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The Caribbean The Secrets of the Shoulder Season Central America's Caribbean: Honduras and Belize By Tim Neville
The rainy season technically begins in May and lasts until October in Honduras, but it rains pretty much all year on the Caribbean coast, with the wettest months coming in September. Honduras is famous for its divingboth cheap and spectacularso if youre looking to stretch your dollar on dives, this is the place to go. The Bay Islands, like Roatan, have dive shops stacked chockablock with ridiculously good bargainssometimes as low as $15 a dive including equipment. Hit places like the Barbareta Wall, three miles offshore from Roatan, where youll find an uninhabited, hilly island with coral gardens, a mile-long wall, and white-sand beaches. Another highlight: West End Wall. This dramatic precipice will give you vertigo as you float over it, ogling sponges and rays. Check out Roatan Onlines diving page (www.roatanonline.com/divers_page.htm) for links to dive operators and packages in Honduras. If diving isnt quite your thing, Honduras has plenty of rafting, such as on the Rio Cangrejal near La Ceiba (Jungle River Rafting: 504-440-1268; jungle@laceiba.com). Who cares if its raining when youre bouncing through Class IV rapidsyoull be getting wet regardless. And as this is the most mountainous country in Central America, there are plenty of opportunities to go hiking as well, especially in Pico Bonito National Park.
Belize is perhaps more Caribbean than Central American as this tiny country lives for the water. The dry season officially ends in May, but July and August see considerably less rain than June and September. Go during the high season and youll pay out the wazoo for hotel rooms and activities. Go in the beloved shoulder season, though, and you can have the best of both worldsgood weather, better bargains. Start out on the Cayes, the outer islands, where the Belize Reefthe second largest in the world after the Great Barrieris one-stop central for all your water-sport needs. Mayan ruins will give you your cultural fix while youre waiting for your skin to dry. Then hop in a canoe and paddle the Macal, Mopan, and Belize rivers around San Ignacio, or go tubing (bring the beer!) for $25 through caves along the Rio Chiquibul (Casa Maya Ecolodge: www.awrem.com/casamaya; 877-833-0679). The largest protected area in Belize, the Mountain Pine Ridge Forest Sanctuary (www.ambergriscaye.com/pages/town/parkmountainpineridge.html), is a good spot to lace up the boots and go for a hike. Five Sisters Lodge (www.fivesisterslodge.com), in the midst of the national reserve, offers doubles starting at $55 a night, and cabanas at $75 a night$30 off the winter rates.
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