Discover the best top things to do in Valladolid, Mexico including Portal Maya Day Tours, MexiGo Tours, Casa de los Venados, Cenote Xux Ha, Xkopek Parque Apicola, Museo de Ropa Etnica de Mexico - Murem, Cenote Zaci, Hacienda San Lorenzo Oxman, Free Walking Tour Valladolid, Cenote Xkeken.
Restaurants in Valladolid
5.0 based on 51 reviews
Tours and car rentals in the Valladolid area. Portal Maya has a solution for all tourist transportation needs in the the central Yucatan of Mexico. Services include: Airport transfer to and from the international airports of Cancun, Merida,Chetumal and Kaua (Chichen Itza International Airport). Van (capacity of 14 persons) and auto rentals with or without driver. Custom archaeological tours, nature tours and cultural tours. We will help you design the right tour for you.
5.0 based on 384 reviews
We bring you in small groups to the jewels surrounding the colonial city of Valladolid: RIO LAGARTOS, EK BALAM, LAS COLORADAS, CHICHEN ITZA, REMOTE CENOTES, IZAMAL, COBA, PUNTA LAGUNA Monkey Reserve. As an official tour operator, we can also provide TRANSPORT from and to the AIRPORT of Cancun or Merida or we can do PRIVATE, custom made tours or circuits. Besides renting bikes, we also offer guided BIKETOURS to see real Mayan people. Go with MexiGo Tours, discover Yucatan and enjoy its beauty. Located behind the church of the center of Valladolid
5.0 based on 1,054 reviews
Instead of group tours, they are conducting private tours with your own group of cohorts. What a fascinating and fabulous place to visit and to make a donation to a very worthy cause. The owners have opened their private home and private collection of Mexican art to anybody who wants to visit and only ask for a modest donation that goes towards local charities. It is impossible to absorb everything and only one visit as there is so much of interest to look at. A big shout out to the owners for their vision and generosity.
5.0 based on 22 reviews
My tour guide took me there. I loved it. Clean, no-one really there, easy access from the road and a short hike to the entry, easy steps all the way down, a small intimate cenote, run by a local Mayan family. Quite picturesque also and a small opening above of course. Well worth seeking out and then checking out.
5.0 based on 188 reviews
Xkopek, a natural area, is located just 10 blocks south of the historic center of Valladolid, offers experiences, products and services that arouse the visitors interest in the fascinating world of bees. The Mysticism of a natural Rejoyada immerses visitors in the culture and tradition of the people of the Mayab. Store honey, Mayan cuisine, apiculture tour, museum, farm, camping area... Daily Bee tour at 10 am.
After a morning at Chichen Itza, I took this one-hour tour in the afternoon. Gerardo was a fantastic English-speaking guide. He talked about the plants and trees, the birds, the dry cenote and its bees, the roles these all played in traditional Mayan culture... We saw bees in the dry cenote and in the more usual boxes. Then we finished with a honey tasting and learning about the various medicinal things created by the bees. The medicines and honeys are all sold there too. Don't forget lots of bug spray, as the mosquitoes are voracious in the cenote. A phenomenal education!!
5.0 based on 85 reviews
In today's world of evolving traditions and cultural fusion, Mexico's ethnic clothing is much admired for what it tells us about this fascinating country and its diverse communities. Situated in the center of Valladolid, the Museo de Ropa Étnica de México--MUREM--is a nonprofit organization that connects us with the rich and varied cultures of Mexico through the indigenous, traditional, and contemporary ethnic costumes on view.
It is a wonderful small museum and represents traditional costumes of different parts of Mexico. Not all costumes original, there are some modern replicas in synthetic materials. For the present time there are no name boards with descriptions. But Marti is a very competent guide! You can get a lot information about costumes and traditions of each part of Mexico. We like this tour and we had a good time.
4.5 based on 932 reviews
Underwater cavern filled with a beautiful blue pool.
Visited twice --- nice Cenote and 30 pesos entrance fee or you can enjoy a meal at the restaurant associated with the property and enter that way -- life jackets and rope safety lines if you want those, and an awesome water stream that feeds into the Cenote with water pumped from their -- very nice place to enjoy an afternoon.
4.5 based on 280 reviews
Beautiful town hacienda from 1746. Marvel at the beautiful blue cenote waters is excellent for swimming and relaxing by the songs of birds and their beautiful surroundings. We service restaurant and bar where you can meet some of the local cuisine at very reasonable prices. If you have kids do not think, because we have pool and palapas just next to the cenote where we sure will spend a very pleasant day.
