You can
read the
introduction here, which lists everywhere we stayed in
Belize and every service we used. It can be used to put together
your own itinerary for visiting and touring Belize.
And you can read
part one of the travelogue here, about
our arrival in Belize and first days in Hopkins.
Heading West
We walked to Kat's for coffee and breakfast. I was humiliated
about my face, which was as bad as the night before - no
improvement at all. I wore my hat and sunglasses and wouldn't look
at anyone. We sat over at the side, me feeling embarrassed about
my face and scared about riding the Honda 150.
Kat's was much busier than the previous day: almost all the seats
were taken. I listened to a family - parents and their teens -
joke about getting "so drunk" the night before and how this one
didn't remember anything after such and such and how that one had
to be helped to bed because "geesh, she could barely walk" - I
think they meant the mom. They thought it was hilarious. So glad
they had enjoyed their first night in Belize (yikes).
An older white tourist arrived and I could tell he was looking for
a one-sided conversation, so I looked away, watching the kids
going to school in their brown and yellow uniforms, via bikes and
walking. In my hat and sun glasses, it was clear I did not want to
talk to anyone. I heard him say to a young couple at another
table, "Are you here from Canada?" They weren't. But he'd now
opened the door to talk and was now ready to share with them the
fact that he had just arrived two weeks ago and had some kind of
really successful business in Mexico that he only had to visit a
few times a year but he had now been in Belize for two weeks, for
the first time, and he was NEVER GOING BACK TO THE USA. He
intended to send for what he might need and sell everything else
and stay in Belize. "This is paradise. I'm never leaving." The
young couple just occasionally said, "Oh, really" or some other
"Yes, we're listening" statements. The guy droned on and on.
Finally, the couple excused themselves and left. So he started
telling the same story to Kat, how Belize was a perfect paradise
and he was never going back to the USA. And Stefan and I both
heard Kat say at last, with a bit of warning in her voice, "Keep
your head." I don't think he got the message.
I totally get the seductiveness of Belize - or so many other
places, for that matter. I get that intoxication mixed with
inspiration. You are in a place that is so different, new,
beautiful - there is a part of you that says, what if I just stay
here? There is a comfort is a completely foreign place, especially
one as beautiful and fascinating and friendly as Belize. But just
like thinking you are in love after meeting someone just once, you
need to give it time and you need to dig a little deeper. Most of
the time, you will probably find out it's not quite the perfect
place - or person - you wanted.
That said, it can happen - you discover it's the "real thing." I
know that feeling. I had that feeling the first time I went to
Austin, Texas - I moved there a few months after my first visit,
was lucky to get a job after a couple of months and I stayed for
more than four years, knowing it was exactly where I needed to be
- until it wasn't. I had that feeling when I went to Bonn, Germany
the first time: I knew on my first visit I wanted to stay and was
lucky enough to get a job offer and move there six months later
and I stayed for eight years. It's an amazing feeling to go
somewhere and know where it's where you are supposed to be. I'm
jealous of Emma and Kat - I so long to feel that feeling again:
going to a place and knowing it's where I need to be.
But this guy at the coffee shop in Belize - he was living a
fantasy, a rush of emotions. It isn't real. He wasn't having a
happy realization, he was thinking every day could be like what he
had experienced on vacation. It's like someone going to
DisneyWorld and thinking, "I'm moving here, because I want to hang
out with Mickey Mouse EVERY DAY and it's ALWAYS GOING TO BE LIKE
THIS." It's not going to happen because you aren't experiencing
something that is reality (
but it's real for you, Carol. It's
real for YOU.).
I wonder what happened to that dude.
The evening before this day, I had been alone on the rooftop patio
at Crash Pad, feeling poopy about my swollen, sun burned face and
the stupidity that I'd done this and feeling nervous about
beginning our motorcycle trip the next day. Stefan was off
somewhere, I don't remember where. I heard someone coming up the
steps and there was Emma, in the most beautiful mesh motorcycle
gear I have ever seen. She stopped, posed with her arms wide, and
says, "I should come with you on our motorcycle ride tomorrow!"
