The Citizen (KZN)

Paddling for clean canals

Retiree daily takes on waterways fishing out plastic and waste. UNESCO SITE: PART OF AZTEC CAPITAL FAMOUS FOR FLOATING GARDENS

- Mexico City

As dawn breaks over Mexico City’s floating gardens, Omar Menchaca paddles his kayak through a maze of canals collecting garbage left by visitors to one of the last vestiges of the ancient Aztec capital.

In the silence of the early morning, before the hordes of tourists arrive, the 66-year-old retiree fishes plastic bottles and other debris from the waters of Xochimilco.

“I came here to train for my competitio­ns,” said the former athletics champion. “I started noticing that these canals were full of garbage.”

As his kayak glides by, herons and pelicans take flight in the morning mist. In the distance, the Popocatepe­tl volcano, Mexico’s second highest summit, rises more than 5 400m above sea level.

Menchaca seems to be far from the network of congested roads that serve Mexico City and its nine million inhabitant­s. In fact, “the ring road is only 600m away”, he said with a smile.

Menchaca regularly puts down his paddle and uses his bare hands to pick up garbage floating on the surface of the water amid aquatic flowers.

Xochimilco is a magnet for tourists who ride colourful gondolas through its network of canals and artificial islands created centuries ago by the area’s indigenous peoples.

On weekends in particular, couples, families and groups of friends come to eat, drink and dance to the sound of mariachi music. The reserve is home to endemic species including the critically endangered axolotl, a salamander-like amphibian.

Cleaning up the waste left by visitors is a constant battle for Menchaca, who offers tours during which he recounts the history of the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on World Heritage Site.

He likes nothing more than to see children copy him by collecting waste. “Xochimilco is visited by around 6 000 people on weekends. Unfortunat­ely, these people don’t take care of the place,” he said.

Conservati­onists also worry about the impact of developmen­t encroachin­g on the area, which is listed as a Wetlands of Internatio­nal Importance under an intergover­nmental conservati­on treaty.

Menchaca curses when sees boats equipped with outboard motors. “The canals are not very deep, barely half a metre,” he said.

“A boat with an engine that carries up to 40 people causes noise and pollutes the wetlands with oil and gasoline.”

At midday, Menchaca returns to the pier from which he set off through a vast canal with a breathtaki­ng view of Mount Ajusco, which rises to some 3 900m within the city limits. His kayak is overflowin­g with garbage.

On the way he greets a man shovelling mud from the canal to use as a natural fertiliser. “The people at the pier should pick up all the garbage and not Don Omar,” said the 69-year-old Noe Coquis Salcedo.

Back on dry land, Menchaca disposes of the debris in a dumpster near the parking lot.

He believes his efforts make a small difference to preserve the place for future generation­s, in addition to the work of the city authoritie­s who maintain the canals.

“The canals are paths,” said Menchaca. “That’s why when I see this garbage, I try to collect it so whoever passes afterward can enjoy a clean path.”

Nearby young people in swimsuits dive from the top of a gondola moored at the pier.

“If we do nothing for our planet there will come a time when there won’t be much left for us to enjoy,” Menchaca said. –

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