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Archives for June 2008

Bikinis and Fish – UjENA 2008

Puerto Vallarta, Mexico is one of the top big game fishing destinations on the planet.

Bikinis and Fish

Reserve your spot in the 2nd annual UjENA Big Game Fishing Tournament. This is a serious competition for professionals.(LOL) IFGA International Angling rules apply.

Get on board with the hottest swimwear models in the world! All the excitement of a Bisbee’s tournament – catch ‘n release Marlin, Tuna and Dorado – with bikini models and photo crews on-hand to catch all the action!

Fish. Girls. Fish. Bikinis. Fish.

More fun than a fisherman ever imagined. Smack in the middle of the biggest swimwear model competition in the world: the week-long Ujena Jam!

Professionals, amatuers and casual anglers are welcome to enter the competition.

ujena bikinis
General Information

Marlins are catch and release. Tuna and Dorado qualify for weigh in. Please keep only what the boat can use. Excessive kills and wasting of fish will disqualify the entrant.

Have a UjENA Photo Crew on your Boat

A UjENA model and photographer crew can join your team for an optional photo shoot on your boat. (Additional fee of $300 per day.) A UjENA photographer will be taking photos of the model in UjENA bikinis and covering the action on your boat. Images will be made available to the team, and the crew with the best images will receive a UjENA Image Award and each team member will receive a $1,000 UjENA Jam Cabo scholarship.

“We are very glad to be working with the Bisbee Organization this year. The fish in Puerto Vallarta are big, the UjENA models are hot, and the parties are a blast,” stated UjENA Jam founder and director Bob Anderson.

The entry fee for the Offshore Jam is a mere $2,500. per four person team, and the cash prizes are equally modest at $20,000.00 (based on 20 teams), plus a ton of great things from Pelagic High Performance Offshore Gear. “The emphasis here is not on giant purses like the Bisbee’s has become famous for, it is a real tournament, but we’re concentrating on flat out fun-fun-fun” said Wayne Bisbee, the tournament’s Director.

Anglers and their guests are encouraged to stay at the official UjENA Jam hotel with the models and photographers. The cost is $795 (based on double occupancy) for five nights starting August 27, 2008. This price includes all food and drink at the hotel, transfer from the PV airport, all taxes and the VIP Jam Event Pass. Single room upgrade is $229. If you do not stay at the official hotel the UjENA VIP event pass is $400 and required for all anglers and their guests.

MORE INFORMATION:

  • 2008 Event Calendar
  • Secure Registration Form
  • Additional Information: Bisbee Off-Shore UjENA Jam Fishing Tournament
  • UjENA Jam Talent Search Week, additional information.

Aztec Death Whistles

MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AP) — Scientists were fascinated by the ghostly find: a human skeleton buried in an Aztec temple with a clay, skull-shaped whistle in each bony hand.

Roberto Velazquez has devoted his career to recreating the forgotten sounds of his distant ancestors.

Aztec Deth Whistle
But no one blew into the noisemakers for nearly 15 years. When someone finally did, the shrill, windy screech made the spine tingle.

If death had a sound, this was it.

Roberto Velazquez believes the Aztecs played this mournful wail from the so-called Whistles of Death before they were sacrificed to the gods.

The 66-year-old mechanical engineer has devoted his career to recreating the sounds of his pre-Columbian ancestors, producing hundreds of replicas of whistles, flutes and wind instruments unearthed in Mexico’s ruins.

For years, many archaeologists who uncovered ancient noisemakers dismissed them as toys. Museums relegated them to warehouses. But while most studies and exhibits of ancient cultures focus on how they looked, Velazquez said the noisemakers provide a rare glimpse into how they sounded.

Hear some of the spine-tingling sounds of the ancient Aztecs:
VIDEO AND SOUND

“We’ve been looking at our ancient culture as if they were deaf and mute,” he said. “But I think all of this is tied closely to what they did, how they thought.”

Velazquez is part of a growing field of study that includes archaeologists, musicians and historians. Medical doctors are interested too, believing the Aztecs may have used sound to treat illnesses.

