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-   -   Can anyone offer value-oriented Belize tips? (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/central-america/882046-can-anyone-offer-value-oriented-belize-tips.html)

iahphx Jan 27, 2009 6:46 am


Originally Posted by brarrr (Post 11148483)
Good to know re food - I had thought that someone mentioned a market on caulker, perhaps not. No problem having someone else cook for me :)

I did not find any hostels but found various places that didn't seem too expensive, will make a list and bring that back here for advice.

From what I have heard, there are groceries available on Caulker, but not a "supermarket." So grocery prices are not cheap.

For accomodation tips, I found tripadvisor to be helpful. There seem to be plenty of decent places to stay for less than $60/night on Caulker, and you can contact many of them by email. The problem may be finding availability. I had a hard time finding accomodations, but others say they've had an easy time, and that there have been a lot of cancellations due to the economy.

PSUhorty Jan 27, 2009 7:40 am

Yes, there is a supermarket on Caye Caulker:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...yecaulker3.jpg

Nothing special, but you will be able to get some basic items there.

I don't recall any open market on Caulker. I don't think there is one. Agree w/iahphx... the food is a bit cheaper on Caulker and you can eat reasonably well w/out having to have the last name, Moneybags.

PSUhorty Jan 27, 2009 7:47 am


Originally Posted by brarrr (Post 11148239)
I am heading there next month and just starting to get things figured out. I will be solo for much of the time, and going on the way-cheap end so that I can dive (and read and drink) as much as possible (can you tell i'm still a student?). Particular highlights or suggestions for the non-kid toting crowd?

There's really not much to do on Ambergris other than diving, eating, and drinking... not there's anything wrong w/that. That's pretty much how we spent our time there. Woke up, ex-gf would go diving, I'd take a walk on the beach or in town or go snorkeling, then read on a pier or the beach w/a Belikin beer or bloody mary. She'd get back from her 1/2 day of diving and we'd walk the beach, go snorkeling by Ramone's pier, head to Caulker, or sunbathe a bit. 4 or so would roll around and we'd head back, shower up, hit the Pier Lounge or the Tacklebox for a few beers, go out to eat somewhere, then get bloody drunk for the rest of the night. Life's great on Ambergris.

I guess the only other thing we did was fishing. I think I paid $70 + tip for a 1/2 day of fishing just inside the reef. Caught plenty of snapper and grouper, then had bbq'ed on the beach by the captain.

Some of my favorite bars were Fido's, the Tacklebox, BC's, Crazy Canucks.

brarrr Jan 27, 2009 9:02 am


Originally Posted by iahphx (Post 11149682)
For accomodation tips, I found tripadvisor to be helpful. There seem to be plenty of decent places to stay for less than $60/night on Caulker, and you can contact many of them by email. The problem may be finding availability. I had a hard time finding accomodations, but others say they've had an easy time, and that there have been a lot of cancellations due to the economy.

I was going through tripadvisor and all the hostel-type places were getting either bad or half bad reviews - bad even for hostels (bed bugs, bad water supply, etc). Ignacio's cabins seems like it might be ok and bare bones (fine by me) but now I'm thinking that I might go up in $ a little bit just to ensure things go a little smoother. That and hope to find someone with similar timing and mindset to split a room.

jfhscott Jan 27, 2009 7:29 pm

Just returened from CAulker
 
Just returned from my 3rd trip to CC.

I greatly prefer it to Ambergris. Simply, the laid back comfort that you might go to Ambergris for is superior on CC.

CC has a couple of minimarts. Chan's is the largest, but it is hardly a grocery store. I get local produce and juice, but beyond that have seen little point to setting up proper housekeeping when I've been there. Diving is great. Dining is fun, but not fine.

Also, if you are on the watertaxi from Belize City, it is pretty accessible. More so than Ambergris.

CC is also a bit more compact. NO need for any cabs or anything like that.

iahphx Jan 28, 2009 9:24 am


Originally Posted by brarrr (Post 11150369)
I was going through tripadvisor and all the hostel-type places were getting either bad or half bad reviews - bad even for hostels (bed bugs, bad water supply, etc). Ignacio's cabins seems like it might be ok and bare bones (fine by me) but now I'm thinking that I might go up in $ a little bit just to ensure things go a little smoother. That and hope to find someone with similar timing and mindset to split a room.

Yeah, if you're willing to go to something like $50/night, I think there are plenty of decent non-hostel accomodations on Caulker. Pretty much everyone reviewed on tripadvisor on Caulker has a website with an email contact. You can even try negotiating the price -- some are definitely flexible.

MKEbound Jan 30, 2009 6:12 pm


Originally Posted by PSUhorty (Post 11148162)
Keep up the trip reports, MKE. Love reading those things. Glad you are having a good time. I'm surprised that you are hving a hard time finding cheap food!? For breakfast, next time, head to Estel's. Walk out the back of Ruby's to the beach go north (right foot in the water). Estel's will be about 100-200 yards up (next to the Spindrift/Caliente). Relatively cheap food there. They have great boody marys too. God, I miss that place.

