Hola, el contenido del video es muy bueno y bien llevado, sólo hago una recomendación: Usar otro tipo de toma que no deforme las imágenes, porque en tomas panorámicas se ven los objetos de los lados se van curveando y no se aprecia. Saludos.
Hola Alberto. A well done video. Bernal certainly has changed. It has always possessed a quaint charm, but it used to be a little town with a gigantic rock in its backyard. Now it is wall to wall tourists and shops packed with souvenirs. I noticed a wall with some masks on it, and I have read that Bernal has a mask museum. Same place? The new buildings to serve the tourists are nice but not very colonial (I'm not objecting to more clean banos, of course). It has been more than 40 years since I visited Mexico, and seeing all of these new, modern buildings in little colonial towns is a bit disorienting. Where am I? What am I looking at? Recently I watched a video from San Cristobal de las Casas. 50 years ago it was a sleepy, provincial mountain town with more than its share of great colonial churches, a handful of tourists and a market that filled with Tzotzil and Tzeltal Indians every day except Sunday. The video showed a large, several level building for restaurants and bars that was so modern that at first I thought the video was about Cancun or somewhere in CDMX. Las Casas seems to have lots of new buildings, but then so does Chamula, and I can't recognize that village anymore either. 50 years ago Chamula was mostly a collection of widely spaced houses with steeply pitched thatched roofs. Now there are numerous multistory masonry buildings in Chamula. I feel like an out-of-date history book. Oh well, Alberto and TH-cam will keep me current. Hola to Adriana. I hope she feels better soon. You, stay well.
Good morning William, yes, in reality Bernal has changed a lot and like all the magical towns in Mexico to begin with they have become centers of high alcohol consumption hehe, the foreigner looks for tequila and the national beer in michelada which personally I don't like I like it, I prefer it natural. In addition, they have taken away that essence of a town and have tried to urbanize it more every day, reizers and ATVs everywhere and the famous tours to the vineyards are the attraction as well as the cheese tastings, personally I don't like it because they have also highly valued these destinations. What is redeemable is the gastronomy with its gorditas, esquites and typical dishes from the region that I hope will not be missed. Bernal is a mid-range place in terms of costs but it is going up. Greetings friend, God bless you
pense subirias ala peña aun haci buen video
Es que ya habiamos subido hace tiempo y andabamos cortosde tiempo jeje
Hola, el contenido del video es muy bueno y bien llevado, sólo hago una recomendación: Usar otro tipo de toma que no deforme las imágenes, porque en tomas panorámicas se ven los objetos de los lados se van curveando y no se aprecia. Saludos.
Gracias , saludos
Hola Alberto. A well done video. Bernal certainly has changed. It has always possessed a quaint charm, but it used to be a little town with a gigantic rock in its backyard. Now it is wall to wall tourists and shops packed with souvenirs. I noticed a wall with some masks on it, and I have read that Bernal has a mask museum. Same place? The new buildings to serve the tourists are nice but not very colonial (I'm not objecting to more clean banos, of course). It has been more than 40 years since I visited Mexico, and seeing all of these new, modern buildings in little colonial towns is a bit disorienting. Where am I? What am I looking at? Recently I watched a video from San Cristobal de las Casas. 50 years ago it was a sleepy, provincial mountain town with more than its share of great colonial churches, a handful of tourists and a market that filled with Tzotzil and Tzeltal Indians every day except Sunday. The video showed a large, several level building for restaurants and bars that was so modern that at first I thought the video was about Cancun or somewhere in CDMX. Las Casas seems to have lots of new buildings, but then so does Chamula, and I can't recognize that village anymore either. 50 years ago Chamula was mostly a collection of widely spaced houses with steeply pitched thatched roofs. Now there are numerous multistory masonry buildings in Chamula. I feel like an out-of-date history book. Oh well, Alberto and TH-cam will keep me current. Hola to Adriana. I hope she feels better soon. You, stay well.
Good morning William, yes, in reality Bernal has changed a lot and like all the magical towns in Mexico to begin with they have become centers of high alcohol consumption hehe, the foreigner looks for tequila and the national beer in michelada which personally I don't like I like it, I prefer it natural. In addition, they have taken away that essence of a town and have tried to urbanize it more every day, reizers and ATVs everywhere and the famous tours to the vineyards are the attraction as well as the cheese tastings, personally I don't like it because they have also highly valued these destinations.
What is redeemable is the gastronomy with its gorditas, esquites and typical dishes from the region that I hope will not be missed. Bernal is a mid-range place in terms of costs but it is going up.
Greetings friend, God bless you
Hola. Tengo unas preguntitas sobre la edicion de tus videos. Donde puedo contactarte. Ojala me pudieras ayudar.
Escribeme a mi correo y nos pasamos el numero si quieres a_cardenas100@hotmail.com