WOW! Many of you are wondering why I came back to Belize. There is so much of the world to explore and so little time. I came back to Belize for days like today. And the day I swam with the stingrays. That is why I came back. After today, I feel like I can do anything, absolutely anything.
The day didn’t start that way. The little nagging voice inside my head woke me up during the night. “You are too old to be doing this cave tour tomorrow. You are too overweight. You are too out of shape.” And each time it would whisper in my ear, I would hush it.
“I climbed a mountain and explored a cave the day after I broke my rib.” I tell it. “I can do anything.” But I had lost the conviction.
Four of us from Jungle Dome are going. Myself and Paul and a couple from Fairbanks, Alaska. Leal and Mark. We join up with our guide, Orlando, and two other couples. One from Sweden, one from Eugene, Oregon. Our first task, to walk across a river to a waiting bus. It has already taken us 45 minutes to get to this place, now another twenty in the bus to the trailhead.
The beginning of our adventure is a two mile hike through the Tapir Mountain Nature Reserve. The trail is well defined but off to each side is heavy jungle, too thick to see through. A mile in I am dripping with sweat. Nobody else seems to be hot. My little voice is creeping up on me. “See you are the oldest, fattest, most out of shape person here.” It says. I concentrate on the trail ahead and ignore it. Forty-five minutes later and three additional river crossing and we have arrived at the cave entrance.
We are issued hard helmets and headlights, which we will use the entire journey (I have never been so happy to have a helmet.) To gain entry into the cave, we have to swim in and then our climbing begins. There are four sections of the cave, the Entry, the Sinkhole, the Ceremonial Alter (The Seplucher) and the Cathedral. All, except the Cathedral are in the water.
To get to the Sinkhole we have to maneuver around and up and over huge boulders. The going is slow and tough and many places are a tight squeeze. The only light illuminating the cave are the headlamps on our helmets. This isn’t Carlsbad Caverns with its concreted pathways and special lighting. This is rough and tumble, you could get seriously hurt at any time, type of caving. You can see the sky through the sinkhole. This is where the ancient Mayans lowered down ceremonial urns.
The Ceremonial alter is surrounded by twenty feet of water. Scuba divers found many pottery remains at the bottom. The priests and elite Mayan members came here to cut themselves, pool their blood and set it on fire. They believed that this blood smoke was the way for them to rise to their gods.
Finally we make it to the Cathedral. To get to the Cathedral we have to climb up twenty feet of rock, scrambled onto a ledge and wedge ourselves there to take off our shoes. Only socks are allowed in this part of the cave to protect the limestone. In the Cathedral we are treated to amazing rock formations, ceremonial pots and sacrificial skeletons. It is overwhelming to look down on the skulls and bones of the Mayans who volunteered to be sacrificed for the well being of their fellow tribesmen.
At this point of the tour, we have been climbing and swimming for two hours (we will spend three hours in the cave) and are a half a mile deep inside. The cave is a total of three and a half miles long, but this is as deep as the Mayans came and it is as deep as we will go as well.
Orlando, our guide, says we will take the “easy” way out. First we have to make our way, stocking feet only, to the ledge and reclaim our shoes. Then we gingerly make our way DOWN the twenty foot high, slippery rock. We manage without any injury. We backtrack all the way to the sinkhole, then take a different path. One of the most treacherous parts is a water slide, through a narrow passageway. Making my way past the sharp rocks, I turn sideways, then the other way, head down and have to very careful of the huge rock right at landing. I have to admit. I was scared. I was more scared than the big twenty foot rock climb. The voice was back. Only this time it was saying, you are gonna get stuck. I shushed it and in I went.
Climbing out of the cave and back to our trailhead for lunch, I felt so exhilarated. This was by far the hardest thing I have every done in my life. Every muscle ached but I have finally silence the voice that has been creeping back into my life since the last time I was here.
I think I will go horseback riding next.