Sexy Jenny visiting at Antiques Museum Ciudad del Carmen
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TravelTranscript
00:00The city of El Carmen is also known for having many oil fields.
00:09Inside we have more than 100 oil plants.
00:13Obviously, what we have here is a model so you can see how they are.
00:30We continue our tour and this is the last one for today.
00:58We are in the Victorian Museum and we are here with Maria Eugenia.
01:01How are you?
01:02Nice to meet you.
01:03Good, thank you.
01:04We surprised you.
01:05It's like the last tour of the night.
01:06That's right.
01:07It's very quiet, isn't it?
01:08Yes, very quiet.
01:09Very quiet.
01:10Well, so as not to make you go through all the years known to have of the history of
01:15this place, which is a lot, we are going to do the five points, do you think?
01:18Yes.
01:19And then we go inside to see artifacts from many years that you will like very much.
01:23Let's see, tell me.
01:24We started, the city of El Carmen had five periods of production.
01:27The first period of production was the stick of ink with caoba wood, which was from 1856
01:33to 1890.
01:34The second period was the gum from 1990 to 1945.
01:41That would be the sapote, right?
01:43No, the gum.
01:44The gum.
01:45Doesn't the sapote tree come from there?
01:47Yes, from the sapote fruit tree, that's right.
01:49I know it.
01:50And the third period was the green coconut from 1910 to 1950.
01:56And the fourth period, here was a confusion because they put the two periods and it is
02:00a separate period and the other part because the shrimp is from 1910 to 1970.
02:06And the oil is the fifth period, which is from 1971 to the present because the oil has not
02:13run out.
02:14Yes, that's why we just showed you at the entrance.
02:17Do you think that oil is one of the largest sources of income for this city?
02:23Well, it is 50-50% because it affected the shrimp fishing a lot.
02:34It affected our fishermen a lot because when they came and installed the platforms, they
02:41threw a receipt.
02:42That receipt makes our fishing, which was close here in our springs, which is all over
02:49the island, is surrounded by our sea.
02:52Well, the fish was close and unfortunately, when Pemez arrived, he had to withdraw a little,
03:00move away our shrimp, our fish, out to the sea.
03:06So the fishermen now have to invest more gasoline to go out to the sea to grab the
03:11product.
03:12Still to this day?
03:13Yes, to this day.
03:14Of course, we have an advantage that the shrimp is eaten fresh, the fish is eaten
03:18fresh because they go fishing every day, but it is the problem that the fishermen have,
03:22that they have to fight, because sometimes bad weather does not let us work either.
03:26We continue to our exhibition room.
03:28Well, let's go in.
03:29Oh, how beautiful!
03:30The first inhabitants of our island were the Chontales.
03:34These are relics of original archaeological pieces of our Chontales, which are archaeological
03:43pieces.
03:44How many years?
03:46Well, they come from about 900 years, because our first ancestors were 900 years old,
03:52they were the first inhabitants of the island.
03:54Our culture comes, which are the Mayans, the Oltecas, the Mexicas, and we, we were
03:59touched by the Chontales.
04:01You know that if you had this in the United States, there would be two guards, glass
04:05toast.
04:06Here they are like this, 900 years, my God.
04:09Yes, 900 years.
04:10This is our exhibition room, it is from the Chontales, they are all their relics, stones
04:16that they grabbed natural and polished them to give them shape.
04:20Their spears, right?
04:21Their spears, exactly.
04:22And their knives.
04:23The knives.
04:24They used the spear a lot, which already gives them perfection, because they are already
04:30sharper.
04:31Because they hunted rabbit and deer, they hunted the men, the men also hunted
04:39the crocodile and the lizard.
04:42They killed a crocodile with that spear.
04:45Well, with the biggest one, right?
04:47With the biggest one.
04:48And these are obsidian stones that were exchanged between European ships, or from
04:56Paraguay, they came in exchange, those stones came, because they also worked, especially
05:00obsidian.
05:01There we have what are the metals.
05:03Incredible, expensive stones on top for today.
05:06The metal, which also sown corn, and they themselves made their own food, the dough.
05:14There we have what is the head of an ant, it is also original.
05:21The head of an ant.
