Monday 7 December 2015

Riding the chicken buses on both sides of the border......Trapped in a flooded cave for 10 hrs - now, doesn't that sound like fun?........keep on truckin...or don't look back! Island life and Belizian brownies, some mighty fine baking there! Back in civilization in PDC!

End of days...Guatemala and the rest... Part 3

Time to leave Tikal and the jungle environ....
...originally, we thought to head back to Flores, fly out from there to Guatemala City and then head on...

But... as we are so close to the Belizian border...

...we decide to press on to Belize, rather than backtrack in Guatemala...

Asking around, there are several options to get us out of the jungle and to the Belizian border...   
...spend $50 US for a private shuttle
...spend less on a shared shuttle, or...
...as we ask some more questions....we find out, we can
...spend $50 Quetzal (abt $8 Can) to ride a chicken bus

The answer is obvious...take a chance on the chicken bus.. why not?



The bus arrives at the Tikal gates, drops off a whole load of park workers and we get on...clean, still painted the yellow school bus color...

....….As usual, our planning is fairly nebulous and open...sooo

There is a bit of structure to our very vague ideas about how our day will unfold....

....where we want to go, where we might end up and what we may want to see or....(the key word is VAGUE...aka known as loose, flexible, unscheduled...)....

The 45 minute trip for the crossroads leaves the park at 8am. Where, we are told, any number of buses head to the Guatemalan/Belizian frontier.



...while it seems we travel without a clue sometimes...we really are organized...what teacher isn't...as the bus pulls away, we discuss the day ahead (hey, we've got lots of time before we have to get off)...

Our rough plans look something like....

...Plan A.. get to the Belizian town of San Ignacio (located about 20km inside Belize) and visit the ATM (Actun Tinichil Muknal) cave and river system. It sounds like an Indiana Jones movie, with crystal skulls, skeletons and a 3 hr cave walk - waist deep in water while holding candles. Sounds fun!

... Plan B...bus right through Belize to Corozal (Belize) or Chetumal (Mexico)...

...Plan C....looks to be something in between Plan A and B...(aka - we could end up anywhere!)

...our travel plans always depend on schedules, weather, the unexpected or new information we've picked up on the fly...

Getting through the park gates/security at Tikal ends up being the longest wait at any 'border/control' crossing we've traveled through yet, on this trip...we wait...bus driver assures us ..."es normale, no problemo"

..soon we depart the gates and rattle off.


Our chicken bus stops every few minutes to pick up locals, it drops off/picks up plastic jugs of gas along the way...school kids, families, all get on and off...people wave, shake hands, talk, kids stare at us, and out the window...

                              
                             ......riding the chicken buses will do this to you.....

...we eventually come to our dropoff stop at the crossroads, and our driver points up the road (thataway!!) , to where we need to catch our next ride heading to the border...

....it takes all of 30 seconds to walk to our next bus stop and we wait....seems some sort of transport comes by every 30 minutes or so....so, we wait.. morning is sunny, lots of daylight left....

2 locals walk by and say "Hi"... they ask "What are you doing here?"... for a split second, we think they mean Guatemala...?? (I wonder the same thing, at times??)..what they really do mean is.."Why are you standing here on the side of the road?"... we tell them we're waiting for the bus, going to Belize etc...chat with them in English for a few minutes.

...we say goodbye, as they point out an approaching van is the one one we need to flag down...

The local collectivo stops and we get on...it's a beat up van, with several people on board heading to the Guatemalan border town of Melchor.


The 90 min ride costs $60 quetzal and passes through rich, green countryside, lakes and small towns.




We stop for a baño break at a gas station and several people grab some food from a local vendor set up right beside the gas pumps...whole new meaning to gassing up at a drive-thru!


We head off for the final stretch to the border. We are arriving at another border crossing without any currency of the next country we are entering.