Look forward to the future trip reports.

iah, you will find it to be a bit more cheap on Caulker. Also, a great place. Do me a favor and go to the sports bar there and snap a picture of the Steeler shirt I signed. Also, look forward to a trip report from you!

Had breakfast three times at Estel's (gotta love a place with a sand floor!)

Breakfast for my family of four was usually $30-35us

Estel's has free wifi!

MKEbound Jan 31, 2009 9:19 pm

I also had to pay $142 usd for the departure fee for my family of 4 :rolleyes::mad:

PSUhorty Feb 1, 2009 10:08 am


Originally Posted by MKEbound (Post 11178987)
I also had to pay $142 usd for the departure fee for my family of 4 :rolleyes::mad:

I'm certain that one of us mentioned this fee somewhere in the thread. Oh well, lotta pages to go through, so understand if you missed it.

Anyways, would love to read a trip report- favorite restaurants, bars, etc?

Glad you liked Estel's. Never met a person who didn't. I'll bet Charlie was there playing his cards at the table as you enter.

SAT Lawyer Feb 1, 2009 10:21 am


Originally Posted by MKEbound (Post 11178987)
I also had to pay $142 usd for the departure fee for my family of 4 :rolleyes::mad:

That stinks. I hate when all taxes and fees aren't rolled into the final price of the ticket. :td: BKK is another airport where you get dinged for a departure fee. The last time I was there, I budgeted just perfectly so that we spent our last Baht on the taxi ride back to the airport only to have to hit the ATM again to get the cash needed to depart.

Is the departure fee at BZE payable only in cash or can you pay with a credit card?

brarrr Feb 1, 2009 1:36 pm


Originally Posted by MKEbound (Post 11178987)
I also had to pay $142 usd for the departure fee for my family of 4 :rolleyes::mad:

Which airline were you? I heard some roll the fee into their fare, some don't.

A friend was just there and went from belize to guatemala by land and had to pay a 18.75USD departure fee (and it must be cash, so I would guess that the airport fee is cash only too - but that is a guess) - I am going to be doing the same so looks like I will get dinged both leaving by land and when I head back and fly out :(

ilovetofly Feb 2, 2009 9:17 am


Originally Posted by SAT Lawyer (Post 11180959)
Is the departure fee at BZE payable only in cash or can you pay with a credit card?

Just returned from Belize with the fare. Departure taxes were US$35.50 per person and can be paid by cash or credit cards.

Another recommendation for dining - Hidden Treasure. Excellent food and nice setting. It is a bit out of busy center but very close to Victoria House.

ilovetofly Feb 2, 2009 9:22 am


Originally Posted by blueslip (Post 11136935)
This is my first time to be in Belize and here's what I found out at BZE. Maya Air is offering a 25% off to San Pedro for US$90 roundtrip total when paying cash. I was told that the taxi to watertaxi is US$25 plus the water taxi for US$13 for a total of $38 one way or US$76 return. For time and convenience, taking the flight to San Pedro gives the best offer.^^^

That is what we took as well. After clearing custom from AA DFW flight, we headed to "connecting flight" and took 4:40 pm flight to San Pedro. It was $90 round trip. Highly recommended.


Originally Posted by SAT Lawyer (Post 11140838)
Does that require you to arrive with no reservation and take your chances on whether there is availability on a connecting flight, at least on the inbound?

We just walked up to the counter without reservation.

MKEbound Feb 2, 2009 1:46 pm


Originally Posted by SAT Lawyer (Post 11180959)
That stinks. I hate when all taxes and fees aren't rolled into the final price of the ticket. :td: BKK is another airport where you get dinged for a departure fee. The last time I was there, I budgeted just perfectly so that we spent our last Baht on the taxi ride back to the airport only to have to hit the ATM again to get the cash needed to depart.

Is the departure fee at BZE payable only in cash or can you pay with a credit card?

I paid by credit card - they charged the fee in US dollars

MKEbound Feb 2, 2009 3:01 pm


Originally Posted by MKEbound (Post 11147953)
Belize - Ambrigris Caye - partial trip report

