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Wikipedia

Ciudad Obregón

Ciudad Obregón is a city in southern Sonora. It is the state's second largest city after Hermosillo and serves as the municipal seat of Cajeme, as of 2020, the city has a population of 436,484. Ciudad Obregón is 530 km (330 mi) south of the state's northern border.

Ciudad Obregón
City
Municipal Palace, Cathedral of the city, Monumental Clock, Laguna del Nainari, Ciudad Obregón International Airport.
Ciudad Obregón
Location of Ciudad Obregon in Sonora
Ciudad Obregón
Ciudad Obregón (Mexico)
Ciudad Obregón
Ciudad Obregón (North America)
Coordinates: 27°29′21″N 109°56′06″W / 27.48917°N 109.93500°W / 27.48917; -109.93500
CountryMexico
StateSonora
MunicipalityCajeme
Founded1927
Government
 • TypeAyuntamiento
 • Municipal PresidentCarlos Javier Lamarque Cano
Elevation
40 m (130 ft)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total436,484[1]
DemonymObregonense
Time zoneUTC-7 (MST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-7 (no DST/PDT)
ZIP code
85000–85059
Area code(s)644,
Websitehttps://www.copreco.mx/ciudadobregon

History

The city, previously named Cajeme, takes its name from Mexican Revolutionary Álvaro Obregón, a native of nearby Huatabampo, Sonora. Álvaro Obregón became president of Mexico after the Revolution and initiated an "agricultural revolution" in the Yaqui Valley, introducing modern agricultural techniques and making this valley one of the most prosperous agricultural regions in the country. Renowned US agronomist Dr. Norman Borlaug, the architect of the "Green Revolution" worked here after successful developments in increasing the resistance of wheat. For his efforts he was later awarded the Nobel Prize. The origins of this city date back to the year 1906 when the company's rail track South Pacific Railway reached this area of the Yaqui Valley; this route, made it possible to incorporate with the Mayo Valley to the domestic and external market, attracting a wave of investors and settlers who brought out populations.

In 1907, a flag station was established for the locomotive crossing the state to supply water, this station was called Cajeme. Cajemé was a Yaqui leader (whose population lives in this area) who fought against them as part of the Porfyrian army; and then led the Yaqui rebellion against it Porfirio Díaz.

"The Cajeme station was run by the American Bert Cameron, superintendent, and Emilio Estrella, station manager. They and their families were the first settlers. Soon after, the cowboys arrived to guard the corrals of cattle that from here was sent to other regions. Soon came neighbors of Hope, near the fields cultivated in the Valley."[citation needed] The Yaquis offered resistance to the arrival of the first settlers on their lands.

The first neighborhood was called Plano Oriente. In 1923, 'Cajeme Motors' was installed, owned by American James Huffaker, it was the first auto agency; fact that contributed significantly to the development of Cajeme. At the end of his term as president of the country (1920–1924), the General Alvaro Obregón returned to Sonora and carried out business projects in Navojoa and Cajeme, creating in 1925, the company 'Obregón y Cía.', which provided more work and economic development in the Region. On 29 November 1927, Cajeme was declared the head of the municipality (until then it had been part of Cocorit) by the governor Fausto Topete, and in 1928 year in which the first town hall was installed, it was decreed on 28 July of the same year on 28 July of the same year change of name to Ciudad Obregón in recognition of Alvaro Obregón, while the name of the municipality was preserved. That same year the first printing press was installed and it was where the first news weekly called 'The Pacific Gazette', owned by Lithuanian immigrant Leo Rosenfeld and his wife Virginia Gámez, was printed.

The first neighborhoods were Plano Oriente, Ladrillera, Cumuripa, Hidalgo, Constitución, El Castillo, Quinta Díaz, Bella Vista and Colonia del Valle.

Rice was the most important crop in the Yaqui Valley in the early [twentieth century]; other crops also include wheat, beans, chickpeas, various vegetables and alfalfa. Over the course of the century, wheat became the most important crop. Due to Cajeme's agricultural vocation, the first industry of great importance was rice mills....

In the 1950s the agronomist Norman E. Borlaug (called the Father of the Green Revolution) collaborated with the creation of the Northwest Agricultural Research Center (CIANO) and in 1970 received the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in research developing better varieties of wheat and maize.Then "El Valle Del Yaqui" was called,"The Barn Of Mexico."

At the end of the twentieth century the railway disappeared as a means of transport for passengers and the station was abandoned.

For the development of productive activities, local commerce offers everything from re-shareholders, agricultural implement stores, agribusiness machinery, safety equipment and all kinds of inputs for production. There are two markets for supplies.

For the realization of economic activities and service to the general public, Ciudad Obregón has offices of the main financial institutions of the country.[2]

Geography

The city is located on the parallel 27–29' north latitude and the meridian 109-59' west longitude. With an altitude above sea level of 40.8 m (134 ft) in the city center.

It is located in the south of the State of Sonora, 50 km (31 mi) from the coast of the Sea of Cortez and 100 km (62 mi) from the Sierra Madre Occidental, is also 240 km (150 mi) from Hermosillo, the capital of the State; and 530 km (330 mi) from the border with the United States.[3]

Climate

Ciudad Obregón has a steppe climate (Köppen BWh) featuring long, extremely hot summers and short, mild winters with cold mornings. Summer temperatures frequently reach 40 °C (104.0 °F) or more, with overnight lows greater than 24 °C (75 °F) and sometimes reaching 30 °C (86 °F). Sunny skies and clear nights can be expected throughout the year. Many severe thunderstorms with strong winds and sandstorms reach the region in summer. Rainfall is scarce but it is more prominent in the summer. In the winter, daytime temperatures can be hotter than 26 °C (79 °F) but at night the temperature can fall to 2 °C (36 °F). Snow in Ciudad Obregón is nonexistent, but hailstorms can occur during cold fronts.

The extreme temperatures recorded in the box below between 1939 and 2016 were recorded at the Downtown Station of Ciudad Obregón, Sonora.[4][5]