...after all the traveling, crossing borders, we have stopped worrying about having local $$ before hand. We have discovered there is always someone ready to deal/exchange local currency.... we are told there will be money changers at the bus station...

Sure enough, as we climb out, a guy approaches us with a wad of cash (at least 2 bricks thick) bundled in his hand.. "Need some Belizian $$?" We do...and quickly, painlessly swap out our Guatemalan $$ for Belizian $$$ ...exchange is 4 to 1..there goes our $100 Quetzal... and we are rich with $25 Belizian..not sure how far that will last?? Still need to find a banco!

...a little voice used to go off in our heads when we first started dealing with street-level money lenders way back when..."This isn't legal, or safe!" ..."We could get into trouble!"...we don't worry a bit, not any more, as the voice has stopped....now we just cross borders, buy money on the run, or failing that, find a taxi driver to take us to a bank machine; esp, if they want to get their fare)...

With limited Belizian $$ in our hands we walk off to the border. It is literally over a bridge, past a long line of trucks idling at the border....





1st stop is departure from Guatemala.

We present our passports, get a stamp, then wander towards the Belizian customs ...the in-between no man's land is a jumble of trucks, semis, people, officials and uniforms. The usual border chaos anywhere outside of Canada/United States.

We are waved on to Belize. Everybody is happy, relaxed.

 I think one could possibly skip right through these borders and everybody would laugh. Customs there check our passports, we get a stamp and we enter Belize..easy, breezy and hassle free...



....now we need a ride out from the border??

Oh, did we mention...we are doing this on the American Thanksgiving weekend... met many people from the USofA in Tikal...all travelling over the weekend and extending their trip for several more days....things may be crowded, at some point.

We come across a private shuttle bus carrying a number of backpackers (some we recognize from our Coban section)...we track the driver down and ask if there's room to catch a ride onward..he'd like to help, but he'd get in sh#$! from the taxi drivers waiting at the border...

...so, we grab a cab..spend $7.50 B to get us to the closest border town that has a bus ... 10 min. later, we are on a bus and shortly heading to San Ignacio and the ATM caves.... still, didn't find a banco ATM!

The Belizian chicken bus ride is pretty uneventful. We stop every few minutes, people get on/off, school kids, people going to Belize City etc...

A few minutes outside of San Ignacio, some travelers get on...we ask them about the ATM caves. They tell us the heavy rains have closed them. In fact, several days earlier, a group of tourists were trapped in the caves and rising waters for 10 hrs before getting rescued. Now, that sounds like fun!

The bus rolls into San Ignacio and our stop.  We make a decision to just continue on and not stay in town. ....next stop Belize City...we pay the driver another fare from our dwindling Belizian $$ and face abt 3 hrs more on the bus! A long day's journey into the night!

...bus travel in Belize is fairly cheap, most buses look to be the old bluebird school bus ( flat nosed and long)...

We hit a traffic jam that slows things to a standstill....seems a dump truck is in a ditch and a bus has run into the back end. Another dump truck sits angled in the lane, blocking whatever space that could be available... to make matters worse..a pick up is towing a modular home the other way...of course the modular home is slightly too wide for the road it is on..which just adds to the chaos....eventually, we sneak by and do get to Belize City by late afternoon!



At the Belize City bus station, we find there are 2 buses leaving for the border town of Corozal. That means another 4 hrs ride...but first we need a bank...

...we exit the bus station, find a cab and off we go to the ATM...we talk about our options...push on (it's getting late), stay in Belize City overnight (not the best choice) or head to the islands for a day or 2...??? Hmmmmm?

.... eventually, we get to an ATM, pull some $$ out and get our cabbie to take us to the harbor to check ferries to Cayo Caulker... seems they leave every hour ...and that decision is easy! We head offshore on a 45 min boat ride to spend several days on Cayo Caulker belonging to Belize. About 80 people fit into this short boat crossing.




