Enjoying the sand outside a cabaña in Tulum.The air-conditioned sand of the Mayan Riviera. Really! You won't burn your feet at all!Outside our hotel in Cancun - ready to kick off the tour.A beach in Cancun.The white sand beach of TulumComing back from SCUBA diving classSunrise in TulumTulum ruins.A view of the Gran Cenote near Tulum.Diving in the Gran Cenote.At 42 metres, the Great Pyramid of Cobá is the tallest Mayan structure on the Yucatan peninsulaValladolid at dusk.Colourful Valladolid.Zací cenote right in the heart of Valladolid.Mumondzonot cenote - a breathtaking find with the help of our keen local guide.Izamal's giant monastary was built atop the riuns of Popul-Chac from 1533 to 1561.Taxi anyone? Ride in style in Izamal - then again, you can walk to anywhere that you'd want to go too.The palace of Nachi Cocom in the town of Sotuta. He was the last great ruler of the Cocom Maya lineage.Kabáh just one of more than a dozen Mayan sites in this area, the Ruta Puuc.The church in Santa Elena. Churches are generally quite massive in this area, probably because of the abundance of building materials that the Spanish found in the form of Mayan temples.Puuc region carvings.The main church in Ticul.Mayan nas in Ticul. These are traditional Mayan homes and can be seen in almost every town. Not too far away is a modern internet cafe.Getting lost inside Mérida's massive market. You can find many different exotic foods and crafts in here.Looking out form the archways of the Palacio de Gobierno at the main square, the Plaza Mayor.Colonial architecture in Merida.Mérida's cathedral.Buying hamacas in MeridaInside the Palacio de Gobierno, Fernando Castro Pacheco's murals portray a symbolic history of the Maya and their interaction with the Spanish.