Climate data for Ciudad Obregón, Sonora (Downtown) (1981–2010, extremes (1961–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 35.2
(95.4)
38.2
(100.8)
41.0
(105.8)
43.2
(109.8)
45.0
(113.0)
46.4
(115.5)
47.5
(117.5)
46.9
(116.4)
46.8
(116.2)
46.1
(115.0)
40.2
(104.4)
35.3
(95.5)
47.5
(117.5)
Average high °C (°F) 24.0
(75.2)
26.0
(78.8)
28.9
(84.0)
32.7
(90.9)
35.2
(95.4)
38.3
(100.9)
38.5
(101.3)
38.4
(101.1)
38.0
(100.4)
35.6
(96.1)
30.4
(86.7)
25.5
(77.9)
32.55
(90.59)
Daily mean °C (°F) 15.6
(60.1)
16.7
(62.1)
17.9
(64.2)
20.6
(69.1)
23.5
(74.3)
30.8
(87.4)
32.0
(89.6)
31.8
(89.2)
31.2
(88.2)
25.7
(78.3)
20.1
(68.2)
16.7
(62.1)
22.1
(71.8)
Average low °C (°F) 6.3
(43.3)
7.0
(44.6)
8.5
(47.3)
10.5
(50.9)
14.2
(57.6)
20.3
(68.5)
25.5
(77.9)
25.2
(77.4)
24.4
(75.9)
17.7
(63.9)
12.4
(54.3)
8.5
(47.3)
14.2
(57.6)
Record low °C (°F) −7.1
(19.2)
−5.5
(22.1)
−2.5
(27.5)
−2.5
(27.5)
4.5
(40.1)
8.5
(47.3)
15.0
(59.0)
15.0
(59.0)
10.0
(50.0)
2.2
(36.0)
−1.7
(28.9)
−4.9
(23.2)
−7.1
(19.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 25.0
(0.98)
12.8
(0.50)
4.6
(0.18)
3.1
(0.12)
0.2
(0.01)
8.9
(0.35)
78.5
(3.09)
94.0
(3.70)
95.3
(3.75)
24.4
(0.96)
12.3
(0.48)
25.4
(1.00)
384.5
(15.14)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 2.5 2.0 0.8 0.6 0.1 0.8 9.1 9.4 6.0 2.1 1.7 2.3 37.4
Average relative humidity (%) 70 71 69 63 62 66 73 75 73 67 66 71 69
Mean monthly sunshine hours 237 237 279 298 325 320 275 272 266 276 241 217 3,243
Source 1: Servicio Meteorológico Nacional (temperature, 1981–2010) (humidity, 1981–2000)[6][7]
Source 2: Deutscher Wetterdienst (sun, 1961–1990)[8][a]

City origins

Cajeme Municipality has as its head Ciudad Obregón. Its first settlers established themselves in the neighborhood called Plano Oriente, as irrigation canals made by the Richardson company around 1910 and two years later, the South Pacific railroad established a station called Cajeme. The town of Cajeme was initially a part of Cocorit Municipality until its elevation to Municipal Seat on 28 September 1927. The first city government was established on 1 January 1928. The 28 July 1928 decree stated that "the city is known now with the name of Ciudad Obregón, the town formerly known as Cajeme." In 1937 another legislation stated that Cajeme be the name of the Municipality and Ciudad Obregón its seat.

In 1950 Ciudad Obregon had a population on 120,000.[9]

Roots and traditions

The native Yaqui people are settled in eight towns, Potam, Huirivis, Torim, Cocorit, Bacum, Vicam, Rahum and Belem. Seven kilometres (4.3 miles) from the city is the first of the eight Yaqui towns that make the autonomous territory of these people known for their independent character, because it is one of the few American ethnic groups not dominated militarily by Spanish colonialists.

Yaqui history informs the defense of their territory and culture, an ancestral culture enriched by rites and traditions of which the Deer Dance stands out, a symbolic representation of the hunt for this animal.

Demographics

Ciudad Obregón is the second largest city in Sonora (after state capital Hermosillo) with a 2010 census population of 298,625 People.[10] Its municipality of Cajeme had a population of 409,310.[11]

As of 2005 the per capita income for the municipality of Cajeme was $10,940 and the Human Development Index was 0.8635.[12]

Government and economy

In Ciudad Obregón lies the seat of the municipal government of Cajeme. The government's exercise rests with the Municipal President and his cabinet, elected every three years.

Of the twenty-one Congress of the State of Sonora,' Electoral Districts of the State of Sonora, the state electoral districts of Sonora, three correspond to the city. The municipality of Cajeme has its own federal electoral district, the VI Federal Electoral District of Sonora of the Chamber of Deputies of the Congress of the Union of Mexico.

The main economic activities in the entity are maquiladora, agriculture, livestock, [aquaculture], and trade. However, the fertile lands of the municipality favour agriculture and the services derived from it, such as its suppliers and their transport. Real estate and construction development has also had a major boom in the city that, because of its relatively recent foundation, has been able to be planned with wide avenues and modern urban development compared to other Sonorense cities.

According to the national census prepared by the INEGI, the economically active population (PEA) in 2010 corresponds to 54.1% of the inhabitants of the municipality of whom 95% have an occupation.[13]

Transportation

The city is served by Ciudad Obregón International Airport.

Education and health

The following institutions of higher education are based in Ciudad Obregón:

  • Instituto Tecnológico de Sonora (ITSON) – Campus Obregón and Campus Náinari
  • Instituto Tecnológico Superior de Cajeme (ITESCA)
  • Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (ITESM) – Campus Obregón
  • Universidad La Salle – Campus Obregón
  • Universidad TecMilenio – Campus Obregón
  • Universidad Tecnológica del Sur de Sonora (UTS)
  • Universidad del Valle de México Campus Ciudad Obregón (UVM)
  • Universidad del Desarrollo Professional Ciudad Obregón (UNIDEP)
  • Universidad Vizcaya de las Américas
  • Instituto Tecnológico del Valle del Yaqui
  • Universidad Durango Santander
  • Universidad Interamericana de Desarrollo (UNID)
  • Instituto de Capacitación para el trabajo Icatson-Cajeme

According to the 2010 population and housing census of INEGI in Cajeme the literacy rate for people aged 15 to 24 years is 98.5% and that of people aged 25 and over is 96.1%.

 
ItSON Rectory

School attendance for people ages 3 to 5 is 44.4%; 6 to 11 years is 97%; 12 to 14 years is 95.1% and 15 to 24 years is 50.5%.[14] Higher Education Institutions Ciudad Obregón has multiple institutions of higher education, and has the most important concentration of these in the south of Sonora. The most important institution is the Instituto Tecnológico de Sonora (ITSON) which has a tuition of approximately seventeen thousand students, twenty-three bachelor's degrees, and whose main campus is located in the city. Ciudad Obregón has the necessary elements to offer the population all academic levels.

 
University of Sonora Campus Cajeme, Department of Health Sciences.

In the city there is also an important campus of the University of Sonora, the [Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey] (ITESM), La Salle University (ULSA), the University of the Valley of Mexico (UVM), the State Normal School of (ENEE), the Instituto Tecnológico Superior de Cajeme (ITESCA), the Universidad Tecnológico del Sur de Sonora (UTS), among others.[15]

Of these above, they stand out:

  • La Salle University located in Obregón City has been operating for 25 years. It is private, Christian-inspired. He has 21 bachelor's degrees and 15 postgraduate degrees on this campus.[16]
  • The Cajeme Higher Institute was founded in 1997. It's a public, decentralized university. It has nine bachelor's degrees and 17 specialties.[17]
  • The Instituto Tecnológico de Monterrey has 20 bachelor's degrees and 20 master's degrees.[18]
  • The Universidad TecMilenio has been in its company for 15 years since its founding. It has 15 bachelor's degrees and seven master's degrees.[19]

Tourism

Nainari Lagoon

 
Nainari Lagoon

The "Nainari Lagoon" with a 2 km (1.2 mi) perimeter is located at the western city limits between Guerrero and Padre Eusebio Kino avenues. It's grounds are used for outdoor sports including an outdoor public gym. The lagoon's two piers are a focal point for aquatic activities like skiing, sailing and canoeing being the site for triathlons, marathons, and bicycle races. There are many coconut and snack stands on the lagoon boardwalk where you can find fresh coconuts and other fruits such as "mango con chile" and restaurants.[citation needed]

The Nainari Lagoon is manmade, it was built in 1956 as one of the achievements of City Mayor Rene Gandara, who opened the hydraulic gates to fill the reservoir. Before, it was a lagoon region where there was duck hunting and rice was grown.[20]

The Nainari Lagoon is a tourist attraction that has a small boardwalk and a boat dock. Water is constantly circulating as it is connected to one of the main canals in the irrigation district, the Lower Canal (el Canal Bajo).

