Showing posts with label chicken bus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chicken bus. Show all posts

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Lake Atitlan, Guatemala: Going Back to Antigua


Walkway between La Iguana Perdida and neighboring property, Santa Cruz, Lake Atitlan, Guatemala. April 2016.


Time to say goodbye to Lake Atitlan and return to Antigua.


Public dock, Panajachel, Lake Atitlan, Guatemala. April 2016.


Upon disembarking at the Panajachel dock, I meandered up toward my bus pick-up, taking a different route than I'd used when I arrived at Lake Atitlan a few days before. By chance, I came across a street that one might call the Golden Kilometer of artisan tables, where vendors sold their jewelry, polished stones, leather work, etc. I saw some items that interested me, but they were beyond my budget. There were more than a few nomadic expats selling their wares.

I arrived very early for the bus departure, so I walked over to a cafe down the road, and asked the staff if they could boil a couple of eggs for me. They were happy to do so and even peeled them and put them in a coffee cup with a lid so they'd be bus-ride sturdy. With some of my left-over German bread, they were perfect bus food.


A little bit of Panajachel from my chicken bus back to Antigua below. If you get motion sickness, you might want to take a Dramamine before watching.




The bus trip back to Antigua was uneventful. However, I did have the opportunity to notice again the curious motels I'd seen on the way to Lake Atitlan.

The motels boasted extravagant names of love and queens and romance. Quite outside the box of social conservatism that one associates with Guatemala. More on this later.




Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Lake Atitlan, Guatemala: Getting There

One of the reasons I chose to visit Guatemala over Rwanda was Lake Atitlan.

It seemed fated for me to go there, ever since I saw this photo a number of years ago:

A rental place along Lake Atitlan, Guatemala.


When I saw this photo, I envisioned myself and some friends staying for a month. Having drinks on the lakeview terrace. Que rico!

Also, one of my brothers had visited Lake Atitlan many years ago and he'd loved it.

Going to Lake Atitlan requires some decision-making.

First up is to decide where to base yourself. This is because there are several villages lakeside, in addition to the large tourist town of Panajachel.

If you want an active ("active" being a relative term) night scene and a good selection of restaurants, cafes, and shopping, then Panajachel is the best option. I didn't want any of those things, so I looked over the village scenarios. Now the decision driver for me was a good place to stay. "Good" meaning budget-priced, comfortable, and hopefully a good view.

A new acquaintance in Antigua recommended two places, both of which sounded luxuriously delightful, but way over my budget.

I pored over all of the options I was able to find electronically, and settled on La Iguana Perdida, an enhanced hostel on the lake, immediately adjacent to the public dock that is below the village of Santa Cruz.

I chose a private room with a shared bath. The rate was spectacularly affordable. My room had a "lake view." Heheheheh. "Lake view." Heheheheheh. Thank goodness I have a sense of humor.  More on that later. No worries, though, I was very happy with my room.

But let me back up to how I got to Santa Cruz from Antigua.

Assuming you don't have your own vehicle, there are several options, which I'll categorize into: 
  1. Cheap
  2. Economical
  3. Pricey

If money isn't an issue, then by all means, I'd book a shuttle that picks me up at my Antiguan accommodations and then takes me to whatever doorway I want along Lake Atitlan.

If I'm on a backpacker shoestring budget and I haven't yet filled my lifetime quota of before-light departures on a sardine-packed bus that requires being dropped off in one town and finding another bus to take me the rest of the way to Panajachel, then I'd go with the cheap option. A possible itinerary here (response 2) and a story here.

Or you could do what I did, which was to opt for the economical. I think there was a bit of bait and switch in my situation, but you know, it all worked out just fine. My Spanish teacher clued me in to it. I went to the bakery across the street from La Bodegona supermarket, bought a round trip bus ticket from the gentleman who manned the table just inside the bakery entrance. Don't remember the price, but it was easily within my budget. I was given the impression by both my Spanish teacher and the ticket agent that this was a special bus, along the lines of a Greyhound, for example. Subsequent research tells me that in the past, it was the so-called "pullman bus," but my experience mirrored what many others have experienced, which was that the bus was actually a chicken bus.

The departure arrangements were to be at the bakery at 7 a.m. and we'd take the bus from there. Well ... not so fast.

At 7 a.m., the selling agent escorted us for a longish walk to the chicken bus lot alongside the artisanal market, to a particular chicken bus. Was I happy? No, I was not. It felt very bait-and-switch. I asked a few pointed, irritated questions, and then just let it go, choosing to bank righteous high dudgeon for some future event instead.

Chicken bus, Antigua, Guatemala. April 2016.


And as I said above, it all worked out OK. The bus was a direct run to Panajachel, so no tranfers needed. Did we stop and go a few times to pick up riders and drop off riders? Sure, but that's the economics of the business. Everyone needs to earn a living, including bus drivers, bus attendants, and the bus owners.

Food vendor on bus from Antigua to Panajachel, Lake Atitlan, Guatemala. April 2016.


When we stopped for gas, a couple of food vendors boarded to sell road food. I didn't buy anything, but I did engage in some free ogling.

The trip was uneventful.

I got dropped off in Panajachel at the end of this bus' line and told to remember where the drop-off was because this is where I'd get the return bus when I left Panajachel a few days hence.  

From here I walked down to the docks to pick up a small, blue launch that would carry me across the lake to La Iguana Perdida in Santa Cruz.

Given my poor directional skills, you might wonder how I found my way down to the docks. This is a fair question. I muddled my way via verbal instructions, a so-so map, and following some other tourists who seemed to know where they were going.


Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Antigua, Guatemala: The Inevitable Chicken Bus Post


Chicken buses, Antigua, Guatemala. April 2016.


What's a chicken bus

I'm going to turn it over to other writers to tell you all about the Guatemalan chicken buses.


Chicken buses, Antigua, Guatemala. April 2016.



Here's the movie trailer for the documentary:




My little chicken bus story

I took a chicken bus to and from Lake Atitlan. The experience was similar to what I had in Ethiopia (here and here are two examples) in that the bus driver has a helper to: 
  • Hang out the door and call for potential passengers; 
  • Collect money; 
  • Load luggage; 
  • Generally maintain some order on the bus; and
  • Run speedily to streetside vendors to get himself or the driver something to drink or eat. 


Chicken buses, Antigua, Guatemala. April 2016.



Yup, the bus goes pretty fast and the bus seats are slippery, so as the bus takes hairpin turns, passengers slide from one side of the bench seat to another, depending on the direction of the curve. The fun of this wears off quickly.


Chicken buses, Antigua, Guatemala. April 2016.



I did not experience the packed-til-overflowing situation described in the scenarios above. Maybe Guatemala has a similar situation as in Ethiopia, where the "class" of the bus, i.e. 1st or 2nd class - and the price of the ticket - brings certain expectations of how many people are allowed in the bus, the conditions of the interior, and the number of stops.


Chicken buses, Antigua, Guatemala. April 2016.


Below is a video I took outside Santa Lucia Church in Antigua, in which chicken buses and tuk-tuks star:



OK, now don't get me wrong on what I'm about to say. The chicken buses - the camionetas - are part of what makes Guatemala Guatemala. They are beautiful - like tropical birds of paradise. The camioneta system seems to meet the needs of Guatemalans and visitors. And what an elegant way to recycle school buses.

But damn, these buses hurtle through the narrow cobblestone streets of Antigua, farting great black odiferous clouds of exhaust, and being generally noisy.