The family and I have been on the island for three days now; we arrived Friday afternoon on the AA flight from Dallas. The flight was about 10 minutes early. Because I'm traveling with the kids (ages 2 & 4) we were towards the back of the plane. After about the first ten rows were off, they pulled up a set of stairs to the back door and we were able to get off the plane rather quickly. The immigrations and customs hall is not air conditioned, so if you can change into shorts in DFW or MIA. Immigration took about 15 minutes - first tip: there are four lanes, get into lane 3 as lane 4 is for citizens of Belize. Once they have finished up with citizens, they start calling people over from lane 3 (I find this strategy works in most counties) We made the mistake of checking two bags - normally we don't but with the kids... Anyway one was out on the belt already, but I had to wait maybe two minutes for the second. By the time I had both bags, the line for customs was quite long. It took another 10-15 minutes to pass through customs. We grabbed a taxi to the San Pedro express (Taxi fixed rate $25 - no tip expected) and made it to the water taxi terminal only to just miss the 4pm ferry. I bought tickets for the 5:30 ferry - Second tip, carry lots of cash. The ferry takes credit cards, but charges and extra 3%. Additionally, I would estimate that about 50% of establishments only take cash, and out of the places that do take credit cards at least 50% add a surcharge of 3-10%! Everyone takes US dollars at a rate of 1us = 2bz.

When we arrived at the ferry terminal porters took our bags and tagged them for San Pedro (no tip expected per our taxi driver) while we waited for the 5:30 ferry we grabbed a snack at one of the open stores. Make sure you use the bathrooms at the terminal before getting on board as the trip to Ambrigris Caye was over 1.5 hours and there are no toilets on the ferry. It was raining and rough when we landed and if it was only my wife and I, I would throw away my return tickets and just fly back when we leave, but with 4 of us it's still worth it to take the ferry and save some money.

We are staying at Rubie's and only had a 2 minute walk from the ferry dock to the hotel. However no one was in the office and it took us over 45 minutes to get the room key. To say the rooms are Spartan would be generous. The beds aren't garage sale worthy, tread bear sheets; two ratty towels, dirty walls, plywood floor. I realize it's a cheap hotel, but I still expect a room that's clean and comfortable - it's not clean and not comfortable...

We had a quick dinner at Mango's: great food, but expensive. In fact, I would have to say that food in general is much more expensive than I had expected. Dinners for 2 adults, with the kids splitting something, with no alcohol runs $70-90us, even a very basic breakfast has been $30-45us.

After breakfast on Saturday we got directions to the local grocery store about a 5 block walk (Superbuy - it was all locals so it must be the cheapest spot) and bought stuff of a picnic lunch, we then grabbed the beach gear and walked down to Ramon's beach and as promised it was a nicer beach than else where (not great, but nicer than others) we spent a couple of hours on the beach and complemented out picnic items by grabbing a couple of big burritos from CB's bar (15bz each) We made it back to the room for showers and a nap for the 2 year old around 2:30, and I went walking down the beach to excursion shop as we wanted to visit one of the Mayan sites. Most places were charging 75-90 to visit Altun Ha and $135-160 to visit Lamani. It took some doing, but I was finally able to find an operator who didn't charge for the kids - we booked a tour to Lamanni on Monday. It you are staying on Ambrigris, and don't want to pay so much to tour a site inland I would suggest you talk to you taxi driver. My driver from the airport to the ferry terminal offered to drive us for the day for $100US - so if you have a family of four you could take the ferry back of the mainland and get a private driver for the day and easily visit the zoo and Altan Ha or some other sites.

We aren't diving or snorkeling with the kids, but it would seem snorkeling tours start at about $30 and one tank dives start at about $60.

The tour of Lamani today was awesome. Even in the rain here today the trip was worth while just for the fact that I got to climb to the top of the high temple with my daughter. We took a boat ride to the mainland, then a bus ride, then another boat ride to the site. They had lunch for us, then a guide who showed us around Lamanai. It was raining today so that wasn't much fun during the boat rides, but it was still a great day. We left at 7am, got back around 5:30. I paid $135, plus 10% tax for the two adults, it took some doing, but found an operator who would take the kids (ages 2 & 4) for free - most wanted 50% for the older one.

I found out on Sunday that the place where we've had breakfast has free wifi, so that's where I'm posing from.

Fun trip so far.


Trip Report - Part Two.

Just a bit more detail on our tour of Lamani on Monday. I can't say enough that this tour was the highlight of the trip, getting to climb to the top of the temple was one of those moments in my travels that make it all worth it. ^

Monday night we ate one of our best and cheapest meals, Pupusas at Waraguma
Http://belizephotographs.com/070810.html Less than $10us for about 7 pupusas, rice & beans and drinks. Waraguma is on middle St. And it was very busy with locals. Good food too.

On Tuesday Estel's was closed and we had breakfast at Celi's deli (which I liked a lot more than Ruby's deli right across the street) we went back to the beach at Ramon's village and the two adults took turns snorkeling at the end of the pier enjoying the great weather and hundreds of fish. We had lunch at the Blue Water Grill (average food, maybe about $45us for 4 for lunch) Dinner that evening was at Celi's main restaurant in their screened in porch (another place with a sand floor!) for an enjoyable seafood dinner about $70us

I missed in my first post that Sunday night we had dinner at Caliente attached to the Spendthrift hotel. I had a great fish with sauce called Maya Mar. Two thumbs up.

