Beating the crowds to Panama
Prices are good, tour buses are few, and there’s plenty of fun to be had
|
So what’s the hang-up?
As in many Latin American countries, past unrest is partly to blame for the low visitor numbers. Democracy has been in place only since 1989, when Manuel Noriega was ousted, and Panama has controlled the Panama Canal only since 1999. Leaders have made up for lost time, however, and today the economy is booming, the canal is in expansion mode, and the high-rise skyline of Panama City is dotted with construction cranes. In general, Panama is a safe and stable place to travel or retire.
I just spent a week and a half in Panama, traveling from the Pacific, through the canal, and into the Caribbean on the Discovery, a small, specially-built catamaran operated by Panama Marine Adventures. There were just 24 people on the ship, and we saw very few tourists, but we saw plenty of other creatures — from toucans to crocodiles to sloths.
Following a river into the Darien Gap, the birdwatchers had a heyday, spotting dozens of magnificent frigatebirds, bare-throated tiger herons, ospreys, blue-footed boobies and wintering woodpeckers. Panama is a narrow land bridge, the midpoint of many avian migration routes, and more than 900 species of birds have been recorded here. It is also home to some 220 species of mammals and 354 species of reptiles and amphibians. Whether on the Pearl Islands in the Pacific or on Lake Gatun in the middle of the canal, everywhere our binoculars focused there seemed to be something moving around. Fortunately, the crocodiles kept their distance.
The Smithsonian Institution has set up several research stations in Panama to study tropical plants and animals. Once off-limits to visitors, the Barro Colorado Island nature reserve, in the middle of Lake Gatun, is now open to a few local adventure companies like Ancon Expeditions, which organizes walking tours with a Smithsonian guide. Don’t worry, the 70 species of bats on the island come out only at night.
Transiting the Panama Canal is an experience like no other, of course. Where else can you go from one ocean to another in the space of one day? Engineering types go gaga over the 700-ton steel doors and locks built big enough to have held the Titanic. Others laze on a balcony, cocktail in hand, as their ship moves up and down across the Continental Divide.
Panama is often pitched as “Costa Rica without the crowds,” but there is one area where it clearly tops its better-known neighbor: local handicrafts. The Kuna women of the San Blas islands produce colorful molas, pieces of reverse-appliqué embroidery that can be used as decoration or incorporated into clothing and bags. The Embera Indians of the Darien jungle make reed baskets that are admired around the world, as well as sculptures carved from the tagua palm nut, nicknamed “vegetable ivory.”
All of Panama’s attractions come in a package that is easy on visitors. The roads are good, you can drink the water, a phone call home will cost 5 or 10 cents, and high-speed Internet access is 75 cents an hour from an Internet café. As our boat trip ended in Portobelo, we stopped off at a local cantina for drinks and dancing. I picked up the tab for 23 Balboa beers as we departed. No, I’m not a big spender: at 75 cents a beer, I paid with a $20 and said, “No cambio, gracias.”
For more information:
Official Panama tourism site
Panama Info
The Panama Report
Tim Leffel is author of the books "Make Your Travel Dollars Worth a Fortune" and "The World's Cheapest Destinations". He also edits the award-winning narrative Web 'zine Perceptive Travel.
Don't miss these Travel stories from msnbc.com |
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM SOUTH AMERICA |
| Add South America headlines to your news reader: |
Resource guide


