Showing posts with label Panama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Panama. Show all posts

The Darién Dare

The mention of Darién brings fear into travelers heart.  Lonely Planet, the apostle of independent travel, forbids travel into the Darién Gap and recommends taking organized tours into the rest of the province.  I tried to comply, but neither friends nor family could join me, and no tours were available on my schedule.  I was on my own.  My chosen destination was La Marea (Tide), a small Embera village, which due to the difficulty of getting there, is off the usual tour itineraries.

In Panama city I gathered the essential supplies for jungle travel.  Hammock, mosquito net, and water purification tablets.  However, even the National Hospital did not carry anti-malaria medicine.  I considered cancelling, but eventually decided to trust my repellent, and hope that the anopheles mosquito knows that it is active only at night.

Driving on the Pan-American Highway, the crossover into Darién Province is immediately evident.  The road quality deteriorates, and police speed traps are replaced by fortified road blocks manned by soldiers in full combat gear.  Adding to the sinister touch, in each of the checkpoints our car was searched and our passport numbers recorded.  The land leg of the journey ends at an isolated dock, where we left poor Nemo on his own and boarded a boat shuttle to La Palma.  The scenic mangroves on shore, and the company of dolphins on the crossing, erased my worries about Nemo.  La Palma, the provincial capital, is a dilapidated one-street town which is distinguished only by the mind-numbing loud music blaring from every establishment.
Here, I would leave poor Adi alone, until my return from the village.

The officer in charge of the army garrison told me that  La Marea is in the "Red Zone", and I need a permit from HQ in Panama City to go there.  I did not argue.  This would not be my first unauthorized border crossing.  I understood that from now on, I will have to be more discreet about my destination.  The same boatman that ferried us to La Palma, was willing to take me to the village. The passage up Rio Marea is possible only at high tide, and so very early next morning, he landed his boat besides our hotel (discreetly away from the official dock).  I felt like the Martin Sheen character in 'Apocalypse Now', as I waved to Adi, and sped away.  At the start, the river was deep and wide.  We motored at full speed around the bends, startling the many birds along the shore, but as we moved upriver, progress became more difficult.  The channel narrowed, and fallen trees floated in the water forcing us to slow to a crawl.  The river was also getting shallower.
'Are we too late?  Did we miss the high tide?'
Eventually we reached the village, which consisted of about a dozen huts.  The village chief, whose permission I needed in order to stay here, summoned the "Tourism Coordinator".  The "anthropologist" in me was dismayed.  However, as Alberta arrived, clad in nothing but a short skirt, my hope rose again.  I tried to keep my eyes on her face as we discussed the terms of my visit ($5 entry, $5 per night, and $3 per meal), and released the boatman who was anxious to get back to town.  I was elated.  I reached my destination and I am the only outsider in the village.

My hut, like all the rest, was composed of a wooden platform elevated on stilts, covered by a thatched roof, and without any walls.  The floor served as living, sleeping and cooking space, while chicken and pigs roamed the ground below.  All of Alberta's family lived in the adjacent huts, and I was introduced to the women and children.  The men were working in the forest.   I soon realized that except for Alberta and her mother, the other women wore western-style tops.  I overcame my disappointment, and  left with my guide on a jungle hike.  We walked a narrow path, crossing several streams, and climbing over fallen trees, until we reached a tall tree which Nino claimed was home to a Harpy Eagle.  This large bird is the holly grail of birdwatchers in this region.  Unfortunately, it was not home.  We returned to the village just in time for lunch which was cooked by Alberta's attractive daughter in law.  Lunch consisted of rabbit stew and copious quantities of rice.  The delicious rabbit was caught in the forest by her husband.  'Belly full, heart content' is a Nicaraguan saying which perfectly applied at the moment.  My heart was delighted further when I took a cool dip in the river.  Kids where playing in the shallows, mothers were washing laundry, and I found a deep stretch to practice my TI swim style.  After the swim, I took a nap in the hammock, from which I was awakened by Alberta's daughter, who asked me to photograph her children.  I was happy to oblige, taking many photos and displaying then to the kids and mother.  She then asked if I would take her photo too. Upon my reply, she ran out, and soon she and her younger sister were waiting for me below, giggling.  Their shiny black hair neatly combed, lipstick on, and long necklaces adorning their bare breasts, they were ready for a photo shoot.  To see the village photos, including the girls, click here.  After dark, I coaxed Nino to take me on a night walk, and at nine pm, the village and I went to sleep.

I could have stayed several days in this delightful friendly place, but the thought of Adi suffering in La Palma allowed me only one night.  In the early morning, after a breakfast of smoked rabbit and lemongrass tea, I joined a family who were heading to town in their (motorized) dugout canoe.  It was slower and more pleasant than the ride upriver.

Epilogue
So far, I am not experiencing malaria symptoms, nor any digestive problems from drinking the untreated village water.  My only complaint is the itchy, red, oozing volcanoes that cover my legs.  I think those are flea bites from sleeping on the hut's foam mattress.      


