|
|
Home : Travel to Latin America :
Review:Moon Handbooks Pacific Mexico: Including Mazatlán, Puerto Vallarta, Guadalajara, Acapulco, and Oaxaca (Moon Handbooks : Pacific Mexico)
Travel to Mexico
Travel-helper.com review all the media and related products you need to make your travel to Mexico more than perfect. Check out "Moon Handbooks Pacific Mexico: Including Mazatlán, Puerto Vallarta, Guadalajara, Acapulco, and Oaxaca (Moon Handbooks : Pacific Mexico)" below.
Moon Handbooks Pacific Mexico: Including Mazatlán, Puerto Vallarta, Guadalajara, Acapulco, and Oaxaca (Moon Handbooks : Pacific Mexico)
Format: Paperback
Author: Bruce Whipperman
ReleaseDate: 09 November, 2005
Publisher: Avalon Travel Publishing, Moon Handbooks
Rating:
No more Moon for me 
This was my third trip with a Moon Handbook. I just returned (Dec 2002) from a trip to Mexico using this publication. I was not to happy with the one to Baja, I found the one for Costa Rica filled with inaccurate information but this one was the worst. I found the maps to be mostly useless, directions to places not very helpful, several recommendations absolutely pointless. Even though this book was published OCT 2001, MANY times I was left with the impression that the author NEVER was on-site or has not revisited since the first edition. This guidebook seemed unfocused, information arranged not practical, and descriptions are exaggerated and/or misleading. Case in point - the town of Playa Azul. The town is given almost 4 pages and a rather poetic description is used to make it sound like a pretty cool place. As it turns out the town itself is very run down, many houses are bad repair, most hotels are dirty hole-in-the-walls and the seafood palapa restaurants are in a shape that most travelers that are just a little worried about cleanliness s/would not eat there. Playa Azul is for Mexican budget travelers and offers nothing that could not be had any other place around there. Barra Vieja would be another example of where the book is off the mark. After reading Mr. Whipperman's description, I was not prepared to drive along a 4 line highway most of the way, past a very nice golf facility and all the construction that was going on there. . . . . and this are just two of my grippes about this book. Despite the book, I had a great time. I saw a very beautiful side of Mexico. I would recommend a trip to Pacific Mexico to anyone. I am going back there in March. I will look for a travel guide I feel more aligned with and whose recommendation I can trust.
Essential for a Mexican road trip 
I found the book extremely useful for discovering those off the beaten path sidetrips. I used this book extensively this past summer for an epic driving trip into Mexico that took me almost to Manzanillo. I also used Fodor's but found this book a notch above in terms of helpful recomendations. Since the bulk of the 3+ weeks was spent in Puerto Vallarta(actually Mismaloya) the book proved to be a good guide for excursions into the surrounding states of Nayarit and Colima. For the most part the details given were accurate but with any travel book there are problems with current information as things are usually in flux in the tourist trade. I suppose that is why they can come out with new editions every year. Some of the information when missing can be a letdown, for example one day we went out for an adventure in the hopes of seeing the turtle rescue attempts in a not so nearby bay only to find out it was not exactly natures right time. There were other let downs such as the time we wet out to Mexicalitlan ," House of the Mexicans", where the ancient Aztecs/Mexica supposedly set out from Aztlan to establish Tenochitlan where the eagle would be found on top of a nopal devouring a snake. The description calls it a "scenic little island town. " If you consider peering into the open doors of the living rooms of the locals I guess it was scenic! For my part I found it to be a waste of a drive. The museum was closed also which brings to a point one should consider whenever driving to a destination in Mexico. Do not arrive during the tradional siesta time or one will have to wait until 4 or 5 in the afternoon to enjoy the local musem etc! By contrast unexpected pleasant surprises can result by the books ommision of information as in the opportunity to see the hatching of baby crocodiles at the end of the jungle cruise on La Tovara near San Blas. All in all the guide is very, very useful to plan out a trip and see things and experience different parts of Mexican culture. The short histories, hotel recomendations, restaurant guides etc are pretty accurate and invaluable in planning a trip within a trip. There is diversity in recomendations for the earthy camper or the posh five star luxury hotel traveler. I would recommend this book for any traveler along the lovely Pacific Mexican trail.
Useless! 
This book is full of information, none of it practical. Want my book? It is useless. You can't find ANYTHING you are looking for in it. NO hostels are listed. They don't even highlight any of the amazing festivals that are held here in Mexico. Believe me, I am living here in Mexcio, and I am going to go buy the Lonely Planet. I wanted something more specific to my region, but this is NOT it. This book is written like the author took one pathway through the region, and wrote along the way. So unless you are following the exact same route, the information is SO useless.
Related products:
click image or link for details on these Mexico travel books.
|
|
|
|
Navigation:
|
|
Travel-helper.com: Main index, About us, Link to us
Pick your continent:
Africa,
Asia,
Australia,
Canada,
Caribbean,
Europe,
Latin America,
Middle East,
Polar Regions,
United States
Latin America
-Acapulco
-Argentina
-Belize
-Bolivia
-Brazil
-Buenos Aires
-Costa Rica
-Cancun-and-cozumel
-Chile
-Columbia
-Ecuador and Galapagos Islands
-El Salvador
-French Guiana and Guyana and Suriname
-Guatemala
-Honduras
-Mexico
-Mexico-city
-Nicaragua
-Panama
-Paraguay and Uruguay
-Peru
-Puerto-vallarta
-Venezuela
-Yucatan-peninsula
|
|
|
|