Caribbean


The first time I ever met someone who had been to Belize was in 1999. I was in Puerto Iguazú, on the Argentinian side of the border, visiting the legendary waterfalls. In an improvised travellers gathering around some beers, a chap from Belgium was telling us about his visit to Belize a few weeks earlier. As it was a place that I had never considered visiting or knew much about I asked him many questions.

He told us that it was a fairly complex place, it could be quite dodgy as it had replaced Panama (after Noriega’s fall) as a stop point for the Colombian cocaine on its way to the USA. There were narco related gangs of youngsters and the police was also in the business, closing roads so the small planes from Colombia, loaded with drugs, could refill and continue their way without being bothered. Funny enough, I bumped into him by chance in Buenos Aires tube, as a goodbye he said: “you have to go to Belize and get your own feeling of the country”. I thought that after the stories he had told me that was the last thing I had in mind but I assured him I eventually would.

In 2006, 7 years and a different life later, Belize was a real possibility. We were organising a trip to Guatemala and thanks to the amount of info in the internet I knew many more things about Belize as a destination: the Cayes, the second biggest reef barrier, crystal clear waters ideal for diving and snorkelling…so Belize felt like a perfect break from Guatemala and we decided to go.

If there is a border I have crossed that has a far west feeling to it and deserves an outlaw movie, it should be the one from Guatemala to Belize. Very disorganised, strange looking people with stacks of banknotes offering currency exchange, people who seemed to be crossing the border from one side to the other continuously…

When trying to enter Belize with the car, the border agent seemed not to like us that much (or at least me), so he asked me lots of questions with a very unfriendly face. At the end he let us pass after handwriting the car license plate in my passport. After the car was fumigated and with a brand new insurance for Belize purchased in the border we headed east trying to reach Belize City as early as possible, and from there to the cayes.

In 1961 a tropical storm badly damaged Belize City and the government decided to move the capital inlands. Thus Belmopan was born, and although it was finished around 1970 it took some time before it became the country’s fully functional new capital. When we drove pass it felt like a small quiet village rather than a capital.

Crossing the country from the West to the East took less than 2 hours. When we arrived at Belize City a big storm had just finished and the city did not look that well: flooded streets, scattered garbage, strong smells..and lots of people, mostly young, sitting in groups in the porches of the houses and looking as they were not that busy. We looked a bit lost in a crossroads and a guy (football jersey, baseball cap) came to ask “wassssup???”.

So we asked him if it was better to go to Caye Caulker or to Caye Ambergris, something we had been discussing from the start of the trip. With a really heavy and hard to understand accent he said: “kee caaa caaa, gotta go to kee caaa caaa”, what after some brainstorming we realised it was Caye Caulker. We also asked him where to leave the car and, pointing to the corner where his friends were, he said: “just there, it will be alright”. After exchanging a quick nod we said thankyou and decided to park the car somewhere else where we had a better chance of finding it when we were back. We finally parked it at the Radisson and on our way to the harbour we saw a few really beautiful wooden colonial houses that improved our first impression of the city.

                                               Photo by Pablo Méndez

The speed boat that took us to Caye Caulker was new and modern and in 45 minutes we were there. CK is a narrow strip of sand (8 x 1.5 Km) with palm tress, sand and a lagoon on the Caribbean side shore. The first impression we got was that is was a very quiet place, with just onelong  sandy street and with no big resorts or tall buildings, only bungalows and wooden houses. Felt much more like a tourists area than the continental part of the country.

                                         Photo by Ana Viéitez

As soon as we were dropped in the pier, an old guy with dreads told us that he could get us a nice and cheap place to stay. We did not mind that much one thing or the other we went with him and finally stayed at a basic but clean bungalow.

After having for dinner the CK speciality, lobster hamburger, we went around the different diving/snorkeling agencies in the main street. Both diving and snorkeling are the real deal in the cayes and the main reason for tourists to go there. The Belize Reef  Barrier is part of the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef, second biggest in the world to the Great Barrier Reef in Australia.

