Colorful Coast

At a family-friendly resort in Puerto Vallarta, kids may love the lazy rivers and sea turtles, as their parents enjoy their outdoor spa treatments by the sea.

Colorful Coast

Smoked Marlin

Summer and fall are Velas Vallarta's busiest seasons — and not just for tourists. Located on Puerto Vallarta's Marina Vallarta, the all-inclusive resort is visited annually by 10,000 sea turtles, who migrate to lay eggs on the beach. Velas quietly collects and nurses the babies, and offers guests a chance to visit the nursery as they're hatching.


Nature touches every aspect of the Velas Vallarta experience. In fact, only in the confines of your room are you ever truly inside. The entrance to the resort, with three-story vaulted ceilings, leads to a courtyard in the middle of the property. A sense of escape overwhelms as hallways are created by palm trees and manicured shrubbery. Here, you're sure to cross paths with a peacock (or three). The winding “halls" soon lead to the weaving stream of a lazy river that connects three pools, one of which overlooks the beach, the Banderas Bay and, in the close distance, the Sierra Madre Mountains.

At breakfast, Velas serves a green juice freshly squeezed from celery, spinach, parsley and pineapple. It's made in batches in the morning — but is also available upon request in the afternoon. Want an insider tip? Add a splash of tequila and you have a guilt-free, Velas-inspired margarita, best enjoyed poolside, naturally.

Puerto Vallarta averages temps of 85 degrees year-round, and very little rain — so even the spa subscribes to the unofficial Velas mantra, “Why be inside when the sun is shining outside?" Massages are given at the tip of a peninsula jutting into the bay, and as water crashes on nearby rocks, you feel like you're on a vacation from your vacation.

Just across the bay, the downtown streets of Puerta Vallarta are bustling, filled with the smells of street food and the sights of colorful wares pedaled by local artisans. But guests need not leave the resort for cultural experiences; family activities include the chance to create one's own arte en popotillo, an ancient art form using dyed straw adhered to a layer of beeswax, then applied to paper.

You might also dine in any one of several on-property restaurants, all featuring live mariachi music nightly. In addition to a fun, kid-friendly, not-necessarily-Mexican room-service menu available 24/7 — Cajun-style pizza with shrimp and sausage, anyone? — there's the fusion cuisine at Andrea, and the fresh seafood at the nightlife-savvy Alejandra.

And for dining with a view, you can't beat the open-air La Ribera. Offering charcoal-grilled meats and delicious traditional sides a la mashed potatoes, this white-tablecloth steakhouse just might also be the ideal vantage point for watching the return of the momma sea turtles, swimming back to the beach to retrieve their newborns.

Click here for information on the "Let's Be Thankful" campaign for healthcare workers.

Food+Travel

Composer Lera Auerbach (photo by Raniero Tazzi)

IN A RECENT televised interview with late-night talk show host Stephen Colbert, Australian singer/songwriter Nick Cave eloquently described music as “one of the last legitimate opportunities we have to experience transcendence.” It was a surprisingly deep statement for a network comedy show, but anyone who has attended a loud, sweaty rock concert, or ballet performance with a live orchestra, knows what Cave is talking about.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment

'Is that how you treat your house guest'

ARTIST KAIMA MARIE’S solo exhibit For the record (which opens today at Art Is Bond) invites the viewer into a multiverse of beloved Houston landmarks, presented in dizzying Cubist perspectives. There are ornate interior spaces filled with paintings, books and records — all stuff we use to document and preserve personal, family and collective histories; and human figures, including members of Marie’s family, whose presence adds yet another quizzical layer to these already densely packed works. This isn’t art you look at for 15-30 seconds before moving on to the next piece; there’s a real pleasure in being pulled into these large-scale photo collages, which Marie describes as “puzzles without a reference image.”

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment