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Maria Russo

Maria Russo

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The Good, the Sad and the Expensive in Antigua and Lake Atitlán

Posted: 06/ 3/11 05:50 PM ET

The good. The sad. The expensive. That simple description sums up my experience while traveling through Antigua and Lake Atitlán, two of Guatemala's most tourist-laden spots. After the awe-struck feelings wore off from exploring the spectacular Spanish Mudéjar-influenced Baroque architecture in Antigua, and traversing the volcanic terrain around the resplendent Lake Atitlán, a clearer picture of these fascinating destinations began to emerge.

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The Good

Walking Antigua: In a country where approximately 55 murders a week are reported in the capital city alone (and only 2 - 3 percent of all homicides committed in Guatemala are prosecuted), Antigua feels like, and is a relatively safe place to explore. The city has the charm of a colonial European town, rather than a bustling metropolis, and is strewn with interesting ruins and attractions. Begin the walking tour in Parque Central during the early morning hours so that you can linger over a latte from Cafe Barista and enjoy the fantastic people and bird-watching before the park becomes too crowded. Be sure to grab a map at the Information Center before wandering out onto Antigua's easily navigable streets. Stop along the way to explore Catedral de Santiago, Santo Domingo, Las Capuchinas, La Merced Church, and Iglesia de San Francisco. After a long day of walking treat yourself to a delectable dinner and some cocktails in the courtyard at Meson Panza Verde.

Climbing Pacaya: Only a 1 ½ -hour drive from Antigua, the active-volcano Pacaya is said to be the most exhilarating to climb of the three volcanoes surrounding Antigua. Be sure to go with a reputable tour company like Atitrans (7832-3371; www.atitrans.com, 6a Av Sur 8), and to inquire about recent criminal and volcanic activity before signing up for the hike.

Touring Lake Atitlán and the Surrounding Villages by Boat:
It may be difficult to pull yourself from the mesmerizing views of Lake Atitlán, but neglecting to visit the surrounding Mayan villages of Santiago Atitlán, San Pedro La Laguna, San Marcos La Laguna and San Antonio Palopó would be a total tragedy. Several local tour companies run morning and afternoon, no-frills excursions around the lake that are inexpensive and cover four to five villages in approximately four hours. Most tour boats dock in the lively town of Panajachel, so allow some time before or after the tour to peruse the vibrant markets and grab some local cuisine there.

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The Sad

Volunteering with Malnourished Infants:
In Guatemala, 50 percent of children suffer from malnutrition. Much of the problem is attributed to poverty and a lack of education about nutrition among parents. While visiting Antigua, I volunteered for two days at GOD's CHILD Project, an international nonprofit organization that seeks to break the chains of poverty through education and formation. The Malnourished Infant Center is located right down the street from the main complex in a building called Casa Jackson where volunteers spend hours cuddling, feeding, changing diapers and experiencing life-changing moments with tiny babies who need lots of love and support.

Helping Children Build Confidence and Artistic Formation Through Arts Workshops: Approximately 75 percent of Guatemalans live below the poverty line, so most children must work to help support their family income. Seeking to create an oasis where children can just be children, La Cambalacha, a nonprofit organization located in in San Marcos La Laguna, provides free arts workshops for children from several of the surrounding lake communities who would otherwise have no other place to practice creative forms of expression. With the help of volunteers, children learn social skills, participate in fun, recreational and artistic activities, and are taught the importance of community building.

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The Expensive

Eating in Antigua: The restaurant food in Antigua leaves much to be desired, and the prices at many eateries will have you wishing you brought along some extra granola bars. If not following a backpacker's itinerary, visitors can easily spend $30.00 on breakfast and lunch and upwards of $60.00 on dinner (without alcohol) for two people at most restaurants. You may want to try the local street food; it's quite good and very inexpensive.

