site logosite logo
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Photo
  • Video
  • Panorama
  • About
    • About us
    • Statistics
    • Gear
    • Map
    • Vehicle
  • Contact
  • CURRENT BLOG »
SIDEBAR

Finally. Guatemala.

1 comment
  • Central America
  • Guatemala
Oct 08 2016
Post's featued image.

Border crossings in Central America are famous for being chaotic and stressful. We had heard stories of ‘border helpers’ swarming vehicles on arrival, everyone trying to get their cut, bribes, fees, corrupt bureaucrats, confusing paperwork, people stuck camping on borders for days because of technicalities outside their control.

It was with some trepidation that we rolled up to the border with Guatemala.

El Ceibo crossing between Tenosique, Tobasco, Mexcio and El Ceibo, Peten, Guatemala is as far from chaotic as you could imagine. Peaceful, calm, relaxed and friendly. We breezed through the obligatory paperwork for the vehicle, bid a friendly farewell to Mexico and were warmly welcomed into Guatemala with a few quick, easy stamps and some photocopying.

Our first destination was Flores, the colonial town on an island. The man working the immigration counter had told us to expect great things.

We were actually a little underwhelmed.

The island town of Flores, Guatemala

The island town of Flores, Guatemala—A little bit underwhelming.

I guess we had just seen too many colonial towns in Mexico.

img_0565
img_0594
img_0593
img_0591
img_0588
img_0582
img_0596

Flores was a small run-down collection of tin-roofed structures huddled together on what appeared to be a slowly sinking island in the middle of Lago Petén Itza.  It was the last stronghold of the independent Itza Maya, held against Spanish Conquest until 1697. (Well over a century after the Yucatan Peninsula). Sadly, today there are no remnants of the Mayan city of Tayasal which stood on the island before this latest collection of ramshackle colonial buildings.

img_0584

Attached to the town of Santa Elena by causeway it is easy to visit the island of Flores without having to contract a boat. It would have been easy to walk a circuit of the small island if large chunks of the outer road hadn’t been under water at the time.

img_0574
img_0569
img_0576
img_0575
img_0577
img_0567

Flores might not have captured our imagination. But what couldn’t be denied, however, was that we were already falling for Guatemala. Sure Flores wasn’t shaping up to be as spectacular as we had hoped, but the people of Guatemala were sufficiently friendly and welcoming that we immediately felt right at home.

We whiled away a couple of days in the area. Spending time setting up local sim cards, catching up on laundry, wandering the narrow alleyways of the island and watching boat captains land their vessels in the flooded streets of the town.

img_0581

We also took a detour to visit some nearby ruins.

img_0603
img_0606

Only in Guatemala can you be driving along a road and suddenly find yourself passing through the central plaza of an ancient Mayan temple complex. Sure the ruins weren’t that spectacular compared with some we have seen, but you just can’t beat that convenience.

There were of course some rather famous ruins not-to-far from here—Tikal.

After visiting ruins teeming with howler monkeys and spider monkeys, ruins hidden in the jungle, some still barely excavated, ruins with exquisite carvings, hidden passageways, huge temples, spread out over a vast area or with a spectacular view. We weren’t sure what Tikal would have to offer.

We camped within the park area for the ruins so we were able to wander in the front gate right on sunrise and had the ruins to ourselves for an hour or two.

img_0622

Soon, the enormous, steep-sided temples emerged from the thick morning mist. As we wandered the vast site we began to truly appreciate the sheer size of the location. The dull morning light, filtered through low-hanging cloud didn’t make for the most spectacular ruins to photograph.

We had visited dozens of sites in Mexico and Belize. Each one had something special or unique that made it worth a detour. Here in Tikal, we had thought the unique thing would be the steep-sided temples famous from the postcards and documentaries (like Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope).

Yavin 4 (Erm… I mean Temple II and III seen from Temple IV)

Yavin 4 (Erm… I mean Temple II and III seen from Temple IV)

But what actually made Tikal so appealing was that it had a bit of everything.

Ruins overgrown by jungle.

img_0940

High temples that could be climbed for a better view.

Temple climbing with a morning coffee—don't mind if I do!

Temple climbing with a morning coffee—don’t mind if I do!

Carved monuments.

img_0916

Hidden passageways.

img_0930

Jungle surroundings teeming with wildlife. From roaring howler monkeys to nimble spider monkeys.

img_0706

Flocks of comedic toucans.
img_0823
To this little fox-type critter.

I'm not sure what kind of critter he is, but he's cute.

I’m not sure what kind of critter he is, but he’s cute.

Tikal had a mix of everything that makes visiting Mayan ruins great. We wandered around the ruins until the sun was high in the sky, the cloud was starting to burn off and the morning crowds were rolling in.

img_0946
img_0938
img_0936
img_0932
img_0929
img_0926
img_0920
img_0915
img_0914
img_0912
img_0899
img_0894
img_0841
img_0762
img_0758
img_0738
img_0730
img_0702
img_0700
img_0694
img_0684
img_0678
img_0675
img_0626
img_0625
img_0623

Magic.

bordercolonialfloresGuatemalaIslandruinstemplestownwildlife
« Not quite Guatemala—Part 3
To the lake »
  1. Pingback: Flightless Kiwis » Yaxha

Submit a Comment Cancel Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

SUBSCRIBE

Stay up to date with our latest blog posts:

SEARCH

RECENT POSTS

  • Plus four legs
  • Can we keep her?
  • And try again

POSTS BY Category

  • Vehicle
  • Planning
  • New Zealand
  • Australia
  • North America
  • Central America
  • Photo Friday
  • South East Asia
  • Resources
  • South America

ARCHIVES

© 2020 Flightless Kiwis

X
This is our archived blog from our Pan American road trip, if you want to see what we're up to now, visit our current blog.
FLIGHTLESS KIWIS »