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Tips
When Visiting Panama... |
Note:
All information current as of January 29,
2004.
Getting there:
American Airlines, Delta and Taca are
among airlines that serve Panama City. Taca
subsidiary AeroPerlas runs two one-hour flights
daily from Panama City to Bocas del Toro for
$100 round trip.
Getting
around:
Taxis from Bocas del Toro airport to downtown
cost about $1 a passenger. From Bocas Town,
boats to nearby islands cost $1 to $2.
Where to
stay:
The ritziest hotel, which is not that ritzy
by Western standards, is the Hotel
Swan's Cay (swanscayhotel.com).
Double rooms are $60-$90; larger suites go
for $120-$200. Rooms have cable television
and air conditioning, and the hotel pool
overlooks the sea. Out of town, several all-inclusive
lodges offer bungalows and meals including
the Al Natural Resort (011-507-757-9004),
where double-occupancy huts start at $100
a night. Punta
Caracol (puntacaracol.com) is a slightly more upscale eco-lodge with
five cabins set on a dock. Winter rates for
two start at $265 a night, which includes
breakfasts, dinners, transfers from Bocas
Town and snorkeling equipment.
Where to
eat:
The Thai / Lebanese / Mexican / seafood menu
at El Pecado da Sabor may sound a bit strange,
but the delicious fresh fish and soups cooked
from scratch come together quite well; about
$20 a person for dinner. Reggae Bar Roots
in Bastimentos village serves fresh Caribbean
food and cold beer as the sun sets on the
water; $12 for dinner. Om Café offers
Indian twists on Central American staples,
including a spicy eggs vindaloo for breakfast
($7).
What to
do:
Eight-hour tours around the archipelago start
at about $15 a person at any of the boat
companies on the main drag in town. They
can include snorkeling, scuba diving and
visits to beaches with a stop for lunch.
Wander past the docks and talk to boat operators
until you find someone you're comfortable
with. |
BOCAS DEL TORO,
Panama — When Liza Belkin and Brian Steele
told friends they'd be going to some small Panamanian
islands for vacation in December, they got only
one question: "Why?"
But once the Palo Alto, Calif., couple arrived
at this Caribbean archipelago dotted with lush
jungles, white sand beaches and protected coral
reefs, they had a ready answer.
"This is awesome!" says
Steele, 30, a marketing executive.
Long overshadowed
by eco-tourism heavyweights Costa Rica and Belize
to the north, Panama's Bocas
del Toro is starting to emerge
as the newest star in the eco-tourism pantheon. Guidebooks
and promoters tout the islands as "the Galapagos
of the 21st century." Hundreds of species of
fish, parrots, toucans, monkeys and sloths live on
the islands, which include a 20-year-old national
marine park to protect endangered manatees and
sea turtles.
Already a popular destination for
vacationing Panamanians from the mainland, Bocas
del Toro, which means "mouths of the bull," is
a collection of nine islands and more than 200
keys sprinkled about 25 miles off the coast near
the Costa Rican border. Christopher Columbus
named the archipelago, which today counts 10,000
residents, in 1502 when he landed on Isla Carenero,
the smallest island. American banana companies
built the main settlement, known as Bocas Town,
on Isla Colon, the largest island in the chain,
not long after Panama declared independence from
Colombia in 1903.
But with its rustic facilities
and end-of-the-line feel, it's not for everyone. Now,
as eco-tourism increases, Bocas Town, with only 1,200
people, feels like a sleepy beach place poised on the
verge of a big boom. The government-run Panamanian
Tourism Institute has started promoting the islands
to U.S. travelers, launching an English-language
Web site that features Bocas prominently.
With an
airport, Internet cafes, ATMs and plenty of hotels
and restaurants, Bocas Town has enough infrastructure
that visitors have no problem quickly making themselves
comfortable. Concrete-and-steel frames for more
hotels seem to be popping up everywhere, and a
Bocas Business Association, with a big sign in
English, sits prominently on downtown's main strip,
Calle 3. The official currency is the dollar, the
legacy of U.S. involvement in Panama, and most
stores and restaurants accept credit cards. Many
merchants speak English as well as Spanish.
But chickens and roosters still strut the unpaved
side streets with impunity, and the chirps of tropical
birds often wake tourists well before the alarm clock
rings. Most of the few cars are taxis, and pedestrians
stroll down the center of Calle 3. Palm and banana
trees provide shady spots. The islands are still
wild enough to have hosted the Italian and Russian
versions of Survivor.
"It's kind of rough around the edges, which
we like," Steele says.
Getting around the islands is easy. Touts for
boat companies wander the streets, offering to
ferry tourists to less developed spots in the
archipelago. Once out of town, the biological
diversity sparkles. Mangrove forests bump up
against beaches with coral reefs just offshore.
On Isla
Bastimentos, a 10-minute ride from town,
a little village of brightly painted open-air
huts and cheap hotels sits at the foot of jungle-covered
hills. Tourists can take a 20-minute hike through
sunny meadows and down muddy paths to Wizard
Beach, a nearly deserted slice of white sand between warm turquoise water and steamy rain
forest.
Along the way, ants carry bits of leaves twice
their size across the path. Thick mud oozes underfoot
after a common early morning rainstorm. A jungle-covered
hill looms to the north, vines drooping from
the summit almost all the way to the sea. Coconuts
fall from trees at the beach's edge. Surfers
willing to lug their boards through the forest
ride rolling waves.
Back in the village, tourists sip beers and
listen to reggae music under a thatched-roof
bar where water taxis dock.
In Dolphin Bay, boats circle to watch bottlenose
dolphins surface, although there are too many
jellyfish to swim alongside them. Perfectly clear
water covers a sprawling reef at Coral Cay. Barracuda
lurk as snorkelers watch white snappers, angelfish
and other species in dazzling shades of yellow
and blue.
From there, a short boat ride ends on Bastimentos,
where another hike goes through forests teeming
with rare poison-dart frogs. Bright red and not
much bigger than a thumbnail, they dart from
one leaf to another. (They're only dangerous
if handled with open cuts.) At the end of the
trail is Red Frog Beach, less empty than Wizard
Beach but just as relaxing.
Another popular snorkeling stop is Hospital
Point, where an enormous variety of sea life
clusters along a coral reef at the edge of a
60-foot underwater cliff. Live sponges mix with
coral on the seafloor. Eels slither alongside
crabs and tropical fish. Guides can provide snorkeling
equipment.
Over the past couple of years, some lodges devoted
specifically to eco-tourism have opened outside
Bocas Town, with private beaches and snorkeling
spots.
Still, until more development comes, visiting
Bocas may take a slightly more adventurous spirit
than a trip elsewhere in the Caribbean. But for
many who come here, that's exactly the draw.
"Our clients that choose Panama want something
that is off the beaten path," says Denise
Page with Lost World Adventures, a Decatur, Ga.,
travel agency that has booked trips to Bocas
for eight years. "It's people who are more
well traveled and comfortable going to places
that are off the beaten path. That's what they
seek."
Read the original USA Today article.
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