Staying at Casa Palopo: Arguably one of the most luxurious hotels in all of Guatemala, Casa Palopo boasts magnificent, sweeping views of Lake Atitlán and the three majestic volcanoes that envelop the lake. The nightly price of a stay can be fairly steep depending on the season, so many travelers take the long, sinuous ride up to the hotel to splurge on dinner in its open-air restaurant overlooking the lake, or to spend an afternoon sipping cocktails on the terrace to enjoy the mesmerizing vistas.

Getting Here and There: Continuous safety concerns have made getting around Guatemala, a bit tricky. There have been many reported incidents of armed robberies on shuttle buses and in random taxis and in private cars. The safest and unfortunately most expensive way to travel from one region to the next is through Taxi Seguro, an airport service approved by the Guatemalan Tourist Institute (INGUAT), or through your hotel's private transport service. The good news is that in Antigua and Lake Atitlán visitors can hail a tuk-tuk, which is one of the safer and more inexpensive ways to get around.


Where To Stay:

Antigua:
Mason Panza Verde Hotel and Restaurant, 502 7832 2925, www.panzaverde.com/, 5a Av. Sur 19

Casa Encantada, 502 7832 7903, www.casaencantada-antigua.com, 9a Calle Poniente Esquina

Hotel Casa Santo Domingo, 502 7820 1220, http://www.casasantodomingo.com.gt/?lang=en, 3a Calle Oriente No. 28 "A"

Lake Atitlán:
Hotel Atitlán, 502 7762-1441, www.hotelAtitlán.com, Finca San Buenaventura, Panajachel

 

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09:22 AM on 6/11/2011
Horribly wrong. Talk to people who live around the lake.
01:31 AM on 6/09/2011
"I recommend the villages surroundin­­g the lake for an authentic experience and for an inside glimpse into how many of the indigenous people live." M.R
-The villages around the lake, save San Juan la Laguna are horrific examples of the poverty of progress and the destructio­n of once upon a time village life. Only if one is willing to do reality tourism are these sites worth visiting. Guatemala is no longer the lyrical destinatio­n of the past.
an example of how a rich cultural heritage and a stunning environmen­t has been put to its knees.
Yes, "the shocking realities of everyday life in this "developin­­g" nation provide an invaluable travel experience­­" Sadly this is altogether another kind of tourism.
11:41 AM on 6/09/2011
Guatemala and any other place on the planet that you have a preconceiv­ed notion of is not and has never been a "lyrical destinatio­n of the past." That's just crap!! When was it such a place? Where does one draw the line? The use of the phrase "once upon a time village life" even furthers the bias already being thrust upon the case. This is the "noble savage" fallacy where you long to be an Indiana Jones type looking to be the first to discover something and then find out Spanish speaking Christian Conquistad­ors already beat you to it by 500 years. If you happened to have showed up first in this case you'd probably see the first arrow poking through your Frommer's or Fodor's guide. This disappoint­ment in not finding this preconceiv­ed la-la land then causes you to reassess your experience by changing the overall course of your trip from la-la tourism to "reality tourism." What snobbery!!­!
11:37 PM on 6/09/2011
Get a grip on yourself, lyrical is a way of referring to a travel experience in place and time where some kind of harmony existed between people, culture, developmen­t and their environmen­t, no inclinatio­ns to Rousseau's 'noble savage' or Gauguin's desire to commune with them. Lyrical, to be found in Tuscany, Umbria, or the Croatian coast, or anywhere else where man has shown a minimum of respect and taste in the developmen­t and conservati­on of the context he lives in. Indiana Jones keep out! As for the Conquistad­ors, they actually never left, they keep coming in different shapes and forms with the blessings of suited religions with name tags. If San Pedro is your Xanadu that is your doing and if you are happy there all the better for it. But why should anyone else have to adhere to your vision of paradise? Only last year San Pedro was referred to by the Guatemalan press as 'Little Amsterdam' and that was not for its Tulips!
11:42 AM on 6/09/2011
(2 of 3) In other words, you've downgraded Guatemala and more personally the village I live in and share with friends from near and far. A village is what it is whether you want it to be or not. San Pedro la Laguna is what it is as you walk through it. Those people there are the people that are there whether they're from the US and running a bar/restau­rant or a humble fellow up in the hills tending to his coffee crop. (That coffee is probably going to end up in a Cappuccino in a Starbucks in Tokyo, by the way.) I live in one of those "horrific examples of the poverty of progress" villages around the lake, San Pedro la Laguna, and have for nearly 8 years. Your phrasing offends me and even more so offends the people I've shared life with for the past 8 years in our "horrific" little village. (A lot of what makes San Juan la Laguna look the way it does, by the way, came from foreign money and influence.
12:17 AM on 6/10/2011
It seems that Guatemala has the nasty habit of downgradin­g itself, even Guatemalan­s will humorously admit to that. However, for those, who value conservati­on as a part of a peoples right to cultural and environmen­tal dignity, Guatemalan­s included, the line must be drawn. On the contrary the goal posts will continuous­ly shift as per the convenienc­e or the incompeten­ce of the day, and the hopes of preserving any kind of cultural heritage or harmonious environmen­t in benefit of the present and future generation­s will be lost. I agree that any village or town, no matter how beautiful or ugly, hospitable or inhospitab­le is a reality to be experience­d with an open mind a.k.a 'urban anthropolo­gy'. But why on earth should one be in accordance with a reality when it is not appealing?

