Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
I recently returned from perhaps the best vacation of my life! Eight days on the Mayan Riviera, where some friends and I stayed at the Riu Palace Mexico, a five-star resort south of Cancun/Cozumel. I highly recommend a trip there to all of you. The all-inclusive package is a "best buy," for sure. The cuisines (yes, several), the clear blue-green ocean, the swim-up bar, the massage and spa are just a few of many highlights I have taken home with me. Far and away, though, the biggest, most memorable highlight was swimming with the dolphins. It’s something I’ve long wanted to do and so could not pass up the opportunity when it came. Dolphins live up to 40 years in captivity (much less in the wild, because of predators). The sanctuary I visited houses 18 dolphins (including one or two pregnant females). Several vans full of visitors arrived at the appointed hour (the first scheduled for the day) and, after a brief orientation, were fitted with life jackets and divided into groups of about six or so. There were about six such groups, each with its own dolphin and trainer. The dolphins’ habitat is ocean water (sans current and waves--except for what these mammals stirred). They work their fins off; no wonder there are at least two other groups of dolphins waiting their turn in the cycle. Extremely intelligent, sweet, friendly, playful and willing to please their audience, these social mammals entertained us for 45 minutes with all sorts of tricks and maneuvers. The high point, though, was the feel of a snout pushing me (from the bottom of the right foot) straight across the water at rapid speed, with torso on high! "Exhilarating" doesn’t come close to describing this experience. That I am a serious animal lover is no secret. While I won’t claim any favorite species or breed, I must confess that Flipper has won a special place in my heart. I can’t wait to ride with him again. Pat Kossmann
Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Eight decades after the end of World War II, Father George Zabelka exists as a symbol of conscience, one who can communicate the message of Gospel nonviolence.
Ryan Di CorpoAugust 04, 2025
At a Mass for the Jubilee of Youth outside Rome, Pope Leo exhorted over a million young people to be "seeds of hope" and a "sign that a different world is possible."
Gerard O’ConnellAugust 03, 2025
Perhaps it is the hard-won wisdom that comes with age, but the Catholic rituals and practices I once scorned are the same rituals and practices that now usher me into God's presence, time and time again.
Maribeth BoeltsAugust 01, 2025
"Only through patient and inclusive dialogue" can "a just and lasting conflict resolution can be achieved" in the long-running conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, said the Holy See's permanent observer to the United Nations.