Saturday, August 9, 2008

Bay Island blues


After the highs and lows of La Ensenada we thought about trying another village but felt that we had our perfect experience. The obvious thing to do was to get back on the gringo trail so we got o the boat to the budget-dive-island of Utila, still part of Honduras. And we didn´t heed advice and take sea-sickness pills.

The boat was a motor catarmaran. The sea was rough afternoon. There was pitching, but there was also yawing. There was so much movement in all directions. And the sides of the boat were non-transparent tarps so you couldn´t see out and get a fix on the horizon or land. The journey was only just over an hour. Within ten minutes my shorts and b-ball top (still thanking Per!) were soaked through with sweat and I realised something was up. The crew were scanning the 50 or so passengers readey with bags and towels. Then it began. I was puking so much for the next 45 minutes I didn´t even notice that Anna had joined in the fun along ith about 20 others. My hands were numb, my body was weak, and when we arrived I couldn´t get off the boat for about 20 minutes. Then I had to lay on the dock for another 45 minutes, still throwing up. Oh, I was a sight. Meanwhile Anna scored us a great room at Ruby´s, with a lovely bathroom, kitchenette across the courtyard, jetty with late night rays, and the lovely cats, MC (coincidental note to Warnocks) and Baby, who was blind, so had the most incredibly piercing green eyes. MC stole the yank fisher guy´s steak shark bait and we fed Baby sweet milk. But I couldn´t really do anything for 2 days. But the beach and snorkelling were great. Anna still has the jellyfish sting scar on her upper arm.

Our rooms usually look something like this. This was a nice one
Anna befriends parrot on Utila beach. Jamie loses job.

The Cuban connection


You see, just like the book says, most travellers tend to fly through, or skip, Honduras, except for the cheap diving courses on the Bay Islands. So we thought that we would head for the North coast´s Garifuna villages to get off the gringo trail and find paradise - and we kinda did.

On the way through the Honduras with Laurent & Laura filling our heads with stories of (his) primitive pastoral lifestyle high in the Swiss Alps, we hit a local bus price protest outside San Pedro (AKA the AIDs capital of central america). After a quick chat up of an off duty minibus driver in yours truly´s awful spanglish, and with Laurent roping in some other stranded Frenchies, we were able to slip through the waning picket line with only a few gruff looks from the protesters. Anna and I then went to Tela, where our room for the night had an open window - altogether we had a cricket, 4 cockroaches and in the morning we found one scorpion (he had stuck to the Heath Robinson gaffa tape device I had tried to block the window with), and we moved on to the randomly chosen Garifuna village of La Ensenada.

The villages dot the Caribbean coast from Belize to Panama and are made of Creole speaking descendents of slaves that were exiled from Roatan back in the day. There is a lot of poverty, basic subsistence living (fishing), basic tourist facilities, a few weekending local tourists, and in our experience, no gringos.

We arrived and did our classic luggage/accom manouver: we piled up the bags and one of us went off to scout all available lodging for the best deal for a week. We do this whenever we can basically because our bags are just too heavy to lug around! After meeting local-man-with-a-certain-quality, Gary, and seeing a mixted bag of overpriced or scummy rooms about three different people had pointed towards the Cuban, the last house on the beach. I came back beaming to tell Anna. I couldn´t believe it. Lovely big house on stilts, garden to the beach, big bedroom, sound of the waves, big kitchen, lounge with TV and stereo, and the owner and his partner who take guests because they have two spare rooms and like the company. And it was cheap (10usd a night). It was too good to be true. This was where coud spend 2, 3 weeks, even longer.

La Ensenada has about 200 residents, one tiny shop, about 5 palapas (shacks) serving food (you can have anything you want as long as its fried fish, rice and beans), most of the locals living in huts (mostly Pepsi sponsored) a couple of nice small hotels (empty) and four nice houses (all owned by the Cuban) on the beach - which, by the way, is a gorgeous arc of sand with rainforest at one end and stretches into the distance.

We lasted three days in the end, including watching the Euro final in the village shop. There was a classic side show when Gary reappeared, very drunk. The village shop had a young scrawny kitten that Anna had been giving some milk too during the footy, and Gary turned up and started getting very dramatic, and very, very camp, with the owner about taking away the cat. He was all swaying head, skinny torso, black painted nails, kitten kidnapping and rolling drunk (warning non-PC section)- and distracting me from the serious business of kraut-baiting. But it was all worthwhile when the shopkeeper leaned over to me and confided in me that Gary was ´batty man´ in rich creole pattoir. Yes, he really was the only gay in the village.

