The Travel-Ready Rollator: How the VOCIC PackGo Z35 Redefines Senior Mobility
For many seniors and travelers with limited mobility, the decision to bring a rollator on a trip is often a tug-of-war between nec...
Seniorcenters.com is a free resource helping seniors and senior centers across America. Learn about our editorial processes.
You’re in for a treat. Oaxaca isn’t just a destination—it’s a sensory unspooling of color, flavor, history, and architectural wonder. If you take your time, you’ll discover places that make your heart skip a beat, plates that stay with you long after you’ve gone, and monasteries whose silence is louder than any sermon. This guide unfolds the markets, the moles, and the monasteries—at a pace that lets you soak it in deeply. Perfect for older adults who prefer meaningful discovery over rushing.
Every corner smells of fresh cilantro, sizzling corn, and ripe mangoes. Central de Abastos is Oaxaca’s largest market—humble, vast, unfiltered. Walk through endless stalls of chile, fruit so bright it hurts your eyes, pig heads, moles (both the ingredient and the sauce), and kids darting between woven baskets piled high. It’s noisy. It’s messy. It belongs to the locals.
For those who move slowly, linger at the corners where old women sell fresh cheeses wrapped in corn husks, or watch artisans dye wool—earthy reds, cobalt blues packing pigment in their hands. Nothing staged. It’s real.
This is where your taste buds wake up—grills ignite, chapulines (grasshoppers) crunch, and “comida corrida” lunches offer everything from tlayudas to sopa de guías (a squash shoot soup beloved here). Around the food stalls, artisans display vibrant textiles, colorful alebrijes, shining pottery.
Tip: Go mid-morning so chefs just finished cooking. Leaves dance in the sun, aromas swirl—you’ll smell mole (yes, more on that soon), taco lands at your lips. Take your time choosing crafts. Ask questions—you’ll learn a story with each woven bag.
If you can, plan to be here Sunday. Tlacolula Market is legendary: Zapotec vendors display flowers, baskets, natural dyes. At Mitla or Ocotlán, handwoven rugs, fruit peculiar only to these valleys—prickly pears, pitaya—rise with the dawn. These weekly markets are about gathering, not just buying.
Respect when you enter—these are living traditions. Haggle gently. Smiles go a long way.
Oaxaca is nicknamed the “Land of the Seven Moles.” Each one tells a different tale:
You should taste at least three—you’ll likely fall for one. Try them paired with mole negro at family-run restaurants in Oaxaca City; try rojo at mitote feasts in the valleys; try verde at villages where ingredients are harvested from garden patches.
There are experiences in Oaxaca that feel like sacred rituals, and a mole-mezcal pairing session is one of them. Pouring smoky mezcal, then a bite of mole—it’s like tasting Oaxaca’s spirit in your mouth.
Check out “Mezcal y Mole,” where you’ll be guided by certified sommeliers through seven moles paired with ancestral mezcal. Helps you appreciate the nuances—why one mole dances differently when paired with a smoky, wood-aged mezcal versus one made from younger agave.(Mezcal y Mole)
This is what dreams are made of. Baroque stone facades thinking they’re castles; golden altarpieces hidden behind velvet curtains; cloister gardens once echoing with chants, now hum with visitors but still sacred.
You’ll want to spend at least half a day here. Inside the former convent walls is the Museo de las Culturas that houses artifacts from Monte Albán, including Tomb 7, with its gold and jade treasures. And don’t skip the ethnobotanical garden—it’s cool, shady, alive with local plant life used for medicine, dyes, food.(Santo Domingo de Guzmán)
Head toward Mixteca Alta for some of the most monumental and rarely crowded monasteries in Mexico. These are 16th-century churches built by Dominican friars—massive stone skeletons of power and faith. Their capillas abiertas (open chapels) were built to reach out to indigenous communities, to invite them in without erecting barriers.(Dominican Route)
At Yanhuitlán, the altars still shine; in Teposcolula, you’ll see arching vaults that feel like the sky’s echo. Coixtlahuaca may feel more remote, but there’s peace in that—walking past ancient murals that whisper stories of conquest, syncretism, devotion.
Just a half-hour from Oaxaca City, Cuilapam feels like stepping back into a painted story. The Convento de Santiago Apóstol was begun in the 1550s, blending Gothic, Renaissance, Plateresque and Mudéjar styles, even indigenous art in murals and decorative stonework.(Monastery of Santiago Apóstol, Cuilapan)
Part church, part ruin: the basilica is roofless now but still full of echoes. The museum houses liturgical items from the 16th century—chalices, sculptures, painted wood. In the quiet cloister, you’ll feel the weight of centuries and how art was used to reach hearts (and minds) when words alone couldn’t do it.
Here’s a gentle flow if you’ve got about 5 days and want to experience Oaxaca without feeling stretched thin:
Slower travel means deeper absorption. You’ll breathe in scents, rest in courtyards, taste—not just eat. Monasteries reward quiet; markets reward curiosity. Oaxaca lets you unfold, gradually, not sprint.
Advance planning helps—make sure you have comfortable walking shoes, sun protection, and maybe a scarf (some churches require covering shoulders). Bring cash for smaller vendors. Try to hire local guides who can translate, share stories—the ones you’ll remember.
Oaxaca isn’t about ticking boxes; it’s about unfolding moments—watching a cook stir mole in a clay pot, stepping into a shadowed cloister, feeling stone walls pulsing with centuries of faith. As you wander markets, savor moles, and wander among monasteries, you’ll discover that Oaxaca doesn’t need to be swift to be unforgettable.
Let your pace be your pilgrim’s pace. Let every sight, sound, scent linger. In that space, you’ll find what travelers most hope to: beauty, belonging, and something that stays long after you’ve said adiós.
No results available
Browse thousands of Senior Centers from around America. Senior Centers are an integral part of society and are the center of life for many seniors and aging adults.
Find a Senior Center which fits your needs using our search feature and keep up to date on all the latest news.
Click the icon to Ask Anything!
Advertisers are not endorsed by SeniorCenters.com or any senior center listed.
This site is not endorsed by or affiliated with any senior center or organization listed.
Just one helpful email per month – no clutter, just value.