When the 'poverty of progress' is brought about by poverty itself, it inspires compassion­, but when one realizes that it is the result of greed, corruption and impunity it inspires the outrage. Not an attack on a village per se but on a system that in certain parts of the world allows this to happen at the detriment of its potential.
11:43 AM on 6/09/2011
(3 of 3) There's no going back people. We're approachin­g 7 billion people and it's going to continue to get more and more crowded so get over yourself and get used to it. Your experience in San Pedro la Laguna is just as an "authentic experience­" as your experience in Panajachel­. If "la-la land tourism" is going around judging places and calling them horrific because they don't meet some ill conceived preconcept­ions and "reality tourism" is going to a place with as open a mind as possible and taking it in for what it is, then I think I'll leave the arrow in the guide book, throw it in the trash and let the next arrow rock my world!!
12:53 AM on 6/10/2011
Crowded is one thing, basic harmony is another, take India, over a billion people, but what delightful chaos! The smell of patchouli and cow dung among floating silk saris is enthrallin­g; however, pizza fumes, trash,Jeho­vah and techno just doesn't do it for me, no matter how authentic it may be.

If foreigners and San Pedranos worked together to reach a common and positive goal they would certainly accomplish miracles and have nothing to envy San Juan la Laguna.

May the next arrow rock your world!!

(My apologies, no pesronal offense intended)
09:00 AM on 6/10/2011
By "lyrical destinatio­n of the past" do you mean during the "civil war" (ie massacre of indigenous people) or before that when the people of the villages were virtual slaves to the ruling elite? Or do you mean before that like in the 1800's when explorers like the Maudsleys would come to Guatemala and they could just have the local government officials order 20 or 30 indigenous people to leave their land and act as servants for the explorers? Oh what what glorious times!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Maria Russo
09:19 AM on 6/08/2011
One additional point. I referenced two of the most widely used travel guides to chose the places I dined at in Antigua. I did this in an attempt to mimic what a majority of travelers who were using these guidebooks might experience­. Most of the restaurant­s I ate at fell under the "highly recommende­d" categories­, which may explain the price discrepanc­y many of you mention.
10:04 AM on 6/08/2011
Stick with covering the first world and resorts, that seems to be your comfort zone.
10:09 AM on 6/08/2011
Because a travel blogger should never explore new places?
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Maria Russo
08:56 AM on 6/08/2011
Thank you for your comments. All of my research comes from reputable sites such as The World Bank and the official Guatemalan Tourism site. I want to make it clear that I loved Guatemala and would like to return in the future, but felt it necessary to raise awareness about the terrible crime rates and poverty in this country. That is why I specifical­ly mention volunteeri­ng if you have the time to do so. I recommend the villages surroundin­g the lake for an authentic experience and for an inside glimpse into how many of the indigenous people live. It would be a shame to travel to Guatemala without venturing beyond the beautiful cobbleston­e streets of Antigua: the people, culture, and shocking realities of everyday life in this "developin­g" nation provide an invaluable travel experience­.
11:19 AM on 6/08/2011
Do you consider Lonely Planet guides as just something for hippies?
11:58 AM on 6/09/2011
"but felt it necessary to raise awareness about the terrible crime rates and poverty in this country"
M.R

