Yelapa, Mexico is owned by locals.

It’s an exotic destination that proudly remains untouched.

Yelapa was initially settled by four families who came down the mountain from the village of Chacala and started a life of fishing and agriculture. The town name is said to be an old Native American one meaning “where two rivers meet the sea.” About 1,500 Mexicans live is this little town as well as a growing number of foreigners. The four aboriginal families still live here and almost everyone is related.

Yelapa is a unique community—”one of the few remaining on Earth where the original inhabitants still reside on, own, and control their own land.” As a comunidad indigena, Yelapa is a land grant or reservation legally set aside and protected for its indigenous people. The land is held collectively by the community. Outsiders may not buy any land, but they may and some do lease it longterm.

The high mountains behind Yelapa have not been crossed by roads, so the only ways to get here are to come by boat from a nearby town, to walk or ride a horse or mule on the long, rocky coastal route, or to come down on the trail/dirt road from Chacala. Taxi boat please!

Modern conveniences are recent. Electricity and phones arrived in 2001. Before then, there were only lamps or flashlights and one local pay phone. Water is brought to the village from the rivers. There is a central water system but it doesn’t reach all, so many still manage their own water lines.

All of this means that the most basic tasks of living – walking, cleaning, cooking, carrying, and building, and certainly bringing needed items in – can quickly acquire new meaning and importance.

– Source: The Yelapa History Project

 
 

We traveled here with our family as a way to scout this location for you all, and we fell in love with Yelapa.

We felt extremely safe, and touched by the uniqueness and kindness of this land and its people.

We can’t wait to return with you! 💛


Our special week also happens to coincide with the village’s Virgen de Guadalupe festival. The rest of Mexico celebrates this in December, but Yelapa has its own local celebration in May. It is a very momentous and sacred time.

 
 

Our Lady of Guadalupe refers to the specific apparition of the Virgin Mary that an Aztec man named Juan Diego experienced in the 16th century in what is now Mexico City. She is a potent symbol in Latin American Catholicism and of Mexican identity.

This Marian apparition is described as a “young native woman” with black hair, high cheekbones, and darkened skin – which is why the Virgin Guadalupe is sometimes referred to as “la virgen morena” (the brown/brunette virgin).

She appeared to Juan Diego four times, speaking his native language, and performing miracles. The most famous of the miracles are leading Juan to a snowy hilltop to gather fresh roses to bring as proof to the regional bishop, and the colored image that appeared on the inside of Juan’s cactus-fiber woven tilma when he released the roses gathered in it before the bishop, and which (even though these garments normally don’t last more than a decade) still rests in the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City 500 years later.

There will be a lot going on in Yelapa as they celebrate the Virgen de Guadalupe in May. We hope to enjoy some of the fiesta, and we will certainly be calling Our Lady in to aid us all in the work we’re doing, too. ✨


 So send us an email if you want to save your spot!


At… 👇