths into yesteryear and slow down — what would it be like to live here, we wondered. In fact, we learned that some locals have never left — afraid to experience cars, noise and big city life.

As our magical day in Mexcaltitan drew to a close, we embarked onto the little boat alongside some 25 great white pelicans. It was a day like no other we’ve ever had.

For our time of sun and surf, we headed back to Riviera Nayarit. We chose picturesque San Pancho (formally called San Francisco), where we stayed at the lovely Cielo Rojo boutique hotel, perfectly decorated with Mexican folk art. In San Pancho, we visited the fabulous Entreamigos Community Center — a utopia-like non-profit established and run by a former Californian. It is well worth an hour of your time.

Moving on to Bucerias, we stayed in an outstanding ecoproperty. Los Arroyos Verdes is a botanical garden built around 36 private casitas, a restored Airstream trailer and small RV, with 26 staffers attending to the organic chef’s garden, nursery, authentic Temazcal sweat lodge, maintenance, activities (yoga, tai chi, salsa dancing, etc.). We explored the surrounding countryside on the cute vintage bicycles, and swam in the huge azure swimming pool.

Knowing Nayarit is a joy, one that takes much more than one trip there — this gloriously beautiful, lush, authentically Mexican destination will happily fill your minds, hearts and stomachs.

For more information, visit Riviera Nayarit

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c7f3b3aa-780d-4f4a-9133-4997d9f98068This contest gives away an all-expenses paid trip for two girlfriends sponsored by E! Entertainment, Aeroméxico, Grand Velas Riviera Nayarit and Vallarta Adventures. (Valid only in Mexico and Latin America.)
The Riviera Nayarit Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB) invites you to participate in its new Facebook promotion titled #ViajaComoCelebrity (#TravelLikeACelebrity). This contest could be your free ticket to ride and enjoy the best of the Mexican Pacific.

The promotion is sponsored by E! Entertainment, Aeroméxico, Grand Velas Riviera Nayarit and Vallarta Adventures. You could travel like a celebrity with a round-trip ticket, a 5-night/6-day stay plus different activities and tours for two girlfriends—all on the house.

All you have to do is “Like” our official Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/rivieranayarit.mx) anytime between October 13-17, upload a pic to the contest app and describe five experiences you think no celebrity should miss on their visit to the Riviera Nayarit.

The images with the most votes (Likes) will have the highest possibilities of winning. The results will be published on October 28, 2014. The trip will be valid from January 1 - December 31, 2015 (subject to availability). This is only valid for contestants living in Mexico or Latin America.

The Riviera Nayarit is currently a celebrity hot spot for many reasons, among them the excellent international flight connectivity and the amazing resorts that place the area among the top destinations in the world.

It currently offers four AAA 5 Diamond properties and ten AAA 4 Diamond hotels as well as several Virtuoso properties and a recent inductee into the prestigious Relais & Chateaux hotel group.

The luxury offered by the Riviera Nayarit along with the many unique experiences, including its eco diversity, have attracted celebrities such as Kim Kardashian and her sister Kourtney, Colombian actress Sofía Vergara and Brazilian model Alessandra Ambrosio, among others.

NEW Riviera Nayarit Logo March 2013

playa-gemelas-puerto-vallarta 542056288bebbUnobtrusive and just 15 minutes away from the Malecón, there is a beautiful little beach called Las Gemelas. People who speak Spanish may wonder, and justifiably so, about the name: Las Gemelas means The Twins, and there are, in fact, two little beaches that lay side by side and look very similar. I went there this weekend and just have to share my discovery with you.

Getting there is quite simple, even for a person like me who has no good sense of direction. Downtown Puerto Vallarta consists of different zones, and I took a bus at Zona Romántica that said “Mismaloya”. It travels south of Puerto Vallarta, and along the way I have seen many beautiful beaches like the famous Conchas Chinas and Punta Negra. This day, however, I decided to visit the smaller twin beaches, and I immediately fell in love. It is less crowded than the other beaches I have seen so far, and the water and sand are very clean. An attentive life guard ensures safety, which is an important issue for me, since I am quite a poor swimmer.

