Oaxaca
October 25 - November 4, 2024
$3,395 per person ($480 single supplement)
Join us in Oaxaca, Mexico during one of the most unusual festivals anywhere – the Day of the Dead. On this day, people prepare home altars and cemeteries to welcome the dead, who are believed to return to enjoy the food and drink they indulged in during life. Not at all a morbid occasion, the town is filled with celebration.
Oaxaca lies in a semitropical valley surrounded by the peaks of the Sierra Madre del Sur. The city’s architecture reflects its rich Spanish Colonial and modern history. Vast ruins of Ancient Mixtecan and Zapotecan civilizations lie just outside the city. Oaxacan archaeologist Dr. Jeffrey Blomster will accompany us on our trip.
Tour Schedule
Friday, October 25
Join us in Oaxaca for a cocktail party at the Hotel Gala de Oaxaca, where we’ll spend seven nights.
Saturday, October 26
In the morning, we will tour the Mercado de Abastos, Oaxaca’s famous flower market. In addition to an abundance of cut flowers we will also see special Day of the Dead decorations on sale. In the afternoon, we’ll visit the regional museum and tour its displays of artifacts from Mitla and Monte Albán, including the gold treasures that were found in Monte Albán’s tomb #7 in 1932.
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
Sunday, October 27
We’ll spend the morning exploring the impressive ruins of Monte Albán, a city built by the Zapotecs between 500 B.C. and A.D. 750. In the afternoon, we’ll take a walking tour of Oaxaca and visit the ornate church of Santo Domingo, the cathedral on the Zócalo, and the old central market.
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
Monday, October 28
We’ll explore the elaborate ruins of Mitla. Built by the Zapotec and later occupied by the Mixtec, the masonry buildings are decorated with mosaics made from thousands of hand carved stones. We’ll tour Dainzú, a Zapotec city founded in 350 B.C. that controlled a narrow valley pass. We’ll also visit the ruins at Yagul and Lambityeco.
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
Tuesday, October 29
We’ll tour the wood carving village of Arrazola as well as Cuilapan, a Dominican monastery built in 1555. In the afternoon we’ll visit Zaachila, the last capital of the Zapotec kingdom.
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
Wednesday, October 30
We’ll tour nearby crafts villages, including San Bartolo Coyotepec, San Martín Tilcajete, and Santo Tomás Jalieza. In Ocotlan de Morales, we will visit the home of Rodolfo Morales as well as the great Dominican complex he helped restore.
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
Thursday, October 31
In the morning we’ll visit the archaeological site of Atzopma. In the afternoon we’ll visit the Rufino Tamayo Museum of Pre-Hispanic Art. In the evening we’ll visit the cemetery in Xoxocatlán.
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
Friday, November 1
Free Morning. We will be moving to the Hotel One Oaxaca for the next three nights. In the afternoon we’ll visit the main cemetery in Oaxaca to observe the Day of the Dead festivities.
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
Saturday, November 2
We’ll travel to the Etla Valley and tour the site of San José Mogote, an important village first occupied around 1400 B.C.
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
Sunday, November 3
We’ll see the native weaving village of Teotitlán del Valle in the morning. In the evening, we’ll have a farewell dinner at one of Oaxaca’s finest restaurants.
Meals included: Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner
Monday, November 4
Participants depart for home. You may want to ask your travel agent about extending your vacation to the beach at Huatulco or to other delightful destinations in Mexico.
Meals included: Breakfast
Oaxaca
Tour Details
Cost Includes hotel accommodations based on double occupancy (single supplement is $480), meals as indicated, happy hours, admittance fees, tours, background reading materials, surface travel via bus. Not included are meals other than those specified and transportation to and from Oaxaca.
Oaxaca is located at 5,000 feet above sea level and the ruins are at higher altitudes. People with respiratory problems should consult with their physician. People unaccustomed to higher altitudes sometimes experience fatigue and dizziness. A modest amount of walking is required. Ruins have rubble, undeveloped trails and stairs. The Hotel Gala is a charming restored hotel. It does not have an elevator or rooms on the first floor.