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La Corrida - Bullfights in the Yucatan Mexico

When the Spanish arrived in the Yucatan they brought many of their traditions. One of these was the bullfight, or La Corrida, which has remained popular to this day. There are two major bullrings or plazas de toros in the Yucatan, one located in Merida and the other in Motul, with many makeshift arenas in smaller towns.

La Corrida evolved from the rituals of ancient animal sacrifice featuring bulls, a symbol of virility. The earliest accounts can be found in the writings of Plato in his tale of Atlantis. In Spain, these rituals developed into a training regimen for medieval combat. A public display of bullfighting was usually associated with a saint’s feast day, or fiesta, when an entire town expected to be entertained and fed. The local rancher or ganaderio provided bulls, the aristocratic cavaliers demonstrated the art of combat, and the local villagers lent their cheer and appetites.

Today, La Corrida is usually held on a Sunday afternoon. Three bullfighters or Toreros, or Matadores, fight two bulls each for a total of six bulls. Each bullfight is divided into three acts called terceros.

In the first tercero, the bull is released into the ring where the Peones or assistants, under the direction of the Torero, use their capes to test the bull’s behavior. The Torero then calls for the Picadores, two men with lances on armored horses who weaken the bull by piercing its back between the shoulder blades. This is done to make the bull safer to approach and to allow for a quicker kill in the final tercero.

In the second tercero, the Torero calls for the Banderillos. These three men approach on foot, often imitating the behavior of bulls. Each Banderillo decorates the bull with two hook-tipped spears wrapped in brightly colored ribbons.

During the final tercero, the Torero uses his yellow and pink cape and a wooden sword to work closely with the bull in a series of moves like a dance. You will hear the crowd shout “ole!” when the bull passes particularly close to the Torero. This is the most elegant and refined part of the bullfight and is the subject of much art, song and literature, such as Hemingway’s Death in the Afternoon.

When the Torero senses that the bull is tired, he exchanges his cape and wooden sword for a smaller red muleta and a steel sword, the espalda. The Torero thrusts the espalda between the bull’s shoulder blades and into its heart for a quick death.

During a bullfight, you will hear the crowd cheer and applaud valiant or well-executed maneuvers by man or bull. You may also hear boos, taunts and whistling when the crowd is not pleased. At the end of a fight, some might wave white rags signifying that the Torero should be awarded one or two of the bull’s ears, and perhaps even a tail.

The bull, too, may be awarded, either with a dignified procession of its body from the ring (arrastre lento) or by a pardon (indulti). On most occasions, however, the bull is killed and its body is taken from the ring, quickly skinned, quartered and sent to market as beef.

La Corrida is not for everybody. We neither endorse nor condemn this tradition, as it is simply a distinct part of our Spanish heritage. But before you attend your first bullfight, you should ask yourself if you would travel in a time machine to witness similar spectacles, such as a medieval jousting contest in England or a ritual Mayan sacrifice at Chichen Itza.

Bullfighting season is generally during the winter months, from approximately November through March or April. For the best experience, try to attend a bullfight with a well-known matador. Matadors from Spain, Mexico City and all over the world will occasionally perform even in small venues like Merida. Advertisements can be found on posters around town, usually on corners in the historical center of Merida. And tickets are sold either at the bullring itself, or in some of the restaurants or hotels closest to the Plaza Grande in the center of town.

You will pay between $15 and $50 dollars U.S. for tickets to attend La Corrida in Merida or Motul, and slightly more in Cancun, where there is also a public bullring. If you want less expensive tickets, specify sol seating, which means on the sunny side of the arena, but be sure to bring a hat. The sombra seats, which are in the shade, are more expensive. It is customary to bring a cushion, a bota bag of red wine and a white rag. It is also a good idea to bring bottled water. Beer and other refreshments are sold at these events as well.

James and Ellen Fields are expatriates who write about the experience of living in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico. More of their writing can be found on these two popular websites: Yucatan Today, http://www.yucatantoday.com, the oldest travel and tourist guide to the Yucatan, and Yucatan Living, http://www.yucatanliving.com, a blog about everyday life in the Yucatan.