Speaking of swimming, I just loved it. With an outdoor temperature of 33ºC, the water was totally refreshing at approx. 20-25ºC. My experience with the sea in Germany is that you can stay in the water for a maximum of 20 minutes and come back freezing and with chattering teeth. At Las Gemelas, I was able to swim and relax in the sea without feeling cold or uncomfortable. Drifting in the sea, gazing at the mountains and the coast of Puerto Vallarta, I felt like I was in an outdoor spa. Really awesome experience! I also enjoyed the number one favourite tourist activity at the beach: just lying down, lazing about, doing nothing but tanning in the sun. When it got too hot, I would just jump in the water. After this day, I felt like the most relaxed human on earth.

There are also some people selling stuff at the beach. Even if you don’t feel the urge to buy a watch, you should nevertheless try some of the delicious food. Mostly there is a broad variety of fresh fruits, mussels, roasted fish and other little snacks that are highly recommended. As far as I am concerned, go with something I tried that day--a Mexican dish called Ceviche. It is served on a tostada (a fried tortilla) and comes with a mix of fish and vegetables such as carrots, cilantro and avocado. As a topping, I added some lime juice and a traditional salsa. The result is a simple but incredibly tasty Mexican meal.

Sources: Vist Puerto Vallarta

620x400 TedAllenAs the star of Food Network's Chopped, and former judge on Bravo's Top Chef, Ted Allen can eat.

And eat. And eat.

But when he's not eating, or jamming out to David Bowie, he's traveling -- and currently looking for some vacation suggestions. That said, when he does take off, Ted has reading requirements for boarding a plane and refuses to purchase products from those in-flight magazines. We recently caught up with Ted while eating Thai food, as he, Pepcid, and Eater.com, hosted dinner at Pok Pok NY at its new Brooklyn location.

Read on for our exclusive interview...

Q: What are your must-have carry on items?
A: My noise-canceling headphones and lots of stuff to read. I'm always disturbed when I get on a plane -- I'm always next to a business guy who brings nothing to read, not even a newspaper! The plane takes off and he starts to look at the SkyMall catalog. I'm like, really? You're flying to Los Angeles [from NYC], and you're going to be nourished by the SkyMall catalog? The little speakers that look like rocks, and the massagers and stuff?

Q: Have you bought anything from the SkyMall catalog?
A: Has anybody ever bought anything from the SkyMall catalog?

Q: They must...
A: Yeah. Salesmen! I have not. It's kind of fun to look at the stupid stuff in there, but I like to have a book or two. I catch up on magazines on flights. I still love print magazines.

Q: What's the last thing you bought in an airport?
A: I often buy Rolling Stone [magazine] in airports because I don't subscribe to it, but I like to see it once in a while. I really love Vanity Fair. I just subscribed to The New Republic, which is great. I bought a sandwich at Subway lately, because that was absolutely the most food-like option.

Q: What airport were you in?
A: Puerto Vallarta, like a month ago.

Q: That was your last trip? What did you do there?
A: Yep. Sat on my ass and sunbathed! I went to a nice resort in Pura Vida and stayed in this amazing guesthouse in Puerto Vallarta Proper, part of it, which used to be part of the actor Richard Burton's home. I'm not sure I'd recommend Puerto Vallarta as a destination. It's a little played out, but it was a slice. I'd never been there before. I needed to get some sun. Our [New York] winter sucked. I was like, I don't care what it costs, I don't care where it is -- just get me there!

Q: Have you ever been stopped at customs?
A: [Laughs] No. That's a good question. Another good question: have you ever lied going through customs.

Q: Have you lied at customs?
A: I'm not going to answer that. No.

Q: What's your next trip?
A: I don't have one lined up! I've shot 8 episodes [of Chopped], so I have 31 more episodes to go. We wrap Chopped on July 2, so my next trip is to Chelsea Market [in NYC], and then home, and then to Chelsea Market and then home for several weeks. It's a good problem to have, and it's still fun to make it.

