#METOO!

When we arrive at Calico Jack’s we are in for an unknown adventure! Neither of us has ever done anything like this in the first half-century of our lives! Ziplining through the jungle? WHAT HAVE I GOTTEN US INTO? We decide to take the “Ultimo Explorer” tour. This 1.5 hour tour is over 2,900 feet of zip line comprised of 9 runs and 15 platforms that take you over and through the jungle. I am totally pumped! My husband on the other hand, having an aversion to heights, opts to go last! After eventually trusting his harness and brake, he begins to enjoy it as much as I! As we zip over and through the tree tops I ponder how many other “first time” adventures God has planned for us in our next half century. As we hike through the rainforest to the heights of new platforms I wonder what sort of terrain may lay ahead in our walk of destiny. By the time he reaches his last zipline run my husband is ready to yell “I ‘Belize’ I can fly!” My heart is full! As I unhook my harness I wonder, am I trusting God’s harness for me so that I can experience the fullness of His adventure for my life?


The drive through the wilds of Western Belize to and from this remote village of El Progresso, Cayo is an adventure of it’s own. Although our drive is less than 30 miles and judging by the map should be about 20 minutes, it takes about an hour each way. Along the way we watch the land transform from farms to dense jungle. Beside the dirt road the fence posts were made of hewn logs. Obvious from the sprouted branches from their tops, most of these logs have taken root! Some have even turned back into dense jungle thickets.

Gazing out the car window I ponder those fence posts. How much life those “logs” still had in them when they had been cut and set in the ground, essentially being transplanted. Their last bit of life was spent on propagation! These logs which had been healthy were now cut off from their supply and buried! Yet all their needs were supplied by the richness of the soil and tropical environment. While some simply became fence posts others spent their remaining life giving EVERYTHING to see LIFE propagated to the fullest again. They put down roots to draw life from the rich tropical environment and grow new branches and eventually bear fruit.

My husband and I came here to Belize for a week with the purpose of helping our long time friends as they pioneered a church in the District of Cayo. My husband was ministering to this new church! Adam and Lizeth are doing just as those “logs” are! They have the life of Christ in them and they are digging into God’s Word to bring life to citizens of Belize. They in turn will produce fruit and propagate the Gospel of Jesus Christ in their own nation!

Those logs that did not grow into trees were planted in the same soil. Why did they NOT grow? Why were they content to be simple fence posts? What made the difference between them and the young tree posts? As a gardener I know a little about propagation. Those posts failed in the roots. They were unable to develop a new root system in a timely manner for whatever reason. Maybe they got dried out and lost their life while they waited to be “planted”. Maybe they were planted in a drier space or season and lost their life soon after planting. Perhaps they were not secured as well into the soil and had too little contact for roots to grow. I could not help but wonder, how much life do I have left? What will I spend the rest of my life on? Am I like the logs that did not have enough life within to propagate new life? Will I use ALL that is within me to grow roots that will draw on the Source of life to bring life to others? I don’t know how much life is left in me but I know that Christ lives in me and I want propagate the Life of Jesus Christ to the fullest in my life and in others even if that means being cut off and transplanted! I want to be a thriving & living fence post!

Mark 14:8 (NIV) “She has done what she could.” This is not a flippant sort of remark as if to say “oh that’s all she could do.” No! I believe Jesus is saying that she has done EVERYTHING she possibly could do! Don’t you want Him to say that of of you and I? Can I please be just like this woman with the alabaster box? She poured out ALL of her hopes and dreams to honor Jesus! What dreams and hopes am I still holding onto because they are too precious to give to Him? She traded all HER life for the unknown adventure that only He could give her! She trusted the harness! #METOO! How about you?

Belize; Soooo Much More!

A peaceful piece of paradise!

Belize is sooo much more than “the Blue Hole” or “the second longest barrier reef!” Away from the hustle and bustle of snorkelers, divers and  the usual tourist attractions is a hidden gem in Western Belize.

On the worn brick pavers of Burns Avenue, downtown San Ignacio in the Cayo District, you will find a small unassuming door to jungle secrets and adventures.  Family owned and operated Jungle Splash Eco Tours offers several tours that take you off the beaten path, and into the hidden beauty of Western Belize -deep in the heart of the Mayan Mountains. Husband and wife team, Robert & Christy Melendez, have been in the tour business for several years. Their passion to protect and share this beautiful wild space is apparent.  Robert exhibited such care for these creatures and their habitat,  as if they were personal pets in his own backyard;  rightly so, considering he was raised in the area and his family still farms here. They treat their customers like family, and bend the tours to  the needs of each specific group. Every tour is unique, as the living jungle chooses to reveal varying treasures on any given day.

We chose their signature tour “Waterfall Pontoon Adventure: a river cruise on a pontoon boat.” They also offer cave tubing, horseback riding, among other tours and vacation accommodations.