Here's
a short Instagram video that shows her in the mesh gear. The
gear is from Mosko Motors. I spent an unhealthy amount of time
touching her new pants, pants that I will never wear, because of
my large hips and belly. Sigh. But on the other hand... mesh
pants? Mesh motorcycle pants exist? I knew mesh jackets were a
thing - I have one. But mesh pants? Movable, breathable, airy mesh
pants for hot weather? I knew I would be looking into that more
when I'm back in the USA after this trip, most definitely. I so
hope someone makes them for fat girls and there's somewhere I can
try them on before purchase.
Anyway...
It was time for me to put all that I was going to take on my
motorcycle - which was everything I brought - into my dry bag or
my purse, and to leave my carry-on at the to
Crash Pad,
to pick up when we returned to Hopkins in 10 days or so. Stefan
brought straps to securely tie our bags on the back of the
motorcycle, along with the walking stick that Emma somehow found
for me to use on my trip - I can't hike without such. We put on
our bike pants and jackets at the last possible moment - it was
blazing hot already, hotter than it had been on any day we'd been
in Belize so far. We had only 140 km to go to San Ignacio, in the
Western part of the state. We couldn't check in to our hotel
before 4, so we didn't want to get there early. We also weren't
sure if we were going to stop at some sites along the way and how
long those stops would take. But I was so, so ready to ride. The
motorcycle riding was the primary focus of this trip, along with
visiting ancient Mayan sites, and I was ready to get busy with
those.
We
took some photos with the bikes before we left. The Honda
150s take a long while to warm up on the open clutch (same with my
KLR). Once we were pretty sure they were warmed up and we would
die at the first stop sign, we were off.
It felt amazing to be riding a motorcycle at last - and I
immediately felt the difference in riding this versus my own, far
bigger bike: this was SO much easier to maneuver. I didn't have to
think carefully about how to navigate something complicated or
even stopping - the bike was SO light and nimble. Wee!! Through
always busy Hopkins, then out of Hopkins, past the flat wetlands,
and onto the main road, and then onto the lush, green, hilly
Hummingbird Highway that would take us all the way to San Ignacio.
In our mesh jackets, once out of the lowlands and
into
the jungle landscape of Hummingbird Highway, we weren't
dying from the heat - the wind flowing through the jackets was
wonderful. I started thinking about how amazing mesh pants must
be! Added bonus, it was a bit cloudy and in the higher,
jungle-covered hills, things cooled off quite noticeably.
I wasn't going as fast as I should - I was still skittish about
being on a bike that was not my own. I also wanted to read any
sign, know what any restaurant or roadside stand or business was
called, and have a look at how people lived along the way. Traffic
wasn't bad at all, other drivers were very respectful, and I knew
to get over near the white line for the shoulder whenever someone
was behind us, to let them by, per my experience in Mexico - and
no one rode our ass waiting for us to do it.
Not sure how long it took us, but we stopped eventually at
a
roadside bar and restaurant. Every business along the way
looked and felt like a juke joint, and this place was no
exception, right down to the
chain
link fence around all the wall openings. I picked a table
where
we could see the motorcycles. We were alone except for the
two women staffing the bar and a little girl belonging to one of
them. And, yes, I was drinking Coca Cola. I don't drink it in the
USA, but when I am abroad, all bets are off, give me a Coke!
The
sign high above the bar suggested:
Please don't urin outside
use the bathroom
Please have on your shirt
at all times
Please don't spit inside the bar
Indeed, we used the bathroom (clean, as always in Belize), we kept
our shirts on, and we did not spit inside the bar. Even though I
found the Belikin Babe posters offensive. And I wouldn't have
found them offensive if there had also been men up there, because
I prefer equality in sexism and objectifying people sexually. But
we all know THAT'S not going to happen.
Outside, we started up the bikes, and as this was only the second
time I had taken off on the Honda 150, I was still not used to the
clutch. Much to the amusement of the people sitting across the
road in their yard, I popped a small wheelie as I pulled out. I
have never popped a wheelie before, ever. And I have not done so
since. That I did not drop the bike is a miracle. Lesson learned
and I never did that again.
