December 30-January 1
Hello everyone!
If you think of the Caribbean, you probably think of this…
|
Kite Beach, Cabarete |
|
Walking between Playa Encuentro and Playa Cabarete |
The Dominican Republic, or DR, is famed for its stunning beaches. Many people visit these, stay in an all-inclusive hotel and drink away their days without venturing outside the walls of their compound. Punta Cana, on the east coast, is the most renowned place for this, and prohibitively expensive at this time of year.
|
This is an example of a place in Punta Cana... |
|
...and this is the cost. In January. For one night. |
Luckily, there are plenty of other beaches, with it being an island. Different places offer different elements: Las Terrenas, for example, is known for its cafe culture and significant number of French expats. I almost went there but instead plumped for the northern town of Cabarete.
|
A picture from my book of Playa Rincon |
|
An internet picture of Las Terrenas, which is 150 km east of Cabarete |
Considering it’s quite a popular place, it is a bit of a mission to get there from Santo Domingo. You take a bus through beautiful countryside and settlements such as Santiago and Puerto Plata to get to Sosua. From there, I then took a mildly terrifying 15 minute motoconcho ride to Cabarete. My bike driver pulled into a petrol station at one point, saying ‘gasolina’. He then slowly drove around the lot, leering the whole time at a blonde Westerner, before driving off. Without ‘gasolina’. I was glad when the ride ended, and took a minibus (called a guagua) on the return trip three days later.
|
There are a lot out there but the distance makes them hard to photograph |
|
That far area is known as Bozo beach, quite possibly for the bozos who try to learn to kitesurf there and make a few mistakes! |
This happens on the western side of the main beach. At Playa Encuentro, about four kilometres further west, another sport is more popular…
|
Much more swell here makes this Surf City |
|
People of all ages were giving this a go |
Whilst spending my first day of 2023 walking between the two, I also came across boogie boarders and the pretty impressive kitesurfer below.
|
What he balances on looks strange, as it looks like a long tube comes out of the board |
I wasn’t overly bothered about trying any of these, content instead to watch better people do their thing whilst sipping a coffee and reading. Besides, I’d had my adrenaline jolt the day before…
|
Saltos de la Damajagua |
A popular day trip from the north is to go inland to Damajagua, a forest reserve which contains 27 waterfalls. The idea is that you look at some, slide down others…and then occasionally follow the water by jumping into the natural pool below.
|
This first became a tourist attraction in the mid-1990s |
This was the only thing I had booked before arriving in the DR. It was thus a bit disappointing to find that my adventure had been cancelled a week before. When I asked about this in Cabarete, from where some of the trips depart, they said it was due to a lack of rainfall. Fair enough - can’t be jumping 8 metres into a non-existent pool. Instead, I hopped on the regular trip which takes in seven waterfalls.
|
You hike for about 30 minutes to get high enough to start |
Calling them waterfalls is technically accurate - water falls down from the rock in the same spot - but it wasn’t quite what I imagined. Nevertheless, it was cracking fun jumping…
…sliding…
…and getting splashed by other people’s fearless feats.
We did two jumps - a four metre and six metre launch into oblivion. On the latter, I forgot to heed the advice of the guide who said to jump ‘like a pencil’. Instead, I had my arms out like wings. A little bit sore as a result. Always listen to your teachers, kids.
|
The waterfall behind is the final one, which you slide down |
Rock jumping was the undoubted highlight of my time in Cabarete, as well as people watching whilst sipping happy hour mojitos on the main beach.
|
Feliz año nuevo! |
|
Baseball on an eastern beach at dusk |
|
Cannonball! |
Love you all,
Matt
No comments:
Post a Comment