Enjoy access to beaches, bays and natural pools with complimentary lounge chairs, hammocks, lifejackets and inner tubes. Swim or snorkel in the crystal waters of Xcaret’s underground rivers and stroll through the Tropical Jungle Trail. Visit the House of Whispers and see the Living Museum of Orchids. At the end of the day, dazzle your senses with a musical spectacle of light and color that takes you on a journey through the history of Mexico since pre-Columbian times.
Everywhere you look and go in Xenses, there are things that fool or challenge your senses. There are curved walls where the tile appears to crisscross and rooms where you appear big on one side and small on another. There are rivers of mud to float in and you can fly like a bird on a zip line. This park was very creatively designed and it is a great place to spend time with your family.
Explore the world of adventure at one of Cancun’s most famous parks, Xplor! With a wide variety of activities in store for you, you are guaranteed non-stop fun and adventure with this all-inclusive ticket. Soar through the skies on the highest zipline in Cancun. Drive a vehicle through the jungle, and explore flooded underground caverns on a raft. Dive into a 65-million-year-old stalactite river or splash down into a refreshing cenote as you board a hammock zipline- the first of its kind!
Tulum offers the perfect combination of total relaxation, tranquility and seclusion, yet can fill your day with the many interesting and rich activities in the area.
You will find Tulum about 1 hour drive south of Playa del Carmen and only 25 minutes south of Akumal.
Yes, Tulum may well be one of the most Instagrammed spots in Mexico, with plenty of smoothie stands and yoga retreats, but the Caribbean beach town is so much more.
A cenote is a natural pit, or sinkhole, resulting from the collapse of limestone bedrock that exposes groundwater. The term originated on the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico, where cenotes were commonly used for water supplies by the ancient Maya, and occasionally for sacrificial offerings.
The Yucatán Peninsula alone has an estimated 10,000 cenotes, water-filled sinkholes naturally formed by the collapse of limestone, located across the Yucatán Peninsula, in Mexico.