05:23Made of stone.
05:24It is the head of a stone.
05:27And these are five pieces, three here and two here, which are made of clay, they are
05:32especially made of clay.
05:34They made it because it was the trade.
05:37We have a head of the sun god.
05:40What would the sun god be?
05:42Ceramics, which are made of clay, they made masks and dishes and those jars.
05:51What would the sun god be?
05:53The sun god is this one.
05:55For the Mayans, it was important for them because they did the rites to bring the
06:03sun god.
06:04It is in Chichen Itza?
06:06Exactly.
06:07But it has a name, right?
06:09Yes, there is his name.
06:11The face of the sun god, the shape of the head, classic Mayan.
06:16Kinich Awa.
06:17Kinich Awa.
06:18Kinich Awa.
06:19Very good.
06:20These are the ceramics, these are made of clay.
06:23These dishes are called tripido because they have three legs so that the dishes do not
06:27go out of level.
06:29These are the dishes that they consumed for their domestic food.
06:33They ate and drank their jars.
06:35To this day, they continue to find remains in caves in Tulum.
06:40Look, in cenotes of clay jars.
06:43The most important material that the women used was the metate and the molcajete.
06:48The molcajete was a stone where they cultivated the tomato, the onion and all that.
06:53They planted everything.
06:54The chilies and everything.
06:55And the women continued with the rhythm of the tortillas, right?
06:58Because they planted corn.
06:59The tortilla is the oldest thing in food.
07:02This is a scene.
07:05They are also volcanic stones.
07:08They used this scene to give these real sizes, which are the molcajetes.
07:15Impressive.
07:16And this is a scene that they brought.
07:19It came out of the ranch here in Puerto Rico.
07:24And they brought it.
07:26They found it in the ranch.
07:28Yes, in a ranch and they brought it here.
07:30How beautiful.
07:31And they donated it.
07:32And it is an emperor with his head, his chair, his cane, his head, his penis.
07:38We believe that it marches, right?
07:40Exactly.
07:41The codices have codices because it is a descendant of the Mayans.
07:45We already know that the Mayans are the main ones of the codices.
07:49The codices around tell us that it is the story of the character.
07:54And also the relics, which are small, are what they do for their trade.
08:00A lot of history.
08:02A lot of history, guys.
08:03We are here in the second part.
08:05The pirates.
08:06They arrived in the year 1573, commanded by Captain William Lampierre.
08:11This is our cow wood.
08:14They took care of the cow wood.
08:16These are cast iron cannons.
08:21Most of the cannons that were found here on the island were found in the houses that began to be built in the land.
08:28And they appeared.
08:29Yes, the buried ones appeared.
08:32That's why they look more conservative.
08:36And the base is very important because the base of wood is pure cow wood.
08:41They did it, the bases did it.
08:43The pirates themselves did it.
08:45But this one is made recently, right?
08:47No, it's from their time.
08:50Are the two original?
08:51Yes, they are original.
08:52That's why they say that the cow wood is the best wood, right?
08:55Exactly.
08:56We also have their route, which was our island, which is the tip of San Julián, Juariche and El Prisidio,
09:05which we are here right now, in the center.
09:08All these islands, they went to get what was the treasure, which was gold coins, silver coins, centenarians.
09:18And our island was surrounded by the riches that were in that time,
09:22it was the cow wood, the ink stick and our boys.
09:25They fought for wood, I can't believe it.
09:27That shouldn't be like that.
09:29It was like gold.
09:30Of course, because they built it from that.
09:32Wood, exactly.
09:34Today, cow wood is worth like gold, I tell you.
09:36The Spaniards come to visit and find the riches of our island, they leave,
09:41but they return on July 16, 1917 and face the two sides.
09:46Unfortunately, the pirates leave, the Spaniards take over our island.
09:51The Spaniards were worse than the pirates.
09:53Yes, unfortunately, yes, because they entered our island,
09:57they made a port to bring products from other places, from other foreigners.
10:03Wine, cheese, fabrics, etc.
10:06But on this side, they entered to loot what was the wealth of our island,
10:11which was the ink stick, the cow wood and our gum.
10:14There we have the Spaniards.