Showing posts with label Maya ruins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maya ruins. Show all posts

Sunday, April 18, 2021

DAY TRIPPING TO THE MUST-SEE MAGNIFICENT MAYA PYRAMIDS AT EK BALAM


Ek Balam Gateway to the Underworld (En-Yucatan Travel)

Day Tripping

Excerpt Chapter 17, Where the Sky is Born—Living in the Land of the Maya


On the paid highway just outside of Valladolid we stopped at the toll booth to pay the fee. All around us the monotonous landscape of the eastern Yucatan prevailed. Flat and dry with the occasional crecopia tree, ranch or small hacienda, there was little else. In five minutes we were at the city's outskirts, driving on a narrow one-way street past tidy cement block homes. A mustard-colored stone wall hugged the road all the way into el Centro.



Crecopia (Useful tropical plants)

Our rental car bolted towards the square where wrought iron benches with wooden slats were crowded with locals and tourists alike. I gazed at an ancient stone church with two tall spires that stood on the south corner of the square as we rounded the wide traffic circle, looking for a sign that would direct us to Ek Balam.


Although its past history was ominous, present day Valladolid was that pleasant contradiction one so commonly finds in Mexico—a busy city with one foot in the past and one in the future. Commerce prevailed and the streets were lined with shoppers and vendors taking care of daily chores and business.





Valladolid


One more time around the traffic circle and el Centro and we spotted the sign directing us to the pyramid site, only 15 kilometers away. Another one-way street led out of town and we followed it past small pharmacies, neat houses and the occasional tienda. 



Once on the city's outskirts the road narrowed considerably but was smooth and newly paved. Several kimometers later another sign pointed to the right and we took a turn that dipped and led down to an empty creek bed, then back up the other side into a forgotten pueblo. Packed dirt streets no more than 12 feet wide were bordered by rock walls dividing the street from tiny yards with ancient stone houses coated with rough plaster. Some lots had twig huts with palapa roofs. At one crossroads, two squealing pink piglets ran dangerously close to our tires, chased by a squawking red rooster, tail feathers bobbing. A hunched old woman eyed our late model rent-a-car cautiously as we inched our way through this time warp in history.



Countryside near Ek Balam (PxHere)



Finally out of town, we welcomed the freedom of the open countryside. In the distance I saw a pyramid temple peeking above the low shrub landscape. A simple green sign with an arrow and picture of a pyramid pointed down a side road to the north. We turned onto the sacbe, an ancient Maya pathway, and drove slowly towards what we hoped was the site entrance. 



At a primitive palapa a caretaker appeared. He explained there was a ten peso donation and asked if we wanted a guide. We said yes and he pointed to a raven-haired boy of ten.


"Mi hijo, Jorge." His son would assist us. We dropped the pesos in a handmade wooden box and followed the boy down the road.



Entrance to Ek Balam (photo Loco Gringo)

Except for his size, Jorge had all the attributes of a serious 40-year old. He was reflective and deliberate in his speech, and as we walked, he began telling us the history of Ek Balam. Construction started around 100 B.C. The site was named for Maya ruler Ek Balam, bright star jaguar. Ek to the Maya is the brightest star in the heavens; balam is the word for jaguar. The first excavations of the site were carried out by Frenchman Désiré Charnay in 1886, and more recent work had begun in 1987 when INAH (National Institute of Anthropology and History) funding was granted. Although the city was compact, there was still much to be done. He explained that the number of buildings on the site suggested Ek Balam had been rich and powerful at the same time, possibly holding the position of agriculture center of the northwestern Yucatan.


Statues at Ek Balam (Yucatan photos)






We walked through an amazing four-sided gateway arch that, Jorge explained, connected to a sacbe (road) which connected to all the Maya kingdoms. Ek Balam had numerous sacbes, he explained, to all major sites in northern Yucatan and beyond. The views from the arch landing were breathtaking.