My husband and I visited the Oxman Cenote in Feb. 2020 as part of a day tour that also included Chichen Itza, a Mayan cultural center and the village of Valladolid. This was one of the coolest tours we have been on, and we would love to bring our kids back and do it again! The Oxman Cenote was definitely a highlight. It was unlike anything we had ever seen before, and was incredibly beautiful and fascinating, and a must-see for visitors to the Yucatan peninsula, especially if you come as far as Chichen Itza. We were staying in Playa del Carmen, so it made for a long day, but was so worth it, and we would do it again in a heartbeat! The hacienda is an unexpected little oasis set back off the beaten path and through the jungle, but not too far from Chichen Itza, and DEFINITELY worth the trip. The hacienda as a whole was both very charming and very clean, and had all the needed amenities—bathrooms, changing rooms, food & drinks, and even a beautiful swimming pool. The cenote itself is deep down in the ground, and you can get an awesome view of it from above before descending down the steps on the inside. (Pictures don’t do it justice.) Once down inside the cenote, you feel like you’re in some kind of jungle adventure movie, with the damp stony walls, the deep blue-green water and the jungle vines hanging down everywhere. Although there were several people there, it didn’t feel crowded at all. There are free life jackets to use (recommended) of all sizes, and there were plenty available. You can enter the water either from steps that go right down to the water, or be more adventurous and use the awesome jungle rope swing (recommended!) and swing out from a platform over the water and let go. (It kind of makes you feel like Tarzan!) The water is a little on the cool side, but definitely refreshing—especially after a hot morning at Chichen Itza. It was all absolutely perfect, until we had a little mishap. But read on…it all ended better than we could’ve hoped for! I jumped in first, from the rope swing, while my husband took a video of me. Then he jumped in from the rope swing, with my iPhone in a waterproof phone pouch, with the strap wrapped around his wrist and clutching the pouch the best he could in his hand (not recommended!). When he hit the water, the impact was hard enough that it broke the pouch off the strap, knocked the pouch out of his hand, and what we thought was a floating pouch sank down, down, down, complete with all the pictures from our whole Mexico trip and also my heart (this happened one day before we came home). And ironically, my photo cloud backup had not been working right since we had come to Mexico, so none of those pictures were backed up. I’m not sure why we didn’t think through that whole scenario before jumping into a 260 foot deep body of water, but I think we were too excited about how cool the place was and wanting to capture it all on camera. (We recommend you do that from the side, not from the rope swing!) We borrowed a snorkel mask from someone, frantically searching for the phone and hoping that maybe it would float up like it was supposed to, but with no luck. Our guide and the workers at the cenote were sympathetic and all tried their best to help us, but without scuba gear, the water was too deep to go down and search, and the phone didn’t turn up. Unfortunately we spent the rest of our time there searching and trying to figure out what to do, so we didn’t get to enjoy the rest of the hacienda like we would have liked to do (another reason to go back!). Finally it was time for our tour to leave, so all we could do was leave our contact info, in case by some miracle my phone showed up, and we were given the cenote owner’s phone number and email address. The next day on our way to the airport, we called and spoke to Juan Pablo, the owner, to see if by chance it had turned up, but still nothing. He asked me to email him when I got home, so I did. He told me they send divers down once a month to clean out the cenote, and that he would have them look for my phone the next time they did. But with as big as the cenote was, and with as much as things settle in the fine sediment down that deep, and with a waterproof pouch that first of all wasn’t rated for that deep, and second, definitely wasn’t rated for underwater protection for that long, we knew it was a long shot. About three weeks after we returned home from Mexico, we got the happy news that one of the divers cleaning out the cenote had found my phone. My phone was passcode protected, but he charged it to see if it would still even turn on, and it did. The phone seemed to be in perfect condition, although the pouch was completely destroyed. They found it at about 200 feet deep, so all we can figure is that the pressure that deep must have been so much that it basically vacuum packed my phone in the pouch—destroying the pouch, but protecting my phone from the water for three weeks. But even more remarkable than my phone being found and in perfect condition was the fact that everyone was so honest about it and intent on returning it to me. Juan Pablo paid about $60 (US) up front to send my phone via Intl. FedEx Express from Mexico to the US, even though he didn’t know me and had no way to know if I would really reimburse him. Then he sent me a picture of the FedEx package with its labels (addressed to me, and with the cenote’s return address) and the tracking number and shipping receipt. Within about four days of that, I had my phone back, miraculously in perfect condition, and complete with all the pictures from our Mexico trip! (Told you it had a happy ending! And of course I reimbursed him, with some extra as a thank you.) So not only was the cenote itself absolutely incredible and one of the coolest places we have ever been, but also Juan Pablo, the owner, is honest, kind, helpful, and has given us some of the best customer service of anywhere we’ve been. He and his staff definitely went above and beyond in helping us with a mishap that was entirely our own fault, and thanks to them, our story had a very happy ending, and now we have our Mexico trip photos to enjoy for years to come so we can remember all our great adventures! The Oxman Cenote is definitely worth checking out with the whole family (those who aren’t adventurous enough to get in the cenote water can just enjoy some lunch or the beautiful pool there!) Go visit this cenote, not just because it is an amazing place, but also to support the awesome locals that own and work there. They have earned our trust and loyalty, and we hope it’s not too long before we can return with our kids to show them this unique hidden gem!
4.5 based on 34 reviews
We are local guides, we promote the culture of the city of Valladolid with diferents experiences, we show the real town and the real life of the yucatecan people. We also have our private guide services in the city.
4.5 based on 1,024 reviews
The stalactites and rock formations make this cenote really special. It is entirely covered apart from a small natural window in the cave ceiling that lets in a shaft of sunlight. It wasn't too busy when we arrived around 12:30 though we may just have been lucky as it is get a little busier as we were leaving. Well worth visiting - and the entrance fee allows you access to the smaller Sumaya cenote across the road. There are a lot of souvenir shops by the entrance and people trying to sell you a photo of yourself with parrots/lizards, which made the whole thing seem very commercialised and a bit unpleasant. Push on past this and just enjoy the beauty of the cenotes.
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