When we woke up very early the following day it was pouring rain and our hopes of a great day out were gone. We went to see Mario, the guide, to confirm that it would not be possible to go out in the boat and he replied: “in an hour we are leaving and bring sun screen, there will be no clouds and your back will be fried”. Needless to say he was right and in less than an hour the sun was shinning and there was no single cloud the rest of the day. It was my first experience with tropical weather.

Before leaving I needed to send an email, it was a bit late and I rushed to the internet cafe. The rasta grandpa stopped me looking distressed and told me: “what are you doing???”. I was really surprised and just explained to him that I needed to send an email. He replied: “in this island you don’t run or rush. Look at me, all I have to do today is going to the end of the street and come back”. They guy was my hero. Maybe I just did not see the sign:

                                                    Photo by Ana Viéitez

To this day snorkeling in Belize is one of the best ones I have ever done. The water is, possibly, the most transparent and clear I have seen, it felt like looking through a immaculate glass. In the coral reef there were lots of multicoloured fishes, sting rays (they came as soon as they heard the engine of the guide boat, as he used to feed them), reef sharks, underwater plants…

                                                   Photo by Pablo Méndez

But one of the best moments, if not the best, was in the lagoon in front of Caye Caulker, when a group of manatees passed below us, almost still in their calmness. Mario asked us not to bother them or try to touch them, apparently if they feel threatened they grab you, go down to the bottom and they don’t release you till you drown. Not sure if that was true or just a trick to scare us as I have never heard that again, no reason to doubt Mario though. In any case nobody tried to go any closer to the manatees.

The second day we stopped in Caye Ambergris, which capital, San Pedro, is supposed to be “la isla bonita” from Madonna’s song. It was much bigger and touristy than CK (but don’t imagine a Cancun in any case) so we felt we made the right decision staying in Caye Caulker.

After 3 intense days in which we were hardly out of the water and the only set back was that Fran could not go diving to the famous and amazing  Blue Hole, it was time to go back to Guatemala. The car was still were we had left it and as we did not want to cross the border too late or driving at night for too long I tried to rush to the border.

As usual, the more you want to rush the earlier you find a traffic jam. We bumped into a long line of cars and people walking, then we realised it was a funeral and they were following a hearse. So I went out of the line and tried to pass all of them when a policeman stopped us, and he was really pissed. He shouted that it was a lack of respect doing that and that we had to go back in the line to pay respects to the deceased… unless we wanted a big fine. Back to the queue. And as soon as the procession turned towards the cemetery we left the scene like Mr Wolf in Pulp Fiction.

Dates: 20/02/2010 to 27/02/2010

Visa: No visa needed as I held a Spanish passport

Bought a pack with Virgin Holidays including flight, 7 nights hotel in all-inclusive board and Airport transfers.

Flight details:

London Gatwick – Antigua nonstop flight with Virgin Atlantic airlines. Flight time was 8:40hs on the outbound flight and 7hs in the return one. Outbound was 45 min delayed while return was over 2hs delayed due to problems in San Juan (the flight connects with Puerto Rico). Both flights were full. Plane was a 747. Service was good, but in flight entertainment was just ok compared with other airlines.

Hotel:

Jolly Beach resort and Spa

http://www.jollybeachresort.com/sites/S1/index.php?p=1

Overall rate is good.

The location was excellent as Jolly Beach is one of the best beaches in Antigua and big enough so despite the size of the hotel it did not feel too crowded.

The resort is fairly big, but it has no big tall buildings so it mixes ok with the beach and the environment (or in other words could be much worse).

The room we got was facing the sea and just on the beach. It was a bit old and run down, but good enough for a week. Size was ok and the bed was comfortable. It had a fan, A/C and a TV. The terrace was big enough to sit outside for a drink and see the waves and the blue water.

