
About Central Highlands Planning a Trip to Central Highlands
Antigua Guatemala, Central Highlands, Guatemala Don't forget a warm jacket when you go to Antigua. It could be cold beyond your imagination in Antigua!
Going on a finca tour on horseback is wonderful. I recommend Parramos, check out "posada de mi abuelo" on the internet. It's a wonderful place and its food is the best in guatemala! Good tip? (0) Chichicastenango, Central Highlands, Guatemala Sundays are the best for the market. It is a massive, colorful extravaganza around the cathedral in the center of town. The variety of woven goods, pottery and embroidered goods is wonderous. Mayan women bring masses of flowers and take up positions on the steep stairs leading up to a cathedral. It makes for a perfect "Kodak" moment BUT you must use a telephoto lens: if they notice you taking photos, they hide their faces and that really ruins the moment. For lunch or dinner there is very nice hotel directly behind the cathedral. It has a large courtyard garden and the food is good. Good tip? (0) Antigua Guatemala, Central Highlands, Guatemala If you are itnerested in learning Spanish, this is the place to do it. There are many schools and they will arrange home stays for you so you can practice your Spanish even when not in school. The ONLY drawback is that there are so many foreigners doing the same thing, you could find yourself lapsing into English with them while hanging out in this beautiful city. Also, always carry your camera. Photo opportunities abound everywhere and Guatemalans love to pose. Good tip? (0) Antigua Guatemala, Central Highlands, Guatemala Photographers take note!!! Guatemalans are very colorful people and they do not mind posing for pictures, but expect to give them a dollar or so for doing so. Also, be aware that someone started a rumor that is making it very difficult to take pictures of kids whose parents are not around. Just as we tell our kids not to get in cars with strangers, many Guatemalans tell their children not to pose for pictures because, so the rumor goes, the pictures are used to "market" kids to foreign parents and once a "sale" is made, the photographer comes back and abducts the child. It sounds pretty ridiculous, but apparently it strikes enough of a chord with Guatemalan families to cause alarm. Considering how many abducted children in the US disappear without a trace (should we do a TV show about this? Just kidding!), the Guatemalan parents precautions might not be entirely out of place. So, if you want to take pictures of kids, ask where their parents are and if they are anywhere close by, ask the parents. Otherwise, it is perhaps better to just let the moment go. I did however, convince two girls in very colorful costume to pose, but only after I gave them some money. One looked straight at the camera but she did not smile (perhaps because she did not want to look too cute and abductable. The second one kept her face in profile and she also did not smile while I took the picture. However, when I was done, they smiled and waved goodbye. They had been sent to the local market to sell some fresh produce from their land and they went back to tending business. A couple of days later I saw a mother with two daughters,a truly colorful picture opportunity. I asked the mother and she agreed. I took some superb pictures of the two girls and then of the girls with their mother. She was selling home-woven shawls and I bought some as souvenirs. It was a good transaction and a good memory. Good tip? (0) Guatemala, Central Highlands, Guatemala Visa is widely accepted as oposed to American Express Good tip? (0) Parramos, Central Highlands, Guatemala If you are interested in taking a look around a coffee farm on a horseback, you should go to Parramos.
Type in Posada de me abuelito, Guatemala on Google. You will find some information about this german country farmhouse converted to a BB. Get a weekend package that includes bed, brekky and horse riding for Q.300 or something(apprx. $40)
Take a chicken bus to Chichicastenango at Antigua bus terminal and get off in Parramos it cost like 3 Q's p/p. Then get a local taxi to the hotel...it takes around 5 minutes from town center.
I loved everything about this place - its coffee(fresh coffee from the owner's finca), its food(authentic guatemalan), its atmosphere(green, fresh, cool and quiet), unforgettable horse riding(though it hurt my unprepared arse bit too much) and the hospitality of the hotel owner couple!
Bet you'll have a great time. Good tip? (+2) Chicastellanos, Central Highlands, Guatemala se llama chichicastenango, no chicastellanos!!!!!! Good tip? (+1) Chichicastenango, Central Highlands, Guatemala Market days are Thursdays and Sundays.
If you are pressed for time a good way to visit the markets is via a tourist mini bus from Panajachel or Antigua. They cost between $10 and $15, pick you up, drop you for a couple hours at the markets, (you can leave your bags on the bus) and then drop you at the next city.
Really worked well for us as that time, we only had a week in Guatemala and being able to leave our bags was huge because otherwise we would have had to have lugged them around the markets. Good tip? (+1) Guatemala, Central Highlands, Guatemala Don't stay in Guatemala city. Catch a taxi between the bus stops, and head straight to your next destination. Good tip? (0) Antigua Guatemala, Central Highlands, Guatemala Don't arrive very early in the morning because everything is closed - even the hostels! They start to open their doors around 9 or 10 am. Good tip? (0) Top Cities in Central Highlands |