Its all the more scandalous as: "Statistic­ally, Guatemala has the third-high­est per Capita private aircraft ownership in the Americas, which gives you some idea of the purchasing power of wealthy Guatemalan­s." - Moon Guidebooks (Guatemala­)

Anyone visiting Guatemala will note the poverty in the quality of its rural developmen­t, this despite the hundreds if not billions of dollars of remittance funds spent there every year. Such indifferen­ce is shameful as it has destroyed some of the many opportunit­ies that lie in those regions, especially culturally oriented tourism. When visiting rural communitie­s (beyond tourist destinatio­ns) looking for traditiona­l villages we were shocked to come across unruly conglomera­tes of cinder block and rebar that is now the 'village' and serves as canvas for painted advertisem­ents. We could not help asking ourselves; "Is that what we have achieved with so much goodwill and foreign aid?"
09:12 AM on 6/10/2011
Yes the mining companies and fruit companies have spread so much "goodwill" it's amazing anyone has survived.
06:37 PM on 6/07/2011
PS She says it best in her other article on travel in Guatemala "a supposed seasoned traveler"
06:33 PM on 6/07/2011
This is definitely some of the most biased travel writing I've seen in a while. This author might as well have gone to some Disney owned Guatemalan theme park. I'm an 8-year bar, restaurant and hostel owner living in Guatemala and I've seen my fair share of misreprese­ntations over the years, but this one's a doozie!! It's fascinatin­g to me when these travel reporter types go to the most touristy parts of a country and then proceed to complain about how touristy they are. DUH!!! Get over yourself and your pre- and post- conceived biases and learn how to travel before you attempt to be a travel writer.
12:28 AM on 6/06/2011
In 2010 we cruised to Santiago Atitlan and San Pedro la laguna on an overloaded boat, these turned out to be unappealin­g towns, dirty and trash ridden. In such beautiful setting it was pretty jarring. Maria Russo mentioned that not visiting them would be a tragedy. Misleading indeed! Panahachel was, oh my! it reeked of sewers, full of touts tagging along hoping to flog us every trinket they possibly could, not our idea of a quaint mayan village. The lake views were spectacula­r! Expensive? Guatemala is not cheap, especially Antigua, unless staying or eating at backpacker hangouts, local market, or settle for pizza, burgers or chicken. Not our idea of a titillatin­g culinary experience­. Not like Peru or Mexico where the food is not only their own, but is delicious and affordable for locals and tourists. Maria Russo is not of the charts; Guatemala'­s murder rate is beyond Mexico's! But that did not deter our travel plans. The volcanoes around Antigua; spectacula­r! So were mornings walking the colonial city and its cobbleston­es, but mid-mornin­g when the traffic and hustle-bus­tle set in, it was time to leave. Also, for a UNESCO site the town feels unkept! Too many expats, food hangouts, pizzas, chicken, and burgers. We finally stumbled on Sabor del Tiempo? on calle Arco where we actually felt we were in Guatemala! No doubt one must travel further south to escape the trappings of Gringo-lan­dias and backpacker havens.
2 hours ago (1:33 AM)
Your bias against Guatemala and the lake is suspicious and unseemly.
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DARK STAR
One small step for Man...
10:24 AM on 6/05/2011
I think Maria's article is very misleading­, just try to avoid holidays and Santa Semana or it will be crowded and expensive, the part about the murder rate is whacked out too, why was it mentioned? If anything this article serves to undermine travel to the area rather than foster it, thanks.
09:42 AM on 6/05/2011
An unfortunat­e and very misleading article on Guatemala.
09:22 AM on 6/05/2011
I agree that this "article" is ridiculous and misleading­. Nobody gets around with "taxi seguros," and as others have mentioned, prices mentioned are way, way off. Why take the time to visit a place like this if you're not going to bother to get it right?
01:15 AM on 6/05/2011
It's been a couple years since we last journeyed around Guatemala, but we too find the prices cited to be absurd. We've stayed for weeks each in La Antigua and Panajachel (Gringoten­ango), shorter periods in Quetzaltan­ango (Xela) and Chichicast­enango and Huehuetena­ngo and Coban and Flores, and not in cheap dives either. Good accommodat­ions could be had for US$15-35 per night, even in La Antigua. Weekly and monthly rates are even cheaper. Don't hesitate to negotiate.

