Cascada Cola de Caballo (Horsetail Falls): Monterrey
“Horsetail Falls", a 25 meter waterfall, is six km up a road leading west off the national highway at the south end of El Cercado. You can park at either the hotel or continue up the rod a few meters to the main entrance to the falls. After parking and paying admission, you can begin the scenic walk (or ride a donkey cart) to the falls. You can walk until cascades (almost one mile) from the entrance or can rent a cart thrown by a horse or mounting to horse. You can acercarte to cascades, the sufficient thing for mojarte with the dew. This it is an excellent place to take photographies from the family, asi that you do not forget your camara. Here you are restaurants, snack bars and store of memories before undertaking the route until cascades.
A little far from this place more are other cascades to a side of the highway and a small villa alpine type to one short wagon distance arrives. This prÃstina area is patrolled by the villagers who simultaneously are in charge to administer the place and to maintain it place clean. An ample parking is available to the entrance.
Tail of Horse: the quota of entrance is around 35 pesos. Victory is located to approximately 25 miles to the Southeastern of the limits of the city of Monterrey on the State highway to City. It looks for by the signaling while crossings by Santiago.
Cascada de las Tres Caidas: Guadalajara
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Fines against Coca-Cola in Mexico upheld
Mexico's federal competition commission has upheld a $15 million fine against Coca-Cola's Mexican subsidiary for anti-competitive practices.
The commission began investigating the company when a complaint was made in 2003 by Raquel Chavez, a Mexican shopkeeper. Ms Chavez claimed that her Coca-Cola supplier refused to sell to her shop when she began to stock a rival brand, Big Cola. The complaint led to the commission finding other similar incidents.
The fines have been imposed on 15 of the distributors and bottlers of Coca-Cola in the region and will be a victory for Ajegroup, the maker
MEXICO: Coke fined by competition authority
Coca-Cola’s Mexican subsidiary and some of its bottlers have been fined US$15m after failing to convince Mexico's competition watchdogs that it had not broken trade laws.
The Federal Competition Commission upheld a fine imposed on Coke and its bottlers for allegedly pressurising small shops into refusing to stock other brands of cola.
The Commission received a complaint from Raquel Chavez in 2003. She accused a Coca-Cola distributor of refusing to sell to her small shop because she had started stocking the rival brand Big Cola.
Big Cola, a Peruvian-based supplier of cheap-end colas, joined the action against Coca-Cola.
Mexican Coke firms fined for strong-arm tactics
Mexico's competition watchdog upheld on Thursday fines totaling almost $15 million against 15 Coca-Cola (KO.N: Quote, Profile, Research) bottlers and distributors for forcing shops to sell only their soft drinks.
The distributors, many owned by Mexico-based Coca-Cola Femsa (KOF.N: Quote, Profile, Research) (KOFL.MX: Quote, Profile, Research), the world's No. 2 Coke bottler, as well as the Coca-Cola Export Corp., owned by Coca-Cola Co. (KO.N: Quote, Profile, Research), were fined about $1 million each for insisting that stores in Mexico only sell Coke brand products and not competitors' drinks.
The Federal Competition Commission said the
In Mexico, Taking Fizz Out of the Cola Giants
The founders of the upstart cola maker Ajegroup know a thing or two about guerrilla marketing.
When Shining Path rebels took to hijacking Coca-Cola Co. trucks in the late 1980s during Peru's civil war, the Ananos family started peddling its own line of soft drinks in recycled beer bottles to meet local demand. Today the company controls more than one-fifth of the cola market in Peru.
Ajegroup is still taking potshots at Coke, but the battle has shifted north to Mexico, where the Peruvians are once again making gains through unorthodox methods. In a
Museo de Monterrey: Monterrey
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Museo Metropolitano de la Ciudad de Monterrey: Monterrey
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Alameda: Monterrey
This is a park for kids and adult. A nice place with a lot of hotels nearby for travellers.
Address :
Avenida Pino Suárez y Washington Poniente
Zona Centro, Monterrey
64000, Mexico
Museo de la Fauna y Ciencias Naturales de Monterrey: Monterrey
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Barrio Antiguo: Monterrey
Walk trought the streets of the Barrio Antiguo (Old District), find the northern arquitecture, combination of colors and old window bars. This is a place full of art gallerys, bars, night clubs, coffe shop store and more. The center of nightlife in Monterrey is definitely Barrio Antiguo, but there is plenty of action spread out over the rest of the city. Theatre, concerts with big name entertainers, discos, small coffee houses, Norteña music shows, salsa clubs, jazz and piano bars, extravagant rodeo shows all combine to provide a selection that should satisfy everybody. Many of the