(1 votes) ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Rate it! | Report it!Hole In The Donut Travels http://holeinthedonut.com Blog author: BarbaraW Click here to view BarbaraW's profileDescription: A fifty-something woman abandons a successful but unfulfilling career to travel solo around the world for six months, searching for meaning in her life. Now back in the States, she continues to travel and blog about the places she disovers,the people she meets on the road, and the importance of following one's true path. The site also features her stunning photography. Category: Blog Directory » Personal Blogs » People And Society |
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Latest blog posts from Hole In The Donut Travels
Rancho Pescadero Resort â€" An (Almost) Undiscovered Gem In Baja California, Mexico
I stepped from my casita and looked up into a night sky exploding with stars. They swirled and throbbed, so bright that I needed no flashlight to find my way. On the western horizon, Orion’s bow pointed me toward the open-air restaurant at Rancho Pescadero, while the Big Dipper hung low in the...
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Published 2 days ago
La Fonda de los Briseno â€" Best Mexican Restaurant in La Paz
Like everyone, I appreciate a good restaurant. But perhaps because I used to be severely overweight, food is not overwhelmingly important to me when I travel. I generally eat only one meal a day, and most of the time I am happy enough with something from street vendors, who usually offer...
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Published 4 days ago
Blogging Boomers Carnival #153 at VABoomer
As Nancy of VABoomer.com says, the Blogging Boomer Carnival is the best baby boomer writing on the web. Why not cruise on over to VABoomer and check out her summary of all the boomer posts this week and click on individual link to read each full post.
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Published 5 days ago
A Mexican Bingo Remembrance of My Mother
My mother would have loved this. Every year, when I’d visit for Christmas, Mom would drag me to Bingo at the local smoke-filled hall. Gleefully she’d buy a passel of bingo cards and press a packet upon me. I’d tape my eight or ten cards to the carved and chipped wooden table while she...
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Published 5 days ago
Going With the Flow, On to La Paz, Mexico
So much for my schedule. I knew it was going to be a fluid trip, I just didn’t know how fluid. First I killed time in Cabo San Lucas waiting for a casita to become available at the new Rancho Pescadero Resort near Todos Santos, Mexico in order to spend a few more days in paradise. As luck would...
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Published a week ago
For a Good Time Call 555-Cabo San Lucas
It’s a high school girl’s worst nightmare, discovering that her phone number has been scrawled on the boy’s room wall. Those five words: “for a good time call….” speak shameful volumes about a girl who has given in to temptation, in search of elusive popularity, love, excitement. Not...
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Published a week ago
Ferrying Across the Sea of Cortez Between Mazatlan and La Paz in Baja California
One of the things I promised myself when I embarked upon this trek around Mexico, Central and South America was NO planes, unless absolutely necessary. Back in the days when it didn’t take three hours to get checked in and through security, back when the airlines actually cared about their...
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Published 2 weeks ago
Blogging Boomers Carnival #152 at Midlife Crisis Queen
Though I’m thousands of miles away in Baja California, Mexico, the magic of the Internet lets me stay in touch and steer you toward this week’s Blogging Boomer’s Carnival, hosted by Midlife Crisis Queen. Now in our 152nd week, the Blogging Boomers are still going strong, bringing you the...
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Published 2 weeks ago
Meeting American Expats in Mazatlan
I’d been in Mazatlan, Mexico for exactly one day when I received an email from Nancy Dardarian. She and her husband are American expats from the Seattle area who retired to Mazatlan more than two years ago. When they first started thinking about moving permanently to Mexico, Nancy and Paul...
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Published 2 weeks ago
Second Stage Spanish
It’s a process, I keep reminding myself. When I first arrived in Mexico my Spanish was rusty. Not wanting to make a fool out of myself, I pre-planned everything I wanted to say prior to it coming out of my mouth. In my mind, I practiced Spanish sentences such as, “Can you recommend the best...
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Published 2 weeks ago
Stroll Along the Malecon for a Taste of Mazatlan
Hundreds of years ago, Mazatlan was founded as a fishing village on the north bank of a natural inlet from the Sea of Cortez. Over time, Mazatlan grew northward from the inlet as the protected deep-water lagoon beyond the inlet attracted a commercial fishing fleet that now numbers in excess of...
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Published 2 weeks ago
El Centro â€" Heart and Soul of Mazatlan
Catedral Basilica de la Inmaculada Concepcion To really discover Mazatlan one must leave the touristy “Golden Zone” along the town’s northern shores and venture into its historic old town. At its core is the lovely Moorish and Gothic style Cathedral Basilica de la Inmaculada Concepcion,...
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Published 2 weeks ago