On the second morning we were both in the water looking back at the house, the forest, along at the beach, up at the blue sky; in soft, clear, gentle water; and we really were there. We really had arrived. It was truly magical. But a few hours later Anna came out of the water with a jellyfish sting. I spent some time on the Cuban´s internet to ensure that she about to make proper use of her urine. I didn´t watch. Anna got some bad cramps and muscle aches for a few hours after but no fever luckily. Later that day the true state of the kitchen also dawned on us. It turned out that the Cuban and partner spent all day in bed and drove the half hour to eat in Tela most evenings. They bought a lot of food, and vitamins (you have never seen so many power and pump pill bottles - and the big ones too) but left it to rot. The kitchen stank, there were fruit flies buzzing around black bananas, the floor thick with dust, gubbins everywhere and it was a real struggle to wade in and make something.

On our last morning we had a chat with Alfredo, our portly retiree host, that explained a few things. His partner, to who he lovingly referred as ´This One´ (as in ´not the other one who was 18´) was only 17 when they met, ´a few months ago´. There were five video recorders and no videos in the lounge (why have the videos elsewhere?), there were some fairly graphic images on his PC, ´This One´ clearly had other interests (fitting for a teenager) other than home building, and Alfie clearly only had interests in the bedroom. We felt dirty, the place was dirty, paradise ahd been tainted by an ex-pat exploiting ´their need for a father figure´. And the house, and the beach, and the village were wonderful. It was a bit sad. But funny, for everyone except for This One´s parents, probably.

La Ensenada bussling as ever
The beach backed by rainforest at tusk
The sting

Friday, August 8, 2008

Really cosmic Guatemala


Lake Atitlan has been on the gringo trails for many moons and is also now part owned by North Americans who have created some spectacular holiday homes on its banks. Panajachel was our first sight of the lake. It had a sports bar (Holland wasn´t it?) and good shopping and a relaxed vibe. We got the launch to San Marcos, famous for being a hippy hang out. One of the smallest and arguably most charming villages on the lake, San Marcos is unique because the bottom half of the village is filled with posadas (hostels) that are linked by tight leafy alleyways. It is like a fairytale, especially at dusk (or ´tusk´ as Anna called once, which I won´t let her forget:)) when the wailing of several local women starts. It is spooky, accompanied by some bells, and definately adds to the cosmic vibe. There is a yoga resort made out of pyramids, and our place, La Paz, had a yoga hall, Mayan sauna and good food. The Mayan sauna was brick, low, fired by wood outside, and you put water on the metal of the oven inside. It was only warm but very sweaty, which was good. The manager of the hostel we named Kinky Bill, after his T-shirt, which was suitably prophetic as it transpired he was known for walking around naked and walking in on sauna-ing visitors. There was a little security problem in the surrounding hills, which one long term gringo dealt with by always carrying a cricket bat - not unlike Ian {mandolin strings in Austin) Faith.

We swam in the lake, we met Germans, we met the Belgians again, Anna went to Yoga, I spanked axe. It was very cool. And we met Lauren and Laura, the multi-lingual Swiss-English couple, famous for giving us the Kiterunner (ace book), who we should have given Middlesex (similarly ace book) but hadn´t finished it yet.

Just when L&L thought they had lost us, we ended up on the bus out of Pana with them, and while they went onwards, we went local, via Antigua, the duff town of Chichimula (Chikki) for the Honduran border. At Copan, we didn´t bother seeing the ruins or the butterfly sanctuary but, within 5 minutes of arriving we saw the Grangers and Ficeland again, and when we went to buy bus tickets, Laurent´s de}readlocked permagrin was there to meet us. Around this time Central America started to feel very cosy. And we were in Honduras and I had a plan...

Always the search for...
The view across Lake Atitlan
Anna takes a dip late in the day

Slightly more cosmic Guatemala


At Earth Lodge we met the lovely, though Northern, Granger family. Mother Emily and toddler Toby sayed at the lodge torturing the residents while daughter Ishabel (13) and father Bananaman accompanied us on the tour of the Pacaya volcano.

Oh how Adi and (Emily´s cousin and Earth Lodge manageress) Lucy must have been creasing when they handed over the bag of rainwear to Bob. It wasnt until we arrived in the van at the foot of Pacaya that he realised he was about to climb a volcano in a bright custard yellow, all-in-one, light plastic jump suit, that was about 3 sizes too small for his lanky frame (I think I am qualified to use the term ´lanky´ by the way).

Did we offer to wait and reupholster him, or have a whip round, or canvas for alternatives - No. I promptly christened him Bananaman and sang the Banana Splits theme tune and mouthed other assorted witicisms, which needn´t lower the tone of this blog, all the way to the top.

