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Spring Break Cancun slow....half of hotels still closed from Wilma

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  • Spring Break Cancun slow....half of hotels still closed from Wilma

    Tough break, say students in Cancun
    Hurricane damage undermines party
    By Julie Watson, Associated Press | March 15, 2006

    CANCUN, Mexico -- The sugar-white-sand beaches are back after being swept away by Hurricane Wilma five months ago. But there are no stages for wet T-shirt contests, and MTV won't be hosting its spring break beach party.

    Instead, the first wave of winter-weary college students who converged on Cancun found that construction workers nearly outnumbered revelers this week in Mexico's spring break capital of beer and bikinis.

    With nearly half its hotels still closed, Cancun has plunged down the list of destinations for spring breakers from the United States. The Caribbean resort fell from number two last year to number eight this year for travelers booking trips through CheapTickets.com. Miami was the top destination.

    Tourism officials say they expect about 25,000 visitors in Cancun this season, compared with 40,000 last year. Many spring breakers have moved farther south to the Maya Riviera or to Acapulco, the Pacific playground of the 1950s that has been steadily rising in popularity because of its all-night discos.

    ''Obviously it's not going to be the same this year," said Cancun tourism director Jesus Rossano.

    Many of those who did make the trip found themselves sitting against a backdrop of lumber piles and cement blocks or next to pools lined with brown palms that appeared to have just gotten a buzz cut. Instead of blasting music, the sound of hammers pierced the air.

    ''It's not near as nice as I expected," said MacKenzie Horras, 22, an elementary education student at the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls, Iowa. ''Some of the pools are dirty or don't have water."

    But while some hotels were clearly out of business for some time to come, others were fully functioning beyond their damaged facades. The Oasis hotel, popular with spring breakers, showed few signs of being hit by a major hurricane.

    Everyone, however, agreed Mexico's party resort has slowed down a bit.

    Stephanie Streit, who was sunbathing with Horras on the beach, said her friends who'd come the year before described a much wilder place.

    ''Out of control was the term I heard most used," said Streit, 22, a psychology major at the University of Northern Iowa. ''But it's pretty tame."

    The Mexican government hoped to use spring break as a way to show the world how the country's prime resort had bounced back.

    President Vicente Fox's government poured $19 million into rebuilding the beaches, hiring a Belgian company that dredged sand from the ocean floor and dumped tons of it over rocks and concrete.

    With winds reaching 150 miles per hour, Wilma roared ashore Oct. 21, then stalled over Cancun for nearly 40 hours. It toppled trees, demolished homes, and left much of the city of 700,000 under brown, foul-smelling flood waters.

    Rebuilding continues around the clock, especially in the hotel zone, a 15-mile spit of coast where glamorous resorts line the Caribbean on one side and posh shops and smaller lodges face a lagoon on the other.

    Despite the changes, many students said Wilma did not ruin their vacations.

    ''Looking at the ocean all day is a lot better than staring at a cornfield," said Ben Hansen, a 22-year-old University of Nebraska at Lincoln student.


    http://www.boston.com/news/world/lat...nts_in_cancun/
    "If a Nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.... If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed."
    -- Thomas Jefferson to Col. Yancey, 1816

  • #2
    That's too bad, really. Pobre Mexico.
    "Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed and those who are cold and are not clothed."
    -- Dwight D. Eisenhower

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    • #3
      Maybe this will cause the future spring break crowd to find another place to cut-up. Ft. Lauderdale curtailed the spring break habit and found it really was better off without the resulting damage.

      Comment


      • #4
        Spring Break destinations

        Don't send the kids outside the U.S.??
        Daytona Beach would be better with the serial killer loose?

        "Stuff" happens everywhere and when "girls gone wild" mix with booze, drugs and a thousand miles from mom and dad, then even more "stuff" happens--and it happens everywhere.

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        • #5
          I for one am not sad to see the Spring Break crowd reduced, at least this year. We are headed to Cancun for the first time at the end of the month (just my wife and I) and were a little worried that we would be over run with crowds of drunk kids, but it looks like the odds of that are cut in half. I like to party and have fun just as much as the next person, but I have experience at it and know my limits. Most kids don't, and it can make it unpleasant for everyone around them. From what I have read on Tripadvisor, the hotel we picked is not a spring break hot spot, but we may end up with more than usual becasue of the shortage of open resorts. Either way, we will have a great time and will work with it.

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          • #6
            First, let me welcome Jim (W.) to the site.
            As far as spring break goes, some of the kids are wonderful and some are rowdy.
            The major concern is if they are staying at the same place you are and they are not curtailed. I've been there during spring break and only had minor annoyances with the breakers. I've actually found some of them to be a bit humorous at times.

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            • #7
              We hardly saw any spring breakers during our trip (and none at all at the Royals) but the Cancun airport was packed on the way home! (We just got home today.) The average wait to get checked in and to the gate was about two hours!

              Sharon

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              • #8
                Just got back from week 11. Saw plenty of spring breakers but not nearly as many as in previous years. Senor Frogs reopened the day we got into town.

                On the plus side, none of the clubs had long lines during the week so the kids who did go down did not have to stand around for two hours to get into Coco Bongo etc.

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