Arch of Ek Balam (photo FinalTransit)








Front Ek Balam arch (photo Mauricio Marcelin)








"Paul," I said. "This is fantastic."

A three-sided wall, either ceremonial or defensive, surrounded the city, similar to the wall at Tulum. Ek Balam was known to contain an astrological observatory, palace, tower, a ball court, two cenotes and a building archeologists named the Acropolis, most likely due to the sculptures found inside—full figure statues that looked more Greek than Maya.


From the 10-foot high stairway at the gateway arch, Jorge directed us through the ball court and onward to the remarkable Acropolis. He told us the Acropolis was twice the size of El Castillo at Chichen Itza, with tunnels inside leading to tombs. A unique stucco fresco had life-size statues intricately carved into it. These were definitely rare in the Maya world. They appeared Asian, closer in appearance to Angor Wat than Chichen Itza. I'd not seen anything like it before in Mexico. 


Acropolis at Ek Balam (photo 123RF)


We climbed two-thirds of the way up the edifice, to get a closer look at the statues. Burnished in time to a golden brown, it was almost impossible to believe we were here in Ek Balam. Paul stood before the stucco fresco. "They seem Grecian, or Indian. Look at the lotus position on that statue," he said as he pointed at a character with a Shiva-like headdress.


Hindu comes to the Maya at Structure 4 (photo Yucatanmagazine)



Statues (Mediawarehouse.com)
Through a hallway leading to the tomb of the ruler, Ukit Kan Le'k Tok, who coined Ek Balam, was a 12-foot high stucco mouth with teeth, representing the gateway to the underworld, the Maya version of the River Styx. Archeologists theorize most of the Acropolis was built around 800 A.D. by Ukit Kan Le'k Tok.

The Maya so well preserved the stucco in the Acropolis tomb that no modern restoration was required. After the ruler was buried, the tomb was filled with powdered limestone and rocks, and the entire facade was covered with the same material for preservation.





Ek Balam (photo CancunAdventure.com)

Jorge was a perfect guide, very absorbed in the details of the site and its history. He confided that his dream was to one day become an archeologist. We paid him for his guide work and he followed us out to the car, not wanting to end the conversation.

Within minutes he became a ten-year old again, excitedly asking where we were from and where we were going. He gallantly opened my car door and in so doing, spotted my Maya Ruins Guide in the back seat.


Maya Ruins Guide
Noting his look of longing I asked, "Quieres mi libro?" Would you like my book.

"Si, si!" he said, looking terribly excited at the prospect.

I told him it was in English, but I was sure that since he was going to be a famous archeologist some day, he would soon learn that language.

He agreed wholeheartedly and the last image I have of Jorge was his hugging the Maya Ruins Guide tightly to his chest as we pulled onto the ancient sacbe leading us away from Ek Balam.



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Side note: Where the Sky is Born was written in 2003 and many of our Maya travels happened much earlier, late 1980s, so much is now changed—pretty much everywhere in the Yucatán. Ek Balam, however, is still a site to be reckoned with. The foliage surrounding it is lush and gorgeous, and the real plus is it's not as touristy as nearby Chichen Itza. The statues are so very different from other art found at Maya pyramid sites. They're quite exquisite.


If you enjoyed this excerpt from my memoir Where the Sky is Born: Living in the Land of the Maya, it's available on Amazon with many more tales about ex-pat life, living within 100 miles of four major pyramid sites for many years, owning a bookstore in Mexico, and Maya culture and Mexico travel. Subscribe to my bi-monthly blog posts above, or check out my website at www.jeaninekitchel.com. Books one and two in my Mexico cartel trilogy, Wheels Up—A Novel of Drugs, Cartels and Survival, and Tulum Takedown, are also on Amazon.  My journalistic overview of the Maya 2012 calendar phenomenon, Maya 2012 Revealed: Demystifying the Prophecy, is also on Amazon.