Un Mes en Guatemala

posted in: Central America, Travel | 0

Reading the blogs, travelers say you need at least four weeks in Guatemala and we wholeheartedly agree. We stayed just five days shy of a full month; we had a blast and highly recommend it to everyone! We started with a bus from San Ignacio to Flores, a beautiful town on the water where you need a small boat to take you anywhere. Our hostel overlooked the water and the colorful streets of this quaint town.

Our hostel’s Lancha!

From Flores, we took the 4:30am bus to Tikal to walk through the jungle and look at the ruins; we did a self-guided tour (the first of many) looking at monkeys and toucans as we climbed some of the ancient buildings to view the tops of the canopy. It’s always a good idea to get there early to avoid vendors lining the paths and whistling a sound through their wooden instruments to make you think a jaguar might be lurking nearby. Coons was particularly excited to climb temple four to catch a view found in one of the Star Wars movies.

Recognize this view from Star Wars?

After Tikal, we visited Jorge’s Rope Swing, a destination we thought would be more popular for tourists, but we were able to enjoy some cervezas while we lounged in an innertube or jumped off the diving board or the rope swings.

Loungin’ at Jorge’s Rope Swing

After Flores, we arrived in Lanquin and our hostel, Vista Verde. We loved this place so much we hardly left! It was a much cooler temperature than we’d been used to and we were ecstatic about that. We enjoyed many sunrises and sunsets at the infinity pool overlooking the mountains, and Coons enjoyed a couple siestas.

Sunrise above the infinity pool

The staff and the food were quite enjoyable. Our major excursion was a visit to Semuc Champey: a 45-minute ride in the back of a truck through hilly, dirt roads followed by a tour through a dark, dank cave only lit by a hand-held candle. We climbed and swam through these caves until we had practically no candle to light our way!

Exploring the caves by candlelight

Then we visited an iconic rope swing and floated down the river drinking cervezas. Finally, we climbed to a lookout point to view the pools we would spend the rest of the afternoon jumping, sliding, and swimming in.

View of Semuc Champey pools

By far our longest travel day was Lanquin to Quetzaltenango or Xela (Shay-la) for short — 15 hours total and four buses! One gentleman was kind enough to bring us to our hostel after we arrived at the bus stop around 10:30pm. We were so grateful to the kind stranger and his family as we were completely exhausted from that long, bumpy, crowded journey. In Xela we stayed for almost two weeks in two hostels, previously mentioned in our “Roots” blog post, unpacking for a little while, taking Spanish lessons, hiking volcanoes, and enjoying “El Dia De Los Muertos” and the celebration of fiambre.

We enjoyed two unguided overnight volcano treks in Guatemala: Volcan Tajumulco and Volcan Acatenango. Volcan Tajumulco is the tallest peak in Central America. It has a well-maintained trail through old and new pine tree forest (some of the trees were as tall as Kourtney), and the sunrise was absolutely breath-taking!

Volcano erupting at sunrise

Volcan Acatenango, one of the more popular Guatemalan hikes and the second highest peak, overlooks Volcan Fuego that spouts huge clouds of black smoke and red lava a couple times per hour. We sat in awe during a beautiful sunset listening to the BOOM and rumble of the erupting volcano.

 

Volcano Fuego erupting during the day

From Xela, we stopped in Lake Atitlan to visit two local lake towns: Santa Cruz and San Pedro. We stayed at a hostel called Free Cerveza in Santa Cruz where you pay 70Q or $9 US for a three-course meal and two hours of all-you-can-drink fun! There was beer bong; there was slap cup; there was flip cup — and just for a second — we forgot our age as we crawled into our teepee tent!

Glamping life!

In San Pedro, we hiked Volcan San Pedro, and then Coons hit the courts for some pick-up basketball with an amigo we met from the hike. Who said white men can’t jump?

Antigua was our last stop in Guatemala and a charming historic town! We walked around the city looking at old churches and uneven roads decorated with beautiful multicolored buildings.

The classic Antigua arch

We stopped into a couple restaurants for refreshments. We enjoyed some local brews from Antigua Brewing Company — don’t get the nachos! — and some cabernet and queso from a small wine bar near the iconic yellow arch! We loved Guatemala so much we took a cooking class at La Tortilla to make sure we could recreate all of these memories when we’re back home in our kitchen missing Guatemala.

Now, it’s time to rip through some waves in El Tunco, El Salvador — wish us luck!

 

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