....ah...Belizian Island life...a little Belize, a little Caribe, a little reggae... Life is easy on Cayo Caulker.... we hop off the ferry and head down clay/dirt Front Street to look for a room in the gathering darkness...Look at several places, before finding a nice, quiet upper floor room of the Bluewave Guesthouse across the street from the beach and a view of the ocean. Cost around $65.






Near the only real beach spot called the Split...so named cause a narrow channel was formed from natural/human cause and morphed into a 100 M wide channel, perfect for boats to take a short cut from the outer side to the inner island.



...we chill out for several days, swim at the infamous Split beach, watch the sunrise, endure some good wind and rain storms....eat some local island food and taste...





 .....Belizian brownies from a beach vendor, sold straight out of his Styrofoam ice cooler and made by wife....ingredients are to die for ...the effect ...heavenly!..

Our few evenings here were spent checking out the local street and pub scenes.  Music everywhere... One particular night we were at a sports bar with reggae music by The Melody Man - a Rastafarian from Belize.  Great music to listen and dance to...
with some interesting characters ...


...there's only 2 real band members (fellow in the white T, along with the guy in the background on the keyboard.....the rest....guy with white oar for a guitar, the other with a beer bottle for a microphone are just what happens when you are on the islet....




Cayo Caulker has the reputation...but in reality, is just a sandy, clay packed mangrove islet that attracts a wide, diverse group to its shores.



...rather than return to Belize City and hop another 4 hr bus ride to Corozal/Chetumal....we opt instead,  for the panga ferry to San Pedro (Ambergris Caye).... which gets us through Belize customs.....we then hop a final ferry for Chetumal, Mexico!...the 3 hr ride is easy, breezy, filled with ocean views and ocean calm...

Again, arrive without problem or pesos...no issue in customs...the waterfront taxi stand at Chetumal takes Belizian $$, and our cabbie assures us there's an ATM in the ADO bus station where we need to go.

Move through Chetumal and out in 30 minutes, as we catch an ADO bus to Playa del Carmen (PDC) with minutes to spare and head out on the 4 hr ride up the coast. This premium bus came with a pair of free headphones, a free drink, Spanish videos, male/female washrooms, curtains to close and plenty of room to stretch. Shayne even got his own set of seats.

With our days numbered on the road and a flight to catch home, we walk into a busy American Thanksgiving weekend in PDC and look for a room.

Find a nice, small hotel close to the action Hacienda Paradise Boutique Hotel for $100.  We have a large room with a balcony overlooking the inner courtyard and pool which proves to be nice for a cool early evening swim. Nice to go upscale for a it.



We're now into the higher prices of the tourist strip!  We spend a few days on the beach and cruise the famous 5th Avenue shopping street during the cooler evenings with hustlers at the ready to entice you into their shops.  PDC is extremely overpriced, the beach & water not so great with a sewage-type smell lingering. Some say it's from the mangrove swamps, others say it's from the Sargasso seaweed and still others say it is from a burst sewage pipe up the beach near the river.  Hmmm?

After 3 days in Playa, it's time to hop on a bus for the hour ride to the airport...

This trip is a wrap....heading home to colder temps/weather, a chance to see family and friends.

Adios for this road trip...nearly a dozen countries in 6 months of travel in 2015. Each so varied, so unique and so much fun!  Do we have a favourite?  Not really.... It's always about the wonderful people we meet along the way... Precious!!

Come join us in early 2016, as we head out again...Should be fun and another great adventure to share in words and photos.👍

Shayne y Yvonne




Monday 30 November 2015

Wow...if this is the dry season....we'd hate to be here for the rainy season...so...how many can you stuff in one of those 'roomy' shuttle vans for another long haul trip???..... Flores....a beautiful flower on Lake Peten.....welcome to the jungle, for real....Tickle me, ..we are in the Mayan ruins...more stairs? Oh, no!.. Organ music in the jungle..could it be a requiem for the Lost World....