Noisemakers made of clay, turkey feathers, sugar cane, frog skins and other natural materials were an integral part of pre-Columbian life, found at nearly every Mayan site.

The Aztecs sounded the low, foghorn hum of conch shells at the start of ceremonies and possibly during wars to communicate strategies. Hunters likely used animal-shaped ocarinas to produce throaty grunts that lured deer.

The modern-day archaeologists who came up with the term Whistles of Death believe they were meant to help the deceased journey into the underworld, while tribes are said to have emitted terrifying sounds to fend off enemies, much like high-tech crowd-control devices available today.

Experts also believe pre-Columbian tribes used some of the instruments to send the human brain into a dream state and treat certain illnesses. The ancient whistles could guide research into how rhythmic sounds alter heart rates and states of consciousness.

Among Velazquez’s replicas are those that emit a strange cacophony so strong that their frequency nears the maximum range of human hearing.

Chronicles by Spanish priests from the 1500s described the Aztec and Mayan sounds as sad and doleful, although these may have been only what was played in their presence.

“My experience is that at least some pre-Hispanic sounds are more destructive than positive, others are highly trance-evocative,” said Arnd Adje Both, an expert in pre-Hispanic music archaeology who was the first to blow the Whistles of Death found in the Aztec skeleton’s hands. “Surely, sounds were used in all kind of cults, such as sacrificial ones, but also in healing ceremonies.”

Sounds still play an important role in Mexican society. A cow bell announces the arrival of the garbage truck outside Mexico City homes. A trilling, tuneless flute heralds the knife sharpener’s arrival. A whistle emitting cat meows says the lottery ticket seller is here.

But pre-Columbian instruments often end up in a warehouse, Velazquez said, “and I’m talking about museums around the world doing this, not just here.”

That’s changing, said Tomas Barrientos, director of the archeology department at Del Valle University of Guatemala.

“Ten years ago, nothing was known about this,” he said. “But with the opening up of museum collections and people’s private collections, it’s an area of research that is growing in importance.”

Velazquez meticulously researches each noisemaker before replicating it. He travels across Mexico to examine newly unearthed wind instruments, some dating back to 400 B.C. and shaped like animals or deities. He studies reliefs and scans 500-year-old Spanish chronicles.

But making replicas is only part of the work. Then he has to figure out how to play them. He’ll blow into some holes and plug others, or press the instrument to his lips and flutter his tongue. Sometimes he puts the noisemaker inside his mouth and blows, fluctuating the air from his lungs.

He experimented with one frog-shaped whistle for a year before discovering its inner croak.

Renowned archaeologist Paul Healy, who made an important discovery of Mayan instruments in Belize in the 1980s, said many of the originals still work.

“A couple of these instruments we found were broken, which was great because we could actually see the construction of them, the actual technology of building a sound chamber out of paper-thin clay,” he said.

Still, their exact sounds will likely remain a mystery.

“When you blow into them, you still can get notes from them, so you could figure out what the range was,” Healy said. “But what we don’t have is sheet music to give us a more accurate picture of what it sounded like.”

ORIGINAL STORY

The Daily Scene » June 29 to July 6

the Puerto Vallarta DAILY CALENDAR

June 29 to July 6, 2008

The Puerto Vallarta Daily Schedule of Events is continually updated. Last-minute additions and corrections are frequent. Click on any listing for more information for individual events.

The “Low Season” in Puerto Vallarta has officially begun. Calendar listings will be sparse. As the weather warms, the activity here now centers on the beaches and the clubs.

SUNDAY June 29

 • MUSIC » Municipal Band, 6 pm, Presidencia Square, FREE
 • DANCE » the Sunday Evening Dance, 7 pm, Presidencia Square, FREE

MONDAY June 30

  
TUESDAY July 1

 • VALLARTA PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST DEADLINE
 • CANADA DAY » Canadians party.
  
