One of best things about powering through a brutally hot first day in the field was the knowledge that our schedules were cleared for the weekend. Not that we don't like doing fieldwork - we really do - but it was incredibly hot at the end of April, despite a few early rain showers, and extreme heat has adverse effects on my cognitive processes. Witness, for example, the drop in productivity on this blog since last Thursday. We still had a number of tasks to accomplish in our lab and around town on Friday and Saturday - figuring out what went wrong with our GPS units, for one - but the lack of a physically demanding field schedule freed us up to have some fun on the last weekend in April.
We drove into Belmopan, the capital of Belize, on Friday afternoon for a multipurpose visit. For those of you not familiar with Belmopan, it's not a typical destination for thrill-seekers in western Belize on a Friday night. But it is where the Belize Institute of Archaeology is headquartered, and both Anabel and I needed to pay registration fees for the Belize Archaeological Symposium at the end of June. We arrived after 4 pm and got to chat with a couple of friends on the Institute staff, which was great for me, because I hadn't seen them in nearly a year.
After paying our registration and getting some information for Anabel at a different government agency, we proceeded to the
National Agricultural and Trade Show, held at a fairground just outside the city. I'd never been to this event before - I've never been to Belize this early in the year, actually - and it was quite the experience. Probably not the full experience you'd get on Saturday and Sunday, as most exhibits were still setting up when we arrived on the scene, but we were able to talk to some farmers, agriculturalists, horticulturalists, and various others who were enthusiastic about growing things.
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James stands next to Pumpkin Man and other assorted giant squashes while Anabel talks to Cayo Ag. officials. |
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Fulfilling all your chicken-based needs in a timely fashion. |
Opening night was something like a combination 4-H fair and high-level diplomatic event. There were a number of vendors and agriculturalists, ranking civil servants, members of government, ambassadors, representatives of the British High Commission and the Organization of American States, and the Governor General of Belize, to name a few attendees. I was happy I wore long pants. We didn't partake of the food and drink at the party, which we were technically not invited to attend, but we did enjoy conversing with various dignitaries and listening to the band.
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These kids rocked it! Also, US diplomatic car in the background. No ambassador yet for Belize, so the Chargé
d'Affaires attended. |
We left the Ag Fair after a little more than an hour and headed back down the Western Highway toward BRASS Base. To break up the drive and fill our empty bellies, we stopped at a funky little place in Unitedville called
Casa Sofia. I was completely oblivious to this place, but Anabel had noticed it on a previous drive. I don't have any pictures, being primarily focused on the excellent food and beer proffered by the owner/operator, but you can see the open plan of the dining room on his website. The place is run by a transplant from Palermo, Sicily, whom we later found out is named Luigi, and the food is fantastic. Everyone, even James - who may be the pickiest eater I've ever met - left smiling and content.
Saturday we ran some errands around town and began looking at our data from Thursday in the GIS. Data entry and GIS editing are not exactly exciting discussion topics, so I'll skip ahead to the end of the workday when the fun really began. We received a visitor from Belize City, the Honorable Justice Courtney Abel of the
Supreme Court of Belize, who had been sweating it out on this brutally hot day down at the Ag Fair in Belmopan. After he refreshed himself with a quick swim, we loaded into his vehicle and headed to a Literary Evening at the Wildfire Artzsmosphere gallery in San Ignacio, which is an art-space that I'm pretty sure used to be a bar/live-music venue in days gone by.
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Wildfire Artzmosphere performance space. Directly above what used to be PitPan, Coconuts, and probably several other bars. |
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Art adorns the walls behind the main performance space. |
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Anabel reading with orchid necklace. |
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Jim Arnold reads a poem about archaeology! |
The event was sponsored by the Belize Book Industry Association as part of a series celebrating
Book Week 2017. Anabel was invited to read a few passages from her
recent book about ancient Maya land use and environment, and a number of Belizean artists read works of poetry and prose. We saw several performances in a variety of styles, ranging from traditional spoken word to hip-hop inspired slam.
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Kieron Gabriel delivers a high-energy slam
about life in Belize City. |
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Yes, there was South Asian-inspired
dancing, too. |
We
heard poems about the problems facing Belizeans today, the legacies of
colonialism that are omnipresent in Belizean society, love, the sea, nationalism, and a
plethora of other topics too numerous to list here save one: archaeology! I've
never attended anything like this in my years coming down to Belize, and I left the event thoroughly impressed with the literary scene. Also, they were selling glasses of sangria for $2 BZ, which helped a bit with the heat on a still and humid night.
Unexpectedly fun events happen a lot down here on the weekends, and you never know what you'll find or who you'll meet when you step away from project work for a little while. Cayo has a lot more to offer than bars and tourist traps. Not that there's anything wrong with the bar scene, but I've never seen a pirate hat casually laying around in any watering hole down here.
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Not sure if this was part of an exhibit or was left behind by Geoffrey Rush. |
Sounds like a wonderful weekend. Coincidentally we are heading to Sicily today! I'll agree that the food is temendous in Sicily. Glad james got to experience some !! Love the hat picture ! 😁
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