The Lagoon has been in recent years better taken care of and upgraded by the local authorities.[citation needed] There is now a small garden with a bronze statue of a discobolus (discus thrower) by the Ostimuri Park entrance. Right next to the lagoon there is a sports complex with an Olympic size swimming pool and many types of sport courts such as tennis, basketball, soccer, and fronton.[citation needed]

Ostimuri Children's Park

Next to the Nainari Lagoon are the Ostimuru Children's Park and the Ostimuri Zoo. At the park, there is a variety of mechanical rides for children. Lush trees surround the park. The Ostimuri Zoo is located inside the park – This habitat hosts a wide variety of animals, the song of birds as you stroll through this place is like a melody from heaven.[original research?] As you make your journey in the midst of animals, you are surpassed by a boa as if it were a guardian of this place.[citation needed]

Yaqui Museum

The Yaqui museum offers a perspective of Yaqui culture having among its objectives rescuing, preserving, investigating and spreading the culture and lifestyle of the Yaqui tribe. As well as stimulating in the state's population the rediscovery of historical, linguistic and ethnic values of the Yaquis.[citation needed] Another objective is to show Sonoran children and teens the particular characteristics of Yaqui personality and the richness of their folklore [tone] and raise consciousness among Sonorans in regards to the development of historical events of the Yaquis as well as the influence that they had in the formation of groups and classes that constitute the regions current society.[citation needed] Scenes of daily life of the Yaqui tribe are represented throughout the museum highlighting musical instruments, hunting tools and clothing that distinguishes them since ancient times.[citation needed]

Cocorit House

This construction dates from the previous century, its architecture is of colonial style. It has four exhibition rooms and an ample garden where we find permanent samples of painting and sculptures as well as arts and crafts. Among the House's visitors is the internationally renowned sculpture and painter Jose Luis Cuevas. Among the objectives of Cocorit House is to support art in those people with artistic attributes that don't have enough support. That is why local artists call it the region's haven for the arts.

"Álvaro Obregón" Dam

The General Álvaro Obregón Dam also called the Oviachic Dam, named taken from the place where it is located, started its construction in the year 1947 and finished in 1952, being filled for the first time on July 1952. It is located 35 kilometres (22 miles) north of Ciudad Obregón.

Lake Oviachic has a surface of 20,500 acres (83 square kilometres) and a storage capacity of 3226 millions of cubic meters; it is part of the dam system on the Yaqui River, it's the state's largest dam and the third located on said river. From the Oviachic Dam a 27,603-kilometre (17,152-mile) network of main and secondary canals is derived that irrigate 450,000 hectares (1,100,000 acres) of surface in the Yaqui and Mayo Valleys, being one of the most important hydraulic infrastructures in the country. During the last two decades this hydraulic work has become one of the main and most visited tourist destinations in our region.

Huivulai Island

Huivulai Island is located 50 kilometres (31 miles) south of Ciudad Obregón and 5 miles (8.0 kilometres) off the Sonora coast in the Gulf of California (Sea of Cortez). In Mayo, Huivulai means "long neck". The island is 17 kilometres (10.6 miles) long and 1.2 kilometres (0.7 miles) wide at its widest part. The island features many natural attractions including sand dunes used by four-wheel drive vehicles. The island has a water well oasis surrounded by date trees that attract many species of birds, including gray and white pelicans, corvetta, gray crested cranes, storks, and albatrosses. The island is ringed by beaches and features fishing opportunities off-shore.

Festivals and cultural programs

Tetabiakte Art and Culture Festival

This festival of art and culture takes place in November to celebrate the anniversary of the founding of the municipality of Cajeme with the support of the Institute of Municipal Culture and the National Council for Culture and the Arts ([CONACULTA]). This festival offers music, painting, film, poetry, book presentations and shows the culture and traditions of the Yaqui ethnic group.

ITSON Arts Festival

The Festival, promoted by the Instituto Tecnológico de Sonora through the Directorate of Extension of Culture and Services and is held annually in October. The Festival is a member of the National Network of Festivals of the National Council for Culture and the Arts (CONACULTA). The program serves audiences of higher middle education, university and the community at large, through an artistic program representative of our cultural diversity, with national quality groups, with presentations in university forums, public spaces and theatres, with close access to the commun

Ars Vocalis México

Ars Vocalis México is an international festival and academy dedicated to vocal art that in 2015 is hosted by Ciudad Obregón. This festival, founded by the tenor and cultural promoter Carlos Zapién, has a pedagogical program thanks to which young Mexican singers, previously selected through an audition process, have the opportunity to participate in classes lectures given by renowned figures in the operatic world of Europe and the United States, as well as being able to work with coaches from various opera houses and educational institutions. Students also have the opportunity to work on the German vocal repertoire (Lied), ancient and baroque music and Mexican music. The audience has the opportunity to listen to recitals and operatic performances at no cost.

IPN International Book Fair

Since 2013, the National Polytechnic Institute has organized the International Book Fair held in September. The program has been attended by renowned figures in the literary field, such as Elena Poniatowska and the program has the cooperation of several governmental and private institutions.[21]

Sports

The most popular sport in Obregon is baseball. The city's professional baseball team is the Yaquis of the Mexican Pacific League, who play at Tomás Oroz Gaytán Stadium. Ciudad Obregón has multiple infrastructure works dedicated to sport, among which stand out: the Municipal Gymnasium "Manuel Lira García", with a capacity of 3,000 spectators. The Arena ITSON, with capacity for 7,500 people and the New Yaquis Stadium, can accommodate 16,500 people. As well as small basketball and baseball stadiums scattered throughout the city, these two sports are the most popular of the company.

Ciudad Obregón has the following sports teams:

  • Ofew City Yaquis: Baseball team of the Mexican Pacific League.
  • Obregón City Hawks: Basketball team of CIBACOPA.
  • Guerreros de Obregón FC: Football team of the Mexico's Third Division.

Football also has acceptance, the stadium "Manuel 'Piri' Sagasta", is the most important venue for its practice with a capacity of approximately 4000 spectators, although the sport is not as popular in the city, it remains a recreational practice by the ease of game development. Next to the football stadium is the sports car "Náinari 2000", an area for the practice of different sports.