Eventually, we saw a turnoff for something - we weren't sure what
- and then a bit farther down, the turnoff for an official natural
site:
St.
Herman's Cave. I really did not want to get to San Ignacio
yet and I was in the mood to see
something. So we pulled
in and parked the bikes. I was so pleased to learn that this site
was managed by staff from the Belize Audubon Society. In fact, the
staff of the Society manage many of the national parks and
wildlife sanctuaries of Belize.
We saw another motorcycle rented from Alternate Adventures in the
parking lot - the RENT ME in the front is always the giveaway. It
was a Lufin Cobra (LF250), a Chinese-made dual sport bike, with
two small carry-on suitcases strapped to the back. You can go two
up on this bike, and that's what this couple was doing; they were
just finishing up a cave tubing tour.
Since the walk to the cave entrance was so short and a guide
wasn't required for the short hike into the cave, we opted to have
a go. We paid our admission and walked through
the
beautiful and densely landscaped trail. It felt unreal. I
was in a jungle! Jayne of the Jungle at last! We were walking in
our motorcycle pants, so hiking was slow.
There
was a high road but, of course, I took the low road. I felt
a drop in temperature but saw nothing in the landscape change. And
then
we
came to this sign that explained why - it's because of the
cave entrance. Pretty incredible, given that the entrance was
still many yards away and
not
at all visible.
I was beyond grateful for my walking stick already, but, wow,
I
never could have entered or exited the cave without it. I
cannot tell you how much I hate being an old woman. My right knee
quit working properly when I was about 26, long before I was
overweight. My left knee followed suit in my 30s in Germany. The
stabbing pain under my knees is horrible unless I pop them
regularly, and then the pain is relieved only for a few minutes. I
have talked to at least six doctors about it. They do X Rays. They
shrug. They say something about arthritis and to take some Advil.
One chastised me and said my knees were this way because of my
weight (never mind that they felt this way before I gained
weight). Sigh. And yet I keep hiking.
The cave is very wet, with a small river running right through it.
We later learned that this is the launch point for cave tubing. We
were thinking of doing it in the future, even here at this cave,
which we would pass again on our way back East in a few days, and
which really wasn't that far from San Ignacio for a day trip.
Spoiler alert: we never did, for various reasons. But the people
who did it loved it.
After exploring the cave and walking back to the parking lot, we
had a bathroom break (as always, clean and with flush toilets -
you can be in the middle of now where and there will be clean,
flush toilets) and headed back on the bikes the way we had come;
we wanted to check out the interior
St.
Herman's Blue Hole, which is the site we had passed earlier
without knowing what it was. We showed our ticket from the other
site to the attendant, chatted a bit, and headed down to the
natural swimming hole.
And we got there and we were alone. And it was so hot. And it was
so beautiful. Our bathing suits were back on the bikes. Screw it.
We stripped off down to our underwear and
in
we went.
Ya'll, I had a religious experience, much like the experience I
had, for different reasons,
at
Crystal Crane Hot Springs in the outback of Oregon back in
September. This time, I elt my way-too-high core body
temperature gently lower, I felt the intense heat raging inside me
subside, and in addition, I went from misery to relief to absolute
pure joy. I felt spiritually transformed. That water felt
unbelievably amazing. I told Stefan, as we swam in that beautiful
blue water, that if being Baptized had felt anything like this, I
would have actually become and remained a Christian. This swim in
this natural swimming pool, unlike my Baptism as a child, was
glorious.
Another guy came down to jump in. He was originally from the
Dominican Republic but now lives in New York City, and I told him
that totally makes him a New Yorker now. He was vacationing and
LOVING Belize - and loving this site as much as us. We left him
and the pool after a while, him happily taking selfies. Our timing
was perfect - as we walked back up the steps to the parking lot,
first one group, then another, was descending down. A little girl
in the second group told me, "I'm going swimming!" Yes you are,
honey child. Yes you are.
Back in the parking lot, a Belizean guy had to tell us how much
better our Hondas are than Chinese bikes, and he wanted to know
where we rented them from. Later, we were surprised to learn that
most people anywhere in Belize know the bikes are rented from
someone in Hopkins - but, then again, Emma at Alternate Adventures
is the only person in the entire country who legally and
officially rents motorcycles.
