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Horseback riding tours in Mexico,  Central America and the Caribbean:

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La Sierra Classic Cavalcade

& Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary

 

 

THE TOWN - Valle de Bravo

Once in Valle de Bravo, the brief and pleasant drive up to "Finca Enyhe" crosses the town from end to end. Narrow streets, white walls, balconies with flowers, Spanish tile roofs, and all kinds of shops keep your eyes and mind entertained, as you approach the "downtown" or central area of town. Contrary to other Mexican towns, where the main square is called "La Plaza", locals in Valle de Bravo call the main square "El Jardin" (the garden). A "kiosko" (kiosk) and a church sit amid a garden which in turn is surrounded by several old, two-story buildings. After a right turn, more shops, some hotels and several restaurants adorn and liven the roadside. Most of these establishments only open for the weekend, when visitors from Mexico City travel to Valle de Bravo in order to rest for one or two days trying to recover from the hustle and bustle of the big city.
In 1521, shortly after the Spanish conquest, the "conquistadores" heard of a village where the Aztecs made sacrifices in honor to their god of the sun. Worried that these Aztecs could also use this location as a gathering place for rebellious warriors, some Spanish soldiers were sent to the village. This was the way the Spanish began to settle in what is now Valle de Bravo. For over four centuries, local people earned their living by plowing the rich land of this region, naturally irrigated with the melted snow from "El Nevado", which springs out in the form of rivers and streams that run into the valley.
In 1945, modern technology arrived to Valle de Bravo. A new road was made to communicate the town, and a dam was built in its agricultural valley to feed a water-powered electrical plant. As a consequence, a beautiful artificial lake was created, close to an old settlement next to "La Peña", an ancient rock for Aztec sacrifices. The use of the water that came through the rivers into the valley changed. Instead of using it for local irrigation, it was used to generate electricity for Valle de Bravo and for some other nearby towns. People from Toluca and Mexico City could then travel by car to visit the town and the new lake located in the middle of evergreen forests. After some years, the calm and isolated old town had become a touristic weekend resort. People came in, bought land, and new weekend houses were built in the town, on the hills and in some far-away places inside the woods. A big change came for the peasants who now began offering different types of services as builders, housekeepers, gardeners, cooks, etc. Today, Valle de Bravo is one of the most important touristic lakeshores in Mexico. Many families from Mexico City come every weekend to enjoy the town and practice one of several sports. Sailing, water-skiing, kayaking, golfing, horseback-riding, mountain-biking, hand-gliding, or just walking and mingling around the town are all popular activities.

watch Video of:  La Sierra Classic Cavalcade Video
 

Accommodation

Accommodations for the week are at Finca Enyhe, a colonial style house built around a patio with a fountain in the centre surrounded by impressive verandas with multicolor hammocks hanging from the columns. The building reflects the Mexican architecture, and the individual bedrooms with its private bathrooms are all decorated with typical furniture from different parts of Mexico. A beautiful garden with an amazing variety of plants, flowers, and fruit trees separates the house from the old fashioned stalls, with a huge and very well set tack room, and the riding arena surrounded by bamboo fences.

Finca Enyhe counts with:

  • Six beautiful standard rooms all decorated in Mexican style, each with its own and exquisite particular decoration. Most of the bedrooms have their own brick or iron fireplace.
  • Each bedroom has a big and comfortable bathroom, all decorated with hand-painted tiles. Some of the bathrooms have a Jacuzzi.
  • The six bedrooms are distributed in different areas of the house. Two of the bedrooms are facing the central patio, two more have the view of the gardens, and the last two have the swimming pool vista.
  • A private bungalow with one double room that faces the beautiful horse stalls.
  • A library, a TV room, a billiard table and a small gym.
  • Outside heated swimming pool (45 Ft. long) with integrated Jacuzzi (7X7 Ft.).
  • Several patios, verandas, terraces, and gardens.
  • 24 stalls, a dressage ring surrounded with bamboo, and a magnificent tack-room.

