Posts Tagged ‘tour’

Sailing Tulum to Sian Kaan

February 27th, 2012

Sian Kaan Biosphere

Just down the beach from Coco Tulum Cabanas where we were staying I found Miguel, a really nice Chihuahuan who takes people out sailing on his 18 foot hobie cat.

We arrived at 10 a.m. at his boat, as he was coming down the beach with a small cooler and a big smile on his face. I thought how nice it is to love your job so much you can’t wipe the smile off your face.

I climbed on the mesh between the hulls and Miguel and my boyfriend pushed us out into the deeper surf, where the water was a little wavy but promised to make it a fun sail.

They both jumped aboard and we set off into the deep blue yonder…. Miguel navigated the boat to the south, in the direction of the Sian Kaan BioSphere.

The water was a beautiful shade of clear blueberry – I just love that color – it reminds me of the popsicles we had as kids. When I stare at it it makes my mouth water.

I looked deep beneath the color on the surface and saw all the colorful fish and countless types of coral along the reef. The second-longest reef in the world directly below me was teeming with marine life.

The water was so spectacularly clear, I could see 50 feet to the pure white sand bottom beside the reef. It was so clear and pristine I felt like I was sailing in someone’s aquarium.

As we settled to relax in the sun and warm breeze, Miguel told us that the Sian Kaan Reserve is a UNESCO World Heritage site that totals over 1.3 million acres.

He also told us that as well as having well over 350 animal and bird varieties that it has the nesting grounds for two endangered sea turtle species. How fortunate we found Miguel and his catamaran and could share such a special place, I thought to myself.

As I lent over the edge of the boat a huge dark shadow abruptly appeared and started racing up from the bottom behind us towards the surface.

My heart stopped for a split second just as the most beautiful fish I have ever seen broke the surface and sailed by us in glorious gleaming technicolor. It was a 6 foot sailfish – with its full fin out and its nose pointing straight out in front.

He disappeared just as fast as he had appeared and I thought that was the end of the show. But under the water I could see he turned and started back towards the boat.

As he swam our way the surface of the water suddenly exploded with shiny dagger fish flying towards us at the same time.
There must have been 50 of them, all about 10 inches long and gleaming wet silver. All except one landed back in the water but the one started flopping around on the mesh right at my feet. I grabbed my camera and got a photo of it just before Miguel threw it back in the sea. He told me it was called a ‘ballyhoo’.

It was all over as fast as it had started but as we continued sailing I knew I had experienced something rare and quite spectacular… even though I didn’t get a photo of the sailfish, I got a photo of the little ‘ballyhoo’ that landed in the boat.

And, that would be enough for me to show my friends and tell them about the whole day!

Gran Cenote Paradise

January 24th, 2012

After watching another beautiful sunrise at the beach outside my Coco Tulum cabana, I ate breakfast at the Playa Azul restaurant. It was delicious as usual. After that I walked back along the beach and found my tour guide, Blake, waiting to take me to the Gran Cenote.

We made our way along the Tulum Beach road past a little ‘pueblito’ of palapa shops selling t-shirts and local carvings and out through the Tulum jungle reserve in his dune buggy. After that we drove another 7 minutes north towards the Coba ruins through virgin jungle on a road which was barely a paved goat’s path a few years ago.

It’s only a little sign that warns the speeding drivers that they are about to pass one of the best cenote snorkeling spots in the Yucatan.

We entered the cenote park through a palapa-style entrance beside a sleepy guide. It was a beautiful short stroll along a pebbled garden walkway lined with local flowering shrubs. The Riviera Maya is rich with a wide variety of plants and flowers. There are an estimated 20 to 30 thousand different species of plants growing in Mexico, which is considered to be one of the most floristically diverse countries in the world.

We arrived at the top ledge looking into a breathtaking tropical sinkhole oasis. The Gran Cenote was formed over a period of thousands of years when rainwater wore away the limestone making its way back to the sea.

As we walked around the lip of the cenote I heard some scuba divers getting suited up on the island in the middle of the sinkhole, talking about exploring the tunnels snaking off from the main pool. There are hundreds of miles of divers ‘line’ in the Riviera Maya tunnels.
I have been in many cenotes before, but most were in out in the sunshine – this one was like entering the yawning mouth of a prehistoric rock creature … and right where the throat should start I took a deep breath and plunged downwards, not expecting the small cave above the water to suddenly expand into an arena the size of a small stadium, filled with stalagmites and stalactites.

The bubbles from the diving group swimming below me rose up and I watched the group enter one of the tunnels near the bottom. I have heard of divers finding completely blind fish in those tunnels that after millenniums of years in the dark have lost the ability to see.
I spent the next hour swimming around the island and I peered into more tunnel entrances with lots of colorful cenote fish swimming in and out of the rocks. All in all it was breathtaking.

On the dock after the swim, my tour guide Blake, who I now consider a good friend, told me that the Mayan name for Gran Cenote is ‘Sac Aktun’, which in english means ‘White cave’, possibly because the island was formed when the cave’s thin roof collapsed thousands of years ago letting in the sunlight.

I heard some young children snorkeling and I thought what a sacred and special place for parents to bring their children on holiday.
I closed my eyes and felt thanks that I had the opportunity to experience such wondrous beauty tucked away in the virgin jungles of Tulum.
Until next time…