And my god it was the most dangerous thing we have ever done. In some reference literature it does mention people have been hurt and died doing this but you don´t really realise that until you are standing in an active lava field, you feet are warming, you can see red hot rock in between the cracks and fissures of fragile, twisted lava rock beneath your feet, and you can see an actual moving lava flow about 150 meters away. Oh and there is smoke bollowing out behind, intermittent hissing, the guide can only manage to keep the group of 10 within 100 yards of each other (useless!) and there are other tour groups of panicing americans taking flight at random trajectories across the flow as they realise how totally ridiculous this is. Of course, the ones in shorts and flip flops are getting melting plastic soles, warm legs, singed leg hair, and the occaisional nasty cut from rock as the scramble as the brittle lava rock beneath them gives way, breaks away, or causes slips.

Anyway, it was wikked and there was still plenty of time to get a few super hero poses out of Bananaman.
Never in a month of sundaes!

Cosmic Guatemala


Arriving in Antigua, Guatemala was a bit odd. On the surface it is one of the most charming large towns in central america. Wide cobbled streets, safe, easily walkable, every restaurant with a lovely courtyard, interesting museums, good shopping, sensible prices, loads of excursion options, and those amazing volcanos that you can see rising from the end of every street, that help you orientate.

Unfortunately, Antigua is also gringo city. There is fast food (bad), a good guitar shop (good), long queues with tourists for the ATMs (bad), good food (good), loud obnoxious hostels (bad), language schools (good) - but why would anyone try to learn immersive spanish in a town where everyone is from Maine, Malmo or Manchester?

So we stayed a night and then shipped out to Earth Lodge. Perched on a hillside 20 minutes outside of Antigua, in a village accessed by 2 daily buses, requiring a final 2km walk along the hillside where vehicles can no longer pass in the rainy season; Earth Lodge is a US owned avocado farm with accom for 15 in stilted apex rooved cabins. Oh and every cabin has a view across the valley beside Antigua of three towering volcanos. We saw ´Fuego´ erupt two night running - it was awesome. We did nothing but eat resident Israeli chef Adi´s wonderful veggie food, help ourselves to the open bar, and start a backgammon school. I did also have to day trip to Antigua to fix my nut*

But it was 2 weeks before avocado harvest. Like the dolphins that are waiting for us somewhere, we will still have to wait for those fresh avos that we adorned; the prime reason anna wanted to go there! There were also four great cats; the ginger fell off the tin roof with delight as we tickled him and Baby purred. Anna had acupuncture. I spent 3 hours filing my new nut and fitting it and it works - hoorah - a first for me. I was helped by a lift into town from a comedy German withe most messed up VW camper I have ever been in. We discussed music (his touring with Captain Sensible), religion, politics and the vintage VW yard on the edge of town. He had been mugged walking there once so I didn´t go. He took frequent calls from his ex-language students as he had just been sacked. We drank coffee in the sun and talked nuts. And just as was about to start wandering around aimlessly I bumped into fellow San Blas Social Club members, Greg and Elise, for the first time since San Blas. They insisted we start afternoon drinking. We laughed a lot. They showed my photos, including Greg accidentally showing me one of his ´art´ pics that featured an unknowing Elise. We laughed a lot more. It was a good day.

Just part of the awesome view from Earth Lodge
The Earth Lodge cabins

The wilds of Belize and Guatemala

Quick recap
Belize; the ATM cave; named after all the cash you have to get out to see it; Altun Maa probably; waist deep water; swimming in the entrance; precarious mini climbs; only possibly by standing on the guide; only possible for Anna because of borrowing Ficeland´s Crocs (at last a use for them); the big Germans were there and we love them; we walked through ancient Mayan pottery fused into the living rock; at the end there was a skeleton; cool and scary; we felt very adventurous and got very wet.

Guatemala; El Remate we met the Belgians and Per and Marie; we swam in the lake; pigs played on the basketball court; the hotel owner persuaded us to do the dawn tour.

Tikal; expecting a small party we joined 70 tired individuals on the dawn tour; and some of them yapped far too much; we climbed temple four; we sat and waited for the clouds to break; monkeys called; tempes appeared in the mist; eventually the party shut up for 5 minutes; we climbed other temples; met the nice New Zealanders.

The view from the mirador of Semuc Champey´s pools was well worth the climb
This is an awful picture from Tikal´s temple 5. It was high up

Blog day afternoon

There were lots of reasons not to blog - but now we are back.

Don´t try to read it all at once.

And you should know that we had to abandon the BG for money plan when I lost all my matches on the second practice day.

I had written a load of guff here but a gremlin has swiped it. Suffice to say we are rocking now - the following posts were written in two monster sessions over 12 hours in Merida, Venezuela.

Cheers, MC Deli and Miss Deli