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Showing posts from June, 2022

Week 2 Adventures

 Highlights from our second week in Antigua: Santo Domingo del Cerro museums and zip line course ChocoMuseo chocolate class Pool time with friends More great food Santo Domingo del Cerro We visited this cool art museum last Saturday, a series of small galleries in separate buildings surrounded by beautiful gardens, sculptures, and mosaics, all on the top of a hill overlooking the city. We learned about Efrain Recinos, "the Picasso of Guatemala", who created most of the work permanently exhibited here.  Side note: Are you getting sick of the iMovie "Magic Movies" yet? I am, but not so much so that I'm willing to spend the time to edit stuff together on my own. ;)  After we explored the grounds and galleries, we found the zip line course. We did the hour-long short course of 8 zip lines and 2 hanging bridges. Zadie said it was scary at first, but then "super fun after the first one". I was a little surprised both a) that she made it through the course (

Week 1 Adventures

Some highlights from our first week in Antigua: 1. El Cerro de la Cruz From one edge of downtown, we hiked up a steep but relatively short paved path to El Cerro de la Cruz ("the hill of the cross"), and were rewarded with great views of downtown and the surrounding mountains and volcanos. Well, almost great views of the volcanos - that big cloud behind the cross is covering the top of one volcano. 2. Iglesia y Convento de la Merced We tried to see this church last Saturday, but the church itself was closed for a morning mass. The attached former convent was open, however, and we practically had it to ourselves. A series of earthquakes mostly destroyed it in the 1700s. The girls and I returned yesterday to check out the church's mosaics. 3. Valhalla Macadamia Nut Farm We drove 15-20 mins outside Antigua to a nearby organic macadamia nut farm, where we took a short free tour to learn about the farm and their mission to provide free trees to rural farmers. The girls got to

Nuestra Casa en Guatemala

We've never stayed away from home so long before, so wanted to find a place where we'd be comfortable and the girls would be happy for a month. Braver folks might book two nights in a hotel, then upon arrival, immediately meet with a real estate agent to tour and lease a place for the month. While that would have been cheaper (and stressful!), we booked through AirBnB for ease of use and peace of mind, filtering for places with a pool and separate rooms for the girls. So far, we're happy! We're a half mile from the central plaza and markets, and basically the entire town is within walking distance. Here's a photo compilation overview: I'm so glad we booked a place with outdoor activities. Zadie LOVES the trampoline, jumping multiple times a day. She even met a friend around her age one day, though it's usually empty. There are two pools, one shallow and one deep, but as we expected, neither is heated and they are pretty chilly since the air temp has been 60-

Travel days

 Zadie woke up early this morning and wrote in her journal about Guatemala:     "Gwotumolu is cool and osum. A litl uv both." Before we get to why, I'll talk about our travel here. Stories about the actual mechanics of travel are inevitably boring (delayed for some reason or another, spoiler alert: we got there in the end), but I'll record it for posterity's sake anyway. I won't be offended if you skip reading this post. :)  Current COVID rules for Guatemala do not require fully vaccinated travelers to provide negative test results. All our American Airlines info agreed, but still wouldn't let me check in online unless I attested that I had negative test results in hand. We ended up going to the airport 3 hours early just in case we needed to get a rapid test, but they checked our vaccine cards and we got our boarding passes. Hooray!  RDU must have staffing shortages, because the majority of the restaurants were closed when we looked for dinner. We ate, pl

Why Guatemala?

A week out from our month-long trip, the question we've gotten most so far is "Why Guatemala?" There are many reasons we chose to visit Antigua, Guatemala after seriously looking at several other places that fit our criteria (Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Columbia, Puerto Rico). Short list of most important factors: time zone/"workability", language, "walkability", activities, weather, and cost. Longer answer: Time Zone/Work Bill will be working remotely much of the time we're there. His supervisor doesn't care where he's physically working since their team is fully remote, but joining meetings would be difficult if we were outside of the Americas. We focused our search on Central and South America and referenced "best places for digital nomads" lists for ideas. Guatemala uses the equivalent of US Mountain Time, and is supposed to have reasonably reliable and fast internet. Language We previously decided that we should learn Span