November to December Progress

Adding the last block to the garage and the south wall

How time flies, it’s been yet another month since I updated things so I thought it was time to share a few more pictures.  As of our last invoice/payment we are at 42.8% completed on our project, so we’re just about half way there.

There’s been quite a bit happen in the last 30 days at Calle 66.  We’ve had the rear suites put up, particularly ours on the 2nd floor, the walls and floors are in.  The rear stairway is in and the roof has been put in place.  What you have to understand here is that up to this point in time, there is NO wood, zero anywhere in this casa.  It’s all cement block, metal “I” beams, concrete and rebar – there should be absolutely no squeek in this place.   Once we get the structure up, I’m going to try to determine from the contractor just how many concrete blocks are in this place – my guess is in the thousands.

The 2nd floor walkway

A look at the terrace from the 2nd floor rear suite.

What it looked like in November

 

 

The 2nd Floor ready for the Cement Truck on Monday

The plan is for Casa Yucatan Construction to work on the rear bedroom suites so that maybe, just maybe we can stay in these when we head back down in April.  If these are ready for us to sleep in with water and electricity, we’ll be able to save the $$$’s for a rental casa and maybe put those funds into a fridge or two.  We’re very happy with the progress made with hopes that we’ll be able to get the keys to the finished project sometime in July 2019.

 

A Side Trip to Uxmal – Temple of the Magician

Today we decided to take a trip to Uxmal about 150 kilometers from Merida to see one of the most magnificent pyramids of the Maya known as the Temple of the Magician.

While much work has been done at the popular tourist destination of Uxmal to consolidate and restore buildings, little in the way of serious archeological excavation and research has been done. The city’s dates of occupation are unknown and the estimated population (about 15,000 people) is a rough guess.  Most of the city’s major construction took place while Uxmal was the capital of a Late Classic Maya state around 850-925 AD. After about 1000 AD, Toltec invaders took over, and most building ceased by 1100 AD.

Maya chronicles say that Uxmal was founded about 500 A.D. by Hun Utizil Chac Tutul Xiu.  For generations Uxmal was ruled over by the Xiu family. It was the most powerful site in western Yucatán, and for a while, in alliance with Chichen Itza, dominated all of the northern Maya area. Sometime after about 1200, no new major construction seems to have been made at Uxmal, possibly related to the fall of Uxmal’s ally Chichen Itza and the shift of power in Yucatán to Mayapan. The Xiu moved their capital to Mani, and the population of Uxmal declined.

Uxmal was dominant from 875 to 900 CE. The site appears to have been the capital of a regional state in the Puuc region from 850-950 CE. The Maya dynasty expanded their dominion over their neighbors. This prominence did not last long, as the population dispersed around 1000 CE.

After the Spanish conquest of Yucatan (in which the Xiu allied with the Spanish), early colonial documents suggest that Uxmal was still an inhabited place of some importance into the 1550s. As the Spanish did not build a town here, Uxmal was soon after largely abandoned.

More photos will be placed on the blog, however I need to convert these from RAW files to .JPEG files, I just found out that I can’t post my RAW shots, sorry.