    

Waltzing with Whale Sharks

“Coiba diving is amazing.  Boca is a party town”
That was the opinion of a fellow traveler in Cerro Punta, and that's all it took to rotate our heading from the Caribbean, to the Pacific.

The Island of Coiba and its surroundings is a national park, famous for large marine animals.  At this time of year, whale sharks are the star attraction.  They are the largest fish, reaching a length of 15 meters.  Being a meditating diver, I arrived at the hamlet of Santa Catalina without any expectations, or at least that’s what I told myself.
“They come and go,” said the girl at the dive shop “they follow the plankton, and for the last few days, they have not been sighted.”
Since I was still suffering from a nasal congestion, I decided to rest a day before diving.
‘Maybe by then they will come back’ I thought.
Santa Catalina is also one of Panama’s best surfing breaks, and I spent the day in the company of bored surfers, whose rest was imposed by the lack of waves.  The absence of swells seemed to overlap with the absence of the whale sharks, and I formed a neat nautical theory connecting the two.  As if to confirm my theory the dive-boats returned without a sighting.

Towards the end of our first dive, two in our group sighted a whale shark, but the low visibility prevented me from seeing it.
“It was an interesting dive anyway” I told myself
The second dive location featured many white-tipped sharks, but not the stars.  Before the third dive, a couple of people felt tired and stayed on the boat.
“This is a known feeding spot,” said the dive master, “just sit back and look”
He was right.  There was nothing to do.  The water was unpleasantly cold, and the cold current brings with it plankton and low visibility.  The underwater scenery was dull, and the overcast sky made it dark and gloomy.
'What a waste!' I thought while hugging myself, and after a pang of guilt, I relaxed into my mantra 'No expectations.'
And then suddenly, a blurry shape materialized out of the darkness.  It was huge and it came closer.  One at a time they swam up to the surface, lingered a bit displaying their spots, and then disappeared in the murky depths.  They swam slowly, ignoring our presence, and I grew bolder, approaching one within 2 meters. Judging from the photos, the biggest shark was at least four times my size.
‘They only eat plankton, but a side swap could hurt.’
Just as suddenly, they left.  Back on the boat, we did not have to speak.  Our smiles said everything.

Serendipity


Serendipity is one of the attractions of nomadic travel.   In this case, I found an enchanted forest.

Boquete, rejected us.  This famous town in Panama’s Highlands was celebrating the “Flower and Coffee Fair”, and all the beds were taken.  I was relieved.  A place where all hotel owners are white and all beers are expensive, maybe fine for expats, but is no place for me.  Instead, we headed to Volcan, which is on the other side of the Baru volcano.  It had the look and feel of a gold-rush California settlement, and was clearly my kind of town.  The following day, we continued to Cerro Punta, which is higher on the same road.  This village has a distinct European flavor.  Its clean streets, steep-angled roofs, and decorative flower gardens are reminders of the Swiss group that settled here a hundred years ago.  Men on horses share the road with Toyota Hilux trucks and with indigenous women dressed in colorful embroidered dresses.  The villagers grow vegetables on the steep flanks of the volcano.  However, agriculture went high tech, and it was not too surprising to learn that Israelis were the consultants behind the plastic greenhouses and the renowned strawberries.  In the village, we stumbled on the office of Ecotreat, which brews a good Cappuccino (that was the initial draw), and rents cabins inside Amistad National Park.  The cabins were built long ago, and were grandfathered into the protected area. 

It took half an hour driving up a tough 4X4 road to reach the site.  At an altitude of 2200 meters, the cabins are surrounded by forest, and within sight and sound of the headwaters of Chiriqui Viejo River.  As I stepped into the forest, I entered a magical kingdom.  The trees are huge, and the ground level is covered by dense tropical vegetation.  I realized that I found the prototypical cloud forest which I was seeking in El Salvador (Parque Impossible), and Nicaragua (Reserva Miraflor).  The atmosphere is cool, humid, full of animal voices, but devoid of any man-made sounds.  The scene is eerily reminiscent of the movie Avatar, and as I walked, I felt the savage within me getting ready for the hunt.  The trail was not easy.  When not muddy, it was steep and slippery, but we endured, driven by the quest to find the Quetzal, a small bird with a long colorful tail.  Looking for birds, first you hear them, and then you spot them.  Adi was my hearing aid as she pointed at various birds; pretty, colorful, but no quetzal.  Night approached, and our rain jackets proved useful as the cold rain demonstrated why this is called a Cloud Forest.  Nacho, the only caretaker on the premises, lit the wood-burning furnace, which easily heated the cabin.  At sunrise, when I ventured out to look for the early bird, the thermometer read 5 degC,

Pardon the commercial, but our time in the forest cabin (ecotreat.com) was the highlights of our trip so far.  Nacho claimed that later in the season, the quetzals can be seen from the cabin deck, and we booked another stay for our way back after the Carnaval.  Maybe this time we will be lucky.
  Click for a quetzal photo