Thursday, July 9, 2009

We left Utila and headed north. Maybe not the best time to leave as the president has just been ousted from Honduras and everyone was on edge as the Military had just taken over. As we traveled north everywhere we stopped everyone was glued to the TVs.

We made it up to Porto Cortez where we took a boat up to Placencia in Belize. After arriving for the boat we had to hang around for 4 hours before it left, but the actual journey didn't take more than about 2 hours including a stop for immigration and customs. I did manage to get quite badly burnt on the boat but it was a nice trip and we even saw some dolphins swimming next to the boat.


After a night in Placencia, which is quite expensive and has alot of American tourists, we headed north to a little town called Hopkins. There wasn't a whole lot happening here but it was a nice place to see, populated almost entirely but the Garfunian people. Lots of beach here, although quite a lot of drift wood and such on the tide line. The water in the sea was really warm, like getting into a bath, which was quite pleasant in the evening.

After a night in Hopkins (and lots of Mosquito bites) we headed north again to Belize city where we took a boat over to Caye Caulker, a small island off the coast. The island was originally alot bigger, but got split in half by a hurricane a few year back. A good things really as there isn't much on the north part and the split has made a nice sandy place to swim.


From Caye Caulker we went out for the day on a yacht to the local reef. Here we saw lots of things including this frenzy of nurse sharks.


We snorkeled around with the sharks and various other sealife including turtles, stingrays, moray eels and loads of fish. Lunch was served on the boat along with some rum punch and we got a little bit more sun burn.




Other things we did on Caye Caulker was to have a wind surfing lesson, do some karaoke and hire bikes for the day. Hiring bikes ended in disaster however as me cycled into a remote area infested with massive mosquitoes that attacked us leaving lots of bites and even drawing blood.



In the evenings we enjoyed some of the, rather expensive, local cuisine. Caroline decided to abandon her vegetarianism for 2 days to eat lobsters and lobster keBaabs, which she says was worth it but despite trying a bite I am still unconvinced by seafood. Unfortunately Caye Caulker was completely void of Pizza Huts and McDonald's.




Apparently drugs are illegal in Belize, but you wouldn't think so given the number of people offering them.





It seems most every building, bar, and restaurant here has its own dock, allowing access to boats without dragging them through the masses of Sea Grass, and providing convenient sun bathing spots, although some were in disrepair and a tad dangerous.

From Caulker we boated back to Belize city where we got a bus out to a Bamboo farm and nature reserve. Here we spent three nights in a nice, but rather pricey, bamboo cabin. While here we kayaked up the river, using some strange outboard electric motors powered by car batteries which we had to lug all the way to the river and back again.







The river was nice and warm to swim in but there were wee fish which bit us all over. The river is also infested with crocodiles but apparently they are scared of humans and sleep in the day time.

We are now in a town in west Belize called San Ignacio, close to the Guatemalan border. We are planing to explore some of the local jungle and Mayan ruins before heading out to a place called Barton Creek Outpost where we plan to stay for a few weeks to do some volunteering.

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