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Lago Menor de Chapultepec

4.5 (2 reviews)

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Paseo de la Reforma - Desfile de Catrinas Mundialistas

Paseo de la Reforma

4.8(19 reviews)
3.1 kmCuauhtémoc

Paseo de la Reforma is a famous street in Mexico City, most notable for being closed to cars each…read moreSunday and being open to walkers, runners, and bikers. It stretches about 9 miles and has a variety of landmarks throughout: Ángel de la Independencia, Chapultepec Park, Diana the Huntress Fountain, and others. It's surrounded by various skyscrapers including but not limited to luxury hotels, office buildings, and banks. The street stretches along those modern aspects of the city as well as with the historic aspects of the Chapultepec Castle. We specifically went on a Sunday to see all the runners and bikers and it was so cool to see that this is just routine for them and just another day for a bike or a run. I wish more cities had car-free streets like this!

After a quick fuel, we were off for the Paseo de la Reforma, (one of the principal avenues in the…read morecity), which is closed on Sundays for walkers, cyclists and runners. It was an awesome and unique experience to be able to cycle on such a typically busy street, and see how many people were out and about enjoying the wonderful spring weather. Halfway through our ride along the avenue, we stopped to listen to our guide, Símon, talk about the lost 43 students that vanished in 2014. It was a very sobering history about the dark relationship between the Mexican government and cartels, but I'm glad Simon shared it with us, and we were able to view the faces of the victims as we continued our bike ride. https://traveltimewitht.com/2026/03/21/la-ciudad-de-mexico/

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Paseo de la Reforma - Día de Muertos 2025

Día de Muertos 2025

Paseo de la Reforma - Día de Muertos 2025

Día de Muertos 2025

Paseo de la Reforma - Día de Muertos 2025

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Día de Muertos 2025

Voladores de Papantla - Voladores de Papantla en Chapultepec

Voladores de Papantla

4.5(11 reviews)
2.3 kmPolanco

Voladores are dancer who dance to the gold. They do a spin around the pole 56 times which represent…read morea new year every 56 based on the Aztec calendar. Something like that. My tour guide told me. The pole is quite high. Its definitely entertaining to watch. This one is located in front of the Museum of Anthropology in Chapultepec park. Cool

The voladores are fliers who dance in the air upside down from ropes secured to a pole that stands…read moreabout 120 feet high. Slowly revolving around the pole, the ropes slowly descend the fliers to the ground. A man sitting atop the pole revolves, too, and he plays a flute to represent a singing bird. These poles are now metal but, originally, they were tree trunks and the role of the dance is to appease the primary rain god, Xipe Totec, a visually scary looking character attired in flayed human skin. This is a highly-choreographed dance where the voladores circle the pole 13 times each; a total of 52, the number of years in the Aztec calendar. There are variations on this ritual that is at least 450 years old but the hypnotic revolutions of the dance is a core feature. The most well-known voladores appear in the town of Papantla, in Veracruz, near the ruins of El Tajin. Conveniently, you don't have to trek there because dancers also perform here in Chapultepec Park a few steps from the anthropology museum.

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Voladores de Papantla - Voladores de Papantla en Chapultepec

Voladores de Papantla en Chapultepec

Voladores de Papantla - Voladores de Papantla en Chapultepec

Voladores de Papantla en Chapultepec

Voladores de Papantla - Voladores de Papantla en Chapultepec

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Voladores de Papantla en Chapultepec

Lago Menor de Chapultepec - localflavor - Updated May 2026

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