After a tiring day in Tikal, we fully deserved a relaxing week on a laidback Caribbean island (again). Read the rest of this entry »
Tikal’s pyramids and falling mokeys
In El Remate, a small city which serves as base-camp for Tical, we met Adam and Greg – the first visitors on our RTW! It was a huge change for us. They came with their own car that, although registered for as many as five people, usually carried no more than five people! Read the rest of this entry »
Amazing Cascades and Scary Spiders
Somewhere in the middle of Guatemala, there is a beautiful place called Semuc Champey. It is surrounded by hills covered with thick forests, cut by clean and refreshing rivers, and drilled by mysterious caves inhabited by thousands of bats. There were also scary spider-like creatures in one of these caves, which made Marta stay at home, of course. But probably the most amazing place was the series of several calm cascades with pools of crystal clear water in between. Marta was exploring their underwater part (she is still addicted to diving). I was admiring the interesting engineering design of Nature – most of the river water was actually passing under the pools, forming a 300m long bridge!
Antigua: the smell of burning shoe soles, dyed wood dust and incenses.
People here in Antigua, Guatemala, get really crazy during the Holly Week of Easter. Various religious processions circulate simultaneously the streets of this beautiful colonial town. The climax is on Good Friday, when Read the rest of this entry »
Dry and boring facts on diving by Maciek, the genuine nerd
1) It is not the tropical forests that form the “lungs of our planet”. It is the oceans – 70% of oxygen is created there.