Days and nights in Finca Enyhe include:

  • Breakfast: continental or Mexican style.
  • Lunch: some days served on the terraces of the finca and others as a picnic during the ride.
  • Dinner: delicious Mexican style cuisine. Meals served with purified water, sodas, beer or wine.
  • Alcoholic beverages: three drinks per person per day, not interchangeable.

Note: Special care for vegetarians and other special diet considerations are available upon anticipated request.

 

THE HORSES

The sound of some horses make the riders come out of the tack room. From there, more horses can be seen standing inside the twelve wooden stalls that are shaded by the same tile roof that can be seen from the terrace. Each horse is saddled according to its rider's preference. The match of each rider with the horse he/she will ride during the week is carefully decided upon based on the knowledge, experience, and preferences specified in the bookings.
Tied from one pole, stands a buckskin quarter horse saddled with a black western saddle with silver ornaments. On the other side, stands another quarter horse, this one a roan, saddled with a Mexican seat with a "machete" hanging from its left side. The next horse is a chestnut trakhener, about 17.5 hands tall, and its English saddle is a Stübben! A bay trakhener, as big as the first one, has a Mexican saddle and some nice-looking saddle bags are hanging from each side. The most spectacular horse is a palomino with a reddish Western saddle that shines as much as the horse's golden coat. Another huge bay trakhener, this one a mare and saddled with a Crosby, peeks out from inside one of the stalls. An appendix horse, tied to another pole, shows off a Mexican saddle with a "machete" on the left side and a "sarape" tied to the back. Two bay horses, maybe quarter or appendix, inside contiguous stalls, are saddled Western and English style. A big, strong, light buckskin quarter horse with an old Mexican saddle has a "falsa rienda" on his head instead of a bridle and bit. The hosts explain that this is only used while the "caporal" finishes breaking and training the horse. Tied to the last pole, a gray mare, almost white, has a black Western saddle; it looks like a Spanish horse because of her long mane and tail. The hosts explain that she's an "Aztec" horse, a new Mexican breed achieved by crossing a Spanish horse with quarter or criollo mares. A chestnut horse is inside the stalls, saddled English style. It looks like a tall thoroughbred. Last but not least, a big black head with long ears peeps out of his stall. It is "Don Sabino", the mule that will carry every day's lunch. Today, "Don Sabino" is resting because the ride will be short, but as of the following day, riders will have to keep an eye on him, especially around mid-day. Some more horses are inside the other stalls. They are unsaddled, waiting to see if a rider has a problem with the horse that has been selected for him or her.

One by one, under the supervision of the hosts, the riders mount their horses. Two grooms take care of the length of the stirrups while the hosts give a short explanation to each rider about the horse he/she will ride. When horse and rider are ready, they are led into the arena, so that they can become familiar with one another, and if necessary, the riders receive some more advice. First a walk, then a trot and, at the end, a short canter is done by each rider before the next one comes into the arena. Waiting for their turn, some of the horses that are still tied to the poles are eager to join the group and nervously begin turning to one side and to the other. Others are almost asleep, paying no attention to the group working inside the arena. Grooms come and go from one horse to another, helping riders get mounted. Some turkeys are running away from the movement of the arena and join a group of hens and a silver-colored rooster that are digging on a horse's manure near the empty poles. One of the riders goes inside the arena with his camera and takes pictures of the already mounted ones. Lots of movement, familiar horse noises and smells, a mixture of languages, the emotion of riding a new horse, and maybe the surprise of using a different saddle, make of this moment an unforgettable one.