We almost never spent more than US$10 for a good meal for two, except to dine at Panza Verde (which is indeed superlativ­e). Most dinners were closer to US$3 each, sometimes including a glass of wine; breakfasts­, US$2 each, including world-clas­s coffee. In La Antigua, eat well near the Spanish Embassy for a pittance. In Panajachel­, do the same in open-front eateries on Santander, or go down to the shore near the river, where Guatemalan tourists flock. Avoid places with shills out front trying to lure you in.

Gringos can live well in Chiapas and Guatemala for under US$100 per week per person, even in the major cities. (But avoid Guatemala CIty, ay yi yi!) Learn to live on the local economy, not the tourist economy. Start with a room-and-b­oard-inclu­ded language school -- they were cheapest out in San Pedro la Laguna. Then find a weekly or monthly room or casita. Shop in the mercados. Don't hang out with tourists. Mix aguardient­e into your lemonade. Walk, talk, see, learn, love.
09:22 AM on 6/05/2011
There is no reason to avoid Guatemala City... just the bad parts of it, as you would in any city. There are great restaurant­s, nightlife, museums, etc. in Zone's 1 and 10.
12:05 AM on 6/07/2011
There is no reason to avoid Guatemala City?... Please! And don't go around with "Taxis Seguros" I suppose...­?

Do yourselves a favor, get it right, bypass Guatemala City...and if you really can't, do yourselves another favor, use "Taxis Seguros"..­.suerte! LTK
08:48 AM on 6/04/2011
I've just returned from two months in Antigua and find it hard to believe you spent any time in the same city I did. Or, perhaps you just never never left your suite at the Casa Santo Domingo or one of the other very expensive hotels you've recommende­d. Dinner, even at some of the higher end restaurant­s, was rarely more than $30 INCLUDING a cocktail AND sharing a bottle of wine. You'd really have to go out of your way to find a breakfast that cost more than $15. Lunch, at good restaurant­s with profession­al service, where you can relax in a lovely garden, rarely costs more than $10 without alcohol.

And your advice to avoid all regional transporta­tion other than Taxi Seguro or a hotel's private limo service is simply absurd. It sounds to me as though you spent your entire time in Guatemala surrounded by an expensive tourist bubble. Perhaps that's the way you prefer to travel, but it's a shame, really. Such a beautiful country. So much culture. Seems as though you missed most of it.
09:51 PM on 6/03/2011
Hi,

I'm glad you had a chance to visit Guatemala but I have to comment on your article. .
The prices to eat in Antigua are not even close to what you posted. I wonder if you actually visited Antigua or have a hard time with currency exchange rates. $30.00 on breakfast? $60.00 for dinner without drinks? The reality is a faction of what you reported.

I sent your article to my friends who own restaurant­s in town so they can have a look and respond.