Thursday – Trip to Xunantunich

Bruce, Ezra and I made another trip to the mainland to visit the Mayan ruins at Xunantunich. We started with an early morning — 6:00 a.m. on the dock for the water taxi into town. Ezra flew his paper airplane on the boat.

Ezra flies his plane

Breakfast at the Sun Breeze with this gorgeous view.

View from the breakfast restaurant

Then we caught another flight to the mainland, where our trusty guide, John, picked us up. He brought his six-year-old daughter, Bethany, to keep Ezra company on the two hour drive from the airport to Xunantunich. They were both totally silent on the way there.

In order to get to the site, you have to cross a river on the best ferry ever — a hand-cranked wooden contraption that apparently had me too stunned to take a picture of the whole thing. But here’s a look at the van on the ferry.

On the ferry

And the guy cranking it to get us across.

Hand cranked ferry

Once on site, we jumped right in with a site guide to lead us through and tell us about the different buildings. Here are some pictures of the main plaza.

Structure on the plaza

Structure on the plaza

The crown jewel of this site is El Castillo, the second tallest structure in Belize at about 130 feet.

El Castillo

Despite my reservations after last year’s climb up part of the temple at Lamanai, the three of us climbed to the top (and I’m sure glad we did!).

Here we are with John and Bethany after the first seven steps. They stopped there but we kept going.

The three of us with John and Bethany

The view just kept getting better.

View

Almost there …

Getting close to the top

At the top you can see Guatemala.

View from the top (you can see to Guatemala)

This is the view from the front. The structure at the very top of the picture is the royal palace.

View from the top of the royal palace

And one for posterity’s sake once we’d gotten to the bottom. I was happy to have the railing on that last staircase.

After our descent

The area surrounding the main site was pretty jungly.

Jungle

We saw ants that carried small pieces of leaves, howler monkeys up in the trees, other ants that thwart the anteaters by making their nests in trees, giant termite nests, and a cool orange centipede for Finn.

Orange centipede

When we finished our tour, the crowds had all left and we got a nice view of the empty site. And Ezra jumped.

Ezra jumps

Next up, we headed to lunch. Ezra and Bethany were all of a sudden thick as thieves in the back of the van — laughing, signing songs, etc. When we got to the restaurant, they diligently worked on the puzzles on their kids’ menus.

Ezra and Bethany work on the kids' menu activities

And took a little walk to the balcony to look for birds.

Ezra and Bethany take in the scenery

Seriously cute. And funny since Bethany speaks Creole and I think Ezra only understood about half of what she was saying.

On the flight home, Ezra requested we sit right behind the pilot (instead of on the bench seat at the back of the plane where we’re usually asked to sit). I think he enjoyed it.

Ezra got to sit right behind the pilot

And we made a stop in Caye Caulker so Bruce got to see the “airport” there. And then we were home. And totally exhausted from another great adventure.