If you want to get a sense of life in Belize, start by familiarizing yourself with some of its simple pleasures. There are a few highlights that will send you home saying, "Ah mi gat wahn gud guf taim" (I had a good time).
No matter where you are in Belize -- whether you're seated at a seaside restaurant or perched on a bar stool in San Pedro -- ask for a beer, and you'll be presented with a small dark bottle with an illustration of a Mayan temple on the front (in case you were wondering, that's the Temple of the Masonry Altars at Altun Ha). This is Belikin, Belize's national drink. You may find, like we did, how deliciously addictive this hoppy, malty lager is.
You'll soon notice the way it's served in bars and restaurants: the bartender folds a little white napkin and wraps it around the top of the bottle. No glass -- you drink the beer straight from the bottle. If you like a darker beer, try the Belikin Stout.
Belizeans frequently talk about "the Jewel." They say, "Get yourself a piece of the Jewel." Or, "When are you coming back to the Jewel?" By Jewel, they simply mean Belize. And, of course, Belize is a Jewel. It's a place of incredible natural beauty, of mint-green seas and emerald-green forests, of the longest barrier reef in the Western or Northern hemispheres, with more kinds of birds, butterflies, flowers, and trees than in all of the United States and Canada combined. Massive ceiba trees and graceful cohune palms stand guard in rain forests where jaguars still roam free and toucans and parrots fly overhead. Rivers, bays, and lagoons are rich with hundreds of different kinds of fish. And Belizeans themselves are Jewels. The country is a gumbo of cultures -- African, Hispanic, Mayan, Asian, European, and Caribbean -- all getting along better than anyone would expect. Belize? It's a Jewel.
Once you see toucans at Tikal or the hard-to-find motmot in the Cayo, you, too, might get caught up in the excitement of searching for some of Belize's 600 species of birds. Many Belizeans know all their local birds (although the names they have for them may differ from those in your birding guide) and where the best places are to find them. Crooked Tree, Chan Chich at Gallon Jug, the New River and New River Lagoon near Lamanai, and much of the Toledo District in the Deep South are wonderful areas for bird-watching; keep your eyes peeled to the treetops and don't forget your binoculars.
Though the ancient Mayan empire -- which once occupied much of present-day Guatemala and extended into Belize, Mexico, Honduras, and El Salvador -- began to collapse around AD 900, it still left one of the richest cultural and archaeological legacies in the world. Only a fraction of the thousands of Mayan ruins have been excavated from the jungle that over the centuries has swallowed the splendid temples and sprawling cities. Evidence of the Maya is everywhere in Belize, from the lagoon-side temples of Lamanai to the caves of Actun Tunichil Muknal. All together, Belize has about a thousand Mayan sites, most small and unexcavated, with likely hundreds or even thousands still to be discovered.
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