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April 9 – May
6, 2007
Santa Elena (Belize) – Chetumal – Mahahual – Felipe Carillo Puerto –
Punta
Allen – Tulum – Valladolid – Mérida |
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Flat and hot, covered in jungle, dotted with Mayan ruins, sprinkled with
cool swimming holes and surrounded by beaches, the Yucatan Peninsula was
a very pleasant last stop on our Latin American trip. |
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Chetumal was our first
port of call where we enjoyed an easy-going,
functional town that provided everything we needed. The Mayan cultural
museum there has a very informative and well laid-out display of Mayan
traditions and beliefs, which was a great introduction to Yucatan. |

Reproduction of Mayan painting |
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Kurt, the chef |
This area provides many great
camping opportunities. Just as well because hotels are much more
expensive here than anywhere else in Latin America. Our first beautiful
camp spot was on Laguna Bacalar, renowned for it’s 6 shades of
blue.
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From there we moved on to the
Costa Maya near Mahahual, where we had to peg down our tent with
big wooden sticks in the sand to prevent it from flying off to the back
of beyond.
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Kurt, the builder |
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Well... someone has to do it! |
There we had a wonderful
holiday with Darina chilling in the hammock ... |
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...and Kurt providing fish and
lobster for dinner.
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Kurt, the fisherman |
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Kurt, the gourmet |
When Darina got sick of
cooking fish … we just had sushi! |
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When cruise ships descend on
Mahahual, this lazy quiet village is transformed. One of the adventures
offered is a guided quad ride, 20km down the coastal road, sporting a
GI-helmet and grimacing in the dust of the quad ahead. The cruisers
reminded us of scenes from a Vietnam war movie with their somber faces and their “a man’s got to do what a man’s got to do”
attitude. |

Quad adventures |
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Mahahual |
The Mayan Coast is gorgeous.
Turquoise Caribbean waters lap the palm-fringed white-sand beaches, and
impressive coral gardens are just a swim away. Rays, caimans, barracudas
and an array of colourful tropical fish make snorkeling a treat.
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Oh yeah! |
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However, the high tide line is
clearly marked with non-biodegradable rubbish, i.e. plastic bottles,
synthetic ropes, shoes, broken chairs, fast food containers and buoys.
In addition to this, local favourite picnic spots are clearly marked
with everything Juan and his family omitted to bring home after the
party.
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Littered beaches |
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Sian Ka'an |
Leaving the main drag to
Cancun, we veered off into the Sian Ka’an Biosphere Reserve.
Cycling on this dirt road through jungle to El Playon was lovely and
quiet. The whole day we met just 4 cars and 2 cyclists. The shady path
was a welcome break from the beating sun and while we dodged iguanas,
butterflies fluttered by and a whole feathered orchestra filled the
jungle with song. |
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Gerardo and Sebastian
from Mexico City were down to explore the flora and fauna of the area,
while evaluating the merits of bicycle touring.
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Gerardo and Sebastian |
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From Playon to Punta Allen |
A short 3-minute trip by boat
brought us to Punta Allen. |
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This former lobster-diving village has
now discovered ecotourism and fly-fishing as good sources of greenbacks. The laid-back
atmosphere and
extra-friendly locals make it a great place to hang out for a couple of
days. |

Punta Allen |
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Shell and
coral detail at Punta Allen |
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Sirena, the American mermaid |
Sirena (American), shipwrecked no less than 3 times in
Latin American waters, has a wonderful guest house with traditional
palapa huts in a beautiful garden. You can even read her
autobiography there and learn how she came out tops after every disaster.
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Great views of the Caribbean
were dispersed at regular intervals on the sandy jungle road up to Tulum.
Again we encountered strings of jeeps, day tripping (pardon, adventuring)
down to Punta Allen, leaving us in a cloud
of dust. |
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You'd better not be in a hurry! |
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Tulum ruins and beach |
The Mayan ruins at Tulum
are spectacularly located on a cliff overlooking the sea. To appreciate
them at their best bring your swimming gear and observe them while
having a swim from the beach below.
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Cobá was a handy stop en route west. The local ruins boast the highest Mayan pyramid in the Yucatan
Peninsula, but it is it’s ball courts that are most impressive. |