Wednesday was our day to leave so we took a walk on the beach, had breakfast at Estel's again (fruit filled fry jacks ^) then caught the 11:30 ferry to San Pedro. The weather was great so the ride was a lot more enjoyable that our ride to the island in the rain, but if I were to go again, and plane tickets were still $90 per person, I would strongly consider flying to and from the Caye. With a family of 4, it still makes sense to use the ferry.

We tipped a porter to watch our bags at the dock then found some food nearby for lunch - one last meal of chicken, rice & beans!
Checkin at the airport was a breeze, the line for the departure desk took a good 25 minutes to pay our $142.00, quick trip though the X-ray and we were in the departure lounge about an hour before our flight. If you are hungry, make sure you get food before going though security as there is only one place that serves food post security, and the only thing on their menu was hot dogs. The flight to MIA was smooth, Immigration took 35 minutes, we walked right through Customs, had dinner at a pre-security Cuban restaurant that was acceptable and forgettable at the same time. The flight to EWR took off about an hour late due to the storms in the Northeast. After a long flight, long time to get bags, long trip back to the car as the Airtrain was running at 1:30am and a long drive home to CT in the icy weather we made it back safe and sound just as the sun was coming up at 5:30am. :o

Some final thoughts and tips:
Since this tread talked about value options, I would highly suggest that if you are watching you money on San Pedro to eat off of first street and on middle street, or walk to Superbuy in the morning after breakfast and buy items for a picnic on the beach (Ramon's), then at lunch time walk up the beach a minute to CB's bar and buy their lunch special of the day. We had some great grilled chicken and great burritos that way.

If you aren't going to splurge for a snorkeling or diving trip (or can't because of the kids like us) the artificial reef off the end of Ramon's pier is a great place to swim with the fish. Also, make sure you take your left over breads from you meals to feed the fish off the pier!

If you are going to splurge for a land trip I highly recommend visiting Lamani. I was able to find this tour as cheap as $135 plus tax per adult.

If you have a laptop and need wifi, Estel's has free wifi, otherwise I found an internet cafe that had workstations and computers for $10bz per hour - right up from the ferry dock.

Nights are a great time to walk the beach, listen to the waves, watch the stars, dip your toes in the water...

ilovetofly Feb 3, 2009 10:16 pm

Great trip report, MKEbound. Thanks! ^ It sort of helps me re-live the trip.


Originally Posted by MKEbound (Post 11188683)
I missed in my first post that Sunday night we had dinner at Caliente attached to the Spendthrift hotel. I had a great fish with sauce called Maya Mar. Two thumbs up.

I second the Caliente for the Maya Mar.

PSUhorty Feb 4, 2009 10:45 am

FYI, my cousin just came back on Saturday from speding a week on Ambergris Caye. Sunday, started to get sick. Today, went to the ER. Doctor says it looks like something she picked up in Belize. Intestinal.

jfhscott Feb 4, 2009 11:41 am

Just returned from CC.

One should note that a few higher end accomodations have on line booking, lesser accomodations will respond to your emails, and some you just walk up to to see if they have rooms.

I'm not much of a risk taker, so I always make reservations. But even in January, there seemed to be plenty of availability - and even discounts - for walk ups. They were calling it the Obama inauguration special.

no one, however, should attempt CC over Easter without reservations.


Originally Posted by iahphx (Post 11149682)
For accomodation tips, I found tripadvisor to be helpful. There seem to be plenty of decent places to stay for less than $60/night on Caulker, and you can contact many of them by email. The problem may be finding availability. I had a hard time finding accomodations, but others say they've had an easy time, and that there have been a lot of cancellations due to the economy.


iahphx Feb 4, 2009 6:46 pm

Back with the family from Caulker. Definitely a very worthwhile and pleasant trip. Here are some of my thoughts and suggestions.

Flying AA. Not so great. No scheduling effort is made to ensure good connections, so the trip is loooong. I could practically get to Hawaii in the same amount of time. AA equipment is old and the service is barebones -- I would rather have been flying WN for some extra legroom! On the outbound, we had a last minute mechanical and sat on the plane at DFW for about an hour and 15. Arrived 45 minutes before the last ferry boat to Caulker! We went straight to the "Belizian citizens" line and after a brief explanation and a slightly annoyed stare, they let us through. Made it to the dock with about 8 minutes to spare (we also ran into some traffic and road work which added time to the normally 20 minute taxi ride).

We also had to pay the departure tax. Almost US$180 for 5. Ouch! BTW, I thought this fare was only $60 roundtrip plus taxes. I paid about $130 all in. I guess that was just US departure taxes and PFCs.

If you've got a family, the ferry IS the way to get to Caulker. That only cost about US $55 for all of us roundtrip. A pleasant ride, as long as the seas are relatively calm (ours was fine).