We got back on the bikes and headed westward again, and I made a
discover that changed the rest of the trip and that will change
how I ride a motorcycle in the summer FOREVER. And it is this:
Riding a motorcycle with a soaking wet bra under a t-shirt and
mesh jacket is heaven. It is the best cooling system EVER. Why,
why, WHY hasn't anyone ever told me this before? Oh, the misery I
could have alleviated on so many trips had I known this!
I was loving the motorcycle riding. I was loving the scenery. I'm
in Belize! Riding a motorcycle! And I was thinking, if the trip
never gets better than this, that's going to be fine, because I am
loving this!
Spoiler alert: the trip got even better.
I was getting hungry. But suddenly, all the many roadside cafes
had disappeared. I slowed down at every group of houses - none
seemed to be a restaurant or snack shack. At one point, we saw a
sign for a resort restaurant and pulled into the driveway to head
over to it - and then saw the "closed" sign. ARGH. We rode on.
Then I saw a sign on the side of the road: "Are you hungry?"
Well,
yes, I am, I said aloud in my helmet. Then came another
sign. "Are you tired?" Well, I was a bit tired, but mostly hungry.
And finally the payoff: the sign and turnoff for the Warrie Head
Resort and Restaurant. YES! We proceeded down
a
beautiful white gravel and dirt path through a groomed, lush
jungle landscape. We passed another sign: "Do you hear the
howler monkeys?" Not yet, but I do hope that happens...
I pulled into the little area that said parking and happily jumped
off the bike, ready for food. Then Stefan said, "Did you see the
sign said this is a 'Naturalist Paradise'?" We both had the same
thought:
wait, do they actually mean naturist?
Is this a nudist camp?!? We sheepishly looked around: no
naked people. In fact, no people at all. But surely there would be
more signage warning if this was a nudist camp? Surely they really
do mean naturalist, not naturist? We slowly walked up to the empty
restaurant - like most places in Belize, it had open walls, no
windows at all. We could hear someone in the kitchen working and
Stefan called out. A fully dressed waiter emerged. The restaurant
was, indeed, open and he took our order. I had to pee in a bad
way, but the bathrooms for the restaurant were closed for repairs,
so the cook sent me to one of the rooms they have for rent, back
behind the restaurant, to use that bathroom. I cautiously looked
around as I walked to the room.
Please, please let this be a naturalist
site, as in John James Audubon was a naturalist (also a racist,
but not important to this conversation now), and not a naturist
site.
And if you are a naturist, good for you. I wish you the best. But
I don't want to see you naked.
We never saw any guests at all, so even if it had been a naturist
site, we would have been fine. But, happily, it is NOT a naturist
site - it is a normal Belizean jungle resort, one focused on
enjoying the jungle and, indeed, the sound of howler monkeys,
which we did hear. We also had delicious beef burgers that rocked
our world.
As we left, I kept thinking how much I'd like to stay there for a
night - it really was lovely.
Onward to San Ignacio, passing a fender bender along the way where
the driver of a truck got out with a machete and started pounding
on the driver's side window of the guy who rear-ended him. We
didn't want to stick around for that. We also passed Galen
University, Cayo Institute for the Deaf and an agricultural
research center funded by Taiwan.
We got into San Ignacio and got lost repeatedly trying to find the
Midas Resort. There were a
LOT of one way streets, and no street had any street sign. We had
come into the city from a different direction than we had looked
at on a map, and it turned out we had been really close the moment
we had entered the city. After riding through town a few times and
finally asking someone, we finally found the hotel.
You might wonder why we weren't using a GPS. Stefan has an old
Garmin and he had brought it on the trip, but had forgotten that
it needs to be hooked into the motorcycle battery to work properly
- using just batteries, it works only for a day. So we used paper
maps and, on the bikes, we just guessed sometimes which way to go
- old school!
