Some of Mexico’s most impressive private beach villas and remote boutique hotels line the golden beaches of Mexico’s Pacific coast. If you are looking for glitz and glamour, the coast near Puerto Vallarta is the place for you – we can plan some fantastic Christmas and New Year private house rentals in the privacy of a luxury beach house. For a more remote and back-to-nature experience, travel further south, where properties such as Las Alamandas and Cuixmala offer a raw and wild experience of the Pacific with miles of untouched shoreline to yourself. To the north Baja California is the strip of land that juts out between the Pacific and the Sea of Cortez and is the best place to visit for whale watching (between January and April) and year-round sunshine.
Boasting outstanding marine wildlife, this area of Mexico showcases quaint bohemian towns with boutique properties and contrasting stark desert land with giant cacti.
One of Mexico’s most visited highland cities and rightly so. It is culturally very rich, boasts diverse landscapes with lush mountains and beautiful beaches, not to mention its exciting gastronomical presence.
With the Gulf of Mexico on one side and the Caribbean Sea on the other, the Yucatan Peninsula is fringed with some of the most beautiful beaches in Mexico. Between Tulum and Playa del Carmen, the soft white sand and calm turquoise water are also home to some beautiful beach properties.
Riding the El Chepe train through the Copper Canyon is a thrilling experience that should not be missed if you are visiting northern Mexico. The adventure from the little town of Los Mochis to the even smaller town of Creel is filled with ever-changing scenery as you carve through canyons, traverse rivers on bridges and pass tiny station towns.
The UNESCO heritage towns that surround Mexico City, including San Miguel de Allende, Oaxaca and Guanajuato paint a vivid picture of the scale of the Spanish Empire. From Central Mexico down to the Yucatan Peninsula, vast pre-Hispanic Mayan temples and Colonial haciendas jostle together.
The first time you walk into Mexico City’s central square, The Zocalo, you begin to understand the enormous scale of this capital city that over 20 million people call home. In the centre of the plaza, a flag the size of a swimming pool billows in the breeze, watched by a ring of imposing colonial buildings.
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