Caulker's a nice village. Supposedly about 1000 people, perhaps including tourists. You can easily walk to anything, especially if you stay in the central area. Nothing to do on the island except eat, drink, relax, sunbathe, snorkel/dive and sleep. But I think most folks would be happy doing this for about 4 or 5 days. We spent that much time on the island and while the pace was relaxed, we weren't bored. I saw Ambergris from offshore and was horrified by the size and development of the place; I'm really not sure why you'd want to go there instead of the much calmer (and more laid back) Caulker. Maybe for nightlife? Development is definitely coming to Caulker, too, so go now while it's still "a village."

Most of the tourists on Caulker seemed quite young, in their 20s. Indeed, there might be a good singles scene, if you knew where to meet up! Definitely not a "party island" though -- we were a couple doors down from the main hostel and noise was never a big issue. Very few families on the island during our stay, but that didn't bother us at all. A few young "retirees" as well. By your third day, it feels like you know dozens of people. Most tourists are Americans, but I met a ton of Canadians. A good sprinkling of Europeans as well. The locals are a mix of many ethnicities and races, with a pronouced creole/island vibe. Think "Jamaica light." Very friendly and fun.


Because you'll be spending so much time "chilling," I would try to find decent accomodations. You'll be hanging out there, especially if your accomodations are decent. I rented a seaside "condo" that slept 5 for under $100. I found it hard to find family accomodations; those who are a couple or less will find it MUCH easier. Indeed, if you're not coming at a peak time, I would consider showing up, looking around and bargaining. Of course, if you can reserve a top tripadvisor-rated place in advance for a good price, that would also be a good way to go.

The top thing to do on Caulker is snorkel or dive. Indeed, if you don't want to do these things, a one day visit is probably adequate. We snorkeled. The best value trip is a "half day" to nearby Caulker reef areas. About 3 minutes by motor boat, and then you switch sites to see different coral and species. Less than US$25 for adults, and some operators will take kids for half price. Highly recommended -- great corals and marine life If you have only 1 day, do this.

There is also the full day snorkel to Hol Chan. This is something like 20 minutes by motorboat and an hour by sailboat. I recommend Ragamuffin for this trip because they do it by sailboat. A nice ride that way. The operators will tell you this reef is "better" than the local reef, but I found it similar. Less than US$43, including light lunch and rum punch on the way back.

The third trip we did was the night snorkel. My wife found it a little freaky; I found it calm. The children had mixed feelings. It was an interesting once-in-a-lifetime experience (you can see lobster, urchins and octopus and sometimes bioluminesence), but not as enjoyable as day snorkeling. Slightly more expensive than the local day snorkel.

You can do a little snorkeling from the broken concrete pier at "the split." That's also where tourists go to sunbathe and swim. No real beach there, though -- indeed, there's no real beach on the island.

Dining is great fun on Caulker. Lobster is the thing to eat. Unfortunately, there is apparently no lobster from mid-February to mid-June, so if you come then you are apparently out of luck. You can get a complete lobster dinner, including drinks, for between USD $10 and $15 in the local open-air joints. Non-lobster dishes are a little cheaper. Fran's along the water is decent, but as you head south and west in the village, prices are a bit lower. Little Kitchen and Marin's both have cheap and tasty lobster meals (Marin's also has a decent $2.50 lobster burger). Sandbox has a good breakfast menu with good prices. Glenda's is good for breakfast, too, but fewer choices. Amor and Cafe attracts a Starbucks crowd; fairly tasty, but limited choices. Wish Willy's has good local flavor (breakfast and dinner). Chan's/Pirates has tasty "fast food" throughout the day. The local bakery is tasty and cheap, as are the guys peddling breads and cakes in town. The sports bar, bamboo and the lazy lizard are all decent (and inexpensive) watering holes. I found it pleasant to buy a bottle of coconut rum and mix my own drinks with the fresh juice you can buy everywhere on the island. There are several small to medium size food markets on the island, but I can't imagine trying to cook anything myself -- the restaurants are cheap. Cheapest market I found (at least for rum) was Chinatown on the south side.

Bring plenty of US money; always accepted at a 2 to 1 ratio. Only one ATM on the island, and it can be unreliable, especially on weekends. Expect to pay for EVERYTHING with cash. Most of the few places that take credit cards tack on an extra 5% fee, including hotels.

I didn't make any mainland trips (except to the airport), but I think I would if I returned to Belize. I think a day of touring a Mayan ruin would be fun. I'd probably do that from the mainland, to save the travel time. FWIW, I didn't find downtown Belize City to be as "scary" as its reputation, but it's probably no place to linger.

MKEbound Feb 5, 2009 4:17 am

Nice trip report on CC!

I had one last thought; the aiport has a small duty free liquore store, post security that had the best prices on Belize booze (please note I didn't do a whole lot of shopping, so better prices might exist). I grabbed a bottle of cashew wine $4, and a bottle of Lemon Rum $6, on the way out.

iahphx Feb 5, 2009 7:02 am


Originally Posted by MKEbound (Post 11205829)
Nice trip report on CC!

