Categories
Albania Belize Central America Europe General Greece Hawai'i New Zealand New Zealand & The Pacific Voyage Journal Voyages

Life & Reflections of A World Traveler (Jan. 2018)

I feel sad! Utterly and completely sad! Not because of something that happened today. Not because of something that has happened yesterday. It’s life itself. Life is beautiful and a day in it is a major blessing. Why am I sad though? Because I occasionally take a step away from my own body and soul, take a grand panoramic view of everything, and simply remember… life is…. just short.

“…being a traveler allows you to realize how short life is in such a big beautiful world.”

New Plymouth Taranaki New Zealand

Too often do we forget, in our “perfect lives”, that we have this entire span of time, all these decades to do what we want. But it’s far too common to hear the words. “Time flies” and “I wish I had done that”. That is why I am where I am now. Here, in small port town of Picton, New Zealand, enjoying a Cappuccino in a cafe overlooking the Marlborough Sounds, living the good life with a great bartending, serving, and Barista job. Learning all of these jobs in a hotel to take with me wherever I go all while having fun and getting paid to do it. Living in a quaint home with a Kiwi as a flatmate and my dream motorcycle sitting right outside my bed room window.

Picton Harbor in the Marlborough Sounds

First bartending job

Learning to make coffee (+latte art)
Learning to make coffee (+latte art)

The path I have chosen in my life, was something I had dreamed of many years ago. And even today, I feel like this is all a dream. I am pretty well traveled at this point, seeing 32 countries and far more places in between. From, Hosteling, Camping, and Couchsurfing to Cross Oceanic flights and hitchhiking hours. Had many experiences, meeting all kinds of people, exploring different cultures and ethics and having my share of rough times. Rupturing my Achilles in Hawai’i to being stranded in Albania on the road. However still, enjoying the pleasures of everything about Greece, Snowboarding in Slovenia, engaging with locals in Cuba, climbing Mayan temples in Belize, falling in love in Hawai’i to enjoying New Zealand on motorcycle.

Refreshing swim in the Aegean (Folegandros)
Refreshing swim in the Aegean (Folegandros)
Love Sunset over O'ahu
Love Sunset over O’ahu
Motorcycle Diaries, New Zealand
Motorcycle Diaries, New Zealand

 

I told my girlfriend recently while I was naming all of the countries of the world on a quiz website, that I truly do wish to see the world. Beyond the known places like Bangkok and the Phi Phi islands, capitals across Europe, East Coast of Australia, pyramids of Giza, and the sands of Waikiki. I want to see East Timor on the edge of Indonesia. I was to see the faces of people in Tajikistan of why a New Yorker is in their country. I want to cross borders of Sudan, Djibouti, and Eritrea just for the fucking hell of it. Dance Salsa in my island of Puerto Rico to getting lost in India. See Tuvalu, Nauru, and Kiribati to better understand climate change. I want to engage with locals in Brazil with my rusty Portuguese and hitch on sail boats in the Eastern Caribbean & South Pacific. Travel the corners of America with my dad and improve my moms Spanish in Colombia for longer than 2 weeks (It’s that bad. Sorry mom lol). I want to learn be a better bartender, cook, barista, server, tour guide, dance instructor, and overall a better person each day and travel as my excuse to do all of these things.

Te Paki Sand Dunes New Zealand
Te Paki Sand Dunes New Zealand

 

All I am trying to say is, being a traveler allows you to realize how short life is in such a big beautiful world. That’s why I get sad. Both in a good and bad way. There really isn’t too much time for all I want to experience out of life. But I can try! One minute you are enjoying coffee on the roof of a home in Cuba, Bosnian Coffee in Sarajevo, Iced Coffee in cafe in downtown Honolulu meeting the love of your life, to Cappuccinos in the heart of the Marlborough Sounds in New Zealand, writing blogs like this one. One day you are 22 years old, driving over blue sea in the Florida Keys, beginning the end to a long phase of depression and another day you are approaching 30 on the rails traveling across America living the life you dreamed of during your darkest days. Soon, I will be exploring more of New Zealand, exploring Atolls of the Marshall Islands and Tuvalu, holding my girl on the beaches of O’ahu, to maybe campervanning Australia, making my way to East Timor, crossing Mongolia via Camel. Who the hell knows? What I do know is time really does fly and I could find myself in different corners of the world like I am, literally right now. And what time is doing, is flying by well, not wasting it all away behind a desk 98% percent of my years. This life was certainly not a mistake, living it with zero regrets, and not once have I thought about returning to the things I used to do, all of which I considered slow suicide. I am living this life, not later, but NOW. And I created it in such a way to where I can look back and say, life didn’t live me, I….lived life.

