The town of Copan Ruinas, Honduras (Part 1)

The town of Copan Ruinas, Honduras (Part 1)

One of the advantages of studying Spanish at the Ixbalanque language school is getting to live in Copan Ruinas while you are going to school. I really enjoy this little town that is nestled in the hills of the Copan Valley in northern Honduras. It is one of my favorite places in the world.

As I mentioned in one of my previous blogs, the taxi system here is the “Tuk-Tuk” which is a motorized golf cart. They are all over the town.

The Tuk-Tuk Taxi's of Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Most of the Tuk-Tuk taxis of Copan Ruinas, Honduras are red, but occasionally you will see a differnt color

 Many of the town’s activities are centered around the town square which was just a two block walk from the family with whom I was staying. There is also a very interesting museum on the square. I will have some photos of that in a subsequent blog.

typical street in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Lots of activity around the square in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Early Morning in the town square in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

The town square of Copan Ruinas, Honduras. Always a great place to sit quietly during certain parts of the day

one of the entrances to the town square in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

 Around the outside of the square are a couple of shops, a market, a few banks, and a coffee shop where I liked to hang in the a.m. and sip Honduran coffee. Sorry, I don’t have any photos of the retail surrounding the square, you will just have to visualize it—just don’t visualize Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills. This town is for the people who want a totally different experience!

 In my next blog, I will post some photos of the streets of Copan Ruinas, Honduras. You really don’t want to miss those, so don’t wander off and start reading some other traveler’s blogs!

Steve Barrymore ssb11@prodigy.net

Read about the rest of my travels in Honduras

Read about the rest of  my other travels here

Comments?  Please post below or email me at ssb11@prodigy.net


McCaw Mountain Bird Park and Nature Preserve-Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Visiting the McCaw Mountain Bird Park in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

 By now you have read some of my other posts about different leisure activities I have participated in while visiting Honduras. If you haven’t, you can catch up on all of them by clicking here.

 I don’t know anybody that is not interested in seeing the beauty of tropical birds. Well, Copan Ruinas in western Honduras has a great place to see them. It is the McCaw Mountain bird sanctuary.

You will see plenty of colorful birds at the McCaw Bird Sanctuary

One of the beautiful birds

One of the guides available to take you through the park

One of the students from the Ixbalanque Spanish School enjoying one of the birds

My new best friends

One of the teachers from the Ixbalanque Spanish School enjoying the birds

Some of the "inmates"

  In Copan, the means of transportation for tourists are the small golf cart taxis. That is what you will ride in up into the mountain where the sanctuary is located.

Taxis in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

 On the day I visited, the trip was arranged as a side excusion as part of my studies with the Ixbalanque Spanish school in Copan, but you can find any golf cart taxi to take you.

There is an admission charge to enter the park. Plan on spending 2-3 hours. I wanted to share with you some of the photos I took while visiting the park.

The park is open everyday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Entrance fee is $10USD per person. If you are interested in checking out their web site, you can click here.

Steve Barrymore ssb11@prodigy.net

 To read about my other travels click here.

 Comments?  Please post below or email me at ssb11@prodigy.net


Horseback riding in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

During both of my one week study programs at the Ixbalanque Spanish School in Copan Ruinas, Honduras, I have taken advantage of their after school excursions. One of my favorite activities is the horseback riding into the countryside.

Both years, I have had the same guide for my horseback ride. I don’t remember his name, but he is one of the nicest, most accommodating people I have ever met. Here is a photo of him:

My guide for the second time on the horseback ride in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

 My first trip, I was the only person on the ride with him. When he brought the horses to the school, the other students all came outside of the building to watch me climb on the horse. What they didn’t know was that I was from Oklahoma and have had my share of horseback rides. Foot in the stirrup, swing up on the horse, and away we rode. I think they all expected me to fall off the horse!

My guide brought the horses to the school

When we got to the outskirts of town we rode into the Copan River. We stopped in the middle of it to allow the horses to drink. The water was up to the belly of the horse. I had to raise up my feet  to keep them from getting wet.  It was 8 a.m. There was a light fog hanging in the Copan Valley. It was a beautiful morning. It was about as good as it gets.

Crossing the Copan River by horseback

My guide spoke no English. I could understand about half of what he said in Spanish. We rode down the middle of the river for several hundred yards, finally climbing the bank to get up on a dirt road for better footing and more rapid travel.