I had one last thought; the aiport has a small duty free liquore store, post security that had the best prices on Belize booze

Yeah, I noticed the good rum prices there, too. The crew also bought booze there, which is a good sign of low prices (btw, the best liquor prices I've ever run into were at the Aquadilla PR airport -- a bit disturbing when both the pilot and co-pilot are buying by the case!).

There are also other small airport shops, some with lower-than-you'd-expect prices. I almost never shop at airports, but since there were almost no shops on Caulker, I browsed. I picked up a couple Belikin beer glasses (you'll see them everywhere in Belize) for US$1.50 each. I got my daughter a locally-printed shirt for US$6.00.

I should also mention that the Departure Tax window does NOT take Belizian money! So don't have any "left over" (you can spend the Belizian money at the shops). I was thinking of using the airport ATM to pay the departure tax with Belizian money and asked the clerk beforehand -- glad I did! Indeed, since everybody takes US dollars in Belize (but usually gives you your change in Belizian dollars), try to minimize your Belizian money, especially toward the end of your trip. If you're a non-US citizen, this would be a little annoying since you wouldn't want to go home with extra US dollars. The Atlantic bank at the airport does seem to offer exchange (not sure the rate), but they keep odd hours (in the afternoon, I think it was 1:30 to 3:30).

I forgot to mention the large number of folks connecting to the Belize flights from EWR. We all joked about it -- everyone had "the deal"! (BTW, news of the deal reached Caulker, and lots of "locals" flew in their family and friends on the rate). It was the first time I ever saw the impact of a "Flyertalk fare" at the airport!

MKEbound Feb 8, 2009 1:49 pm


Originally Posted by iahphx (Post 11206331)
Yeah, I noticed the good rum prices there, too. The crew also bought booze there, which is a good sign of low prices (btw, the best liquor prices I've ever run into were at the Aquadilla PR airport -- a bit disturbing when both the pilot and co-pilot are buying by the case!).

There are also other small airport shops, some with lower-than-you'd-expect prices. I almost never shop at airports, but since there were almost no shops on Caulker, I browsed. I picked up a couple Belikin beer glasses (you'll see them everywhere in Belize) for US$1.50 each. I got my daughter a locally-printed shirt for US$6.00.

I should also mention that the Departure Tax window does NOT take Belizian money! So don't have any "left over" (you can spend the Belizian money at the shops). I was thinking of using the airport ATM to pay the departure tax with Belizian money and asked the clerk beforehand -- glad I did! Indeed, since everybody takes US dollars in Belize (but usually gives you your change in Belizian dollars), try to minimize your Belizian money, especially toward the end of your trip. If you're a non-US citizen, this would be a little annoying since you wouldn't want to go home with extra US dollars. The Atlantic bank at the airport does seem to offer exchange (not sure the rate), but they keep odd hours (in the afternoon, I think it was 1:30 to 3:30).

I forgot to mention the large number of folks connecting to the Belize flights from EWR. We all joked about it -- everyone had "the deal"! (BTW, news of the deal reached Caulker, and lots of "locals" flew in their family and friends on the rate). It was the first time I ever saw the impact of a "Flyertalk fare" at the airport!

LOL, at least 15 people on my EWR-DFW flight were on the DFW-BZE flight. We ran into another couple who were on the mainland and had taken the ferry to San Pedro for the day who got the fare too!

skipaway Feb 10, 2009 6:22 pm

Interesting thread--as least as helpful as the dedicated destination fora like Fodor's etc. Couple questions esp for you lucky devils that just visited on the FT fare from ewr:

Three travelers, me (62), one daughter (27), and one granddaughter (13). We're going for spring break, March 15-24. FF miles on AA, and they've already messed with both the arriving and departing flights. :(

We're going inland for the first few days (Cohune Palms in Bullett Tree Falls), then one of the cayes (although Placencia remains a possibility instead). Snorkeling is high on the wish list for my daughter, though, and I think it's better on the cayes than Placencia. On the other hand, I want to try kayaking. The sense I get from previous posts is Caulker. Any discussion there? I don't have res yet, except Cohune Palms. Are they tight? Should I jump right on that task? And what about your sense of safety; a dive operator in my town was aghast at the thought of us going to Belize. Probably because not on one of his trips, maybe?

