Cenote exploration retreats at Lunita invite you into the pristine waters of ancient sinkholes where every drop holds centuries of history and healing. Set along La Ruta de los Cenotes with exclusive access to a private cenote, Lunita blends meditation, wellness, and Mayan tradition. This guide covers what cenotes are, how they formed, and their spiritual significance. (For the ceremonial side, see the private cenote experience.)
What cenotes are
Cenotes are natural sinkholes formed by the collapse of limestone caves, revealing the underground rivers that run beneath the Yucatán Peninsula, there are no surface rivers here, so for ancient civilizations these were lifelines.
How cenotes formed
Millions of years ago the Yucatán lay beneath an ancient ocean, leaving behind porous limestone of fossilized marine organisms. Around 66 million years ago, the Chicxulub meteorite struck the northern peninsula, an impact that reshaped the planet's climate, contributed to the dinosaurs' extinction, and fractured the limestone bedrock. Over millions of years, rainfall dissolved that rock into caverns and passageways; as their ceilings collapsed, they exposed the crystal-clear pools we call cenotes.
Types of cenotes
Open cenotes resemble natural lakes; semi-open cenotes are partially covered by rock, blending light and shadow; and underground cenotes are hidden in caves, ideal for meditation and ritual.
The spiritual and cultural significance
For the Maya, cenotes were sacred wells of life and portals to Xibalba, central to offerings, purification, and communication with the gods. They remain powerful places of reflection, which is why a cenote sits so naturally within a personal retreat or the integration arc, and why guests find them as moving as they are beautiful.