At first, the resort couldn't find our reservations, and I
panicked. We had been in touch earlier via email about it! But I
guess it was because I had booked one of the
budget
spare rooms, which I think are actually for short-term
workers and for tour group leaders who bring groups to the hotel,
and they don't book that in exactly the same way as their standard
rooms and bungalows. All we wanted the room for was to sleep, one
that was clean, safe, and quiet, and since we hate spending a
bunch of money on a hotel room we aren't going to spend much time
in, the spare rooms had seemed perfect. At last, they found our
reservations (whew!).
In the spare room, we had a shared bathroom with another room, but
we never saw that person. Our room was back behind the main hotel,
so we didn't hear the large drunken group of people from the USA
who were staying there and decided that 9 o'clock was great time
to start singing karaoke. We didn't hear other guests coming to
and from their rooms. We did have some problems with the air
conditioning at first, but we left the room to
swim
in the huge pool (heaven - had it to ourselves, first time
I've really swam, not just soaked, in years) and then to eat in
their restaurant, and by the time we got back to the room, it was
working fine and we had the temperature we wanted. I knew as soon
as I walked in and felt that temperature that I was done with not
having air conditioning each night for the remainder of the trip -
I couldn't handle it anymore.
Midas turned out to be a wonderful choice: the staff of both the
hotel and the restaurant are so, so NICE. They are happy to help
you with anything: a taxi to the border, more towels, allowing the
motorcycles to stay there while we went to Guatemala, keeping most
of our luggage while we went to Guatemala, and on and on. They
were chatty and sweet and I loved them.
As for that large group of drunken karaoke singers from the USA -
what were they there for, what had brought them together? They
were there in their island fashion finest, looking a lot like
Jimmy Buffet fans. I knew they were all together, and that there
was a common reason they were there, I was curious about what it
was, but I just didn't want to talk to them. I've been like this
since the election in 2016: I don't want to talk to anyone who
might be a Trump supporter. I just can't take them anymore. I just
can't. And it's also from living in Oregon, where people don't say
"Good morning" or "Good evening" or "how are you?" or "It's so
nice to see you", where if you say, "Good morning!" people
literally look the other way. Oregon is the opposite of Belize.
Oregon has made me less friendly. While I chatted up with the
staff at any opportunity in Belize, feeling oh-so-at-home, I
avoided all of the guests. We later learned why the big group was
there: for a guy who sings something called Trop Rock and holds
concerts throughout the Caribbean for his legions of Baby Boomer
super fans. And some Google searching revealed that... well, do
you know who else sings Trop Rock? Yeah, it's best that I just
avoided them altogether. I wish them no ill will at all - love
what you love. Even if it is Trop Rock.
Stefan announced that he had proposal for the next day: instead of
waiting until after we went to Guatemala, what if we went to
Caracol the very next day? The weather seemed okay, and in Belize,
it can rain any time, anywhere, and even in the so-called dry
season, you could have rain all day. But we were relatively sure
it wasn't going to rain a lot the next day. We could decide when
we got up what we wanted to do. But if we tried to go to Caracol
now, and it didn't work out, we'd have more chances to try again -
if we waited and then tried, we wouldn't have any more chances if
we got rained out. I knew he was right: if the weather was good
the next day, we should go to Caracol.
It's 85 km - about 50 miles - to Caracol from San Ignacio. Most of
the road is still unpaved. Most online info said the ride would
take two hours via and all-wheel drive truck that can navigate in
off-road conditions. Could I do this on the Honda? I had never
done anything like it before, not on roads like that for that
long. Would the Honda 150 really make it easier for me?
I was feeling whiney and tired and I begged to NOT have to set the
alarm to get up before 7 a.m., as we had every day since we got to
Belize. We were on vacation - I wanted to finally get to sleep in!
So we set the alarm for, I think, 7:30 a.m.
If the weather permitted, we were going to Caracol tomorrow
instead of two or three days from now.
Gulp.
Part 3:
Visiting Caracol.
You can see
my
favorite photos from our trip here (there are about 500 and
most are taken by me or feature ME). You can
see Stefan's
favorite photos from the trip here (there are about 800 and
most are taken by him or feature him).
Return to the
main
page for our Belize and Guatemala 2023 Adventure.