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Say it with Flores

Posted by Dennis on July 28, 2008 12:14 AM | 

In the Lunas Castle I shared a dorm with seven others and I had to struggle up and down a top bunk. There was no hot water, and there was nowhere to hang clothes. Despite being upgraded to business class by Copa Airlines and booking a couple of nights at a hotel in Guatemala City at $45.00 per night, as opposed to $12.00 per night in the Lunas Castle, I still felt I was leaving my comfort zone when leaving Panama for Guatemala City last night.....and so it proved.

After complimentary wining and dining in the Presidential Suite at Panama's Tucuman International Airport and being fawned over during the two hour flight I got into a battered taxi and headed to the Cantabria Hotel in Zona 1. I selected this hotel at random on the internet after failing to secure accommodation at a few of the places recommended in Lonely Planet which were around the $15-20 mark. They were either full or just didn´t get back to me. During this trip I had planned along the way to take time out at a few more upmarket establishments rather than the more bohemian crash out places like the Lunas Castle and exchange camaraderie for comfort and to recharge my batteries.

If you use the human body analogy for Guatemala City the taxi driver was taking me the arsehole route into town. We veered through dark, spooky, unlit desolate abandoned streets. Then I spotted signs of life. On most corners there were, in ones and twos, what seemed ghostly ladies of the night until one of them glared straight into our passing cab displaying a grotesquely made up face showing that they weren´t ladies at all. "Transvestites" pointed out the driver proudly as if they were an object of civic pride. This was a scary, seedy, twilight world I would have preferred not to have witnessed at midnight within twenty minutes of arriving in reputedly one of the most dangerous cities in the world. As I was thinking that I could not wait to get to my hotel away from this nightmarish world the taxi driver stopped and said "Your hotel·" I thought there must be some mistake but there it was, The Cantabria Hotel. For $45.00 per night in Guatemala I was expecting a salubrious area with bellhops and maybe a personal manicurist, but this... surely not. I got out and banged on a door of a house. A little old lady appeared after taking twenty minutes to unbolt. She spoke fifteen to the dozen in Spanish and the taxi driver didn´t have change from my $20.00 note. I stared at the sky thinking "Why has thou forsaken me?" While she was prattling on the taxi driver who owned me $8.00 after my tip offered me a note of local currency stating that it was worth $7.00. By this time I had moved sharply into cynical mode. A man of my world weary experience knows that crumpled well thumbed noted of a pinky hue are never worth more than 20p. Higher denominations have the virile gravitas of bluey or greeny colours. I reluctantly took the said note and followed the chattering old lady inside.

It was a house if rather a large ornate house. The old dear continued to chatter away nervously as we stood at "reception". I had this overriding sense that she and I were the only two people in the building. I signed the register. Mine was fifth name on the page: so there were four others. Even better the signature above was from the USA. Things were looking up: someone to talk to and exchange information and pleasantries. Then I noticed the date...May. I was the first guest for nearly three months!! I slumped despondently on my bed. I was trapped alone in God knows where with no means of communication, and I´ve just been flimped by a taxi driver. Why didn´t I just book a week in Bournemouth? Then I thought hang on I´m not a tourist I´m a traveller. When somebody said to Paul Theroux, probably the best travel writer before he set off on his Patagonian Express Journey " through this part of the world "Enjoy yourself" he explained that wasn´t the point and went on "I craved a little risk, some danger, an untoward event, a vivid discomfort, an experience of my own company, and in a modest way the romance of solitude" Well I´m not that spartan but you get my drift.

After a good night´s kip I was woken by the sound of gunfire. It seemed that nearby there was a military firing range...or squad. I drew the wide curtains and revealed a beautiful second floor veranda. I stepped through the large French windows sat at the ornate table and looked over the city skyline with the backdrop of the most perfectly shaped volcano. It was like a huge isosceles triangle with a bit chopped off the top. I checked the Guatemalan quetzales currency with smug confidence to discover that scruffy pinky note was actually worth $7.00. At least I gave him a good tip even if it wasn´t with good grace at the end.