 

Now ask yourself, are you living yours?

 

 

Ironically, Louis Armstrong is playing….

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHCcJf6Fo7Q

Categories
Central America General Guatemala Voyages

Guatemala Safety: Getting to Flores and Tikal

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Guatemala is an absolutely beautiful country. The terrain is a mixture between coastal pacific, mountainous, to lowlands of a former jungles despite a bad taste of deforestation. The culture is rich with a blend of Spanish, Mayan, and Garifuna. The people are absolutely friendly to foreigners with fluency, intermediacy, and or lack of knowledge of the Spanish language. This land is a transition between Mexican and Central American culture and home to the ancient Mayan world. After all, the country slogan is, “El Corazon Del Mundo Maya”, “The Heart of The Mayan World”.

9Despite all the positives mentioned above, there still lies some safety precautions that exists much more than back home in America, the UK or any country considered developed. Guatemala is still a developing country having a rough history and past Guatemalans are not so proud of. Civil war and genocide gave a bad name to this country in much of the second half of the 20th century. With much of that in the past and doing better since, Guatemala still revolves around much corruption, high unemployment, poverty, and high crime rates including homicide and drug trafficking.

Now all these negative factors should never discourage a traveler from visiting a whole country, as like any other 3rd world considered country, extra normal precaution should always be considered. My visit to Guatemala summer of 2013 was an absolutely pleasant experience. Actually, the travel experience was amazing and gave me a new perspective to travel throughout Central America and Latin America as a whole for future travel. But one experience that put me on my toes was transportation in the country.

Untitled They say be wary of your ride within just about all of these countries. As you should already know, unless you know a local, you will need to get around via coach bus, chicken bus (Latin America), shuttle bus, and or cab. Prior to my visit, I researched transport across Peten, the northernmost “departamento” of Guatemala from the Belize border to Flores, a former Mayan island turned spanish in the middle of a lake. Petén, unlike much of the rest of Guatemala is still undergoing development far beyond the rest of the country. Petén is like the American west of Guatemala: Great vast land of property which the government makes available for cheap in order to develop this part of the country.

Bandits, as far as I have researched, have much more of an advantage to bribe the law and enjoy a slight taste of lawlessness. Prior to arrival, I read a disturbing thread on TripAdvisor regarding a tour agency providing tours and transportation services to foreigners at cheap cost and far too available in that area. The creator of the thread in short stated that this agency, San Juan tours scams people. In this thread the woman said the bus picked up someone, armed bandits forced the driver into a secluded area off of the main road, robbed everyone, then takes off and leaves them stranded in a way that seems prearranged.

Crossing the border, My step dad and I got stamped and immediately got offered a ride from this bus which already had two foreigners from Germany, a Mexican, and a local Guatemalan riding on it from Belize City. I noticed the sign, San Juan tours before getting stamped. With the intensity of the Spanish language by the persistent ‘cambistas’, or people who exchange money, and the persistence of the San Juan tours employees the pressure was far too much while trying to explain this story to my step dad of why we shouldn’t board. Biting my teeth and clenching my fists while sweat from the heat and fear runs down my bad, I finally gave in, took my chances, and boarded the small white bus.

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Although shitting bricks, the ride was very pleasant and the scenery along the way was great. But my paranoia would get the best of me and look out for potential danger on the road, while I snap away my GoPro and Iphone along the way to capture the scenery. Every time we slowed down for a speed bump or large pot hole, I would immediately think about jumping out the window and sprinting like Usain Bolt. Every time I saw a car pull out in front many yards away or the one time I saw 4 motorcycles do so, I would prepare myself to take the wheel and floor that shit. The one time I saw a police check point, I was prepared to pray for my life and let go of my belongings (This we actually slowed and drove right through.)

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11At the end of this long highway heading west came a cross road: One way heading to Santa Elena where Flores is to the left and to the right, Tikal National Park. Instead of left to go where we are supposed to, we go right, exactly the direction the girl on TripAdvisor went where this bus took them and got robbed. At this point, I am now scared, and preparing myself for this trip to turn awry. In the small lake coastal town of El Remate, we stopped at a “tour guide” agency to pick up a highly suspicious man in a purple shirt with a scar on his face, the same description of the man I saw on this thread. He boarded the bus, pulled out a Nokia-like phone which he constantly used to most likely text his associates about the tourists on board and eventually attempted to sell us “cheap” accommodations to Tikal. Stupid me asked the man where my hostel was, handed him my reservation, and he spend far too long reviewing all my info. Shortly after this, he and the quiet local Guatemalan on the bus were let off somewhere beterrn that intersection and Flores and we continued on. Last odd experience was the fact that we were dumped off into Flores instead of in front of a hostel like we were supposed to and the slight English knowledge the driver had immediately disappeared. The man even played stupid considering my Spanish was utilized with him.