The Monarch Butterfly
 

The natural phenomena of the Monarch Butterfly migration was recently discovered. During the 1960s a group of Canadian and American scientists began wondering what happened to the butterflies they saw in their gardens during the summer as they disappeared during the winter. The scientists decided to mark and follow the butterflies and after several years of hard research in the late 1970s they finally ended in the central mountains of Mexico where these beautiful insects come to hibernate.
Every year the Monarch Butterflies return to the same high mountains located in the states of Mexico and Michoacan. These mountains are part of the Transverse Neovolcanic Chain that runs from the Eastern Sierra Madre until it joins the Western Sierra Madre. As its name says, many volcanoes are located in this area, and several of them are still alive. From the 9,000 and up to the 12,000 feet over sea level these mountains are covered with dense fir tree forests. The Monarch Butterflies come to these fir tree forests looking for shelter against the wind, the rain and the cold. At the same time, this forest provides the butterflies with food and humidity to keep them alive during their hibernation period.
Coming from the Eastern side of Canada and the USA, the Monarchs fly more than 4,000 kilometres to arrive to Mexico during the last days of October or the first days of November. On November the 2 nd , the Mexican people celebrate the traditional festivity of the Day of the Dead and an old legend tells that these butterflies are the souls of dead people coming back to visit their beloved ones. From 60 to 90 millions of Monarchs arrive each year to the same five or six sites; and the high density of them transforms the evergreen fir trees into beautiful orange/brown trees.
After four months in hibernation, these marvelous insects become active again and get ready to fly back to the north. The butterflies mate in the fir tree forest and with their last energy reserves depart from Mexico around March 21 st . They will barely make half of the journey back to the place from where they came. Most of them will lay their eggs on the milkweed plant found in the Southern states of the USA and then die.
With the beginning of spring, millions of eggs hatch on the milkweeds. The caterpillars eat the leaves of this plant and take advantage of its poison in order to become poisonous butterflies for the birds that would like to kill them. This new generation of Monarchs will continue flying to the north until they reach the place from where their parents began flying several months before. After a short life of only 2 to 6 weeks this generation will mate, lay their eggs and die. This process continues during spring and summer when Monarchs with a short life span brighten up thousands of gardens in Eastern Canada and USA.
The Monarch Butterflies born during September have a different and special destiny. They will have to fly south looking for warmer latitudes in Mexico in order to escape from the cold winter. This special generation will have a very long life span of about eight months. They will make the amazing journey to the Mexican mountainous fir tree forest. They will arrive exactly to the same trees from where their ancestors departed several generations ago.
Up to now humans have not been able to understand how Monarch Butterflies can find their way through 4,000 kilometers while crossing different types of country with a great diversity of weathers. This is an incredible miracle that shows how little science knows about mother nature!

No words can describe in it's full dimension what this natural phenomenon is like. Not any photograph or video can compare to seeing something like this for oneself, in this fir tree forest. A picture or even a moving image can't do for your soul, what being there can. Being there, you understand that there's nothing like experiencing the phenomenon in person... it's really the only way that one can truly appreciate it.
Thousands and thousands of butterflies. Some are lying on the floor, looking for the warm rays of the sun. Others, already warm, fly, in search of food or water. Many more are hanging from trunks and branches, transforming the trees in such a way that the human eye is easily deceived; the fir trees wear a disguise made of butterflies that makes them look like oak trees.
The orange color of the Monarch Butterflies' wings shows up brilliantly when they are flying. When they're not flying and close their wings, these turn into different shades of brown. So, what initially looks like dead oak leaves, are in fact bunches and bunches of these marvelous insects piled one over the other, in an effort to keep warm and protect themselves from the wind and rain. They don't move until the rays of the sun stimulate them to shake their wings and fly again.
That moment when the sun streams into the forest and the butterflies begin flying is beyond description. One can even hear the sound of their wings. It is really a once-in-a-lifetime experience!!! You don't dare talk or move; all five senses are focused on witnessing and enjoying the grandiose nature of what you are living. The truth is that the only way to know what this is like is to experience it.

 

YOUR HOSTS

The hosts, Lucia and Pepe Schravesande, speak fluent English and personally take care of all the details of the accommodations, meals, route, horses, and tack.
A team of smilingly and gracious wranglers make all the work of cleaning, feeding, and saddling the horses. Everyday the group is accompanied by one of the hosts that guides through the route and by two wranglers that help the riders whenever they may need it.

