I’ve been here a couple of days now, internet-free except for about 3 minutes that I borrowed the hostel office computer. So all of these Bocas del Toro posts will be a bit on the late side. I hope at least that I will be able to get interenet at my next hostel on Isla Bastimento. *NOTE* This post was posted May 27th.
From where I’m sitting on the balcony in front of my hostel dorm room, I can hear someone hammering in the tarped up house next door. I think the people must be living in the house while construction is going on. The roof and supports seem to be finished, but not the walls. In the window of the house next to that one, I can see a woman in a blue T-shirt making pasta for her family and using the ledge outside her window as extra counter space.
At this point, the woman has just poured her pasta into the strainer. |
The tarped up house. |
Yesterday, I went to the beach and got a pretty bad sunburn. I didn’t realize it until after the fact though. It never occurred to me I would burn; I had put on sunscreen and spent the day in the shade of palm trees. But I suppose it was washed off by the ocean or by the bug spray I liberally sprayed on after the first tiny dot bugs started stinging me. There are these tiny flying bugs here, about the size of a period at the end of a sentence, that sting. I haven’t noticed that they leave a bump, but it still hurts while they are stinging. Afterwards, I can’t tell where they stung and can’t feel the pain.
So now I’m in quite a lot of pain from the burn, and worse still, I was bitten by some sort of a bug last night that left smallish itchy welts all over my right leg and arm (hardly any welts on left arm and leg oddly enough). So I itch, but if I scratch my sunburn pains me.
The beach itself was quite nice. There was a long, narrow stretch of land. Extraordinarily calm water was on one side of the strip of sand, palm trees and jungle on the other.
The sign says not to touch the starfish. |
It was fairly easy to find a spot distant enough from anyone else underneath the palms.
I camped out underneath the center palm. The beach was narrow, but still quite nice. |
I rode home on the same bus I went there on. Elvis and Manuel (I don’t actually remember the 2nd guy’s name, only the first’s was memorable, so I made up a new name for him) were the driver and doorman. I’m not sure which was which, but at the end of the journey there, we were all asked to pay the return fare ($5) and given a little yellow laminated card that had Elvis and Manuel’s telephone numbers and the bus schedule (to give back to them as proof of payment).
That bus ride to the beach has been one of the most interesting experiences of my trip. They squished as many people on that bus as possible. Just when I thought the bus was full, Elvis (or Manuel) would direct someone up to the front to sit down in a nonexistent seat. That bus had 4 or 5 (more?) fold out seats.
I was seated next to a local woman who happened to know all the words to the vibrantly colorful Caribbean (but not exactly calypso) sounding songs. I find it very difficult to describe the music I heard on that 40 or 45 minute ride. Basically, each musical artist would take a catchy (or not) phrase and repeat it over and over using different notes set to upbeat music. The song I distinctly remember is “Hay Doctores.” I never figured out if it was a question, “Are there any doctors?” or if it was a statement, “There are doctors.” Since the singers’ intonation went up at the end, I’m voting for a question. Seriously, I don’t think there were any other lyrics to the song. These guys just really cared about these doctors. Many of the other songs I heard were similar. I suppose that’s why the woman next to me knew all of the words to the songs blasting through the bus.
Back to Elvis and Manuel. These guys have the hookups. Every few minutes they would stop the bus. The driver and doorman would get out and do something (that I couldn’t see from my poor vantage point). Then they would hop back in and drive on for a few more minutes. I imagine Elvis was the doorman. The driver just didn’t look like an Elvis.
I was able to see some of Elvis’ actions from where I sat. For example, at one stop, he picked up a large bucket full of ice. He dropped it off at the side of the road a couple of minutes later. At one point, he had a large bottle of gasoline (I think). He held it out the door for the 100 yards the bus drove with it. He then left it of the side of the road, seemingly in the middle of nowhere. At another stop, he ran across the street to drop a small plastic bag on the doorstep of a woman’s house (he did not wait for her to come get it; she was in the yard at the time). Not far from Bocas Town, the driver stopped at a convenience store. Later in the trip, he stopped in the middle of a road construction site to exchange a bottle of water for a dollar with one of the workers.
The bus finally arrived at the beach; it was one of the more interesting bus rides of my life.
Because of the sunburn and my reluctance to get back out in the sun (pretty much anything to do here requires much intake of sun), I only left the hostel this morning to get food and even that was fairly painful. Fortunately the hostel is big and there are multiple places to hang out. I’ve read, played sudoku, written, watched local children throw paper over their front porch rail, half-listened to several Spanish lessons (I’m staying at a Spanish language school), and have seen several different kinds of birds (including what I swear is a hummingbird).
I haven’t learned much of anything new, but I have heard some words and phrases I haven’t heard in some time, thus reigniting a small part of my atrophied brain. The only thing I thought was rather curious was a guy who was (if I understood correctly) trying to teach his class to pronounce Mexico and Oaxaca with an X sound instead of an H sound. I didn’t quite catch everything he said, so I think some of my confusion would have been explained away if I could have heard the entire lecture, rather than just a few snippets.
Tomorrow, I will take a water taxi to Isla Bastimentos. That island is supposed to be less peopled, have fewer businesses, and more wilderness. The beaches are supposed to be even nicer than the one I saw yesterday as well.
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