Guatemala.... Part 2

....deep in the lush, sweaty jungle surrounding Tikal, our machetes chop and hack through the dense, thick foliage.... mosquitoes swarm and descend on our bare skins with relish, feeding and sucking. The muddy pathway oozes a rich, brown goop over our boots, as we  desperately swat at big, black buzzing things from the back of our necks. We trudge further on, all the while watching the leeches crawl their way  up our legs...the sun has been swallowed up somewhere, high above us by the dark, green dank vegetation. We ran out of food yesterday and we are sure our guide is lost....

(Yea...OK...enough of that fiction...let's get on with the reality and we will get back to Tikal later! Ha-ha)

We leave Antigua and head north (or east?) to Coban....




...we are assured (when we booked)...that these long haul shuttles are roomier, with fewer seats and more leg room for gringos than the smaller vans we've used so far...yea, yea, right!!

Van picks us up at our hotel with only a handful on board...the 6 hr ride looks promising with all the space....hopefulness is soon turned into harsh reality, as we spend about the next hour or so, driving around Antigua picking up more passengers. Soon, we are 16 tightly squeezed in travellers...even the little, flipdown seats that fill in the aisles are used...smelly bodies, long legs...Ahhh! Close your eyes and meditate...just as we are finally settling into the zone, the van suddenly slows.



What's ahead now?!!  Not chickens, pigs, horses, dogs or cattle, but a downed power pole with wires across the street.  No problem!   He just drives over them and keeps going...everyone breathes a sigh of relief when we actually make it across safely!!!



...we head to Coban, through traffic, rain, mountain passes...our goal is actually Semuc Champey (which is almost another 3 hrs beyond Coban on a rutted, dirt road)....Semuc is supposed to be a gorgeous series of limestone pools, set deep in the Guatemalan wilderness..., there's also a cave system that you can explore using just candles....seems mystical and draws the tourists to it.... like moths to a flame..


...arrive in Coban late that afternoon and look for a room and info about Semuc Champey... we are worried about all the rainfall we've driven through, flooded fields, muddy creeks and swollen rivers that may cause problems for the Semuc Champey system (and us)....sure enough...we find out the region is closed due to high waters... A bit disappointing...

So, we stay in Coban for the night...with the Christmas decorations and music playing in the town square....beautiful tall Christmas tree, lights and ornaments, along with festive Christmas music... "It's the most wonderful time of the year...." piped in around the square and church...




...we move on the next morning to Flores in pouring, pounding rain, and in yet, another crowded van. Yvonne and I score the front seats beside the driver...not bad, but a bit tight with our 2 packs crammed in and around us.....

...we pull into a gas station, undercover, out of the rain while the driver puts our packs on top, underneath a thick tarp, along with the rest of the luggage while we all have a quick lunch and stretch break then off we go...




(It was a good choice to leave Coban and move on...as we run into some travellers days later, who were stuck for 3 days waiting for the raging waters at Semuc Champey to abate....)

...we drive through cascading, torrents of the wet stuff as we head to the island town of Flores, near the Tikal ruins....

...we wind our way up and over mountain passes, through a number of small, desolate, muddy villages, detour around local markets and suddenly come to a river......

...there isn't any bridge to cross over the rain-swollen waters, instead there's a barge, ferrying traffic back and forth...



The high waters have wiped out whatever on/off ramp we were to use, so a bulldozer is frantically building a muddy, earthen ramp in between barge landings...


...somehow we get on and off without getting stuck and drive on to Flores...




Flores is a beautiful, little village set in/on Lake Petén Itzá. Joined to the mainland by a short causeway the little town is a handy base to explore Tikal and the area..



....we luck out and book into a nice, cosy, quiet lakeside hotel.. we manage to score the 'penthouse' with a massive terrace that provides a superb vantage point overlooking the Petén Itzá Lake with its smaller islands and for viewing the sunsets...