The most popular martial discipline in Ciudad Obregón is the TaeKwonDo which is practiced by many young people in the municipality of Cajeme, which has multiple medalists in official competitions, nationally and internationally. The ITSON Potros have won 3 national university championships in Mexico.[22]

Obregón F.C. play professional soccer in the Segunda División.

In 2021, Ciudad Obregón and Hermosillo co-hosted the 3rd U-23 Baseball World Cup, organized by the World Baseball Softball Confederation.[23]

Gastronomy

Ciudad Obregon has a wide variety of typical dishes, such as:

  • Wakabaki
The Yaqui ethnic group, one of the most numerous in Mexico, inherited the wakabaki, which is a broth that constitutes a traditional dish that is prepared in its most important festivities. Its ingredients are: chickpea, beef rib, pumpkin, potato, cabbage, carrot and jote. Its preparation begins with the cutting of the firewood and the sacrifice of the res.
  • Tortillas Sobaqueras (large flour tortillas)
The Spaniards, who during the Arab domination learned many ways to take advantage of wheat, brought flour tortillas to Sonora. The Yaqui tribe adapted them and colloquially called them "tortillas sobaqueras" these tortillas are made by hand and using a lot of water.
  • Cahuamanta
Typically made from manta rays and shrimp, it is usually prepared as a broth in which the manta meat, shrimp and vegetables are added. The broth is served on a plate or you can prepare cahuamanta tacos, when only the broth is served it is called "vichy", in some places that same broth with shrimp is known as "chucki". Its name derives from the word "caguama" (loggerhead sea turtle) and manta ray, originally this dish was prepared with loggerhead sea turtle meat but since the fishing of this marine species is not longer allowed, it was decided to replace the "caguama" with manta meat. The dish was created in the late nineteenth century in Ciudad Obregón.
  • Coyotas
Traditional cookies from the state of Sonora. These are made with wheat flour and stuffed with "piloncillo" (raw form of pure cane sugar). Coyotas are similar to Argentine alfajor, but thinner and larger in diameter. In Cd. Obregón you can find in addition to the traditional ones made with "piloncillo"; coyotas filled with "cajeta" (Mexican caramel sauce), "cajeta" and walnut, chocolate, Bavarian cream, guava, strawberry, pineapple, apricot (chabacano), blackberry, mango and apple purees.
  • Cecina

Also known as salted dry meat, is a type of dehydrated meat that is made of beef cutting and air drying and during venison season can be made of this animal as well.

  • Bacanora
Bacanora, like Jalisco tequila, is a spirit drink made in Sonora, Mexico. It is a mezcal made 100% of the juice of the roasted maguey head, fermented and distilled. However, the development of the formal market in El Bacanora was truncated in 1915, when the manufacture and marketing of this alcoholic beverage was banned. It was until the 1990s that this activity ceased to be persecuted and sanctioned by customs and its authorization was contemplated in the Law on Alcohols of the State of Sonora.
This agave drink from Sonora is protected by appellation of origin, published in the Official Journal of the Federation on 6 November 2000. In this publication it is officially stated that the State of Sonora, is exclusively the entity, which is recognized as producer of this drink. Agave angustifolia is the only maguey species admitted by this Law for the production of El Bacanora. The territorial area of this denomination area is: 57,923.92 km2 and is composed of 35 municipalities of the mountainous area of Sonora.[24]

Some popular restaurants recognized for offering some of the dishes mentioned above are:

  • "Los Arbolitos de Cajeme" (little trees of Cajeme) opened over 25 years ago and currently has 13 branches throughout Mexico.
  • "El Bronco" Restaurant opened in 1968,[25] specialized in steak and authentic Mexican dishes. It features live music and country-style facilities.

Notable people

Some prominent people originating in Ciudad Obregón, or with a track record in their careers connected to the city are:[26]

  • Julio César Chávez – Professional boxer
  • Giovanny Gallegos – Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Hector Velázquez – Major League Baseball pitcher[27]
  • Stephanie Sigman – Actress and model. She is best known for her starring role in the 2011 film Miss Bala. He also appeared in the film James Bond Spectre, among others.
  • María Félix – Born in Alamos, she is an important figure of the Mexican golden film era. She participated in a total of 47 films, and is known as "The Doña" for his celebrated character.
  • Norman Borlaug – Agronomist. He studied wheat, rust and agronomic practices in the Yaqui Valley, looking for it to have self-sufficiency in wheat. He won a Nobel Prize thanks to his practices and research carried out in Obregón. In recognition by the city, one of the main streets bears his name.

International relations

Twin towns – Sister cities

Ciudad Obregón is twinned with:

Notes

  1. ^ Use this station ID to locate the sunshine duration

References

  1. ^ "INEGI". Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  2. ^ http://visitaobregon.gob.mx/tourism/city-obregon/
  3. ^ http://visitaobregon.gob.mx/tourism/city-obregon/
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 April 2017. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  5. ^ "Normales Climatológicas Ciudad Obregón 2015–2017". Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  6. ^ (in Spanish). Servicio Meteorológico Nacional. Archived from the original on 10 April 2017. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  7. ^ (in Spanish). Servicio Meteorológico Nacional. Archived from the original on 20 November 2018. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  8. ^ . Global station data 1961–1990—Sunshine Duration. Deutscher Wetterdienst. Archived from the original on 17 October 2017. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  9. ^ Columbia-Lippincott Gazetteer. (New York: Columbia University Press, 1952) p. 406
  10. ^ "Census Data". Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  12. ^ Oficina Nacional de Desarrollo Humano (2005). . Archived from the original on 6 March 2009. Retrieved 17 December 2008.
  13. ^ http://visitaobregon.gob.mx/tourism/city-obregon/#gobierno-y-econom%C3%ADa
  14. ^ http://visitaobregon.gob.mx/tourism/city-obregon/#educaci%C3%B3n-y-health-title
  15. ^ http://visitaobregon.gob.mx/tourism/city-obregon/#instituciones-de-educaci%C3%B3n-superior-title-higher
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 September 2017.
  17. ^ http://www.itesca.edu.edu.mx/itesca/historia.asp[dead link]
  18. ^ "Ciudad Obregón - Tecnológico de Monterrey".
  19. ^ http://tecmilenio.mx/en/career-professional[dead link]
  20. ^ "René Gándara Romo modernizó a Ciudad Obregón". InfoCajeme (in Spanish). 27 July 2019. Retrieved 27 November 2021.
  21. ^ http://visitaobregon.gob.mx/tourism/city-obregon/#cultura-and-tourism
  22. ^ http://visitaobregon.gob.mx/tourism/city-obregon/#deporte
  23. ^ "III WBSC U-23 Baseball World Cup to open on 23 September". III U-23 Baseball World Cup 2021. World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC). Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  24. ^ http://visitaobregon.gob.mx/tourism/city-obregon/#gastronom%C3%ADa
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 November 2018.
  26. ^ "famous and successful originating in Sonora". Retrieved 26 November 2018.[dead link]
  27. ^ "Hector Velázquez Stats, Fantasy & News". Boston Red Sox.
  28. ^ "Sister City Fun: Dinner Honors Visitors Here on Mexican Exchange". Baton Rouge Morning Advocate (sec. B, p. 2). 29 June 1977.
  29. ^ "About Us..." tucsonmexicosistercities.org. 2017. Retrieved 3 May 2018.