Rio Frio Waterfall near the Upper Macal River

Considering our visit was in July, at the start of the rainy season, I asked if the weather would impact our ability to tour. Christy informed me that they do have a canopy on the boat, and the rains would only “make the waterfalls more beautiful”. I must apologize for the quality of these photos, due to the rainy season the water was not it’s usual tropical blue!

Native Mayan Jose is a close friend with the owners, and is employed as a guide. We met him at their office on Burns Avenue at 8 am on the day of our scheduled adventure.  He drove us out of town about an hour and a half, making a few stops to pick up fresh meal supplies and allow a bathroom break along the way. Meanwhile “Captain” Robert picked up another family from their hotel. We all met at the riverside where the pontoon boat was docked. The first river resident we met was “Komo”, the tropical cormorant. He was standing guard over the boat waving a welcome to us, when we arrived.

Jose informed us that, while most tours average 10 people, the boat could accommodate up to 20; Our group was a comfortable size of 9 passengers and two guides (Jose & “Captain” Robert). We each brought the advised insect repellent and sunscreen and our guides laid in supplies for the day of bottled water, soda, and lunch before we motored up-river smoothly.

“The Jungle Gypsy” our pontoon boat

The “Jungle Gyspsy” (as our pontoon boat was named) was equipped with life preservers, innertubes, benches, tables, an ice chest full of cold drinks, a grill for cooking lunch, and a hammock -all under a shade canopy!

“Komo” paddled alongside the boat for a bit before he took wing to scout ahead, zig-zagging upriver out of sight. “Captain” Robert soon introduced us to “Precious”, another river resident, who was effective at evading the paparazzi. As we approached, she slipped into the water and dove deep heading upstream.  Robert pointed out a large sandy hill on the shore where she had just left as her nest; obviously she was distracting us away from her family. We never saw any more of this small shy native “alligator” nor any of her family the rest of the day. Although Jose and “Captain” Robert never ceased making  jokes about alligators in the water, subtly reminding us we were in their space.

We eventually caught up to “Komo” standing on a rock in the mid-stream with his wings spread wide gently flapping as if  warning of the shallows. Heeding this warning our “Captain”  turned the boat around and cut the motor so we could quietly drift down river. Along the way he drew the boat near a flat rock surface and pointed out some more jungle residents “Insect Bats” clinging in their sleep to an overhang. Soon we docked the boat at a sandy inlet and began a short hike to the “Rio Frio” waterfall. You could hear the water falling through the trees and soon the jungle trail opened to a cool pool of water beneath a stunning waterfall spilling out of the jungle.  We took our time relaxing in this pool, ventured behind the falls and jumped from the rope swing hanging high in a jungle tree! On the return hike, Jose took some time to point out some of the native fauna and show me a “Begonia” as he cut a stem for me to taste. Back at the boat Jose pulled the grill grate from the sandy bottom of the clear inlet waters where he  had placed it to soak. He scrubbed it off and fired up the grill to start cooking our lunch.

Cooking lunch on the grill

As lunch cooked we drifted down river listening to the Cicadas in the jungle. Suddenly we heard them…. the elusive howler monkey conversing through the tree tops!  Finally “Captain” Robert pointed them out in the trees high on the ridge!  We arrived at the “Twin Falls” and the pool beneath them was deep enough for the boat to motor right up to the falls so as to enjoy the cooling spray and the refreshing sound from the hammock in the boat! Within the sight of these falls we docked again at a sandy shore and were fed a delicious lunch of grilled chicken, sausage, ribs, potatoes, plantains, and a tortilla!

Lunch cooked on the boat!

Following lunch there was more blissful relaxing, swimming and jumping from another rope swing. At this course, sandy beach there were numerous tiny fish in the water. Unafraid of us in their river, they gave us  all free “fish pedicures”. A stroll through the sand completed the exfoliation and my desert cracked feet were baby soft for the next week!

Since we had lingered long in relaxing & playing we cut the third waterfall from the trip and head back to the dock. “Komo” showed up to  guide the boat back to his guard post. During the return trip up river Jose pointed out a very large orange Iguana sitting high in a tree top looking very much like a part of the jungle foliage. We motored up river quietly listening to the songs of the cicadas and howler monkeys, reveling in the peaceful late afternoon light glistening on the water in this untouched piece of paradise. During the entire day on the water we saw only one other boat of visitors. As Jose and “Captain” Robert tied up the boat and readied it for “Komo’s” watch, they spoke of the “Sunset Horseback tour” that would begin soon.  We left the river with our hearts full of appreciation for God’s marvelous creation and immediately began pondering when we could go on that “Sunset Horseback tour”! Jose drove us back to town with a bathroom stop to change clothes. We settled our bill (worth every penny), wishing only that we had more time to linger in the beauty of Western Belize!

UP CLOSE AT TWIN FALLS