Taxco

Taxco is a beautiful city in Mexico built on a hill in Guerrero. It is rich with old and new silver mines in the surrounding areas with narrow winding streets and hundreds of silver shops. If you are looking for a side trip that is the place to go. Taxco is renowned for its more than baroque-style church (completed in 1758), the Santa Prisca Cathedral.

Get in
It is off the toll way (Hwy 95D) but it is worth the drive, it is between Acapulco and Mexico City. There is regular bus service to the town from Cuernavaca by Estrella Blanca.

There are also buses there from Mexico City from the South Bus Station (Autobuses del Sur). A one-way ticket costs M$130 (pesos) and they usually leave every half hour. The bus will take you through very scenic mountain views and drop you off in the middle of the town. Since it is a mountain town, you can either walk uphill to the Zocolo (square) where many shops and the famous church are, take a taxi, or any bus that says "Zocalo".

The following serve Taxco:



The last bus out of Taxco back to Mexico City is 8PM

Get around
Walking is the best way to get around Taxco and.

Taxis (Volkswagen Beetles) are relatively inexpensive (M$20-30). Collectivos or combis (Volkswagen Bus) are also a good option to get around town -- most go through the Zocalo and a local can help you find the right one.

See
At the center of the city lies the Santa Prisca Cathedral and several museums housed in historic building surrounding it: Ten kilometers to the south is Taxco el Viejo (Old Taxco). In pre-Hispanic times, the village was the most important area of the Mesoamerican indigenous community.

Do
Get a lot of exercise walking up the steep streets.

There is a gondola (teleferico) that can take you up to a fancy hotel called Monte Taxco, with great views and a decent bar/restaurant. There is not much else to see/do up there.

Taxco is known for its Holy Week celebration in April.

Buy
Silver! There is very beautiful silver, mostly all engraved with "MEXICO 925" or "TAXCO 925" The silver shops away from the centro are where you can bargain. You will be charmed and ecstatic at all the beautiful silver, but will get tired of looking at it in 4 hours or less. You will also be approached by men, women, and children selling you items in the centro (plaza centrál). If you are not interested in being bothered, do not give them any eye contact. Once one finds you are slightly interested, all the other vendors will come try to sell their goods.

Eat
Try the Pozolé. It is a soup-like dish of large corn pieces called hominy, pork rind/fat, avocado, and some crispy tortilla crumbles. Try it at the top of the hill above the small covered market which sells silver. It's cheap, tasty, and filling. It's a great dish to try if you want to experience Mexican food. Thursdays are the traditional pozolé days during which the red and green varieties are typically served. The white style is served the other days of the week.

For adventurous diners, try the jumiles, small edible insects that are harvested from November to February and sold in the markets of Taxco. Some healers attribute painkilling and healing properties to them. They are served on a tortilla as a taco. jumiles-in-taxco



Sleep

 * Hotel Casa Grande is the cheapest digs in town (US$15 for a single with shared bath). It is a 400-year-old building just off the Plazuela and is about a block from Santa Prisca and the Zocolo.  Rooms are arranged around a courtyard, some are great, some are a little scruffy with semi-functional bathrooms, so ask to see a few.  The rooftop terrace is really great for relaxing and looking out at the city.
 * For a little fancier accommodations the Hotel Santa Prisca is a beautiful place with a fountain and lush court yard.
 * The Agua Escondida is right on the Zocalo and has a nice pool. Ask for the cheaper rooms at M$350.

Connect
The restaurant of the Hotel Agua Escondido has free WiFi - ask for the WEP-Key or 'contraseña', in Spanish.

Go next

 * Grutas de Cacahuamilpa National Park (Caves of Cacahuamilpa) is a protected natural area that is home to an infinite systems tunnels and caverns that connect to chambers and underground halls that were once used by the Chontales tribes to worship the gods of the underworld. You can explore the underground river from February through April. 30 km from Taxco. Open daily. Admission charged.
 * Zoofari Safari Park in Teacalco, Amacuzac, Morelos at Kilometer 55 on the Taxco-Cuernavaca highway. 1500 species of animinals, many in a natural setting. Access by automobile only, with taxis available in Amacuzac and Puente de Ixtla. Open daily. Admission MXN$199. Zoofari page in Spanish (March 5, 2019)
 * Iguala is an historic city of 110,000 35 km (52 minutes) south of Iguala. The treaty ending the Mexican War of Independence was signed there in 1821. Iguala is best known for its huge flag. The 19th-century church of San Francisco is worth visiting, and the lake (Laguna de Tuxpan is known for its beauty. You can buy gold in Iguala.
 * Chilpancingo is the capital of the state of Guerrero and its second largest city with 187,000 people. Chilpancingo played important roles in both the War of Independence (1810-1821) and the Mexican Revolution (1910-1921). There are prehispanic ruins in Chilpancingo also.
 * Acapulco was once Mexico's premier resort city. Although it has been eclipsed by newer communities such as Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo and Cancun, Acapulco still offers great beaches, fantastic hotels and restaurants, a rich history, exciting nightlife, and the breathtaking cliff divers.
 * Morelos State offers historical haciendas (many of which are hotels and restaurants open to the public today), colonial monasteries, prehispanic archaeological sites such as Xochicalco, and world-class water parks, in addition to its beautiful capital, Cuernavaca.