--> Stage-One Camping | Tulum County Mexico

Photos of the place and our progress (check back soon for more updates)

Last Updated August 15, 2017  • 

Tent set up with linens and ready for you to rent.

Hermetically Sealed Double Size Mattress with fresh pillows and linens.

Front Screen Door and Reception Window. Temporarary construction screen.

Large tent with mattress and linens on camp 2.

In the tent looking out toward the dormitory palapa (under construction)

Walking up towards the campsites looking straight at the Kitchen Palapa.

One of the foot paths that lead from a campsite to the main areas.

Angle from the South Side of the Garden.

Pork cooked in garlic and onions, meat sourced from right here on the land.

Hierloom Tomatoes about to become a salsa.

Hungarian Hotwax Pepper, grown from the rich virgin soil on the land,

One of the oldest hens in our eclectic flock.

Little Isaiah enjoying a siesta in a hammock.

One of the younger hens before she went broody.

Chicken and Vegetables about to be cooked the traditional mayan way called "PIB."

The initial stucture work of the kitchen palapa.

Post going up in the Kitchen Palapa.

PIB style chicken in mid cook. Buried under rocks and palm leaves.

A species of native heneken plant.

Thick jungle near the cenote cave.

The cave mouth where the cenote is located.

Steel reinforcement is added to every post before we pour the concrete.

Steel reinforcement is added to every post before we pour the concrete.

Steel reinforcement is added to every post before we pour the concrete.

Steel reinforcement is added to every post before we pour the concrete.

Steel reinforcement is added to every post before we pour the concrete.

Post up and roof on the kitchen palapa.

Post up and roof on the kitchen palapa.

Post up and roof on the kitchen palapa.

The entry to Stage-One from the Highway. Cleared and Spread by hand.

The entry to Stage-One from the Highway. Cleared and Spread by hand.

Plumbing for the first bathroom installation.

Floors recieve steel reinforcement grid work before pouring the concrete.

The bathroom prior to pouring the concrete.

J mixing aggregate with the portland cement to make high-strength concrete.

Wooden Walls going up on the Kitchen Palapa.

Little Pigs Grazing on real nutrients and building that marbled meat up.

The little girls from the Mayan village of Chumpon, located about 20 miles away..

The outdoor dish washing area before its move into the kitchen palapa.

A large tent set-up with rigged tarps, a level pad, bed and linens.

The pantry area of the kitchen palapa.

Our personal belief and source of our strength. Don't worry, we believe that people should be able to be free to believe what they want and worship at the atlar of their choice, even if thats no altar at all. Among other things, we teach our children the principals of liberty, tolerance and personal responsibility.

The walls going up on the Kitchen Palapa.

A patch of cleaned land after removing undergrowth.

The hens in their first coop.

Land Cleaning

Land Cleaning

Natural planters housing native plants found locally.

This is "berto" which is spanish slang for his propper name "Dilbert"

Building the roof structure on the Dormitory Palapa.

Little Isaiah taking a moment out for the camera near the swing by the kitchen palapa.

A beautiful bird that lives in a cave near the main area.

Dormitory Palapa Under Construction.

Looking up at the awesome orange Ziricote tree flowers.

The queen bed loft in the dormitory palapa.

Dormitory Palapa Construction.

Working out the center support beam placement to support the loft.

A stunning bright orange Ziricote Tree Flower up close.

Reinforcment Steel added to the footer ditch before the perimeter beam is poured with concrete. (Dormitory Palapa Construction)

Fresh eggs from our eclectic flock.

The sweetest red fruit we have ever tasted in this Jungle.

We will be more than happy to gather you some firewood and help you start a night fire or prep for a BBQ.

Crude water supply solution.

Stage-One Sky through Trees.

Berto in his self made lounge cave.

The entry to Stage-One Camping from Federal Highway 307. We are located at mile marker km212.

Up the road toward the initial build out zone.

Crude Solar/Battery/Inverter House. Currently produces a little under 5 Kwh daily.

Cherry tomatoes fresh on the vines.

Yellow Squash.

A beautiful purple and green plant, The mayans use the salve from the leaf for coughs and inflamation.

The ceiling up in the bathroom.

The kitchen palapa is getting closer to being online.

We are working hard every day to bring Stage-One's initial build out closer to completion!