...after several days of long hours cooped up in the vans travelling, we decide to hang out in Flores...

...we explore the town...about a 30 min walk around the malecon, view the town's Christmas tree (these trees must be government issued as they seem to be exactly the same in each town), and soak up the sun.




We take a panga for a Lake tour and swim at a local beach in the amazingly warm waters of Lake Petén Itzá... sit on our concrete beach slab in between swims...







Weather is sunny, views are amazing... rum n' cokes are abt $1.50 on this version of little Venice.





Like much of Guatemala, Lake Petén Itzá has struggled with rising waters resulting in elevated lake levels.  As a result many of the homes, businesses and roads are flooded and have had to be abandoned...for the moment...





...we could stay here longer, rather than in Antigua or Lake Atitlan...





...after several days in Flores, we move on to the world famous ancient city of Tikal.....this is a must see, we are told, as one's visit to Guatemala would not be complete, if you didn't get to Tikal...


So we book into the Tikal Inn.....one of only 3 hotels/lodges allowed in the park...it offers walk-in closeness, food and drink available... but at 3 -5x the prices as in Flores. Ouch!...

....arriving before the room is ready, we leave our packs at the desk and head out to spend the afternoon exploring the site..it is a big park, most of it still untouched...many people run around in 2-3 hrs having come in from neighbouring towns and leave.....best to have a day or 2 to wander, take your time, deal with heat, humidity, rain etc...

...we walk, climb pyramids, spot spider monkeys, wander down overgrown, jungle lush pathways and listen to the roar of the howler monkeys....they make big noise in the park...like a bull walrus or lion....




As soon as we start down the jungle paths we come across a massive ceiba tree with branches reaching like the hairy legs of a tarantula dwarfing us at its base...It is considered to be The Tree of Life by the Mayans. We hear that it is a protected tree and cannot be cut down. The park is filled with them.




...as the afternoon wears on, the day crowd  leave the park we climb the 202 steps to the top...soon, we are alone, sitting near the top of the massive 65 metre pyramids, high above the jungle canopy... The Temple of the Two-headed Snake although we could not see any indicators of the snakes anymore.  What a view!






...with only the whisper of the wind as a backdrop, the sounds of the jungle are easily heard; birds chirping/squawking, howler monkeys, howling, in some far corner and...... then the rustle of tree tops, below us begins....several spider monkeys make their way across the canopy... swinging from top to top, stopping to eat the nuts/ berries, we watch and spot them...amazing!!!




...soon they are gone, quiet wraps around us, a stillness as we wait for the sunset and moonrise (a full moon at Tikal - must be good karma there, somewhere?)...

....however, clouds block the setting sun and obscure the rising moon....we leave and head back to our jungle room before darkness and the impending rainfall descends....at 9:45 after the power is out, we head outside to see the full moon.  We are in luck as the clouds part long enough to see it in this pitch black zone.



.....the Tikal Hotel is like a small all-inclusive or a tired seniors home way past their prime....generator power only runs for several hrs morning and night, meals are taken in the decorless dining room, while organ/folk music plays through the speakers....not quite the elevator kind, but close enough.



...tour groups come and go over our 2 nights there....staff hover, wait to serve the guests....the pace is slower here, than jungle rot ...a better choice may be to stay in El Remate, located approximately 30 min or so from Tikal and on Lake Petén Itzá...

We awake to another massive rainstorm during the night, after breakfast, we wait out the lingering showers...things eventually clear up and we head back into the park....





....we climb, explore new sections, spot more spider monkeys, coatis cross the road and colourful turkeys are wandering about. The weather is cooler, less humid, and perfect for exploring... amazed, once again, at the ability to create these massive structures...how did they ever do it.. (must have been the aliens, huh?)









...later that day, we plan to escape from the jungle, Tikal and even Guatemala...it is time to move on....

Adios mis amigos,

Shayne y Yvonne


                                            Additional photos...











Adios!

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