What about baggage allowance on Tropic Air? We're not the lightest of packers and wonder if hauling gear would be worthwhile and if the airline would transport it? I'm talking maybe one duffel of masks, fins, beach towels, sunscreen, bug stuff. Plus a carryon each, and maybe a bag with provisions for us and spare books for the school. It would be well within the allowance of AA, at least as of today, lol.

jfhscott and MKE, thanks for the insights. You, too, PSUhorty--how 'bout them Steelers!!!

brarrr Mar 2, 2009 12:14 pm

So I got back last week but haven't had time... I'll add and clarify a few things up to date as of 2/16-20

Entering - fixed taxi rate of 25 US from int'l to ferry terminal
Ferry to caulker is 25BZ r/t, 30 is also possible (and 20, but i only found out afterwards and still don't know how to do it)
Tom's Hotel was 19US/night for a room w/ 3 beds and a shared bath. A casita was 30US/night w/ 3 beds and private bath. Either are good options whether sharing a room or not. Very clean. Talking to people staying at miramar, the hostel, and daisy's it sounds like Tom's Hotel was much cleaner. Very basic but it has its own dock..
Wish Willy's was worth it - just ask for what's good. He's a professionally trained cook that now lives in CC 6 months/year.
Jolly Roger and Frans also the same. Since drinks were "included" but too weak for our tastes, we bought a bottle of 1 barrel rum and they had no problem with us doing so.
Salbutes from the mexi place on front street are cheap cheap cheap and great.
The ham/cheese thing at the bakery is worth waking up for and costs perhaps a dollar. Other items there also worth it - very cheap.
Rasta Pasta is closed, in its place is a bar not really worth mentioning other than it has free wifi.
The sports bar also has free wifi.
Bottles of rum are about the same cost on the island as off (~$9US for a 750 of decent rum) and cheapest at the chinese market on middle street. Get one of those and a box of pineapple juice and a cup and you're good to go.
Diving I couldn't get any discount other than a free shirt... was just over $100US for Hol Chan 2 tank dive and just over 130US for turneffe 3 tank including lunch - which I thought was a great deal overall.
The various markets will have anything you need and other than things like bug spray the prices aren't as high as you would expect.
If you put bugspray on your ankles and feet, don't forget the bottom of your feet :)
Leaving - taxi from ferry to intl was 40US for 5 people - I think we got screwed and should have been charged the flat 25, but wasn't paying attention..
I couldn't imagine doing a day trip to a maya site from CC... you'd spend half the day traveling uncomfortably.
San Pedro from a distance when on the water looked too big, am glad I was on CC.
Departure from airport was 37.50US cash or credit, didn't matter what airline you were on.
Duty free I thought was nothing exceptional - could buy at the same price either in belize or guatemala, in some cases cheaper. Marie sharps hot sauce was 4 or 8BZ depending on size and type.. only slightly more than non-airport. They give change in US, so no worries there.

I was in guatemala as well, and they did not credit the exit fees previously paid (it was ~19US leaving by car).. guatemala entry and exit fees were approx 1.30US. Zacapa rum was cheaper in guatemala than bze duty free.

hope that helps someone..

bpoe19 May 26, 2009 2:11 pm

I've got 10 people going to BZE this week and we would like to fly into San Pedro instead of taking the water taxi. Since the municipal airport is half the price on tropic air, we'd like to go out of there--does anyone know how much approximately a taxi is each way and how long it takes to get there?

immortal May 26, 2009 4:49 pm

Google is your friend....

http://www.sanpedrowatertaxi.com/files/schedule.html

bpoe19 May 26, 2009 6:44 pm


Originally Posted by immortal (Post 11808975)

Thanks for the link. I know about the water ferry, but want to fly out of the municipal airport--was looking to see price to the airport and time to get there.

bpoe19 Jun 4, 2009 8:02 am

I just got back from my trip to Ambergris Caye with my group of 10 and had a great time. I want to thank everyone who's contributed to this thread for the advice and recommendations, because it made life very easy down there.

Ramons Village was a great place to stay--with the exception of water pressure in the shower--and everyone was extremely nice. I wish I could move Estel's and the water to OKC and sit there every morning--best bloody mary anywhere. We took the $25/cab ride to the municipal airport to save on the flights, and it was about as easy as it gets getting there and back for half the price of the international airport to San Pedro.

There were hardly any tourists there, so it kind of felt like it was our own little resort town for the few days--my only regret is not staying longer, and I didn't take on the Mayan ruin tours. Once again, thanks to everyone for all the help and trip reports!

PSUhorty Jun 12, 2009 7:29 am

Yes, Estel's is awesome. I had the same bloody mary's almost every morning! Agreed... the biggest regret is always not staying longer.

snod08 Jul 25, 2009 7:01 pm

hello, is there an ATM machine in BZE airport? We are landing on a sunday, and I heard that banks will be closed.

also another question: (this was posted elsewhere, but no replies):
Anyone know if some vegetarian food can be found in Dangriga Town?

iahphx Jul 25, 2009 11:42 pm


Originally Posted by snod08 (Post 12122988)
hello, is there an ATM machine in BZE airport? We are landing on a sunday, and I heard that banks will be closed.

also another question: (this was posted elsewhere, but no replies):
Anyone know if some vegetarian food can be found in Dangriga Town?