External links

  •   Media related to Ciudad Obregón at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Ciudad Obregón travel guide from Wikivoyage

Coordinates: 27°29′38″N 109°56′20″W / 27.49389°N 109.93889°W / 27.49389; -109.93889

ciudad, obregón, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, a. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is written like a manual or guidebook Please help rewrite this article from a descriptive neutral point of view and remove advice or instruction June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ciudad Obregon is a city in southern Sonora It is the state s second largest city after Hermosillo and serves as the municipal seat of Cajeme as of 2020 the city has a population of 436 484 Ciudad Obregon is 530 km 330 mi south of the state s northern border Ciudad ObregonCityMunicipal Palace Cathedral of the city Monumental Clock Laguna del Nainari Ciudad Obregon International Airport SealCiudad ObregonLocation of Ciudad Obregon in SonoraShow map of SonoraCiudad ObregonCiudad Obregon Mexico Show map of MexicoCiudad ObregonCiudad Obregon North America Show map of North AmericaCoordinates 27 29 21 N 109 56 06 W 27 48917 N 109 93500 W 27 48917 109 93500CountryMexicoStateSonoraMunicipalityCajemeFounded1927Government TypeAyuntamiento Municipal PresidentCarlos Javier Lamarque CanoElevation40 m 130 ft Population 2020 Total436 484 1 DemonymObregonenseTime zoneUTC 7 MST Summer DST UTC 7 no DST PDT ZIP code85000 85059Area code s 644 Websitehttps www copreco mx ciudadobregon Contents 1 History 2 Geography 3 Climate 4 City origins 5 Roots and traditions 6 Demographics 7 Government and economy 8 Transportation 9 Education and health 10 Tourism 10 1 Nainari Lagoon 10 2 Ostimuri Children s Park 10 3 Yaqui Museum 10 4 Cocorit House 10 5 Alvaro Obregon Dam 10 6 Huivulai Island 11 Festivals and cultural programs 11 1 Tetabiakte Art and Culture Festival 11 2 ITSON Arts Festival 11 3 Ars Vocalis Mexico 11 4 IPN International Book Fair 12 Sports 13 Gastronomy 14 Notable people 15 International relations 15 1 Twin towns Sister cities 16 Notes 17 References 18 External linksHistory EditThe city previously named Cajeme takes its name from Mexican Revolutionary Alvaro Obregon a native of nearby Huatabampo Sonora Alvaro Obregon became president of Mexico after the Revolution and initiated an agricultural revolution in the Yaqui Valley introducing modern agricultural techniques and making this valley one of the most prosperous agricultural regions in the country Renowned US agronomist Dr Norman Borlaug the architect of the Green Revolution worked here after successful developments in increasing the resistance of wheat For his efforts he was later awarded the Nobel Prize The origins of this city date back to the year 1906 when the company s rail track South Pacific Railway reached this area of the Yaqui Valley this route made it possible to incorporate with the Mayo Valley to the domestic and external market attracting a wave of investors and settlers who brought out populations In 1907 a flag station was established for the locomotive crossing the state to supply water this station was called Cajeme Cajeme was a Yaqui leader whose population lives in this area who fought against them as part of the Porfyrian army and then led the Yaqui rebellion against it Porfirio Diaz The Cajeme station was run by the American Bert Cameron superintendent and Emilio Estrella station manager They and their families were the first settlers Soon after the cowboys arrived to guard the corrals of cattle that from here was sent to other regions Soon came neighbors of Hope near the fields cultivated in the Valley citation needed The Yaquis offered resistance to the arrival of the first settlers on their lands The first neighborhood was called Plano Oriente In 1923 Cajeme Motors was installed owned by American James Huffaker it was the first auto agency fact that contributed significantly to the development of Cajeme At the end of his term as president of the country 1920 1924 the General Alvaro Obregon returned to Sonora and carried out business projects in Navojoa and Cajeme creating in 1925 the company Obregon y Cia which provided more work and economic development in the Region On 29 November 1927 Cajeme was declared the head of the municipality until then it had been part of Cocorit by the governor Fausto Topete and in 1928 year in which the first town hall was installed it was decreed on 28 July of the same year on 28 July of the same year change of name to Ciudad Obregon in recognition of Alvaro Obregon while the name of the municipality was preserved That same year the first printing press was installed and it was where the first news weekly called The Pacific Gazette owned by Lithuanian immigrant Leo Rosenfeld and his wife Virginia Gamez was printed The first neighborhoods were Plano Oriente Ladrillera Cumuripa Hidalgo Constitucion El Castillo Quinta Diaz Bella Vista and Colonia del Valle Rice was the most important crop in the Yaqui Valley in the early twentieth century other crops also include wheat beans chickpeas various vegetables and alfalfa Over the course of the century wheat became the most important crop Due to Cajeme s agricultural vocation the first industry of great importance was rice mills In the 1950s the agronomist Norman E Borlaug called the Father of the Green Revolution collaborated with the creation of the Northwest Agricultural Research Center CIANO and in 1970 received the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in research developing better varieties of wheat and maize Then El Valle Del Yaqui was called The Barn Of Mexico At the end of the twentieth century the railway disappeared as a means of transport for passengers and the station was abandoned For the development of productive activities local commerce offers everything from re shareholders agricultural implement stores agribusiness machinery safety equipment and all kinds of inputs for production There are two markets for supplies For the realization of economic activities and service to the general public Ciudad Obregon has offices of the main financial institutions of the country 2 Geography EditThe city is located on the parallel 27 29 north latitude and the meridian 109 59 west longitude With an altitude above sea level of 40 8 m 134 ft in the city center It is located in the south of the State of Sonora 50 km 31 mi from the coast of the Sea of Cortez and 100 km 62 mi from the Sierra Madre Occidental is also 240 km 150 mi from Hermosillo the capital of the State and 530 km 330 mi from the border with the United States 3 Climate EditCiudad Obregon has a steppe climate Koppen BWh featuring long extremely hot summers and short mild winters with cold mornings Summer temperatures frequently reach 40 C 104 0 F or more with overnight lows greater than 24 C 75 F and sometimes reaching 30 C 86 F Sunny skies and clear nights can be expected throughout the year Many severe thunderstorms with strong winds and sandstorms reach the region in summer Rainfall is scarce but it is more prominent in the summer In the winter daytime temperatures can be hotter than 26 C 79 F but at night the temperature can fall to 2 C 36 F Snow in Ciudad Obregon is nonexistent but hailstorms can occur during cold fronts The extreme temperatures recorded in the box below between 1939 and 2016 were recorded at the Downtown Station of Ciudad Obregon Sonora 4 5 Climate data for Ciudad Obregon Sonora Downtown 1981 2010 extremes 1961 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 35 2 95 4 38 2 100 8 41 0 105 8 43 2 109 8 45 0 113 0 46 4 115 5 47 5 117 5 46 9 116 4 46 8 116 2 46 1 115 0 