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Guatemala : Caribbean Sea

Three essential tourist spots : Lake Izabal, Quiriguá archeological site, the Rio Dulce river and the village of Livingston. 

Lake Izabal

Lake Izabal Lake Izabal (or Lago de Izabal) is the Guatemala's largest lake (about 48 km long and 24 km wide, with an area of about 590 km²). The Spanish Colonial Fort of San Felipe, now a Guatemalan national monument, overlooks the point where the lake flows into the Río Dulce.

Along the Río Dulce to the coast of the Caribbean Sea, shores own a very rich tropical flora and fauna.

Quirigua

See : Archeolgical sites / Quiriguá

Rio Dulce

Río Dulce ("Sweet River") is a river in Guatemala. It is part of a lake and river system that has become a very popular cruising sailboat destination. It is entered at the town of Livingston. The river meanders for six miles in a spectacular gorge. The sides of the gorge rise up to 300 feet on either side and are covered with teak, mahogany and palms. Wild flowers bloom throughout the foliage and howler monkeys and toucans can be seen. Waterfalls flow over the lip of the gorge after rainfalls.


The river opens into a long narrow lake called El Golfete. To starboard is an island and a large natural anchorage. A few houses and a couple of small businesses are on shore. El Golfete is about 10 miles long and a couple of miles wide. At its farthest end it becomes river again for a couple of miles. It is this area that several marinas and resorts are to be found.


As the river is about to enter Lake Izabal it is spanned by one of the biggest bridges in Central America. On one side of the bridge is the town of Fronteras, the local center of commerce for the area. On the other side is Rellenos. Fronteras is where the local veggie market is and Indians come in from the countryside in dugout canoes. Most of these boats are powered with Japanese outboard motors but many come to market day paddling these “cayucos” by hand.


At the very entrance of the lake is Castillo San Felipe built by the Spanish when this part of Central America was an important transshipping staging point.
Fort San Felipe


Lívingston

Livingston is the name of a town in Izabal department, Guatemala, at the mouth of the Río Dulce at the Gulf of Honduras. The town (whose name is occasionally adapted into Spanish orthography as Lívingston) serves as the municipal seat of the municipality of the same name. It was Guatemala's main port on the Caribbean Sea before the construction of nearby Puerto Barrios.

Livingston Guatemala Livingston is noted for its unusual mix of Garífuna, Maya, Indian and Latino people and culture. In recent decades Livingston has developed a large tourist industry.


Livingston is named after U.S. american jurist and politician Edward Livingston who wrote the Livingston Codes which were used as the basis for the laws of the liberal government of the United Provinces of Central America in the early 19th century.


Parts of this text are from Wkipedia
Travel packages in Guatemala
Guatemala Tourism Commission
 
 
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