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After we arrived at our hostel north of Flores overlooking the island, the owner listened to our story and what I read and sadly all was true. Beyond what I knew, the company has done far worse in recent and far history to the usual armed robbery to raping women. It costed US $10 to get across and I am beyond glad it was that cheap, but paying far more to be safer would have been worth the money. As far as transportation goes to and from Tikal, we payed through our hostel and got to the mayan ruins and back safely. Although they tell you to avoid overnight travel in Latin America, should anyone consider it, Linea Dorada through Andrenaline Tours is absolutely safe. Getting from Flores to Guatemala City en route to Antigua was a relaxing 9 hour ride on a comfortable coach bus.

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All of us travelers at some point in our travels go through a rough patch that will make us like “HOLY SHIT, I MADE IT THROUGH THAT”. Some stories being more life threatening then others. Rarely yet truthfully, few end up dead. It’s a rough world out there and it sadly happens. Not only do I not want to become a statistic but I hope that this is the only and or one of very very few scary experiences I will ever experience along my travels and hope that reading this will make awareness to others of what to look out for. Guatemala is beautiful, with so much to do, so much to see, and so much to enjoy. Despite the possible danger involved, any wanderlust and traveler should not cancel travel plans to lovely Guatemala and or any destination worth visiting. Just like most experience travelers would say or any travel site will tell you, take extra precaution like you would in any large city at home and be safe. While doing so, don’t forget to enjoy, capture amazing footage, and leave with amazing memories.

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AVOID THE TOUR AGENCY LABELED: SAN JUAN TOURS

Categories
Belize Central America General Guatemala

Belize and Guatemala

So here I am back in my room behind my little Macbook. After four more long months of hard work, I finally rewarded myself to another trip. As always my trips get better and better, if not more intense and challenging. My selection of choice as of Oct 2012 was Belize. Originally I had wanted to spend time on the beach, pass through Belize City, check out San Ignacio and possibly take a day tour to Tikal. I realized doing this worked well with my budget. In time my mom and step dad took interest and I was set on Belize. I realized that with +2, the possibilities are much better to do more. So I expanded my sights beyond the border to Guatemala and down south to Guatemala’s old capital.

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All in all I come back home a very satisfied traveler. I wished and still wish I could have continued travel, however I know I’m not quite ready just yet. My mother had school conflicting so it ended up being my step dad and I. Everything I envisioned turned out even better in reality. The only problem as always in my recent travels is that everything has to be done quickly. Nothing is ever chill or laid bad. Who likes to travel that way? I know not me, but I accept what I can get for now.

Anyways, first two days we flew into Belize City and took the water taxi up to San Pedro. In doing so we almost accidentally got off at the wrong island. As expected, there wasn’t much to do but chill out and listen to the constant strong breeze OR hire a tour guide for something, somewhere. Our second day we did hire a snorkeling tour off the coast. Luckily, I had bought a GoPro just a few weeks earlier to get some great pictures and videos underwater. Next day we left out lazy beach bums behind and went on a cross country venture the Belizean way literally. Before that, we got a good glipse of the inner Belize City streets. It looked like a bomb hit some sections and they left it untouched. Very sad sight yet it was expected, however I’m so happy to have seen it for myself.

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Our bus was a retired American school bus (chicken bus) for an “overpriced” 8 dollars, for both of us. You get what you pay for, ANYWHERE, because I couldn’t feel my ass on the seat for 3 hours. The experience was great though and very happy we did this. We arrived in San Ignacio around 12pm after the long ride, checked into our hotel and immediately trekked off to see our first Mayan ruins, Xunantunich and Cahal Pech. The first site allowed us to cross the Mopan river using a hand cranked ferry. Unfortunately May is the time of the year when everyone burns land for cropping. Which meant the heat was double, visibility sucked and a burning smell was everywhere. Xunantunich sat nice and high on a hill overlooking a nice section of the Cayo district with a glipse of the Guatemala border. Yes, Belize actually has a border control to keep the Guats out. Sounds familiar for an American with Mexicans…hm. Cahal Pech is apparently a home to a royal family with many hallways and rooms to walk in an out of. It sits on a hill as well with a close proximity to San Ignacio. Close enough to walk through town to eat and walk back to our hotel, which we did.

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We debated on our travel time, using it wisely and our budget against the highly expensive tours to places that were farther than expected. I’m latino, and my biggest flaw is the inability to speak spanish with confidence. The past year I have been taking courses online, so my biggest goal was to test my skills personally. The answer to this full equation was to cross into Guatemala a day earlier. Crossing the border was as chaotic as I expected. Cambistas everywhere, before the border AND after. After paying a retarded exit fee we crossed and even more cambistas approached with a nice side order of taxi and transportation hustlers.

