Skye

From the sun drenched shores of Loch Lomond, we drove for five hours through spectacular scenery that included Glen Coe, a valley sided by huge, snow capped mountains, lochs, more mountains, more lochs – you get the theme – so much and so many, a little Welshman started to understand mountains bigger time.

At the top of Loch Lomond, a retailing phenomenon: The Green Welly Stop. A huge help yourself restaurant leads into a massive temptation of shopping, with special Scottish mementos leading into a hugely ranged sports shop – everything you’d want for hiking up and down mountains (they’re here in their thousands). Indoors bought a wet weather hat. No surprise there then. And to think she’s survived some 60+ years without one.

Having peeled off the road to Inverness, we came across this statue to commandos, some of who use this area for training. Well hard.COMMANDOSWhat you can’t see is what they’re looking over, namely the UK’s highest mountain, Ben Nevis.BEN NEVISSo many sets of road works, some with the latest fashion of convoy led passing through, when you wait for ages because a lead vehicle drives at 10mph ahead of the cars so everything takes longer, then you wait for a 12 point turn from the stupidly big lead vehicle which then does the return journey, including your car, at …. 10mph. Three of these so far. No hurrying in The Highlands, then. But the roads are in dire need of repair. One’s other car’s low profile tyres would have been shredded by now.

And eventually, after a very steep modern bridge, we’re on the island of Skye. We stopped for a rest, only to discover a locally brewed beer: from the Skye Island Brewery. And it’s mighty fine, thank you. Called into the Co-op to find a moustache’d lady selling wellies, but she wasn’t there. Neither is that story, so move on.

Skye seems very big – it is, being 8% the size of Wales – and really quite desolate, with lots of little single storey houses plonked in fields, away from neighbours, and very few trees. When we have 90mph winds in West Wales, Skye has 120mph winds. Hence, few trees, which makes the desolation seem, well, just more. A bit like Hinterland making Mid Wales appear rural and rurally poor, so Skye is poorer again. Despite a number of houses, in various states of repair, being available, we agree we wouldn’t like to live here. Or have a holiday home.

At this time of year, it gets dark here at about 10.30pm and, I’ve just found out, light at 4.00am. There’s another five weeks to the longest day! And we’ve further north to visit on our travels.

Skye 2

Almost Scraping the Sky

Boat trip back from Isla Contadora was a bit on the hairy side – rough sea – so we were glad to return to Panama City. Waiting for us at the jetty was Tony, our host on Contadora, to claim the golf buggy hire he wouldn’t take with plastic. But he and his wife then commissioned their taxi to drop us off at our last accommodation, so that was appreciated.

To our last ‘home’ of Panama: we have an AirBnB’d apartment in a Block called PH Vitro Loft Studios. The flat is a duplex, with bed and bath rooms on a mezzanine floor and the end wall is glass curtain walling. The view was supposed to be stunning, but we only peer over the rear of the city. However, we are on the 12th floor. The block has 26 floors. On the fifth floor, there is an outside swimming pool as well as a washing room, a games room and a squash court. Yep, a squash court! I’ve spent the whole day walking around in my Wales Squash T-shirt, but so far noone has stepped forward

We did the Sunday thing of walking the bay, to be surrounded by families. Except we weren’t, neither was the road shut off for pedestrians only. Hard to fathom routines in this country, other than there don’t seem to be many.

When we boarded the ferry yesterday afternoon, we had to do it from another beach because the captain decided it was too choppy. We left our big piece luggage at the normal beach and Indoors spent some anxious moments watching for its arrival. Then suddenly it appeared from another boat that had loaded it from the normal beach.

Our walk this afternoon ended with the negotiated purchase of two Panama hats, neither of which I wore home for fear of losing it. Panamoia?

It’s A Wrap

All around my hat

Took an early morning, 100 mins long ferry ride to Isla Contadora, in Las Perlas islands. Staying in a smart guest house, run by a smarter Tony, who has lived on the island for 40 years, we have had some insight into island life. 

We have hired a golf buggy, de rigueur transport here, to explore the stunning five beaches. The island is 1.6km long, approx. 0.6km at its widest. So why, you may ask, do you need a buggy? Because it is varying between 28 and 32 degrees of high moisture heat, day/night in, day/night out. A little walk is alot of sweat. Great for four days, couldn’t live here.

Some say the island is cursed, the Spanish using Contadora to count the pearls raided from the archipelago before despatch to Spain. Certainly there are many signs of decaying buildings, many of which are so big as to be serious eyesores. Here is a good description of how the Columbian finances dried up. And check out the photo of the beached Columbian ferry which is still here. I’m not saying nuttin’, OK?

