
SAN BARTOLO MORELOS, Mexico (AP) — For 32 years, Cruz Monroy has walked the streets of a small town on the fringes of Mexico's capital with a tower of small cages filled with a rainbow of birds.
The melodies of red cardinals, green and blue parakeets and multicolored finches fill the days of “pajareros,” or street bird vendors, like him.
The act of selling birds in stacks of cages – sometimes far taller than the men who carry them – goes back generations. They've long been a fixture in Mexican markets, and are among 1.5 million street vendors that work on the streets of Mexico.
“Hearing their songs, it brings people joy,” Monroy said, the sounds of dozens of birdsongs echoing over him from his home in his small town outside Mexico's capital, where he cares for and raises the birds. “This is our tradition, my father was also a bird-seller.”
During the Catholic holiday of Palm Sunday, hundreds of pajareros from across the country flock to Mexico City and decorate 10-foot-tall stacks of cages, adorning them with flowers bright flowers, tinsel and images of the Virgin of Guadalupe, Mexico’s patron saint.
They walk miles through the streets of the capital with their birds and their families to the city's iconic basilica.
But pajareros have slowly disappeared from the streets in recent years in the face of mounting restrictions by authorities and sharp criticisms by animal rights groups, who call the practice an act of animal abuse and trafficking.
Monroy and others say they don't capture birds like parrots and others prohibited by Mexican authorities – which say tropical species are “wild birds, not pets” – often breed the birds they own themselves and take good care of their animals. Despite that, Monroy said in his family, the tradition is dying out.
In the face of harassment by authorities and mounting criticisms, he said he wants his own sons to find more stable work.
"Because of the restrictions, harassment by certain authorities, many friends have left selling birds behind," Monroy said. “For my children, it's not stable work anymore. We have to look for other alternatives.”
latest_posts
- 1
NASA's Voyager 1 set to achieve historic distance from Earth - 2
Blue Origin safely launches wheelchair user to space and back - 3
Figure out How to Score Huge with Open Record Rewards - 4
Figure out How to Recognize Early Indications of Depressions - 5
As her kidneys fail and time runs short, this activist fights to decriminalize euthanasia in Mexico
Vote in favor of your Favored kind of craftsmanship
7 Peculiar Ways Of starting Your Imagination: Motivation Has Never Been This Good times
DEA seizes 1.7 million counterfeit fentanyl pills in Colorado storage unit
Everyone knows F1 is for the girls. I wandered into the Las Vegas desert to find out why.
Top 10 Books That Will Have an impact on Your Viewpoint
Find the Advantages of Innovative Leisure activities: Supporting Creative mind and Self-Articulation
Purchases of iPhone 17 Pro soar across Gaza amid 'limited' humanitarian aid
Polls open in tense Uganda election amid widespread delays
Mom finds out she has cancer after noticing something was off while breastfeeding