[readon1 url="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/shermans-travel/qa-ted-allen-from-chopped_b_5692847.html"]Source:www.huffingtonpost.com[/readon1]

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On the anniversary of the birth of one of the Garden’s many inspirational spirits, that of Alexander Von Humboldt, we held our second annual awards ceremony to honor a few of the many modern pioneers working to conserve our region’s natural resources and protect the environment that cares for us all. I personally presented awards to honor two of the most diligent laborers on behalf of the Vallarta Botanical Garden — Ellen Zagory and Neil Gerlowski. Also, two other community leaders, Juan Espinoza and Isablela Cárdenas Oteiza, presented awards to two other important local conservationists, Dr. Helios Herández Hurtado and Oscar Aranda.

Ellen Zagory serves the Garden’s US-based Board as volunteer secretary and is the person who first proposed the creation of a conservatory focusing on native Mexican orchids here at the Garden.

During 2013, when the majority for the funding for this conservatory was raised, Ellen’s workload for the Garden quadrupled, yet she rose to the occasion even while maintaining her “real job” as Director of Horticulture the UC Davis Arboretum. Without her commendable service we wouldn’t have been able to accept the generous donations that made the conservatory’s construction possible for this facility to now serve as a living classroom and conservation center. Carlos Mendoza accepted Ellen’s award in her absence and we look forward to seeing her soon to present it to her in person.

Neil Gerlowski, the Garden’s Executive Director, continues to amaze me with his vision and drive for the Garden and its programs. This past year, while excelling at his other duties here, Neil has brought about outstanding new developments to our educational programming and has managed a constantly growing and increasingly skilled team of volunteers to work together with him. We are not only receiving more visitors and school groups than ever before for educational programs at the Garden, but are now offering teachers a range of meaningful activities and custom-tailored events,lectures, and workshops for their young learners.

Juan Espinoza, the Editor of Bay Vallarta-Riviera Nayarit, leads the quest for engaging content for his fine publication which includes an abundance of essays on the natural world, especially the wildlife of our region. We asked Juan to present an award to a local environmental hero, and he chose Oscar Aranda without hesitation.

Oscar’s commitment to sea turtle conservation and public education is inspiring. We were very blessed to hear of his accomplishments in this work and his goals for the long-term protection of these charismatic creatures. Dr. Liza Danielle Kelly Guitiérrez, the Career Coordinator of Biology at the University’s local coastal campus, was invited to nominate an award recipient as well. Her selection of Dr. Helios Herández Hurtado met our instant approval.

Dr. Helios has been laboring for the study and protection of the Bay of Banderas’ crocodiles for twenty years. From wrangling colossal crocs to careful monitoring of wild specimens and documenting their last remaining nest sites, Dr. Helios has shown a devotion to species conservation that rivals any others that I know. In Dr. Kelly’s absence, Isablela Cárdenas Oteiza presented Dr. Helios with his award.

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hsHalloween is a holiday celebrated on the night of October 31. The word Halloween is a shortening of All Hallows' Evening also known as Hallowe'en or All Hallows' Eve.

wild aJoe Francis is now a father.

The Girls Gone Wild creator and his girlfriend, Abbey Wilson, welcomed twin girls — named Alexandria Claire Francis and Athena Olivia Francis — on Tuesday in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Francis has a villa in nearby Punta Mita.

The couple broke the news shortly after the birth of their daughters with a photo announcement featuring a pic of the couple and a scenic shot of Puerto Vallarta. Francis had teased the news hours earlier by posting a shot on Instagram of himself outfitted in hospital scrubs and a surgical mask with the caption, "Here we go!!! Babies are coming now!"

It wasn't a surprise that Wilson delivered girls as the couple revealed that they set out to have daughters through in-vitro fertilization. "I believe people will finally understand my love, respect, and admiration for women," Francis said in April when they announced the pregnancy. "I love girls."

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The births are a bright spot for Francis, whose name is often attached to negative headlines. In August, a bankruptcy judge questioned whether an arrest warrant should be issued for the 41-year-old over his alleged tampering with GGW bankruptcy proceedings. And last year, Francis was sentenced to jail time for an assault case from 2011 involving three women at his Bel-Air mansion.

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