There was a TV programme a few years ago about the violence and lawlessness of Guatemala City. The police didn´t pursue murder investigations because of a combination of the huge number and apathy. Women were especially vulnerable. Back in Lunas Castle the few who had been here said the threat was exaggerated and you have to be sensible. My Turkish friend advised me to jettison any sign of being a tourist. Wear long trousers not shorts, keep any ostentation well hidden such as cameras and watches, and don´t wear tell tale T-shirts. So with that in mind I set out to find my way around this den of iniquity. The area was run down but not threatening as it was the previous night. The night people had gone back into their caskets. Eventually I found my way to one of the main plazas wearing jeans, a plain T-shirt, Panama hat, and to make sure I was incognito my rather cool shades. When I got to the corner of the plaza three limb challenged beggars homed in on me. It was like a qualification for the paraplegic games. Well I thought I had blended in quite well but maybe being covered in a thick layer of sun-block which made me looked like a refugee from the Walking Dead was a give away.

In the evening I went to a Mexican restaurant near the plaza. I was tucking to what turned out to be an excellent meal when I noticed a young lone woman of mid to late twenties sitting just across from me. I was convinced she was British by her poise, deportment and pale complexion. She was attractive rather than beautiful and had an intelligence about her, not that I was staring of course. She is or would have been just my type. The mystery was what was she doing GC alone. I was hoping she would say something as I´m too self conscious of my age to start chatting to young strange young women. When I was young and in my prime thanks mainly to the RAF I found myself in exotic places but did any of these chance meetings take place? Did they fff..., no they didn´t. Last year I experienced two brief encounters with mysterious young women both occurring thirty years too late. Earlier in the day I checked to see what Dating Direct had produced since I´d been away. Two Amy Turtle lookalikes both with a GSOH. Oh fate why doth thou mock me!!. Kismet has been taken the piss out of me all my life.

Anyway where was I? Oh yea back to the lady of the house. She was a sweet old dear of 76 and her hotel was beautiful in an austere way. Although I wasn´t overly aggressive the first night I think she sensed my disquiet. It was blatantly obvious I couldn´t understand Spanish and I repeated "No comprende" monotonously. But despite this everytime our paths crossed she engaged in lengthy nervy monologues. When it was plain that I hadn´t understood a word she took a deep breath furrowed her brow and repeated it slowly and with greater intensity as if it would make a difference, then when this didn´t work she search another away of expressing herself seemingly totally unaware of the futility of exertions. I felt my stay had ruffled all her feathers and as left I could see her metaphorically putting her head under her wing until the guest arrived probably in late October.

I found wandering around GC that although being a poor country even by CA standards the city was vibrant and the people seemed pretty relaxed and were certainly very friendly. Leaving the restaurant I thought of getting a taxi back as is generally advised but I kept walking until the noise of el centro slowly faded behind me and I had about four dimly lit blocks to go. The trannies hadn´t arrived so inspired by Paul Theroux I strode purposefully back the hotel. In these situations I carry no more than $50.00 which I would gladly hand over, however if I´m carrying all my gear and cash then it´s a fight to the death.

I´m now in Copan in central Guatemala. It´s a quaint little town and a stopping off point to my next stop, Flores, which is in the north east. Flores is a large island in the middle of a huge lake which is accessed by a causeway. This may sound reason enough to visit but the island acts as a village that houses visitors to Tikal just over an hour away. Tikal is the most important and most popular Mayan site in Central America. It has the highest pyramids and what sets it apart from other sites is that they tower above the thick equatorial jungle canopies with the sights and sounds of howler monkeys, toucans, parrots, and tree frogs.

After business air travel it´s chicken buses fro the most part now until I get back to Panama in five weeks time


 

Comments (1)

Chris Coughlin wrote...

Hi,
Didn't realise you were travelling again, but I am enjoying reading these blogs. Maybe one day I will get round to trying something similar

Chris

Posted by: Chris Coughlin  | July 29, 2008 10:13 PM

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