40 2 104 4 35 3 95 5 47 5 117 5 Average high C F 24 0 75 2 26 0 78 8 28 9 84 0 32 7 90 9 35 2 95 4 38 3 100 9 38 5 101 3 38 4 101 1 38 0 100 4 35 6 96 1 30 4 86 7 25 5 77 9 32 55 90 59 Daily mean C F 15 6 60 1 16 7 62 1 17 9 64 2 20 6 69 1 23 5 74 3 30 8 87 4 32 0 89 6 31 8 89 2 31 2 88 2 25 7 78 3 20 1 68 2 16 7 62 1 22 1 71 8 Average low C F 6 3 43 3 7 0 44 6 8 5 47 3 10 5 50 9 14 2 57 6 20 3 68 5 25 5 77 9 25 2 77 4 24 4 75 9 17 7 63 9 12 4 54 3 8 5 47 3 14 2 57 6 Record low C F 7 1 19 2 5 5 22 1 2 5 27 5 2 5 27 5 4 5 40 1 8 5 47 3 15 0 59 0 15 0 59 0 10 0 50 0 2 2 36 0 1 7 28 9 4 9 23 2 7 1 19 2 Average precipitation mm inches 25 0 0 98 12 8 0 50 4 6 0 18 3 1 0 12 0 2 0 01 8 9 0 35 78 5 3 09 94 0 3 70 95 3 3 75 24 4 0 96 12 3 0 48 25 4 1 00 384 5 15 14 Average precipitation days 0 1 mm 2 5 2 0 0 8 0 6 0 1 0 8 9 1 9 4 6 0 2 1 1 7 2 3 37 4Average relative humidity 70 71 69 63 62 66 73 75 73 67 66 71 69Mean monthly sunshine hours 237 237 279 298 325 320 275 272 266 276 241 217 3 243Source 1 Servicio Meteorologico Nacional temperature 1981 2010 humidity 1981 2000 6 7 Source 2 Deutscher Wetterdienst sun 1961 1990 8 a City origins EditCajeme Municipality has as its head Ciudad Obregon Its first settlers established themselves in the neighborhood called Plano Oriente as irrigation canals made by the Richardson company around 1910 and two years later the South Pacific railroad established a station called Cajeme The town of Cajeme was initially a part of Cocorit Municipality until its elevation to Municipal Seat on 28 September 1927 The first city government was established on 1 January 1928 The 28 July 1928 decree stated that the city is known now with the name of Ciudad Obregon the town formerly known as Cajeme In 1937 another legislation stated that Cajeme be the name of the Municipality and Ciudad Obregon its seat In 1950 Ciudad Obregon had a population on 120 000 9 Roots and traditions EditThe native Yaqui people are settled in eight towns Potam Huirivis Torim Cocorit Bacum Vicam Rahum and Belem Seven kilometres 4 3 miles from the city is the first of the eight Yaqui towns that make the autonomous territory of these people known for their independent character because it is one of the few American ethnic groups not dominated militarily by Spanish colonialists Yaqui history informs the defense of their territory and culture an ancestral culture enriched by rites and traditions of which the Deer Dance stands out a symbolic representation of the hunt for this animal Demographics EditCiudad Obregon is the second largest city in Sonora after state capital Hermosillo with a 2010 census population of 298 625 People 10 Its municipality of Cajeme had a population of 409 310 11 As of 2005 update the per capita income for the municipality of Cajeme was 10 940 and the Human Development Index was 0 8635 12 Government and economy EditIn Ciudad Obregon lies the seat of the municipal government of Cajeme The government s exercise rests with the Municipal President and his cabinet elected every three years Of the twenty one Congress of the State of Sonora Electoral Districts of the State of Sonora the state electoral districts of Sonora three correspond to the city The municipality of Cajeme has its own federal electoral district the VI Federal Electoral District of Sonora of the Chamber of Deputies of the Congress of the Union of Mexico The main economic activities in the entity are maquiladora agriculture livestock aquaculture and trade However the fertile lands of the municipality favour agriculture and the services derived from it such as its suppliers and their transport Real estate and construction development has also had a major boom in the city that because of its relatively recent foundation has been able to be planned with wide avenues and modern urban development compared to other Sonorense cities According to the national census prepared by the INEGI the economically active population PEA in 2010 corresponds to 54 1 of the inhabitants of the municipality of whom 95 have an occupation 13 Transportation EditThe city is served by Ciudad Obregon International Airport Education and health EditThe following institutions of higher education are based in Ciudad Obregon Instituto Tecnologico de Sonora ITSON Campus Obregon and Campus Nainari Instituto Tecnologico Superior de Cajeme ITESCA Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey ITESM Campus Obregon Universidad La Salle Campus Obregon Universidad TecMilenio Campus Obregon Universidad Tecnologica del Sur de Sonora UTS Universidad del Valle de Mexico Campus Ciudad Obregon UVM Universidad del Desarrollo Professional Ciudad Obregon UNIDEP Universidad Vizcaya de las Americas Instituto Tecnologico del Valle del Yaqui Universidad Durango Santander Universidad Interamericana de Desarrollo UNID Instituto de Capacitacion para el trabajo Icatson CajemeAccording to the 2010 population and housing census of INEGI in Cajeme the literacy rate for people aged 15 to 24 years is 98 5 and that of people aged 25 and over is 96 1 ItSON Rectory School attendance for people ages 3 to 5 is 44 4 6 to 11 years is 97 12 to 14 years is 95 1 and 15 to 24 years is 50 5 14 Higher Education Institutions Ciudad Obregon has multiple institutions of higher education and has the most important concentration of these in the south of Sonora The most important institution is the Instituto Tecnologico de Sonora ITSON which has a tuition of approximately seventeen thousand students twenty three bachelor s degrees and whose main campus is located in the city Ciudad Obregon has the necessary elements to offer the population all academic levels University of Sonora Campus Cajeme Department of Health Sciences In the city there is also an important campus of the University of Sonora the Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey ITESM La Salle University ULSA the University of the Valley of Mexico UVM the State Normal School of ENEE the Instituto Tecnologico Superior de Cajeme ITESCA the Universidad Tecnologico del Sur de Sonora UTS among others 15 Of these above they stand out La Salle University located in Obregon City has been operating for 25 years It is private Christian inspired He has 21 bachelor s degrees and 15 postgraduate degrees on this campus 16 The Cajeme Higher Institute was founded in 1997 It s a public decentralized university It has nine bachelor s degrees and 17 specialties 17 The Instituto Tecnologico de Monterrey has 20 bachelor s degrees and 20 master s degrees 18 The Universidad TecMilenio has been in its company for 15 years since its founding It has 15 bachelor s degrees and seven master s degrees 19 Tourism EditNainari Lagoon Edit Nainari Lagoon The Nainari Lagoon with a 2 km 1 2 mi perimeter is located at the western city limits between Guerrero and Padre Eusebio Kino avenues It s grounds are used for outdoor sports including an outdoor public gym The lagoon s two piers are a focal point for aquatic activities like skiing sailing and canoeing being the site for triathlons marathons and bicycle races There are many coconut and snack stands on the lagoon boardwalk where you can find fresh coconuts and other fruits such as mango con chile and restaurants citation needed The Nainari Lagoon is manmade it was built in 1956 as one of the achievements of City Mayor Rene Gandara who opened the hydraulic gates to fill the reservoir Before it was a lagoon region where there was duck hunting and rice was grown 20 The Nainari Lagoon is a tourist attraction that has a small boardwalk and a boat dock Water is constantly circulating as it is connected to one of the main canals in the irrigation district the Lower Canal el Canal Bajo