Riding down the middle of the Copan River

We rode past several small farms. As we rode side by side, my guide told me about his life in Copan, his family, and how much pride he took in his horses and making them available for tourists.

horseback riding down a rural road outside of Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Part of the countryside outside of Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Part of the landscape outside of Copan Ruinas

The countryside as seen from on top of a horse

We continued to climb higher and higher into the hills until we reached the top with an incredible view of the Copan Valley. As I surveyed the valley below, I remember thinking, “only a few days ago, I was sitting in a white shirt and tie in my office and now, here I am high on a hill in the tranquil Copan Valley, sitting on top of a horse”!

A view of the Copan River

A view of the Copan Valley and Copan Ruinas Honduras

So, if you visit Copan Ruinas, Honduras, I highly recommend that you take a morning and invest in a nice leisurely horseback ride through the countryside.

Next-I will give you an overview of the bird farm

Steve Barrymore ssb11@prodigy.net

To read about my other travels click here.  If you want to read my entire Honduras blog click here.


Ixbalanque Language School in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Studying Spanish at the Ixbalanque Language School in Copan Ruinas, Honduras 
 
 I have come to Copan Ruinas not just because I enjoy the town, but also because they have a very good Spanish school there.  Plus, they have some great Mayan ruins here.

For studying Spanish,  I really like the Ixbalanque school in Copan Ruinas, Honduras.  I have attended it twice and can highly recommend it.  The lessons are one on one.  They have a very nice, new school building within walking distance from anyplace you would be staying in town. 

Outside of the Ixbalanque Spanish School in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Welcome inside the Ixbalanque Spanish School

The very modern Ixbalanque Spanish School

I have always taken the morning classes which last from 8 a.m. to noon.  All of the teachers are very friendly and very helpful.  There is a very relalaxed attitude in the school.  The classes are one on one.

Inisde the individual classrooms at the Ixbalanque Spanish school

Students taking a break at the Ixbalanque Spanish School

T

The entrances to the classrooms at Ixbalanque Spanish School

There are various outside activities that the school offers.  I have visited the bird farm and done the horseback riding as part of the school activities.

Amadea and Kathy are the directors of the school (sisters).  If you want more information you can e-mail them here:  www.ixbalanque.com

Next-I will post some photos and info about the excursion that Ixbalanque offers its students.

Steve Barrymore ssb11@prodigy.net

To read about my other travels click here


Copan Ruinas, Honduras-my home stay

My family stay in Copan Ruinas, Honduras

After the fiasco at the border, I was ready to relax in Honduras and start my studies.  But first, let me tell you a little about the family with whom I would live for the week.  I had checked in with them the day before.

I had been in Copan Ruinas 2 years earlier and enjoyed my homestay with a Honduran family.  I asked the school “ Ixbalanque” to assign me to the same family.  The family was headed by a very nice woman by the name of “Ruth”.  She was a widow and somewhere in her 60’s.  The maid that lived in the house was named Trinni and she was the same maid from my previous stay.

I had been met at the bus station by Kathy, one of the owners of Ixbalanque. I told her I could find my own way to the house, but she insisted in putting me in a golf cart taxi which, because of the narrow streets,  is the method of transportation in Copan Ruinas.

 When I knocked on the door, Trinni took a look at me and then recognized me and gave me a big hug.  She  went to tell Ruth I had returned.  Ruth gave me a hug and we sat down and chatted for a few minutes before dinner.

This is Trinni and her daughter

My room was very similar to the one I had before:  a single bed, private bath and the room opened out to the courtyard.  Just fine for me.  Here are some photos to give you an idea of my accomodations:

Copan Ruinas, Honduras-the patio of the home where I stayed

Copan Ruinas Honduras-the view from my room in my homestay

Copan Ruinas Honduras-the entryway to my room in my homestay

Copan Ruinas, Honduras-the garden view in my homestay

During dinner we had a chance to get reacquainted and get caught up on each other’s life.  It is hard to explain how you can be caught up in a very busy life in the United States and then just a day later be living in a small Honduran town in the Copan valley.  Life was good.

Steve Barrymore ssb11@prodigy.net

To read about my other travels click here

Next-starting classes in the Ixbalanque Spanish School in Copan Ruinas