After we got settled in at El Delfin, Eduardo-the-guide snagged us and we were charmed. Or dazed. Same thing.
Anyway, he got us and we were ‘booked in’ the next morning for a sunrise swamp tour on a 14 foot punta/dory made of rough-hewn hardwood planks.
Eduardo knocked us up at 5:30 am. I was walking through the ‘chickens-at-the-beach’ village at the time when the damn chickens were just waking up! I am going to have to exercise more control over Sally’s impulses. This was crazy.
Actually, it was kinda neat. There was just enough light to see the small town come alive. The first of the shopkeepers were sweeping away the night-blown palm leaves and the evening prior’s trash of beer bottles and plastic. Most of the wretched, skinny dogs were still curled up asleep on the sidewalks and the air was cool with a hint of mango mixed with swamp water.
Yes, it does get better than this but this wasn’t so bad.
We trudged down the dirt track into the jungle just to appear a few minutes later at the embarcadero – the ‘marina’ made up of boats strewn on the shore. They were interesting.

Eduardo in his Swamp Boat
The average ‘Chevy’ of punts is about 14 to 18 feet long with the longer ones powered by 9.9 hp motors and the shorter ones pushed by long poles. Eduardo used a pole.
The swamp is only at a depth of four or so feet right now but, in the rainy season, that will double. The water was pea-green and calm.

Ferries and Launcha
The other most common boat at the marina is the 30 foot punt-bus that does the daily 40 minute run back and forth from one end of the swamp (Monterrico) to the other (La Avellana) where travelers can connect with a chicken bus that gets them back into the interior.

Car Ferry
But the most interesting boat-barge was the 30 foot by 10 foot shallow, plank-built barge they used to ferry cars and trucks. This was amazing. Powered by a 25 hp motor, the barge was controlled by the helmsman sitting at the rear corner. Most of the passengers sat at the front to catch the breeze. The truck, car or ‘huge-pile-of-something’ sat in the middle obscuring the captain’s view. The guy couldn’t see anything except one side and he had to lean out to do that. Such restrictions did not limit his confidence whatsoever. The boat literally charged through the swamp at about 5 knots and any traffic encountered had to make way on it’s own.

Monterrico Nature Reserve at Dawn
We left before the day got busy and floated silently out into the still-dark swamp to see mangroves, egrets and fishermen on other small punts hard at work netting small fish. In the morning mist, we could just make out the silhouettes of the three big volcanoes near Antigua about 50 miles away.

Guatemalan Fisherman
Seems the swamp is home to a lot of life but we didn’t see much. We did see a small school or two of four-eyed fish!? These guys leave two eyes above water and two under and, in this way, double their chance of finding something to eat. And, when they swim, they seem to half fly out of the water. They were pretty neat.
There was nothing really special about the trip overall but the swamp, the mist, the light and the volcanoes gave one an inkling of being in prehistoric times. The Plasticine era or maybe the Crustacean. (Yes, I know that I just made those names up but you know what I mean).

Sunrise (possibly David's first)
We got back around 7:00 am and the town was alive and the heat picking up. A quick breakfast, followed by a longer nap and we were back in business…………….sitting in the pool. Cooling off.
“I really wanna see the turtles, sweetie. Let’s go see the turtles!”
“Sure”, I lied, sounding eager, “do you know where to go?”
“Oh yes. I checked. Just 200 meters down the beach past our hotel or maybe past Johny’s place. Whatever. We’ll find it. They say, ‘you can’t miss it!”
I should have known. Sally’s only flaw: navigation in any form. My only excuse: the heat was getting to me.
Off we went.
“Let’s walk along the beach, sweetie. It’s so much nicer.”
I didn’t take my shoes. It was only 200 yards. The black sand is like pumice and hot as hell so the way to walk on the beach is either with flip flops or down by the water’s edge so as to keep your feet cool. ‘Course that means a quick hot-step to the cooler part of the sand which is over about 150 feet of burning black sand but it’s doable and so I did it. And we began trudging south.
Trudging is the right word for me. I tend to sink into the sand deeper than does Sal who seems to hardly make an impression as she floats lightly along the surface.
And I trudged.
“Gee, I was sure it would be along here somewhere. Let’s just go a little further, sweetie. I’m sure we’ll see it soon.”
And I trudged.
After almost a mile along the beach the pumice-like nature of the sand was making itself known to the soles of my feet. I am pretty sure I had ‘sanded off’ the better part of the bottom of my foot.
“Ya know, this trudging-thing in the sand is kinda getting’ to me, Sal. My feet are kinda feeling raw. I think I’d better head back if I’m to have a chance of making it. Sorry”
“Oh, sweetie. Poor sweetie. Here, put on my sandals. You’ll be fine.”
Sal’s sandals on me look like Cinderella’s slippers on the largest of the ugly step-sisters. They didn’t work.
“Well, let’s just get up the beach a bit and go to that nice place over there. They have a pool and a nice little palapa-like building. Maybe we can get something to drink?”
“Sounds good. But there is still the 100 or so feet of burning black sand to cross. My feet feel as tender as the inside of my eyelids. That’s gonna hurt!”
And so I trudged some more. I kept thinking that maybe it was love that was only skin deep. I was definitely going to find out!
Finally I decided to make a break for the palapa! It was like walking on hot griddles! I got halfway and wanted to flip on my back like a turtle but one of the women at the nearby pool was so greatly amused at my discomfort, I did not want to give her any more laughs at my expense. Gawd I hated that woman! Gawd that short distance hurt! Gawd!
We had a beer and I tried to walk back. This time on the beach road about another 100 yards back from the beach. Couldn’t do it. Called a cab. Coulda kissed the fat Mayan guy on the lips when he dropped me back at my hotel and my shoes.
Sally would not promise to keep this story secret so I am blurting it out now. Easier this way.
But, of course, during all this walking-on-hot-burning-glass-shards, we learned where the turtle refuge was. Life can be cruel at times. So we walked back there. This time I wore shoes.
And it was stupid in that tourist trap kinda way. Lots of turtles but only two sea turtles. The rest were the kind you buy at pet stores in any city. The caimens and iguanas were cool but so cool that they were frozen in immobility. They don’t move much at the best of times and this was a hot humid day in the swamp. They were settled!
And they were all pretty small.
All of which is OK, really. At least the ‘refuge’ was working to preserve endangered species and so, despite its modest presentation, the trip was deemed a success.
No cab was required.
But that was enough of Monterrico. After dinner we decided to catch the swamp-punt-bus to the chicken-bus-stop and head up into El Salvador.
The adventure part of this vacation (not that there was ever supposed to be one) was underway.