 

THE FOOD

The variety of flavors of the Mexican kitchen is offered to the guests with hygienic procedures and the home made food gives them the opportunity to taste different dishes every day. Breakfast includes real fresh fruit and juice, egg dishes, sweetbreads, coffee, tea, or milk. Lunch is a picnic on the trail after three hours riding. It includes fresh fruits, Mexican tortas and tacos, and a variety of cheeses, meats, cold sodas or beers brought along by a pack mule that also provides horse-shoes, first aids kit, medicines for the horses, and all what might be needed during the daily ride out in the forest. Having eaten and rested the riders get mounted again and continue riding for two or three more hours. Horses stay for the night out in the woods attended by the wranglers while the riders are taken back by car to the town of Valle de Bravo. Some riders may like to mingle around the town and afterwards calmly walk back to Finca Enyhe. Some others may prefer to enjoy a spectacular sunset while drinking a Margarita or Tequila by the side of the swimming pool. Everyday, exactly at seven thirty, all riders have together a delicious typical Mexican meal inside the magnificent dinner room with its big table and old furniture. During dinner a wide variety of traditional Mexican dishes are served accompanied by red and white wine

 

WHAT TO BRING:

  • The helmet is not mandatory in the trail rides but it is always a good idea to use it.
  • A good hat or a big cap can keep the shade on your face and protect it from the sun.
  • Sun-block cream may be needed also to protect lips, face, neck, arms, and hands.
  • Short riding boots and half chaps can be lighter that long English or Western boots.
  • Wide boots that can get caught in the stirrup are very dangerous!
  • The boots should be comfortable for walking, especially during the visit to the butterflies.
  • Riders can bring inside the saddlebags a pair of comfortable walking shoes or sneackers.
  • An extra pair of boots if for any reason you may have problems with the first ones.
  • English riding pants, jodhpurs, or Western riding jeans, whatever you usually wear.
  • A light jacket, easy to tie to the saddle in case some cold wind blows during the day.
  • Another thick jacket or a sweater to be used early in the mornings or late at night.
  • Long sleeves in your shirt or blouse can help against the sun and the spines.
  • A bandana or big handkerchief is very useful as towel, cleaner, and against the dust.
  • A pocket knife is always a practical company hanging from your belt.
  • Visit a weather channel to check the local weather and know the type of clothes to bring.

TIPPING:

  • Tipping truly does encourage good service in Mexico.
  • In Mexico a ten percent gratuity is used in most of the services except taxis.

MIGRATION:

  • A regular passport is needed to come into Mexico.
  • Look for specific details at the Mexican Embassy in your country.

INSURANCE:

  • Whenever joining a horseback riding vacation you must have your own insurance.
  • Most of the Mexican insurance companies do not cover any horse related accidents.
  • Find out with your local insurance companies what they can offer for your vacation.

ABOUT SECURITY:

  • Mexico City is not so dangerous if you know how to take care of yourself.
  • Never stop a taxi in the street, only use the ones from inside the hotels or taxi stations.
  • Do not walk by lonely streets or in the night. Always try to go in a group.
  • Change dollars into Mexican pesos only in the banks, not at the restaurants or stores.
  • When paying for something never show great amounts of money.
  • Keep some few pesos in different pockets so you can easily make your payments.
  • VALLE DE BRAVO IS NOT MEXICO CITY, OUR TOWN IS CALM AND SAFE!
  • Here you can stop taxis in the streets and safely go wherever you want.
  • Here you can walk through town without any danger during the day or the night.
  • Here the people are friendly and will gladly help you whenever you need something.

OTHER ACTIVITIES:

  • Riders and non-riders have the opportunity to perform an additional activity.
  • In town several outside activities are offered to people that come to visit.
  • Sailing, water skiing, kayaking, golf, mountain bike, Tyrol rope, wall escalade, hiking, etc.
  • Cultural activities are also offered in town.
  • Ballet, Spanish dancing, painting, languages, music, etc.
  • All activities must be booked and paid by the user directly to the provider of the service.

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