Destinations

You better Belize it! Getting slow on Caye Caulker, Belize.

This place made me feel good. A little piece of paradise. I can imagine myself one day dropping off the grid and tending a thatched-roof sand-floor bar waiting on the next massive hurricane to sweep me out into a windex blue oblivion.

Caye Caulker is a little island about 20 miles off the coast of Belize. The lower half, maybe a little over a mile long and just about a block wide at the northern tip, is the populated portion, carved out of a crocodile infested mangrove forest. It’s the little brother of the more well known San Pedro (of which Madonna sang about in “Las Isla Bonita”), but quieter with less of the party scene here and a well known Rasta vibe. We thought we’d visit San Pedro (a short ferry ride away) but loved Caye Caulker so much we never left.

The island is low on frills or fancy airs. No cars with only the occasional golf cart. No grand resorts. Just a mish of mom and pop hotels, bright and tilted beach bars, and small eateries serving what was caught fresh that day. If you want to disconnect and destress with nothing to do, this is the place.
   

The Barefoot Beach Hotel

 
I booked a room at a little hotel on the south eastern side of the island. It’s quieter at night but only a short walk to the downtown strip. This area was deserted at night and felt like our own little playland.
 

The Barefoot Beach Hotel
 

   

Downtown Caye Caulker

 
The northern tip of the island is the center of tourist activity. There’s one main road with a few cross streets spoking out. You can see both beaches standing on the road, it’s only about a block wide at the top. It gets a little wider as you go south, but not much more than a few blocks. There’s a park where kids play soccer, a school, a few churches, and quite a few little houses. There’s maybe 2000 permanent residents and two main neighborhoods, the northern section where the bars and hotels are, and a more remote residential-only section just north of the airport. More on that later.
 

Downtown. This is about as hectic as it gets.
 
The soccer field in the middle of town.
 
 
A cute payphone by the Coffee N Muffin Company
 
Bike rentals by the convenience store.
 
The school
 
A typical backyard.
 
 
I think this was the most motorized vehicle I saw.
 
A cute house.
 
Downtown at night.
 

   

Walking down the north eastern coast

 
The majority of food and drink spots are grouped along the north eastern coast and along Front street. (As the island widens further south Middle street appears, and then eventually Back street (no connection to the band).) This beach is protected by the Belize Barrier Reef and the calm shallow waters are lined with public plank-piers and white sand. This is also where the dive shops are set up (the region is famous for both snorkeling and diving).
 

They were doing some construction at the split (northern most tip).
 
Swings in the ocean outside a bar.
 
Lots of tiny operations like this. Most food is cooked on those air tank type grills.
 
They’ll bring you food and drinks out to the beach.
 
 
They had a fondness for these swing seats.
 
 
The windex blue oblivion.
 
A convenient picnic spot.
 
More swings! These actually belonged to a hotel with a restaurant out front.
 
Nothing to do but go slow.
   

A walk around the island

 
The island is small. It’s not hard to walk all the way around it. But as you head south past the airport the island interior is not populated, just an impenetrable mash of mangrove forests. A pedestrian trail winds around the coast passing the occasional residence but it peters out as you start across the southern edge of the island, basically disappearing as you hit the western side. You can also walk down the western coast starting at the north. Starting with residentials you eventually run into a more industrial section of town where barges dock with supplies and where the power station roars along, lighting up the island. Eventually you’re forced inland where you travel south on Back street all the way down to the airport until you cross Xocoi Street which leads to the second neighborhood. This area has no tourists, no hotels or bars. Just a few streets of tiny stilted houses in various degrees of disrepair. This area is very poor, a stark contrast to the northern island. I’m glad I ventured over to get a better understanding of the people who live here.

First going down the eastern coast past the more populated areas:
 
 

A little graveyard on the walk to our hotel. That restaurant in the background was pretty good.
 
 
 
One of a series of little bungalows on the southern beach.
 
 
Rainbow!
 
This pier mysteriously led out into a mangrove thicket.
 
Mangroves. By this point I’m pretty far down the eastern shore and the trail begins to deteriorate.
 
Then starting back over at the northern end of the western shore:
 
These little popup restaurants are all over. It doesn’t take much. And you only open when you feel like it.
 
Beautiful sunsets on the western shore but more crocodiles and less wind.
 
 
A little store in the south western neighborhood.
   

Food on the island

 
Don’t expect anything fancy. But if you like fresh seafood prepared on a grill, then you’ll love the many options. It’s the same fare you find on any small island. Grilled fish, grilled chicken, rice and beans, slaw. One place grills a pig all day and sells pork dishes all night. After several nights of grilled fish I went with an interesting version of spaghetti. And there are a couple of medium range restaurants like Habenero’s but they won’t be in the running for a Michelin star any time soon. Lots of over-sweetened tropical drinks that make your teeth feel like you’re growing a moss forest. I can have a couple but I generally stick to either a rum and coke or just rum. Or even better the omnipresent local beer Belikin! Which comes in a few types. It’s synonymous with Belize.
 

Rose’s Cafe.
 
Fish kabobs. The daily special.
 
Love these hand-made grills. This one is from a keg.
 
Home-made pig spit complete with steering wheel. This guy was roasting pretty much right on the street.
 
Said piggy later that night, looking tasty.
 
Said piggy, without sauce.
 
Said piggy, with sauce. The menu is pretty simple.
 
Popeye’s (in a pier over the ocean). I believe this was the chicken with a cone of rice and beans.
 
Popeye’s. The fish burger with mustard sauce.
 
Blended mojito.
 
Also a few tourist places. The Sub-away (loose copyright laws here) and The Fair with deep fried twinkies, oreos, and candy bars. Clearly American focused. Didn’t try either.
 
Stores are pretty basic. Hand bagged from bulk. But reasonably cheap for island goods.
 
I loved that you got to pick your bananas from the tree limb.
 
Ceviche on the beach. What could be better?
 
Cuba Libre. Classic.
 
Fuck yeah, motherfuckers.
 
Grilled cheese with watermelon juice. Very satisfying.
 
After a week of grilled fish I broke down and ordered the spaghetti. Someone must have told them that Americans like cheese cause this thing had about a half inch of goopy sludge on top. I had to scrape it off to find the food.
   

Island dogs

 
I love these dogs. They were the chillest dogs I’ve ever met. Often just splayed out on their back dotted with sand, a certain corpse-like quality to them, until closer inspection where you get a wagging tail and I swear a broad smile. These dogs were all just smiling. Usually just island strays living on handouts.
 

I dubbed this guy Taco Dog!
 
Moving slow.
 
This guy set up shop at the pig joint and had mastered the puppydog eyes to get his food.
   

Caye Caulker airport

 
We caught a flight from the Belize airport on the mainland. A tiny island hopper and a small landing strip. Not even really a waiting area, after your golf cart cab ride you just “check” your bags in by throwing them on a wagon and have a seat outside until the plane lands. Our tickets were just long pieces of thick plastic that we handed over when boarding and are reused each flight.
 

I guess this is departure gate A? Notice the bags on the wagon and the taxi queue.
 
Tiny runway.
   

Daniel Callicoat

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Where am I now?

Eugene, OR

(We’ve reached the end of our trip.  Time to settle down for a bit and recharge our batteries and our bank accounts.  It’s been a good run.  Eugene had the right kind of vibe we were looking for.  Good people.  A good size.  Affordable.  We’re going to give it a go here.  But we’re open to what comes.)

 

Next up:

Nowhere for the moment

(For the first time in three years we don’t have the next adventure planned out.  That’s going to be a strange reality to adjust to.)