After Tikal we drove into Flores to find a church and while we waited for the next meeting to start, we found a little park on the Lake Peten Itza and took a leisurely Sunday afternoon nap. It was a nice way to start the next leg of our trip. The drive to Lake Izabal was on nice paved highways. There weren’t even that many tumulos, which have become increasingly common in Northern Guatemala. (A tumulo is a Guatemalan version of a tope).
Seeing as our trip to Lake Izabal was more of an after thought,
we hadn’t done much research about camping accommodations. We also were going to be rolling in
late at night, so we decided to stick with a “Rough Guides - Central America on
a Budget” recommendation. They
recommended a little town on the western end of the lake called El Estor. El Estor got it's name from English pirates who would come up the Rio Dulce to get supplies at the one store found on the lake. Get it? El Estor = The Store. WE found that hilarious and decided it was a good enough reason to stay there. We ended up at a place called Hotel Ecologico CabaƱas del Lago. For $25 bucks we had a room with A/C, a
private bath, unrestricted use of the restaurant’s kitchen for cooking our
meals and lake access. The owner
also whipped up a fresh batch of Jamaica juice for us when we arrived. The place was clean and the owners were
very accommodating.
"The Store" |
In the morning the owners arranged for us to hop on a boat
and head into Parque Natural Bocas Del Polochic. Apparently there is a bunch of wildlife, although
we didn’t see much of it due to a late start. I suppose we can blame that on me being back to normal and
not being able to pry myself out of bed at 6AM. Our boat guide wanted very badly to show us something
awesome so our 2 hour tour turned into a 3-4 hour tour. By the end of it, we were grateful for
all of his efforts, but we were ready to head back in. We did see lots of interesting birds, bubbles in the water that were supposedly from manatees, and a few howler monkeys. What was
most impressive was how many monkeys we heard. It was at least as many as he
heard at Tikal, maybe more. And
this time they were much closer.
When we returned, we grabbed some fried chicken from the
local Pollo Campero and headed out to find the hot springs waterfalls. I first heard about them when I was
standing in line at the customs office on the Mexican Guatemalan border. I was chatting with some older ladies
and they gave me a whole list of things to do. That has been pretty common here. We get tips on what to see and what to do from people
everywhere. I had kinda forgotten
about the hot springs waterfall until we decided to go check out Lake Izabal
the day before.
You’ve probably already figured out that the hot springs waterfall is a hot-water waterfall but what's interesting is that it falls into a very cold river, making the water below very comfortable. Naturally then, the river a popular place to bathe and do laundry. Luckily all of that was happening down stream quite a ways, so our time at the waterfall was naked-old-lady-free. There were, however, a gaggle of kids from 10-12 years old, scaling the rock face and jumping off the waterfall. Brett couldn’t let a bunch of kids show him up. And naturally, I couldn’t let my little brother show me up, nor could Kaytie let her husband show her up. Peer pressure at it’s finest. Everyone survived and we all had a great time. One of the kids even took us into a cave behind the waterfall. We love that local hospitality!
You’ve probably already figured out that the hot springs waterfall is a hot-water waterfall but what's interesting is that it falls into a very cold river, making the water below very comfortable. Naturally then, the river a popular place to bathe and do laundry. Luckily all of that was happening down stream quite a ways, so our time at the waterfall was naked-old-lady-free. There were, however, a gaggle of kids from 10-12 years old, scaling the rock face and jumping off the waterfall. Brett couldn’t let a bunch of kids show him up. And naturally, I couldn’t let my little brother show me up, nor could Kaytie let her husband show her up. Peer pressure at it’s finest. Everyone survived and we all had a great time. One of the kids even took us into a cave behind the waterfall. We love that local hospitality!
After the waterfall we hit the road. (But not before a quick bath in the
river.) We really had no plans,
other than crossing Guatemala’s largest bridge before dark. We were pushing it on time so we rushed
our baths and got moving. We
barely made it to the bridge before dark.
I’m pretty sure I’ve been on bigger overpasses. We were a little disappointed with that
one. We didn't even take a picture. I guess we need to hold off
on our engineering-tourism ‘til we get to Panama.
With that checked off the list, we really had no plans. We needed to be in Guatemala city by
the next night so we could catch our flights back to the States (we took a
little weekend vacation from our travels to be at the wedding of Kaytie’s
brother). But also, we have a
friend, Sara Galvez, from our time in Hawaii who lives in Guatemala City and
she offered to show us around. We
decided to push on for a few hours before bed to give us more time for site
seeing the next day. After a
while, we stopped in a town for dinner, some Sarita ice cream, and to find a
place to sleep. We were all
hotel’d out, so we first looked for parks and came up empty. Then we went to find a police station
because we’ve heard sometimes they’ll let you park in their lot if you a$k
nicely. Then we found out that the
nearest police station was about 15 minutes back the way we came about. That was unacceptable seeing as I cannot back track. Finally we drove past a nice looking restaurant that was just closing
up. It was steak house type place
and they had a wall surrounding the parking lot with an open barn complete with
hay bales. We pulled in and asked
the first person we saw if we could park there for the night. Turns out it was the owners wife and
she had no problem with it. She
had one of the waitresses show us the bathrooms and had her husband show us
where to park in their barn. Total
cost: $0.00 Although we did spend
more money on breakfast in their restaurant than we typically would have. But it was worth it… Delicious!
The next morning after breakfast we hit the road to
Guatemala City and arrived there early in the afternoon. Along the way we pulled into a car
wash. Sara also offered to let us
park the Montero in her garage while we were gone, and I felt like it should
probably have less than 12 layers of caked-on mud. It was actually quite sad. We had earned that mud together over weeks of travelling and
miles and miles of crazy roads.
And in 20 minutes, two dudes with a pressure washer erased it all.
Sara met us at the Guatemala City LDS Temple, right by her
house. Before we saw the sights,
we drove over to her place, tucked the Montero in, did some laundry and had lunch. After even just a month on the road, it
felt incredibly cleansing to have a place where we could pull everything out of
the Montero, clean and organize it, and put it back in its designated
spot. Thanks Sara!
That night we headed downtown to the Presidential
Palace. (The President doesn’t
actually live there. He lives
around the corner from Sara.) In
the square out front, there were hundreds of people gathered to watch the
Guatemala vs. USA futbol match. We
walked down an outdoor mall that would have seemed perfectly in place in any
major US city. There was a street
comedic team performing to a huge crowd.
I understood about 90% of what they said and got about 10% of the
jokes. Languages are hard. For dinner, we headed to another nice
part of town and ate at my new favorite restaurant, Saul. If you are ever in Guatemala, check it
out. It’s wonderful. The menu had some great typical
Guatemalan dishes but it had western food as well. The Crepes were delicious, the smoothies blew our minds.
We came to know an entirely different Guatemala. This area of the city is super
nice. Honestly, it was kind of
refreshing. It was just what we
needed before our travel marathon to Mexico City to Las Vegas, then by shuttle
to St. George, UT, then by Kaytie’s sister’s minivan to Ogden, UT.
We walked by the Saul place and I was really curious about the food. Looked like a nice joint. Great to hear you guys got to enjoy Guate City.
ReplyDeleteIf you make it back, you owe it to yourself to stop there and get some dessert crepes. Where are you guys at these days?
DeleteI love peer pressure. That waterfall looks awesome. Next time you plan a normal length trip, Eric and I want to go... Of course the super long trip would be a blast too, just not possible at this time.
ReplyDeleteFor sure! You guys could just come on a long trip! We know a family of 7 that is on the road. Their plan is to make it to Rio by the Olympics by 2016! Now that's a long road trip!
ReplyDelete