Flores 15 February
Breakfast is taken on the island which looks at first to be
disappointing but away from the edge it’s lively and colourful with a huge
selection of restaurants, a small selection of different menus and a medium
selection of people we’ve seen before.
This is a rest day before we visit Tikal, the Mayan temple complex and
city in the jungle. H has a swim while I
fall into that deep form of contemplation that the uninitiated believe is
merely a nap.
I mentioned the armed guards in a previous posting and there
are also lots of police and army around.
They all respond with a smile and a buenas dias and I
even get a smart salute from one soldier.
The whole country seems very amenable to travellers from our experience but
I always wonder how many years’ worth of average income we’re carrying about in
the form of cameras, lens, binoculars, e-books etc., let alone the cash.
Up at 4.30 again for a 5.00 bus, breakfast a mouthful of
water followed by an hour and a half ride.
Roseate fingers of dawn clawing at the fleeing night sky.
For goodness sake, where does this tosh come from. Weakness through hunger, probably.
The whole Tikal area is big and there’s nothing to see
except trees when we arrive, no looming temples glimpsed from the bus. We only booked the transport, not the guided
tour but we drift along at the beginning because the guide says we have to be
shown where to go. He explains the arrangement
from a model and I ask him quietly how much it would be to join the group. A figure is mentioned, a note changes
hands. He’s good but very fact rich and
it’s impossible to take it all in. He
points out a crocodile but doesn’t do as one of the other guides did who told
his group that the crocs are vegetarian.
This temple complex has 5 main steep sided, stepped pyramids
with many other structures dotted around and the visitable site is about a
kilometre by a kilometre. The number of
structures still hidden under over a
thousand years of jungle growth is unknown but probably a lot more than
one. Even what we see now only began to be excavated in 1956 following
the first photographs taken of it in the 1880’s. The lot were
abandoned long before the Spaniards arrived and the scale of the
buildings is awesome. All constructed by
hand, they didn’t even use the wheel.
Apparently they knew about it because wheeled toys have been discovered
but the wheel was a sacred shape and
could not be used. That’s religion for
you. This is a wonderfully atmospheric
place with man-made mounds covered in undergrowth and towering limestone
temples pushing through the treetops. We
finish by climbing Temple IV, built around 750 and 230 feet high. I don’t know if there were any man-made
structures anywhere in the world higher apart from the Egyptian pyramids at the
time. By around 900 it had been
abandoned. From the top of Temple IV we
look across the forest canopy and see the tops of other temples breaking the
treeline. It is very impressive. This
was a culture of human sacrifice, usually defeated enemies but they also had
something called the ball game which seemed to be about keeping a ball in the
air using hips and feet. The winners got
to decapitate the losers so I guess arguments about ‘offside’ tended to be
fairly vigorous affairs.
If we had to choose between them we think Tikal has the edge
over Cambodia’s Ankhor Wat. It’s more
mysterious because it is in the jungle whereas
Ankhor Wat is essentially in the middle of cultivated farmland, huge
though that complex is too at about 40 square miles. There were fewer visitors at Tikal and
there’s always the knowledge that there is lots more ‘out there’
somewhere.
On our return we go in the Maya Mall shopping centre to get
supplies for tomorrow’s bus ride, 5 hours (allegedly) to Belize City. The supermarket is like supermarkets
worldwide in their dedication to stocking local produce; the oranges are from the USA despite the fact
that they grow locally. Looking at any
of these towns I’m reminded yet again that corrugated iron shares would be a
great investment. On the other hand,
paving slabs for pavements not so good.
Like all third world, although we’re supposed to say ‘developing’
countries these days, the pavements are unbelievably bad, broken cement, holes,
missing grilles, narrow, cables cemented into them, posts blocking them, uneven
and never an unbroken run. Back home
people couldn’t even cycle along them.
There’s a relatively new causeway to the island and the pavements are
too narrow for a pushchair. However, we
like Flores, it’s fairly quiet and restaurants look across the lagoon for the
setting sun so we have a sundowner in a first floor restaurant where a cat sits
on a stool at the bar and drinks from a
glass.
liked the 'roseate fingers of dawn' passage - more of that please. Would have enjoyed seeing the cat drinking at the bar!
ReplyDeleteMalcolm