Cities in Mexico State of San Luis Potosi

San Luis Potosi State of Mexico


The highlighted green area is San Luis Potosi

Mexico has a vast bus system of 800 bus companies that can transport you to every corner of its 32 states. Over 39,000 Mexico bus schedules offer you a variety of inexpensive travel options.

Mexico’s bus system helps you save money by avoiding expensive rental cars, save time by avoiding airport security hassles, and save vacation memories by meeting local people as you get off the beaten path.

Mexico has the largest and most efficient bus system in the world. Even Mexico business executives park their luxury cars to take an overnight bus to a distant conference so they can arrive fresh in the morning, conduct business, and then return on another overnight bus.

Mexico offers five classes of bus service, ranging from executive class (lujo) with large reclining seats comparable to airline first class, video moves and hostesses serving refreshments, to VW vans that tackle the donkey paths.

But the Mexico bus system with thousands of bus schedules can be bewildering at first. That’s because the Mexico bus companies do not provide printed bus timetables. One tourist in Mexico was even forbidden to photograph timetables posted above bus ticket counters. Contacting Mexico bus companies by telephone can be a frustrating, and very expensive, experience. Bus companies often do not have bilingual agents answering the phones.

Major travel guide books aren’t too much help. They advise you to take expensive rental cars (do you know Mexico’s travel laws, and can read Mexico’s traffic signs), and in some cases devote more space to a practically non-existant passenger train system.

The unique guide Bus Across Mexico now offers you a way to check bus schedules instantly. For only $1.99, you can get schedules to plan your Mexico vacation. Use the handy tables below to find the states and cities you are interested in. Make your selection then order. It’s that simple. And that fast.


CitiesNotes
Ahualulco
( ah-wah-LOOL-ko )
Cedral
( sai-DRAHL )
Charcas
Ciudad del Maiz
( syoo-DAHD del mah-EES )
Ciudad Valles
Las Armas
Matehuala
( mah-te-WAH-law )
Real de Catorce
( rai-AHL dai kah-TOR-sai )

Situated in fabulously rich mining region, it once produced silver and antimony; also gold, lead, and copper deposits. Once a city of nearly 40,000 people, now nearly a ghost town. A popular tourist stop. Sometimes called Catorce.

San Luis Potosi

Founded in 1576, San Luis Potosi was strategically important in colonial times and during the wars of the republican period. The patriot Francisco I. Madero, who was briefly imprisoned in the city in 1910, later named his revolutionary call to arms the Plan of San Luis Potosi. The city center has narrow cobbled streets and solid colonial architecture, but outlying areas are modern. Among its major landmarks are the San Francisco convent and Carmelite churches.

Santa Cruz
Tamazunchale
( tah-mah-zoon-CHAH-le )
Villa Hidalgo
Villa Juarez
( VEE-yah HWAH-res )
Xilitla
( hee-lee-tlah )



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