Posts Tagged ‘panama’

Bocas Del Torro

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Hello from Bocas Del Torro

We’ve been in Bocas Del Torro for the last couple of days.  It’s an archipelago in the Northeast Portion of Panama. It’s a funny mix of Spanish and English and then the people are a mix of black, latino, and indian.  The town is a run down tourist spot that half of which is built over the ocean.  It looks like it won’t be long before the sea overcomes this place entirely.
It rains a lot here, but we’ve been lucky enough to have great weather.
Some might say it looks like paradise here, others might think paradise has rotted away.
I think we’ll start working our way back north tomorrow in Costa Rica.
Funny things about Bocas Del Torro:
They grow bananas here (the Chiquita company is based out of here), but they are hard to find in the stores.
All the boat tour companies sell the same trip.

I think we all wish we were on a climbing trip.  Unfortunately, climbing is hard to come by in these parts, and what you do encounter, is hard to get excited about.  Climbing trips are great because they get us off the main tourist track, and give us something to do each day.  It also saves us from having to drop a bunch of money every-time we want to do something.  things are generally cheap until they are multiplied by three, and then they seem to start adding up.

Hello from Bocas Del Torro (video)

Did you see our video post?  – how fun is that?

All there is to climb...

All there is to climb…

Bon voyette Boquette!

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

So my last day in Boquete was spent doing a beautiful hike up to a waterfall and horseback riding.  My mom would have been so proud!  I thought the trail was pretty rugged for beginner riders.  We rode up to the top of a hill then raced the horses across the top.  It was a blast!  They were very sure footed and well trained. I got hooked up with this by a friend of Jim’s from Boquete Outdoor Adventures.  I’m psyched I was able to do it.
We decided, at the last minute to go to Bocas Del Torro, instead of the Osa Peninsual.  The trip to the Osa was just looking a bit tough logistically.  I’ll tell you more on my thoughts about being here in the next post…for now, here are the top 5 things about Boquete.
1. the coffee – it’s cheap and wonderful and very available.
2: the hostle – what a wonderful place.  we had so much space, it was clean, quiet and the kitchen was great.
3. the island – drinking fresh coconut water and playing on the beach was awesome.
4. the horseback ride
5. baja reiki, the light rain that happens every afternoon.  It makes a rainbow!

Lisa and Zane hiking outside Boquette

Lisa and Zane hiking outside Boquette

Virigins and Volcanos

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

(Intro by Jason)
Well from what I remember from the stories is that you’re suppose to throw a virgin into a volcano when you get to the top.  I don’t understand why you would want to do something like that.  Something along the same reasons you have grape juice and a cracker at catholic mass I suppose.  So when I got to the top of the mountain, Lisa informed me that she wasn’t a virgin, and thus I was not able to throw her into it.  With her having a son Zane, I should have put two and two together.  I am just a male after all and sometimes we miss things.  There was no bubbling lava so I suppose it would have been fairly uneventful anyway.  Just some tumbling, bruises and a very angry wife.  Instead, there was lots of walking.. and then we turned around and walked back down.

(by Lisa)
…and that’s just what we did…for 9 hours, 15 miles (roundtrip) and 8000 feet of vertical gain.  Jason and I hiked the Vocano Baru (11,400 ft., the highest peak in Panama) today while Zane volunteered at the animal refuge.  It was a big day for all of us!  We walked our asses off and Zane got to hire is first cab…in Panama none the less!  Mission accomplished for all!

We started the day at 3:30 am, began hiking a litte after 5:00 am and finshed  at 2:30pm. At the summit you can see both the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans.  Let me say that this was a HUGE day for me.  Like a Cross Fit workout or a hard lead climb, I had to break it into pieces to wrap my head around it.  I really wasn’t sure I was going to summit…my legs wern’t working very well for me in the beginning.  I have to say that determination goes a long way for me.  I just kept moving.  Anyway, just wanted to you guys to know we are still suffering and working our bodies here in Panama…but right now I’m sitting on a couch with ice on my kneese drinking a very strong drink.  Cheers!