The staff was really friendly and relaxed, and also cooperative when we needed them.

It has 3 international restaurants and it is mandatory to book beforehand for any of them so sometimes the queues can be very very long in the booking desk. Only 2 bookings per day. No booking needed for the open buffet or the outdoors grill.

There are 5 restaurants in total:

-          Bocciolo (Italian): has dress code. Food was ok but not much amount. It depended on the dish ordered as one of the nights the food was not good at all, the other 2 nights food was good. Desserts were good.

-          Lydia’s (fish&seafood). Good. If you want to have seafood or lobster you have to pay extra.

-          Hemispheres (varied buffet). Good. Plenty of variety and different food each day. Good deserts.

-          Utsav (Indian): acceptable. Not many dishes to choose.

-          Coconut grill: ok. burgers, hot dogs, chicken, fries. Open most of the day.

There are 2 bars where you can order as many drinks as you want. They have many different cocktails.

Car rental: After asking for prices at the hotel and in a company called Lion’s Cars we decided to book it with Hertz. (around US$20 cheaper in total).

The car was a Nissan Almera, automatic. Clean enough and not too worn out. More than enough for the island.

Price total for one day was US$95 (US$75 for the car including taxes and full insurance + US$20 for the local license). The local license payment is one-off and valid for 3 months, but is mandatory the first time you rent a car. We got the car around 10am and we had to give it back following day at the same time.

The only small thing was that the day we went for the car at the time they told us the office opened (9am), the office was closed and the employee did not arrive till 1 hour later.

Tlf: Head office: (268) 481-4440/1/2         Airport: 481-4455          Jolly Harbour: 481-4456      Royal Antiguan: 481-4457

www.hertz.com email: hertzag.resv@candw.ag

Price of the fuel was EC$11 per gallon. Driving around the island was easy, even when traffic around St John’s got really jammed. I definitely recommend it to go out of the resort and to be able to reach the east side of the island, much less touristic and fairly empty. In total we drove around 63 Km.

Diving:

Went diving with Jolly Dive and I was really happy with their service. Staff was extremely friendly and professional.

www.jollydive.com ph: 1-268-4628305

Price was US$120 for 2 dives in the morning including full equipment rental. Left around 9, back at the hotel around 13:30.

They decide the dive site on the same day depending on the weather, currents…

Both dives were excellent, with 2 instructors for 5 people. Equipment was in very good state.

ANTIGUA

St John’s:

We took bus number 20 from Jolly Beach area to go to the capital. Price for a single ride was EC$3.25. All public buses are vans or mini vans. It dropped us in the West Bus Station. On the way back we took same bus number in the station. The bus did not leave till it was completely full…what meant 35 minutes waiting under the sun and sweating…but always better to take public transport than expensive taxis where you don’t get to see and interact with friendly locals.

The capital of Antigua is interesting and has some character to it, mostly compared with many other areas of the island that are too touristic and they are not very inspiring.

The area around the harbour where the big cruise ships arrive is bustling with locals trying to get the tourists that just arrived in taxis or tours around the island. Tax free shops and buildings look much less shabbier around this area than they do in the rest of the city.

St John’s was quite busy on a Tuesday morning. We took a stroll around the fish market, the public market, the park by it with the tacky flashy coloured monument to VC Bird as pater patriaie…

The cathedral was bigger than expected. Dominates the capital and is a fine building, but it was in urgent need of a restoration, very run down. We could not go inside as it was closed.

The museum (price US$3) is in one of the most beautiful buildings of St John’s. The museum itself is kind of cute, very small. The panels with written history are interesting, especially the ones about sugar plantations and slavery trade, but there were not many objects on display (missed more naval stuff, coins…). Still worth a visit and we learned quite a few things about the island’s background. Really liked the wreck map.

