Day 7 had no part 2.
Got out at 9:45 today. Yeah, yesterday's quiet was a Sunday thing. Everything was open! Not actually true, but felt that way. Even the torta stall I like was active already, unlike other Mercado food places, and I got a torta milanesa carne de res. Also a croissant-shaped thing from the Mercado bakery which is not at all croisssant-like, more of a sweet bread, and I may throw it away.
Walked back to Templo Mayor et al, got croissants from Maison Kayser -- not great, but recognizable as croissants -- noticed that the Plaza de la Constitucion, aka Zocalo, is fenced off. Not that it looks super attractive, just a large expanse of flat concrete. Apparently it's not the Plaza de Armas, but the old center of Tenochtitlan itself. There was a small protest on the south side of the fences, demanding respect for indigenous communities.
Or maybe the Spanish used it as their Plaza de Armas. Still, I remember the Plazas in Chile, which had been turned into parks with greenery, fountains, and seating.
Got out at 9:45 today. Yeah, yesterday's quiet was a Sunday thing. Everything was open! Not actually true, but felt that way. Even the torta stall I like was active already, unlike other Mercado food places, and I got a torta milanesa carne de res. Also a croissant-shaped thing from the Mercado bakery which is not at all croisssant-like, more of a sweet bread, and I may throw it away.
Walked back to Templo Mayor et al, got croissants from Maison Kayser -- not great, but recognizable as croissants -- noticed that the Plaza de la Constitucion, aka Zocalo, is fenced off. Not that it looks super attractive, just a large expanse of flat concrete. Apparently it's not the Plaza de Armas, but the old center of Tenochtitlan itself. There was a small protest on the south side of the fences, demanding respect for indigenous communities.
Or maybe the Spanish used it as their Plaza de Armas. Still, I remember the Plazas in Chile, which had been turned into parks with greenery, fountains, and seating.