(Jason again here)
You have to really like hiking to enjoy the Vocan Baru thing.  It’s a constantly steep jeep road that really doesn’t have much scenery, besides a wall of forest.  The road rarely flattens out, and doesn’t affor many view either until you near the top.  I guess you can ascend it by the Cerro Punta side for a more adventures single track.  You need a guide to do it this way, and hiring a guide to do something like going for a long walk would be hard on my ego.  It was also a quickly planned adventure, so climbing it from the other side would have been much more difficult logistically.

We don’t really like hiking for the sake of hiking, and thus, although we are glad we did it, it’s not a walk I would like to do again.  My knees and feet hurt, there was next to no wildlife, no diversity, and not much in the way of aesthetics.  The hike up was long, and the hike back down felt even longer.  We can say we did it now and we have a story to tell.

Boquete day 1

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

Our first day in Boquete was great.  After a good nights rest we were ready to explore the area.  The town is quite small and safe.  The temps are great and the scenery is beautiful.  You can walk pretty much anywhere you need to go but if you do need a taxi, they are very inexpensive.  We have a dorm type room in a hostel, but we have the whole room to ourselves.  It’s big, light and sunny with several windows that open to the river which runs behind the building.  We have our own bathroom with a huge shower and plenty of hot water. There is a fully equipped kitchen downstairs, although I’m not sure how much cooking I will do as eating out here is VERY cheap.  It’s simple but good food although getting veggies is a challenge…lots of rice and beans and bread.  A person (Alan…Tammy?) would have a very hard time on the Paleo Diet here.
Today we went to an animal refuge (Paradise Gardens) for endangered species.  It was great!  How many times in your life will a person have a chance to hold a baby ant eater? We also go to see an Otter Cat, Monkey’s, a baby Screech Owl, Parrots, an Ocelot, and Toucans.

Zane loved it and is scheduled to volunteer there three afternoons this week.  It will be a great experience for him. I feel like letting him wander here is fine…it’s very safe and quiet.  Not like the streets of Playa Del Carmen, where you feel like your in a frogger game trying to cross the street.
We ended our afternoon with pizza and then a coffee, the later being better then the first.  Boquete produces award winning coffee and the plantations are plentiful here.  It would be great to take a tour, if it’s in our budget.
We have been getting some of our cross fit  work outs in, but they are pretty simple and not nearly as much fun as Hypoxia! Tomorrow we plan to check out the climbing.

Viajando a Panama

Sunday, March 1st, 2009
Architecture, or lack thereof
Architecture, or lack thereof

Well, we arrived in Boquete, Panama last night about almost 30 hrs of travel from Las Vegas. Las Vegas to Denver to San Jose via airplanes took up the night. Two taxi rides in San Jose took us not very far, but ate up some time, as the first taxi left us at the wrong bus station. A long, cramped bus ride on Tacopa, apparently a locals bus as we were the only foreigners, took us to the border of Panama. Some finagling, dragging our suitcases around, waiting in lines, and trying to understand what we needed to do ensued. Why do border crossing need to be such a hassle?
We couldn’t bear two more bus rides (one to David and then one to Boquete), so we let a taxi coerce us into a ride the rest of the way. It was a good move. The taxi was comfy, and it was an hour and half ride for $50.
The was no staff at the Hostal we had planned on staying at, so another hour was killed by the time we got a taxi to another one. Sleep found me quickly.
The bus ride yesterday was long, and uncomfortable, but a least it was interesting. In between fading in and out of sleep, there were mountains, valleys, and painted piles of cinder blocks and corrugated tin they refer to as towns. I was surprised that once in Panama, the roads became wider, the houses were nicer, and there seemed to be a much higher standard of living. I would have thought the opposite.
Gotta go now and see what this Panama place is all about.

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