The Lagoon has been in recent years better taken care of and upgraded by the local authorities citation needed There is now a small garden with a bronze statue of a discobolus discus thrower by the Ostimuri Park entrance Right next to the lagoon there is a sports complex with an Olympic size swimming pool and many types of sport courts such as tennis basketball soccer and fronton citation needed Ostimuri Children s Park Edit Next to the Nainari Lagoon are the Ostimuru Children s Park and the Ostimuri Zoo At the park there is a variety of mechanical rides for children Lush trees surround the park The Ostimuri Zoo is located inside the park This habitat hosts a wide variety of animals the song of birds as you stroll through this place is like a melody from heaven original research As you make your journey in the midst of animals you are surpassed by a boa as if it were a guardian of this place citation needed Yaqui Museum Edit The Yaqui museum offers a perspective of Yaqui culture having among its objectives rescuing preserving investigating and spreading the culture and lifestyle of the Yaqui tribe As well as stimulating in the state s population the rediscovery of historical linguistic and ethnic values of the Yaquis citation needed Another objective is to show Sonoran children and teens the particular characteristics of Yaqui personality and the richness of their folklore tone and raise consciousness among Sonorans in regards to the development of historical events of the Yaquis as well as the influence that they had in the formation of groups and classes that constitute the regions current society citation needed Scenes of daily life of the Yaqui tribe are represented throughout the museum highlighting musical instruments hunting tools and clothing that distinguishes them since ancient times citation needed Cocorit House Edit This construction dates from the previous century its architecture is of colonial style It has four exhibition rooms and an ample garden where we find permanent samples of painting and sculptures as well as arts and crafts Among the House s visitors is the internationally renowned sculpture and painter Jose Luis Cuevas Among the objectives of Cocorit House is to support art in those people with artistic attributes that don t have enough support That is why local artists call it the region s haven for the arts Alvaro Obregon Dam Edit Main article Alvaro Obregon Dam The General Alvaro Obregon Dam also called the Oviachic Dam named taken from the place where it is located started its construction in the year 1947 and finished in 1952 being filled for the first time on July 1952 It is located 35 kilometres 22 miles north of Ciudad Obregon Lake Oviachic has a surface of 20 500 acres 83 square kilometres and a storage capacity of 3226 millions of cubic meters it is part of the dam system on the Yaqui River it s the state s largest dam and the third located on said river From the Oviachic Dam a 27 603 kilometre 17 152 mile network of main and secondary canals is derived that irrigate 450 000 hectares 1 100 000 acres of surface in the Yaqui and Mayo Valleys being one of the most important hydraulic infrastructures in the country During the last two decades this hydraulic work has become one of the main and most visited tourist destinations in our region Huivulai Island Edit Huivulai Island is located 50 kilometres 31 miles south of Ciudad Obregon and 5 miles 8 0 kilometres off the Sonora coast in the Gulf of California Sea of Cortez In Mayo Huivulai means long neck The island is 17 kilometres 10 6 miles long and 1 2 kilometres 0 7 miles wide at its widest part The island features many natural attractions including sand dunes used by four wheel drive vehicles The island has a water well oasis surrounded by date trees that attract many species of birds including gray and white pelicans corvetta gray crested cranes storks and albatrosses The island is ringed by beaches and features fishing opportunities off shore Festivals and cultural programs EditTetabiakte Art and Culture Festival Edit This festival of art and culture takes place in November to celebrate the anniversary of the founding of the municipality of Cajeme with the support of the Institute of Municipal Culture and the National Council for Culture and the Arts CONACULTA This festival offers music painting film poetry book presentations and shows the culture and traditions of the Yaqui ethnic group ITSON Arts Festival Edit The Festival promoted by the Instituto Tecnologico de Sonora through the Directorate of Extension of Culture and Services and is held annually in October The Festival is a member of the National Network of Festivals of the National Council for Culture and the Arts CONACULTA The program serves audiences of higher middle education university and the community at large through an artistic program representative of our cultural diversity with national quality groups with presentations in university forums public spaces and theatres with close access to the commun Ars Vocalis Mexico Edit Ars Vocalis Mexico is an international festival and academy dedicated to vocal art that in 2015 is hosted by Ciudad Obregon This festival founded by the tenor and cultural promoter Carlos Zapien has a pedagogical program thanks to which young Mexican singers previously selected through an audition process have the opportunity to participate in classes lectures given by renowned figures in the operatic world of Europe and the United States as well as being able to work with coaches from various opera houses and educational institutions Students also have the opportunity to work on the German vocal repertoire Lied ancient and baroque music and Mexican music The audience has the opportunity to listen to recitals and operatic performances at no cost IPN International Book Fair Edit Since 2013 the National Polytechnic Institute has organized the International Book Fair held in September The program has been attended by renowned figures in the literary field such as Elena Poniatowska and the program has the cooperation of several governmental and private institutions 21 Sports EditThe most popular sport in Obregon is baseball The city s professional baseball team is the Yaquis of the Mexican Pacific League who play at Tomas Oroz Gaytan Stadium Ciudad Obregon has multiple infrastructure works dedicated to sport among which stand out the Municipal Gymnasium Manuel Lira Garcia with a capacity of 3 000 spectators The Arena ITSON with capacity for 7 500 people and the New Yaquis Stadium can accommodate 16 500 people As well as small basketball and baseball stadiums scattered throughout the city these two sports are the most popular of the company Ciudad Obregon has the following sports teams Ofew City Yaquis Baseball team of the Mexican Pacific League Obregon City Hawks Basketball team of CIBACOPA Guerreros de Obregon FC Football team of the Mexico s Third Division Football also has acceptance the stadium Manuel Piri Sagasta is the most important venue for its practice with a capacity of approximately 4000 spectators although the sport is not as popular in the city it remains a recreational practice by the ease of game development Next to the football stadium is the sports car Nainari 2000 an area for the practice of different sports The most popular martial discipline in Ciudad Obregon is the TaeKwonDo which is practiced by many young people in the municipality of Cajeme which has multiple medalists in official competitions nationally and internationally The ITSON Potros have won 3 national university championships in Mexico 22 Obregon F C play professional soccer in the Segunda Division In 2021 Ciudad