This monument to Giuseppe Garibaldi, by a sculptor named Brooke Wright, was unveiled on April 10th, 1864, on Avenida Chapultepec. Although Garibaldi was most well known for being an irregular in the Risorgimento, the movement that united the various states of Italy, he was in fact widely admired in Latin America. During a fourteen-year exile he fought in two wars in South America. The statue is a block from Avenida Cuauhtémoc, next to a down-market shopping center, in an area where stores sell gargantuan refrigerators and other restaurant equipment. The Plaza Garibaldi, where squadrons of mariachis trawl, looking for customers interested in paying them for a melody, is not named after Giuseppe, but for his son, Giuseppe Jr., who fought with Pancho Villa in the Revolution. I'll post about the Plaza at a later date.
Mexico City
More mannequins
Mannequins are an integral part of the cityscape here. I have posted about them before.
Actually, I have posted about them several times. I'm not exactly sure why they are so fascinating to me. But I was transfixed outside this mannequin store in the San Rafael neighborhood the other day.
You might even say they are as vivid -- or more vivid -- than the people who live here. Some of the people, anyway.
This is from the window display at Uniformes Oskar around the Day of the Dead.
I have posted about mannequins so often that, last week, I was sent an email by a person who identified himself as Yoyo, from the Top-Eagle International Trade Co., Ltd., in Xiamen, China. He said it was great to know that I was "on" the mannequins business, and wanted to let me know about his product line. Click here for a link to his website.
The mannequins in the Liverpool department store are as delightfully perverse as ever.
You've got to love the hand gestures. I'd like to meet whoever's in charge of the mannequin department over there.
I hate this
Until recently, Cinemex multiplex movie houses would post a list of the films they were showing on their marquees. Suddenly, they stopped taking the trouble. Now they suggest that if we want to know what movies they're exhibiting, we go online and look it up, or call them, or get the information through SMS. Lovely, no? Maybe we should return them the favor and stop bothering to patronize them.
The whole tooth and nothing but the tooth
A while back I realized it had been about two years since I had last been to the dentist. So I went to one close to my apartment. He grabbed the metal stick with the little circular mirror on the end and told me to open wide.
After a cursory inspection he told me I had seventeen cavities. He said that he couldn't fill all of them that afternoon, but he could do three or four of them at at a time over a series of appointments. He would charge me a certain amount of money for each filling.
I was nonplused. Admittedly I had let too much time go by since my last visit to the dentist. And although I flossed most nights before going to bed, I may have missed a night here and there. But seventeen cavities?
If he had said three cavities, or five cavities, or maybe even seven cavities, I would have probably said, however glumly, "Okay, go to work." But seventeen? That's more than half my teeth. I asked him to give me a cleaning and that I would call him back after thinking about when to begin getting the cavities filled.
So I went to another dentist. I didn't say anything to her about the one I had just visited. All I told her was that I had let a couple of years go by since the last time. She took a look. "Your teeth are very clean," she said. This was no surprise, as the other dentist had just scrubbed them. She cleaned them again anyway. "By the way, doctor," I asked. "Do I have any cavities?" She took a good look. "No," she said.
"Are you sure?" I asked. "Could you take another look?" She took a good long gander inside my mouth. "It's been a long time since I last saw a dentist. You don't see anything there?" She shook her head. "If you want I can take x-rays, but I don't think you have any cavities. I suggest you come back in six months, or earlier if you have any problems."
I suppose this could have happened anywhere. But it happened here in Mexico City.
Time tunnel
One of my favorite places to eat fish and seafood is Boca del Rio, at Ribera de San Cosme #42, a stone's throw from Metro San Cosme. It's been around since 1941, although not at this location. You can read a little about its history on its website.
What I most like about it is that it's one of Mexico City's many time tunnels. It still feels like it's 1959 in there, with vinyl-topped tables, leatherette furniture and waitresses who are emphatic about their use of hair spray. The portraits in the lower left corner of the photo are of the original owners.
The coctél de callo de hacha (scallop cocktail) is also a big draw for me.
I almost always order the mojarra a la diabla, which is a whole fried perch in a chipotle sauce.