And the Panama hat has gone AWOL again. Sorry Phoebe. We left on a journey with it sat next to us on the front seat and when we arrived it had jumped buggy. Retraced our journey, but it is hiding. Maybe it knows more than it’s telling us, huh?

Almost Scraping the Sky

Movin’ On

After a last night in Bocos Town, with a six course tasting meal at Azul, and a sleepless night at Grand Bahia Hotel (not so grand), we flew this morning back to Panama City in an Air Panama Focker prop plane. It left 20 mins late, arrived 10 mins late, but  50 mins journey instead  of an 11 hours bus journey. Hola!

We had lunch under the temporary canopy of the Marisco Market, ie fish market, which apparently has been there for at least the last 10 years. Prawn cocktail ceviche-style. Very good.

Then onto Bar and Brewery Istvo. Not only did the landlord remember us, but he also insisted I had the same special IPA brew he gave me last time – two weeks ago – and then gave me back my Panama hat.

Phoebe, we are as one again.

All around my hat

Winners

Last day at Bambuda Lodge, so tried to go on their jungle hike, previously blocked by a caiman and her baby. But chickened out when path required crossing a slippery log across a stream with wellies on (us not the stream)

So we went on the hostel’s 150 foot water slide, running from its bar into the sea, riding on a boogie board. Twice each.

And then we entered the quiz night, adding to our team Jorge and Edwin from Columbia. They had the local knowledge, we had some other stuff, as well as a lot more years. And we won! A free round of drinks. Guess what the Columbians drank? Same as me, a glass of Malbec.

Ended up the night with Robert Johnson playing through the bar and me talking blues with one of the chefs. Everyone else had gone to bed ……

Movin’ On

Bocas del Toro

A four hour drive through the mountains, including many miles in cloud covered less than perfectly surfaced roadways, delivered us to Bocas del Toro, an archipelago on the Caribbean.

Well, nearly. A confusing luggage in then, sometime later, passengers for a 30 minutes boat journey to Bocas Town, at the eastern end of Isla Colon. And then another boat taxi to Isla Solarte, Bambuda Lodge, our  destination: this is the sister lodge to  our previous hostel.

Great hospitality, food, drinks, ambience et al ….. but we are here for more than that.

And it is raining. Pretty much all the time. Even though this is the ‘dry time’, ie January to March. Climate change or what?

Went to Bocas town today, with a hairy sea taxi ride, and chilled in various cafe/bar/restaurants. Found some Blues, of course, why could you not? Then had a hairier sea taxi return journey.

Winners

Zip Gliding Away ……

Staying in a modern hostel, Castle Bambuda, half way up a mountain and overlooking Panama’s highest mountain, and volcano, Volcan Baru. The hostel is about 13 mins taxi drive, 40 minutes’ walk out of Boquete, a small town overflowing with tourists from all over the world and currently featuring its annual flower festival (which is not even worth the two dollars entry fee).

Ate in the hostel last and this night, food being good and lots of interesting people around. Walked back from the festival this afternoon, after Indoors found, in the penultimate building in the town, Boquete Brewery, yep, a craft beer brewery. Beer was ace, drinking a pint of Smash before we walked.

The day was really all about the forest canopy zip lines, 12 tree platforms, 11 cables, 3 km total. And of course we were 20+ years older than everyone else. But after the first one, it was great. Would even do it again somewhere else! Really!

Another day of chilling here, then on to Bocas del Toro, a group of islands in The Caribbean.

Bocas del Toro

The heart of Panama

Everywhere you go, everyone you talk to, the headline business is The Canal.

So first thing this morning we took a very comfortable Uber ride (yep, Uber is here) to the Biomuseum. This just happens to be a Frank Gehry designed modern exhibition hall which is brilliant. Well the building is, the exhibition is pretty good, too.

Then we saw some caterpillars and were reminded “Panama” means full of butterflies.

Time for a taxi to …. the Miraflores locks on The Panama Canal. We toured the exhibition, very interesting how scientific solutions were found in the building period – 1903/1914 – and reminders of the scale of the construction. In 2015 the new, bigger locks were commissioned, but the originals are still running flat out.

We had a ridiculously expensive (but rather good) buffet lunch in the only restaurant in town, completed by the arrival of some big, and some not so big, ships, which we witnessed passing through the lock gates. If you want to know more about the workings, history, new developments, etc, I suggest you click here.

Brought up in my earliest years near the River Thames’ Teddington lock, it is only a matter of scale.

Parrillada Jimmy was the locals’ restaurant for dinner. Great bass skewers we ate in an open sided ranch type wooden building surrounded by the teeming car, van, bus and lorry traffic that is Panama City; the CO2 levels are to die for and, apparently, Yoda-ing me.

Zip Gliding Away ……