San Francisco de Campeche is a chocolate box of Spanish treats, where tourHQ guides showcase clifftop fortresses and painted mansions, not to mention some older relics of the great Mayan age.
Search Cities in Mexico
Design, organization, and guiding of multi-day individual tours in Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, El ...
Guide Chauffeur Francophone et anglais, Penynsule de Yucatán et tout le Mexique. Spécialisé en ...
I am a tour guide for Thomas Moore travel, Royal Resorts, for the last 20 years. I was ...
My name is Jeronimo (Jeroen). I offer private day tours and multi day tours to all ...
I'am a Licensed tourguide in history, culture and nature of Mexico since 2008. In ...
Born in Mexico city with european ancestors who came to Mexico during the golden epoque of the ...
MAXIMUM LEVEL OF STUDIES: University Students, Public Administration and Political Science Faculty ...
Welcome to Mexico! I'm thrilled that you've chosen to explore this cherished corner of the world ...
I have a lot of knowledge and experience : 26 years. I like to talk about everything and I ...
Personalized service as the Tour guide for archaeology and nature all over Yucatan peninsula, ...
Hello, I am Mario a tour guide for 8 years, originally from Mexico City but currently living in ...
I am a tour guide that loves to enjoy adventures and always discovering new areas and very thankful ...
I am an official licensed guide since 1987, I´ve been working in the southern part of Mexico: ...
Nestled on the edge of the Mexican Gulf, on the less-trodden side of the Yucatan panhandle, the beautiful town of San Francisco de Campeche is a veritable treasure trove of historic wonders; formed from the painted faces of old Spanish mansions, the uneven cobbled roadways of old colonialism and the crumbling bulwarks of UNESCO fortress after UNESCO fortress.
San Francisco de Campeche tour guides often point first-time visitors straight to the looming bulwarks of the old Spanish bastions here. Since their construction in the 16th and 17th centuries, these formidable walls have kept watch over Campeche’s bustling port districts, and today they offer rolling panoramas of the city’s sun-kissed promenade, with its aging cannons. There is also the striking Puerta del Tierra, with its battle-stained towers, and the hubbub of acclaimed seafood restaurants that now exists between the old, ice-cream coloured colonial homes of the centre.
Of course, there are traces of ancient Maya to be had here, and glimpses of the wild Yucatan, ranging from the lichen-spotted, terraced temples at nearby Ednza, to the vine-clad ruins, endless rainforests and elusive jaguar hideouts of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve just to the west.
Say Goodbye to Travel Stress