Most of the buildings in St John’s (and all around the island) are wooden houses painted in different colors, sometimes vivid, sometimes more pale. I liked the typical Antigua house. Some were new and glittering, many others were crumbling down.

Fig Tree Drive

Driving through Fig Tree Drive was quite interesting, with pineapples, bananas and rainforest vegetation. Half way through it is the canopy ride, what proved to be very popular, with lots of people enjoying it.

Contact details are                        http://www.antiguarainforest.com/ email: arc@candw.ag phone: (268)562-6363

Falmouth and English Harbours / Nelson’s Dockyard

Stopped for a drink in Falmouth Harbour. Very touristic laid back atmosphere, with a few nice bars/restaurants. Big Harbour full of yachts.

Agree with LP that Nelson’s Dockyard is a must see. Price was EC$13. Very nice visit, well preserved, it is a great couple of hours strolling around learning about the military part of the colonial era and Nelson’s involvement in the area (Nelson had to stay 8 months in his ship without going ashore while he was on trial. He was not very confident of the outcome and was ready to flee). The museum was set in a nice building and the contents were interesting.

Shirley Heights:

Hill with outstanding views, not only over English harbour and Nelsons’ Dockyard but also over Montserrat. Entrance ticket was free for us as it was included in Virgin’s pack, if not is EC$13.

The sunset was gorgeous on a cloud free day. The sun just sets by Montserrat. The views and the sunset panorama makes worth it stopping here.

We also went to the famous Sunday evening party…and we did not like it at all. A drum band playing decaffeinated versions of Marley/UB40 and other famous songs from the 80s while flocks of tourists eat stuff from the grill…far too crowded…far too touristic. The price of the van from the Jolly was US$20 per person. And yes, the band improves after dark and it is a bit emptier but still better skip it…

Half Moon Bay and East side of the island

Half Moon Bay was one of my favourite spots of the island. We went there in the rental car. The beach was beautiful, big and it was almost empty (roughly 10-12 people, no more). Water was crystal clear.

We went to the south side of the beach and the snorkelling around the reefs was fantastic. By far the best I did in the island. Tons of many different fishes, beautiful marine landscape, nobody around…highly recommendable.

By the beach there is a place to eat and drink: Smiling Harris thirst quencher. The owner calls himself Samuel L Jackson (they definitely resembles the actor) and they serve chilled drinks and some quick bite like hamburgers, sandwiches or rice&beans). Tel: 722-3939.

Another thing that caught my attention is that there are some rooms built around Half Moon Bay, right on the south side of the beach and by it, but they were abandoned, probably because the East side is too far from everything and not touristic at all?

The East of the island has a complete different atmosphere. It reminds you that even in Antigua you can find your own spot and that crowds can be left behind.

Catamaran ride around the island:

We booked this with Virgin Holidays (as far as we were told the day tour around the island in the Excellence catamaran was exclusive to Virgin Holidays customers). Price was US$110 per person, drinks and lunch included. The catamaran was great, new, modern, clean…around 30/35 people, not too crowded. Staff was really friendly. Very relaxed and seemingly happy.

Day started at 8:30 from Jolly Beach. Stopped for some time at St John’s to pick up other people. The speaker was good fun and he was telling us lots of things about the stuff we could see from the boat. The lunch and snorkelling stop were in Green Island. The beach was very nice and the water was clear and clean. There was a snorkelling excursion along the reefs, with guide and rescue kayak. Snorkelling itself was ok, not great. Lunch was good: fish and salad buffet.

In total we stayed 3 hours stopped at green Island. After that we completed the circumnavigation of the island and they dropped us back at the hotel around 3pm.

I’d say it was a very nice laid back day out but not amazing (as Barbuda turned out to be). Still worth it.

BARBUDA

One of the highlights of the trip to Antigua&Barbuda, if not the best one was the visit to Barbuda, Antigua’s sister island.

