belize vacations

 

Belize City

 

 I love Belize City it is a vibrant city that is alive with a colourful mix of people. Ok it has it's dodgy areas but tell me which city in the world hasn't.

We are going to make our Home on the North side of Belize City in Belama. We are fortunate that now that Brodies has opened its new superstore on the Northern Highway we don't have to far for food supplies.

 

 

 

belize city

Do you offer vacations in Belize email Marten on foo1952@hotmail.com to advertise HERE for $10.00 US a month

 

Belize City is not the capital of Belize, although it once was. Still, as the only large city in the country (albeit with a pop. of just 70,000), it remains its business, transportation and cultural hub. Sooner or later you'll probably have to spend some time here, unless you do all your in-country traveling by air or have a very well-planned itinerary. In fact, since the country itself is so small, Belize City makes an excellent base for a host of interesting day trips to most of the country's major destinations and attractions.

Belize City is surrounded on three sides by water, and at high tide it is nearly swamped. It's a strange, dense warren of narrow streets and canals (the latter being little more than open sewers and pretty pungent in hot weather), modern stores, dilapidated shacks, and quaint wooden mansions, coexisting in a seemingly chaotic jumble.

 

Belize City Harbour


The city was originally settled by the ancient Mayans, who settled up and down the coast here. By the mid-1600s, pirates were using the current site of Belize City as a hideout and provisioning spot. Soon after, the British arrived and set up a logging base here, fueled by slave labour. Logs were harvested inland and floated down the Belize River for milling and shipping. This logging base soon became a colonial settlement and the seat of Britain's colonial empire on the Central American isthmus. Belize City itself is said to sit on a foundation of wood chips, discarded ship's ballast, and empty rum bottles.

Belize City has historically been beset by tragedy. The entire population abandoned the city and moved to St. George's Caye in 1779 following a Spanish attack. The Baymen, as the British settlers called themselves, returned and resettled the city in 1784. Massive fires razed much of the city in 1804, 1806, and 1856. Deadly hurricanes inflicted heavy damage in 1931 and 1961. Between these events, the residents endured smallpox, yellow fever, and cholera epidemics. Belize City had been declared the capital of British Honduras in 1892, but after Hurricane Hattie struck in 1961, the country's capital was relocated inland to Belmopan. Nevertheless, Belize City continues to be the country's largest and culturally most important city.

Despite a reputation for crime and violence, periodic devastation from passing hurricanes, and the loss of its capital status, Belize City remains the urban heart and soul of Belize. Most visitors treat Belize City merely as a transition point and transportation hub. This is probably what you'll want to do too. But if you've got a day or two to burn on a layover here, Belize City is a good place to walk around, admire the fleet of working wooden fish sloops, do some craft and souvenir shopping, and stock up on Marie Sharp's Hot Sauce to bring home with you.

 

  

Belize Museum

Housed in what was once "Her Majesty's Prison," this museum features a collection of historical documents, photographs, and artifacts, alongside exhibits of Mayan pottery and archaeological finds. There are also traveling exhibits, and a room featuring attractively mounted insects from Belize. Just so you won't forget the building's history, a prison cell has been restored to its original condition. The museum takes up the two floors of this historic old brick building. Plan on spending between 1 and 2 hours here.



St John's Cathedral

This old brick church is the oldest Anglican cathedral in Central America, and the oldest standing structure in Belize. Built in 1812, by slaves using bricks brought over as ballast, it is also the only Anglican church outside of England where kings have been crowned -- during the 1800s four Mosquito Indian kings held their coronation ceremonies here.



 

 

 

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