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Worst part of the trip was the transport to Flores from the border. Many months before I had read a post about San Juan tours and scams. Not to forget a robbery off the road on the way to Tikal affiliated with the company. Before getting on my transportation to Flores, I realized that same name on the back of the bus. I was scared shitless and trying to tell my stepdad about this company. But with all the annoying people around us and the workers for San Juan tours rushing us he wasn’t understanding me. In the end, a stupid decision at the time was made and my stepdad convinced me to get on. I have never been so scared for my life by just being on a bus. Every time the bus slowed or “sketchy” vehicles came in front, I panicked. At a flores/tikal intersection the driver turned to Tikal instead of Flores which my heart started pounding more. I based my fear on this forum and many similar ones :

http://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowTopic-g562625-i16186-k4322379-Flores_San_Juan_Travel_trip_to_Tikal_Bandits_be_aware-Flores_Peten_Department.html

Just like a few posts, the driver stopped along the way in El Remate to pick someone up. This man made phone calls and texts throughout the whole drive, tried to sell us “tours”, and eventually the man was dropped off halfway back down to Flores. We ended up getting dropped off and went about our travels. I eventually told the other travelers and the hostel owner about what I read and was all true. Back to the travels, my same day last minute booking through HostelWorld was a gorgeous cabana themed place on the hillside of San Miguel overlooking Flores and Lago Petén Itza. Absolutely amazing place and by far the best hospitality I have ever had in lodging in my life, the name of the hostel is Chaltunha Hostel. The owner happily accommodated our next day venture to Tikal and also transported us across the lake if necessary. I recommend every travel going to Flores to stay at this location. It is perfect!!

Next day we woke up at 4 to get a shuttle to Tikal, the highlight of the trip. Still paranoid about getting around, our transport was legit and made it to Tikal without issue. The park was far larger than I imagined and the walk around I anticipated turned out to be a jungle hike. We saw amazing forest animals, to vines, huge tree trunks to best of all, amazing Mayan architecture. Overall the experience was great, despite the scam scares, everything was worth it. After 6 hours of calorie burning we returned to the hostel for a last beer on the mountain side before switching hostels to be on the island.

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Next day was our most laid back day and relaxing. For lunch, instead of a restaurant, we bought a budget travelers lunch for an equivalent of a $3 meal in Quetzales. Burrito, 2 tacos, and a beer. WOAHHHHHHHH!!! That night we had a 9 hour bus ride planned to head south, so pool side, lake side, and pillow side hanging out was good enough for us. 8pm came around, checked out, and headed over to the sketchy looking Bus station in Santa Elena for our overnight bus trip with Linea Dorada. This was pre booked online for about $117 (3 people). Only problem is our tickets were never sent to me until I emailed them 3 days prior. The luxury bus included A/C, reclinable seats, complimentary water and sandwich, and a bathroom not to forget our front seats on the top deck with a front window view of the road. Oddly for me, I slept well for about 5.5 hours.

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I woke up to sunlight, moutain silouettes, and car traffic in the distance around the bend of these mountains. The air was much cooler and the atmosphere was much less tropic. The traffic into Guatemala City was a bitch, as expected. We caught a cab after we got off the bus and I didn’t think I would make the 40 minute trip to Antigua. The air was so polluted with fumes, I hated breathing. Our first initial turn into Antigua wasn’t what I expected. Not sure why, but I assumed a highway overlooking the city and finally turning into the street. No. A simple turn right, oh shit we’re in Antigua, haha. Absolutely amazing city, with amazing views of the volcano, amazing pastel colored buildings, cobble stoned roads, old Spanish churches and best of all, the people were so great. “Los Guatemaltecos son muy agradables.” Everyone greeted you with a “HOLA””Buenos Dias””Buenas Tardes””Buenas Noches”.  You can’t expect too too much to do in Antigua, except enjoy the ambience of a small old city of great people and beautiful colors.

Overall, this trip was significant in many ways. I found a way to break out of my shy shell and practice my spanish with people. The only way to be fluent in a language is to actually speak it. I never backpacked until this past week. Having just one bag on my back is by far so convenient and awesome. I normally meet people in my travels but I’ve met some amazing backpackers with stories that I dream of. I spend my 7 days a week working two jobs to save up for this amazing travel lifestyle. Here I am thinking I am one of few when there is actually so many who do this and succeed. This was all an eye opener for me and traveling to these two countries did a lot of justice for me. I come back sad to return but with much more ammunition, support, and willpower to further work hard to create a story of my own. Happy travels everyone.

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