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Why I Hate Computers, The Internet, and Mr. Bill

I have been meaning to write this column since the day I first bought a home computer in 1993. It probably was getting online that first prompted the desire to write this. What has been keeping me from writing this column until now is that every time I made an attempt, I would dissolve into a pool of tears and end up on the bed uttering vile profanities.

But here I am. I am bucking up. I am finally going to write this column. Maybe I should call it, “Why I hate computers, the Internet, and Bill ______!”

Let me first ask you something. If you spent a small fortune (and in 1993, computers cost a lot) to buy a high tech piece of equipment, wouldn’t you expect it to work? If you bought, let’s say, a brand-new Sony flat-screen television set, wouldn’t you expect to see The Guiding Light (or whatever program was your pleasure) when you hit the power switch?

What would you think if you hit the “on” button and the television just sat there doing nothing except making clicking sounds and scary humming noises? What would you think if you tried changing channels but only got a nicely-written message saying that the channel you selected is no longer in existence (and furthermore never had existed)? What would you think if you turned on the satellite only to get an error message telling you that you don’t have an account and if you ever had one, it has expired?

These are very legitimate questions. They get worse. What if you have been struggling with this wonderful, high-tech, never-before-has-the-world-seen-such-a-marvel television for years and years? What if you hit channel 4 but you get channel 4,450 instead? You call tech support and they tell you that your television isn’t programmed correctly. The geeks at Sony television lead you on a three-hour wild goose chase of fixes, after which they proudly announce that they have to be gods because they have miraculously cured your technical problem and your set will now work. Only, when you try it, it still does the same stupid thing.

Excuse me if I am wrong here, but when you pay a fortune for something that is supposed to do that for which it was designed, shouldn’t it do exactly that?

I about blew my flash memory when I read that Microsoft is releasing a new Windows Operating System.

ButbutMr. Bill _____, why doesn’t the one I have work? Why not make the one that currently exists and tortures everyone all around planet Earth work? Why not end my suffering with the one that presently sits on a desk in my house and works only when it wants to?

Here is a problem, one that is probably all too familiar to you readers. I have had this problem for years with all the computers I have owned. Upon occasion, but not always, when I attempt to download the Windows Updates (which should be called The Windows OS killer!), they download and install nicely. Then it gives me the fatal, murderous message, You now must restart your computer.

When I do this, it causes some kind of “feedback loop” that makes my computer recycle FOREVER in the start-up mode. It never does anything but make a lot of noise, then reboots forever and ever, Amen!

It sounds, acts, and looks like what I can only imagine what a hard drive must go through when it is having cardiac arrest or a stroke.

If Sony television sold TVs that pulled this sort of nonsense that Mr. Bill ______ and his wunderkind geeks pull, they would soon not be selling many TVs.

What are we, the consumers, to do? We keep buying and buying and buying PC’s with OS’s that consistently do not work!

I have owned many computers since my first one in 1993. I have friends, co-workers, and colleagues who have owned many PC’s since PC’s were first born to make human’s lives miserable. All, and I mean all, have conspired to torture me and my friends with what is touted as “The Mother of all Operating SystemsWindows!”

Why do they want to release another Operating System when the one they’ve presently got does not work? Now, all of you reading this know that what I am writing is true. I am most certainly preaching to the Windows OS choir.

Windows OS works when and if IT wants to.

Not only that, with every single new, off-the-shelf computer I have ever bought, I have had to spend an additional amount of money in software just to get the OS monster to work right. With the computer I bought in Mexico, I had to buy software for virus protection, firewalls, registry cleaners, file deletion, error nuking and fixing, defragging, and more.

You know this is so because you have had to do the same thing!

So, there, I have said it and do not feel one bit better. I do not know who to be madder atMr. Bill ____ of Microsoft or myself for my insistence in buying PC after PC.

I wonder if I can get a MAC in Mexico?

Now excuse me, please, while I start crying and fall on the bed.

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