Monday 21 May 2018

Conquistador trip 1981 – (3) Guatemala: Antigua, Rio Dulce, Flores, Tikal; Belize; Isla Mujeres, Merida

Before pleasure comes pain. We had to push
our clapped-out bus, wrote Bill, up steep hills at
ten thousand feet en route to Antigua.
The group is tense and near to mutiny.

Bill Barrie, in brown trousers at centre back, and Ann Barrie, in blue blouse at front,
help push their tour bus uphill at 10,000 feet

En route to Antigua. We had just pushed the mini-bus most of the way up this hill.

Bill’s words again:
When finally we reached our hotel, I
had forty winks and then with Annie wandered
streets like seventeenth century Spain.
Poseda Rodrigo is exquisite:
alcoves, high studs, carved wood, four-poster beds;
it looks out on gardens where fountains play.
Pre-dinner Aquadiente spirit while
a seven-man band played marimba in
the courtyard, then good food with fine red wine
from Chile and mellow conversation.

Next day, unwell, I slept until Bill fetched
me: “Come my darling, I have special treats for you.”
He led me to a Jade shop where we chose
a choker and earrings for my birthday.
Across the road at Tassa Caff we sat
on stools of cowhide and drank mugs of fresh
roasted Antiguan coffee with cookies
(they let us keep the mugs – I have them still).
“Now aren’t you pleased with my surprise?” Bill said.
“Oh yes, so sweet an afternoon; it’s like a honeymoon.”


At Rio Dulce it rained constantly.
We caught a launch to our hotel; rooms sat
on stilts in jungle at the water’s edge;
I thought Malaya and Somerset Maughan.

Bill rose early and brewed us tea
then off we went across the new
bridge to the Flores road: eighteen-inch holes,
bottomless mud, huge trucks held up;
seven hours’ snail pace, drivers patient.
At Rio Gracias a choice between the rotting
old bridge (no thanks) and a pontoon winched
by hand, two vehicles each trip.

At Flores most hotels beneath water
because of floods four days before; at last
we found beds (slightly damp) at Sabana.
The manager, true gentleman, warmed us
with fried chicken and rum-soaked cake.
He said he’d send one hundred pounds of coffee
from his plantation to Bill. (It never came).

Our three days here restored and rested us;
we hired boatmen and took gentle walks.
In Flores Square, Bill, most amused, captured
me with my admirer. The photo shows
me towering over Bernado Gautel.
His sky-blue kettledrum hangs at his hip.
His pants, white shirt, sports coat are neatly pressed.
Fifty at least, he’d followed me around
the Square, devotion in his sad, dark eyes
but never saying a word.

Also frozen in time, facing the Square
the prison. If you put your eyes
half out of focus, its veranda, columns, neat
white fence could be a gracious home. The men
hung out the windows and relied on friends
to bring them food; they’d get no trial unless
they paid for it.

The six we’d left behind in Antigua
at their request rejoined us, and our band
drove to Tikal in good humour – the break
had helped relieve tensions. We spent four hours
in temples, plazas buried in jungle for centuries.

And here’s Bill’s hand again; the flowing
script shows he was fascinated by Belize:
New state created from former British
Honduras; has asked Britain to send troops
to police Guatemalan claims. Belize
City has dirty stinking canals and
is overcrowded. Our hotel was dear
but dinner a gourmet’s delight: beef-rice
soup (slightly curried), Lobster Thermador,
fresh vegetables, lemon meringue pie.
My soldier husband, Scottish-born, trained chef,
of course he favoured this more than cracked plates
and lukewarm food from Mexico. But now
was time to go back there again.

A genial chap in golfing cap ran our
motel in Tulum. And the cliff-top ruins they
enchanted us. Romance and majesty –
a rocky setting by a turquoise sea,
iguanas, birds, strange flowers and plants.

Ann Barrie at Tulum, January 1981

By ferry to Isla Mujeres where we slept,
lethargic, stirring only to hire bikes.
Bill’s fell apart and I am shamed to say that I
stayed at the beach to snorkel, while he hitched
back into town nursing a wounded knee.
If he resented me he did not say.

Through Chichen Itza, on to Merida.
Our tour was ending, last group meal two days
before; so now we did our own thing – bought
a hammock, tried out eating spots, and strolled
through tree-lined plazas hand in hand.

 “For you, my love, there were too many rules
and ruins, and insufficient music.”
“Yes,” Bill said. “I always like it best with just us two.

But there were highlights.” 

Bill and Ann Barrie at Lake Atitlan, Guatemala, January 1981

Blog by Ann Barrie

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