Obregon and Hermosillo co hosted the 3rd U 23 Baseball World Cup organized by the World Baseball Softball Confederation 23 Gastronomy EditCiudad Obregon has a wide variety of typical dishes such as WakabakiThe Yaqui ethnic group one of the most numerous in Mexico inherited the wakabaki which is a broth that constitutes a traditional dish that is prepared in its most important festivities Its ingredients are chickpea beef rib pumpkin potato cabbage carrot and jote Its preparation begins with the cutting of the firewood and the sacrifice of the res Tortillas Sobaqueras large flour tortillas The Spaniards who during the Arab domination learned many ways to take advantage of wheat brought flour tortillas to Sonora The Yaqui tribe adapted them and colloquially called them tortillas sobaqueras these tortillas are made by hand and using a lot of water CahuamantaTypically made from manta rays and shrimp it is usually prepared as a broth in which the manta meat shrimp and vegetables are added The broth is served on a plate or you can prepare cahuamanta tacos when only the broth is served it is called vichy in some places that same broth with shrimp is known as chucki Its name derives from the word caguama loggerhead sea turtle and manta ray originally this dish was prepared with loggerhead sea turtle meat but since the fishing of this marine species is not longer allowed it was decided to replace the caguama with manta meat The dish was created in the late nineteenth century in Ciudad Obregon CoyotasTraditional cookies from the state of Sonora These are made with wheat flour and stuffed with piloncillo raw form of pure cane sugar Coyotas are similar to Argentine alfajor but thinner and larger in diameter In Cd Obregon you can find in addition to the traditional ones made with piloncillo coyotas filled with cajeta Mexican caramel sauce cajeta and walnut chocolate Bavarian cream guava strawberry pineapple apricot chabacano blackberry mango and apple purees CecinaAlso known as salted dry meat is a type of dehydrated meat that is made of beef cutting and air drying and during venison season can be made of this animal as well BacanoraBacanora like Jalisco tequila is a spirit drink made in Sonora Mexico It is a mezcal made 100 of the juice of the roasted maguey head fermented and distilled However the development of the formal market in El Bacanora was truncated in 1915 when the manufacture and marketing of this alcoholic beverage was banned It was until the 1990s that this activity ceased to be persecuted and sanctioned by customs and its authorization was contemplated in the Law on Alcohols of the State of Sonora This agave drink from Sonora is protected by appellation of origin published in the Official Journal of the Federation on 6 November 2000 In this publication it is officially stated that the State of Sonora is exclusively the entity which is recognized as producer of this drink Agave angustifolia is the only maguey species admitted by this Law for the production of El Bacanora The territorial area of this denomination area is 57 923 92 km2 and is composed of 35 municipalities of the mountainous area of Sonora 24 Some popular restaurants recognized for offering some of the dishes mentioned above are Los Arbolitos de Cajeme little trees of Cajeme opened over 25 years ago and currently has 13 branches throughout Mexico El Bronco Restaurant opened in 1968 25 specialized in steak and authentic Mexican dishes It features live music and country style facilities Notable people EditSome prominent people originating in Ciudad Obregon or with a track record in their careers connected to the city are 26 Julio Cesar Chavez Professional boxer Giovanny Gallegos Major League Baseball pitcher Hector Velazquez Major League Baseball pitcher 27 Stephanie Sigman Actress and model She is best known for her starring role in the 2011 film Miss Bala He also appeared in the film James Bond Spectre among others Maria Felix Born in Alamos she is an important figure of the Mexican golden film era She participated in a total of 47 films and is known as The Dona for his celebrated character Norman Borlaug Agronomist He studied wheat rust and agronomic practices in the Yaqui Valley looking for it to have self sufficiency in wheat He won a Nobel Prize thanks to his practices and research carried out in Obregon In recognition by the city one of the main streets bears his name International relations EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Mexico Twin towns Sister cities Edit Ciudad Obregon is twinned with Baton Rouge Louisiana United States since 1977 28 Tucson Arizona United States since 1980 29 Notes Edit Station ID for Ciudad Obregon is 76258 Use this station ID to locate the sunshine durationReferences Edit INEGI Retrieved 20 September 2022 http visitaobregon gob mx tourism city obregon http visitaobregon gob mx tourism city obregon Normales Climatologicas Ciudad Obregon 1961 2014 Archived from the original on 10 April 2017 Retrieved 9 April 2017 Normales Climatologicas Ciudad Obregon 2015 2017 Retrieved 9 April 2017 Normal Temperatures and Precipitation for Ciudad Obregon 1981 2010 in Spanish Servicio Meteorologico Nacional Archived from the original on 10 April 2017 Retrieved 9 April 2017 Extreme Temperatures and Precipitation for Ciudad Obregon 1961 2010 in Spanish Servicio Meteorologico Nacional Archived from the original on 20 November 2018 Retrieved 1 June 2017 Station 76258 Ciudad Obregon Global station data 1961 1990 Sunshine Duration Deutscher Wetterdienst Archived from the original on 17 October 2017 Retrieved 9 February 2016 Columbia Lippincott Gazetteer New York Columbia University Press 1952 p 406 Census Data Retrieved 7 February 2013 Mexico en Cifras Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 Oficina Nacional de Desarrollo Humano 2005 IDH Municipal 2000 2005 base de datos Archived from the original on 6 March 2009 Retrieved 17 December 2008 http visitaobregon gob mx tourism city obregon gobierno y econom C3 ADa http visitaobregon gob mx tourism city obregon educaci C3 B3n y health title http visitaobregon gob mx tourism city obregon instituciones de educaci C3 B3n superior title higher Universidad La Salle Noroeste Universidad La Salle Noroeste Archived from the original on 18 September 2017 http www itesca edu edu mx itesca historia asp dead link Ciudad Obregon Tecnologico de Monterrey http tecmilenio mx en career professional dead link Rene Gandara Romo modernizo a Ciudad Obregon InfoCajeme in Spanish 27 July 2019 Retrieved 27 November 2021 http visitaobregon gob mx tourism city obregon cultura and tourism http visitaobregon gob mx tourism city obregon deporte III WBSC U 23 Baseball World Cup to open on 23 September III U 23 Baseball World Cup 2021 World Baseball Softball Confederation WBSC Retrieved 25 September 2021 http visitaobregon gob mx tourism city obregon gastronom C3 ADa El Bronco Visita Obregon Archived from the original on 27 November 2018 famous and successful originating in Sonora Retrieved 26 November 2018 dead link Hector Velazquez Stats Fantasy amp News Boston Red Sox Sister City Fun Dinner Honors Visitors Here on Mexican Exchange Baton Rouge Morning Advocate sec B p 2 29 June 1977 About Us tucsonmexicosistercities org 2017 Retrieved 3 May 2018 External links Edit Mexico portal Media related to Ciudad Obregon at Wikimedia Commons Ciudad Obregon travel guide from WikivoyageCoordinates 27 29 38 N 109 56 20 W 27 49389 N 109 93889 W 27 49389 109 93889 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ciudad Obregon amp oldid 1141198352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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