San Miguel de Allende, page 2: Karacadir
One very interesting feature of San Miguel de Allende, for both Kelly
and me, is just barely getting started. Andy Watson, British, and Dorothy
Gerhart, American, have lived and traveled extensively outside the U.S.
. They met in Taxco some twenty years ago, and always knew that they
wanted to return to Mexico to live. Dorothy is bilingual and Andy does
pretty well in Spanish. Now they have purchased some fifteen acres of
land about a twenty-minute drive from the edge of the city. It is rugged,
rocky land, on a ridge with views overlooking San Miguel to the east.
Here they are beginning a center for sustainable living called Karacadir.

Andy Watson and Dorothy Gerhart at Karacadir,
a center for sustainable development
Kelly has a website, greenhomebuilding.com,
which discusses all aspects and forms of sustainable architecture, and
before our trip Andy and Dorothy had emailed him. When Kelly told them
we would soon be in Mexico, they were most welcoming. Indeed, if it
hadn't been for wanting to connect with them, we might have skipped
San Miguel. We hadn't much liked it when we were there a couple of times
before. I liked it better this time, and felt that I got more to its
heart.
Andy and Dorothy took us out to their land. Their first three-week
earthbag building workshop had just ended, and they were exhilarated
from the empowering effect it had had on the students, who were both
foreign and Mexican. In particular, there had been three young Mexican
single mothers, who had been greatly affected by the event. Andy and
Dorothy doubted that the women would actually build houses as a result
of the workshop, but thought they would contribute to their communities
is other ways -- perhaps a wall, or a shift in attitude.
We talked long into one night with Andy and Dorothy. They have lots
of visions and plans, and a realistic awareness of the challenges involved.
Luckily, they both like challenges! It will be fun to see what develops
at Karacadir.

A pleasant walkway
As for San Miguel, I gradually came to see it in a new light. I can
imagine spending time there again. Particularly if I were going without
Kelly for some reason, perhaps to take an intensive language course,
it would be an easier place to be than one with only a few foreigners.
No longer just another pretty little Mexican city, San Miguel de Allende
has become a kind of portal between Mexico and the rest of the world.
It is the place where many Americans and other foreigners get their
first taste of Mexico. Institutions such as the Allende Institute and
the Biblioteca Publica (Public Library) have the flavor of being a cultural
blend. Beyond the unpleasant stereotypes of pretentious and/or dissolute
foreigners lies a whole complex world, a place where alternative builders,
midwives, artists, and others - both Mexican and foreign - blend creativity
in a variety of exciting projects.
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