WEDNESDAY July 2

 • KIDS + PIZZA » Cafe Roma, 3pm
 • NEW MOON
 
THURSDAY July 3

 
FRIDAY July 4

 • 4TH OF JULY » Gringos party 

SATURDAY July 5

 • LITERARY: Vallarta Writers’ Group Meeting, 10:30 am, at IFC
 • GET-TOGETHER » VallartaScene “Board Meeting” 6 pm, Casa Isabel
 
SUNDAY July 6

 • MUSIC » Municipal Band, 6 pm, Presidencia Square, FREE
 • DANCE » the Sunday Evening Dance, 7 pm, Presidencia Square, FREE
 
If you have an event that you would like to see listed here, please email events (at) pvscene.com. The Listings are Free.

VallartaScene Expart Meetup at Casa Isabel

This week’s Wednesday meetup is April 8 from 6 to 8 pm. Everyone is invited.

casa isabel logo
Every other Wednesday evening from 6 pm until approximately 8 pm, The Puerto VallartaScene Forum hosts the “VallartaScene Thursday Night Party.”

Whether you’re an Xpat, Tourist, or National, everyone is welcome to this truly International gathering and if you’re new just come up to us (we’ll be easy to find) and introduce yourself. Casa Isabel is “adult only” so please don’t bring children to these meetings (there are no lifeguards available for the pools). English and Spanish are Spoken (and sometimes French).

The meetings are from 6 to 8 pm, and happy hour with 2 for 1 national drinks is extended to these hours (for our group only). Casa Isabel also often offers a special menu for Vallartascene members. Beer is 20 pesos. Come and meet old friends or make new ones. Casa Isabel also has a fine, moderately priced restaurant menu if you also wish to dine there.

casa isabel sunset.

This is a very loose gathering of expats, nationals and visitors at happy hour for cocktails, conversation and snacks. Approximately 30-50 people normally show up at these weekly events in high season at this spectacularly beautiful restaurant. No reservations are necessary and anyone can drop in or out at any time.

You don’t have to be a “member” of the VallartaScene Forum to attend but we do request that you sign our guest list. To become a “Board Member” of VallartaScene, all you need do is register at www.VallartaScene.com. I’d like to say that we are all god-fearing, decent people, but in reality we are, as Isabel, the owner of Casa Isabel proudly exclaims, “the motley crew.”

Casa Isabel is an open bar/restaurant. We simply invade it on some Friday evenings. We gather on the back side of the bar.

An old meeting:

If you’ve ever wondered about what it’s like to live as an expat in Vallarta, or if you’ve ever wondered what people are like who live as expats in Vallarta, this is a good way to answer your questions. Don’t be shy. Many of us at this meeting live here in Vallarta. Some of the “regulars” are originally from Canada, some from the USA and some from Mexico.

Check out our forum, VallartaScene.com. It’s an eclectic collage of various strange (and a few normal) individuals who all share a love of Vallarta.

Map to Casa Isabel

Experimentación Lúdica Art Exhibition » June 11 to July 15

Experimentación Lúdica (Playful Experimentation) Art Exhibition

Experimentación Lúdica Runs from June 11 to July 15, 2008 at the Vallarta Naval Museum (next to the old Hooters Restaurant, across from the Los Arcos Amphitheater, on the Malecón).

This is an exhibition of the the students’ work from the Cuale Cultural Center Painting Workshop of this spring, taught by Ireri Topete.

The exposition consists of 21 pieces from 19 students in an average format of 120 X 80 cm. The pictures are painted in techniques of Acrylic, Oleo, Mix Techniques and Collage.

Admission is Free.

Poker Walk June 28 to Benefit Kids of the Dump

POKER WALK
Saturday, June 28, 2008

Fundraiser to benefit the Children of the Dump.

$150 Peso buy in with $50 Peso’s to go to the Children of the Dump

Vallarta Pokerwalk

  • 4:00 First card at the TREEHOUSE Bar and Grill
  • 5:15 Second card MACHIS BAR and BBQ
  • 6:15 Third card QUE PASA BAR and GRILL
  • 7:15 Fourth card ASADEROS’S GRILL
  • 8:15 Fifth card at the TREEHOUSE

WINNER TAKE ALL ($100 pesos per person) WITH HIGH POKER HAND ANNOUNCED AT 9:00

TEXAS HOLDEM POKER TOURNAMENT AT THE TREEHOUSE AFTER 9:00

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