We booked a day trip with Jenny Tours at the hotel:      www.jennytours.webs.com

Telephone: 1-268-461-9361 / Mobile: 1-268-722-8188/9092

Price was US$159 per person and included: transfer by van from the hotel (Jolly Beach) to Heritage Quay (at St John’s) and return, return ferry ticket to Barbuda in regular ferry service, pick up at ferry harbour in Barbuda, guided visit to Arawak Caves, guided boat visit to Codrington Lagoon and bird sanctuary, 2 hours at the beach with lobster/chicken/fish for lunch and drinks.

In fact booking it through Jenny Tours is the same that doing it directly with Barbuda Express in their homepage or directly at the dock:     http://www.antiguaferries.com/index.htm Phone: 268 560 7989

E-mail: barbudaexpress@yahoo.com

Just the return fare to Barbuda in the ferry (without the day tour) is US$80 per person. In the beginning we planned to go by ourselves without using a hired day tour, but it is not easy to move around in empty Barbuda unless you take a taxi, even getting from the ferry dock to Codrington was not that easy, so we finally decided to book the tour and it was worth every penny of it. They ask you to take the passport with you in case, although we were not asked for it at any moment.

During the ferry ride (both ways) we saw whales in the distance. The captain was really nice and he stopped the ferry and went closer to where the whales were, so we all could see it. The atmosphere in the ferry was relaxed and happy, hard to believe for a regular passenger ferry, felt more like an excursion. Ferry ride took 1h45 mins aprox. Once in Barbuda we were picked up by our guide in a 4×4, we were just 4 people, although the previous day there were up to 25 persons in the day trip, so we were just lucky.

The guide could not be nicer and more helpful. He was constantly telling us really interesting facts about the island and its people and he responded enthusiastically to my numerous questions on top of that. First we crossed the island from the south east (where the ferry dock is), through the capital and only village (Codrington) till the caves in the north east (Two Foot Bay) area.

The caves were ok, the views from the top were really nice, and the explanations from the guide about how they used the plants to be self efficient was simply great. Caves visit lasted around 45 min.

After that we were dropped at Codrington’s dock. The capital is a small and relaxed village, with just 1600 people and where all the barbudans live. Authentic caribbean atmosphere, laid back but not in the touristic way. Charming in its shabbiness.

We took a boat with another guide and he took us around the lagoon to the bird sanctuary, where we could see the frigate birds. It was a lovely ride, just our boat there, with the chance to see the frigates at very close range, just a few metres. The explanations from the guide were excellent again and the right amount of info and comments. Visit lasted 30 mins or so in total.

After that we headed for the beach break and lunch at Low Bay beach area. Just in front of Codrington on the other side of the lagoon. Stunning beach and blue blue sea, although the water was not transparent ad snorkelling was not possible. Empty, just the 4 of us. It had a wooden restaurant where we were served the yummy lobster with a chilling cold beer…no comments…

We had 2 hours to relax there and then we started the drive back to the dock, ferry ride back to Antigua and van to the hotel. Return time was around 15:45 and took another 1h45min. An absolute perfect day!

Some curious facts about Barbuda that the guide told me:

- Barbudans residents are the owners of the island land. If you want to build a house or anything you just mark the area with a bottle or a few rocks so people know is taken. There are no mortgages, you build when you have the money to do so, so it is common to see houses half built or in the process for long time.

- There are 250 acres of coconut trees in the south of the island. The locals use to export coconut oil, but after prices dropped they export now coconut soap.

- In the whole island there is just 1 bank and just 1 petrol station. Around 50 cars or so. And the crime rate is zero (“if someone steals my car, where is he going to go…we all know each other here…”)

- Despite the island being completely flat, nobody has ever died during a hurricane. There are shelters in Codrington to host all the barbudans.

- The Codrington family had the right to keep anything belonging to any wreck that happened in their coast…so they “kindly helped” the ships to wreck so they could get their bounty. In other words, they were under covered pirates.

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