Yes, there is one. But I wouldn't necessarily rely on it if I didn't have to (the machine on Caulker went down on the weekend, and I was told it was customary). If you're coming from the US, just bring dollars -- they work just fine everywhere!

And you'll need lots of cash, because there's a surcharge (5% if I recall) to use a credit card in most places in Belize (including hotels, restaurants, water activities, etc. -- and that's before your credit card imposes its own surcharge for ringing you up in Belizian dollars!). So there's a real incentive to pay cash. A different mentality than in the US.

snod08 Jul 26, 2009 4:50 am

Thank you so much for these tips IAHPHX.

beckoa Jan 15, 2012 11:43 pm

Great thread started by iahphx and added to by many FT'ers incuding PSUhorty among others ;)

Wanted to create a friendly bump as I have an upcoming trip this week and looking for any updates- don't have plans finalized- thinking about visiting Caye Caulker, and possibly somewhere else, but relaxing with surf and sun sounds good too. Love to snorkel, and am on a bit of a budget. 5 nights and nothing set in stone yet besides arrival and departure into BZE. :cool:

1KHI Jan 16, 2012 2:51 pm

I'm also in the same position. Nothing set on stone and my trip is coming this weekend. Doing a trip with my partner. We are both young and energetic. Our big problem is that We only have two days in Belize.

If you had only two days in Belize (more like a day and half), where would you go?

I'm thinking on going for a day trip to some Mayan ruins and cavings. The cayes look like a fun place to go but going on a plane or water taxi doesn't seem the best use of time/money.

Is there anything interesting to see in Belize city?

wadethegringo Jan 17, 2012 8:30 am

Hello, I work for an Airline here in Belize. I came from LAS America West / US Air. If you do the ruins or jungles stay on the mainland...But nothing to do in Belize City... Go to Caye Caulker or San Pedro...

beckoa Jan 17, 2012 8:57 am


Originally Posted by wadethegringo (Post 17829424)
Hello, I work for an Airline here in Belize. I came from LAS America West / US Air. If you do the ruins or jungles stay on the mainland...But nothing to do in Belize City... Go to Caye Caulker or San Pedro...

BZE itself does sound a bit dry...

Wanted to extend a big welcome to Flyertalk as well- always nice to have folks who actually work for airlines and not just think they do ;)

wadethegringo Jan 17, 2012 11:07 am


Originally Posted by beckoa (Post 17829598)
BZE itself does sound a bit dry...

Wanted to extend a big welcome to Flyertalk as well- always nice to have folks who actually work for airlines and not just think they do ;)

I met a couple who are Alaska Air flight attendants yesterday here in San Pedro. They said they had a great time.

HighPotter Jan 17, 2012 1:25 pm


Originally Posted by wadethegringo (Post 17830596)
I met a couple who are Alaska Air flight attendants yesterday here in San Pedro. They said they had a great time.


Wade, was one a flight attendant(female) and the other in logistics?(male) for AS ?.. I believe I flew back with them to Dallas on Monday.

If it was...small world.


HP

1KHI Jan 18, 2012 1:28 am


Originally Posted by wadethegringo (Post 17829424)
Hello, I work for an Airline here in Belize. I came from LAS America West / US Air. If you do the ruins or jungles stay on the mainland...But nothing to do in Belize City... Go to Caye Caulker or San Pedro...

Thanks for the helpful information! We do want to see the Mayan ruins and jungle in such a short period of time. I suspect we'll miss the night life of the caye caulker or san pedro, since it seems both are islands :(

Is there any nice B&B or hotel near the Mayan ruins or Belize city that anyone recommend? Would renting a car be recommended or should we stick with taxi/tour?

wbannon Jan 24, 2012 8:01 pm

Best in Belize
 

Originally Posted by iahphx (Post 10585154)
There are several of us who've purchased crazy low "mileage run" fares to Belize this past weekend. It's a destination many of us have heard about and wanted to visit, but never quite got there. Well, now we are. :p But instead of a "trip of a lifetime," we're generally dropping in for a few days. And are looking for value-oriented tips to get the most out of our stays.

I've PM'd a couple of flyertalkers for information, but I thought I'd start this forum so that everyone can contribute and benefit from the discussion.

Everyone seems to agree that you want to leave Belize city, and that there are 2 main leisure destinations in Belize: 1) inland eco or adventure travel through rainforest and such; and 2) beach/snorkel/scuba activites on the offshore islands (known as "cayes"). The country is very small, but transportation is somewhat complex in that you have to go by boat or plane to the cayes, and the road conditions can be less than ideal (and rental cars are fairly expensive).

So how do we make the most of our visits? Thanks for the tips!

The best place to go in Belize, is Southern Belize. The town of Placencia has great beaches, hotels ect. There is also an award winning development Sanctuary Belize that is a must see for anyone looking to invest in real estate.


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