Pyramid at Cobá |
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Ball court, Cobá |
This ancient ball game was a
team sport, the object being to score by getting the ball through the
central ring on either side. It’s still unclear whether it was the
winners or the loosers that were sacrificed to the gods on completion of
the game.
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The aim is to get the ball through the ring |
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With temperatures on the wrong
side of 40°C,
cenotes make
life bearable. With its flat limestone landscape, Yucatan has many
underground water pools (cenotes) and caves formed by erosion. These natural wells often came with stalactites and stalagmites
and with an overhead opening allowing light and tourists in! Their cool
unique surrounds were availed of on many occasions. |

Cenote for a swim |
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Salbutes |
Tortillas are the staple for
breakfast, lunch and dinner in Mexico. They come in all sizes and forms
and are filled or topped with meat and things. Although a welcome change
from rice, chicken and beans of Central America, tortillas, chicken and
beans did become a bit repetitive after a week or so!
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Colourful handicrafts |
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Valladolid was our first
colonial town out here and we enjoyed its atmosphere after so many old
stones… and more to come. |

Valladolid colonial houses |
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Novel park seats |
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Chichén Itzá |
Chichén Itzá,
Mexico’s Mayan gem was the next pearl on the string. Famous for its
astronomical architecture and well preserved stone carvings, Chichén
Itzá attracts dozens of tour buses daily. |
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Stonework, Chichén Itzá |
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The main pyramid was cleverly
designed in such a way that Quetzalcoatl, the feathered snake god
seems to slither down the side of the structure as the sun rises on
equinox days. We were amazed at the reenactment of this phenomenon at
the sound and light show in the evening. |

The main pyramid |
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The New 7 Wonders of the World |
Chichén Itzá has a great
campaign going to be included in the New 7 Wonders of the World.
Stiff competition includes the Taj Mahal, the Great Wall of China, Machu
Picchu and, our favourite, Angkor Wat. Not so stiff competition is in
form of the Christ Redeemer statue, Rio de Janeiro, the Statue of Liberty and
the Eiffel tower. You can cast your own
vote online
here before
07.07.07 |
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We had our visit to the ruins
cleverly timed… all done by 11am and back by the pool of our 4-star
campground, while the busloads melted in the midday heat.
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The Pyramid Inn |
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Izamal convent |
Izamal is one of those
towns that seem to be a film set just ready for shooting. The whole town
is painted yellow and the magnificent Franciscan convent and church
occupies a dramatic central location right on top of a former Mayan
pyramid. |
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Izamal street |
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Traditional dress and a lively
market complete the picture of this unique town.
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Traditional dress
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Colonial residence |
Mérida, a city of 1
million, was alas our final stop on this leg of the trip. It’s stately
colonial residences and churches, parks and avenues give it quite a
European feel. |
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With temperatures just on the
right side of 50°C, siesta was strictly enforced.We did manage to
fit in a few shopping sprees while we left the bikes in with a mechanic
for some TLC. |

Local handicrafts |
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Mexican flag |
Our month long stay in Yucatan
was probably the hottest “chill” we've ever had! Moving from the beach to the hammock to the bike to the hammock to ruins to the hammock to cenotes to the hammock at 40
to 50°C... was about all we were capable of doing. But that we did very well!
Yucatan has certainly a lot to offer the tourist – however, pick your season carefully!
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And so we bid
farewell to Latin America. After 22 months on the road, 21 countries and
21,000km we fly back to Europe tomorrow. From Barcelona, Spain, we’ll
have a little spin on the bikes back to Switzerland (via Ireland), allowing us to
readjust to our own continent again.
Looking back at our updates and
pictures reminds us of how extraordinary our trip has been so far. As
always it’s the people that make the trip so enjoyable and we would like
to take this opportunity to thank everyone we met along the way. For the
cheers, smiles, chats, help, curiosity and hospitality… Muchisimas
Gracias, Muito Obrigado and Cheers to you all! |
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