{"id":15839,"date":"2016-02-17T13:49:08","date_gmt":"2016-02-17T18:49:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/panamaadvisoryinternationalgroup.com\/blog\/?p=15839"},"modified":"2016-02-17T13:49:08","modified_gmt":"2016-02-17T18:49:08","slug":"what-its-like-to-travel-to-islands-so-remote-theyre-not-on-google-maps","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/panamaadvisoryinternationalgroup.com\/blog\/what-its-like-to-travel-to-islands-so-remote-theyre-not-on-google-maps\/","title":{"rendered":"What It\u2019s Like to Travel to Islands so Remote, They\u2019re Not on Google Maps"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"http:\/\/panamaadvisoryinternationalgroup.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/02\/san-blas-1.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-15840\" src=\"http:\/\/panamaadvisoryinternationalgroup.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/02\/san-blas-1.jpg\" alt=\"san blas 1\" width=\"630\" height=\"355\" srcset=\"https:\/\/panamaadvisoryinternationalgroup.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/02\/san-blas-1.jpg 630w, https:\/\/panamaadvisoryinternationalgroup.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/02\/san-blas-1-300x169.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 630px) 100vw, 630px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Harboring fantasies of being a castaway on a deserted island? Consider a trip to Panama\u2019s San Blas islands.<\/p>\n<p>Becky Cooper writes for Travel and leisure in this must read article of her travels.<\/p>\n<p>There are 365 pieces of paradise scattered in the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.travelandleisure.com\/slideshows\/caribbean-island-guide\" target=\"_blank\">Caribbean<\/a>, just off the coast of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.travelandleisure.com\/articles\/journeys-bocas-del-toro\" target=\"_blank\">Panama<\/a>: the San Blas Islands. More than 300 of them are uninhabited, all are coated in coconut palms, and most are too small for Google maps to bother with. The Kuna, a tribe indigenous to Panama, run the islands and have fiercely protected the land, their culture, and their independence. That means no hotels, no chain restaurants, no foreign-owned anything. The best way to find a cell phone signal is by hunting for it on a dinghy.<\/p>\n<p>You can arrive on these islands by speedboat from Panama, or, for even more of an adventure, sail with a crew from Cartagena. A five-day trip, stopping over in some of the most gorgeous and remote islands in the Caribbean for about $500? Yes, please.<\/p>\n<p>There are a ton of sailing companies that organize this trip, but one stands out above the rest: a French-owned boat called the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.veleroamande.com\/\" target=\"_blank\"><em>Velero Amande<\/em><\/a>. The site promises charcoal barbecues, abundant lobster, and a personal cook. A culinary adventure by sea, it seems. There\u2019s a boat leaving from Cartagena just before Christmas. I sign up, pay the deposit, and hold my breath.<\/p>\n<figure class=\"media-content\">\n<div class=\"media-content__media-holder hide-contextmenu\">\n<div class=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.travelandleisure.com\/sites\/default\/files\/styles\/tnl_redesign_article_landing_page\/public\/1454951832\/san-blas-island-street-SANBLAS0216.jpg?itok=o7lMAw3V\" alt=\"San Blas Island\" \/><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media-content__caption\"> <span class=\"media-credit\"> Rebecca Cooper <\/span> <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>It\u2019s sultry hot from the second I deplane in Cartagena, though I find relief in the terra-cotta lined room at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.hotelcasaindiacatalina.com\/en-us\/\" target=\"_blank\">Casa India Catalina<\/a>. I fill my three days in the city with ceviche, siestas, and popsicles. The streets bump with merengue and salsa music; walls are soaked with color and wrapped in azalea bushes. The city smells of sizzling arepas, and I wander, despite the heat, pulled around every corner by a building more beautiful than the last. I watch, mesmerized, a man shave a block of ice into a snow cone; I dance on the rooftop of the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/malaganacafe\/\" target=\"_blank\">Malagana Caf\u00e9 &amp; Bar<\/a>, emboldened by the fresh passion fruit caipirinhas; I cool off in the ocean breeze as I tip-toe along the city wall. All sense of time disappears when I slip into the Santa Clara hotel\u2019s courtyard, accompanied by Gabriel Garc\u00eda M\u00e1rquez books and chirping birds, but I am the most charmed sitting outside <a href=\"http:\/\/www.elbaron.co\/\" target=\"_blank\">El Baron<\/a> one evening, in the reflected light of the Iglesia de San Pedro, sipping a chartreuse-tinted basil cocktail. Every night, after I meander my way home, the click-clack of carriage horses through the window lulls me deeply to sleep.<\/p>\n<p>The day before my departure for San Blas, I drop off my passport at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bluesailing.net\/\" target=\"_blank\">Blue Sailing<\/a>, the agency that coordinates all the boat trips through the islands. The next day I set off for Manga, about a half-hour walk from the center of Cartagena\u2019s historic district, where a dinghy skids up to the dock. \u201cI\u2019m Victor, the captain,\u201d the man in the dinghy says. He looks at my hiking backpack and at the runners on the boardwalk behind me. \u201cNormally the police come to check your bags, but they won\u2019t be here for an hour. So&#8230; Do you have drugs?\u201d I tell him no. \u201cOkay,\u201d he says, and I hop on.<\/p>\n<p>The boat, a monohull, with a big kitchen area and dining space, is large enough to sleep twelve. The cabins are as bare-bones as you\u2019d expect from a vessel where space is key: each can sleep two, but you have to be willing to slide on the mattress under the low-hanging ceiling (the effect is not unlike an MRI machine, but oddly comforting in a cocoon-like way). But on this trip, there are just seven of us: three crew and four passengers. The cook is a 27-year-old Parisian named Sophie who left a job in television for the San Blas Islands. The skipper, Esteban, is also from France. He\u2019s spent all his life on boats, he says.<\/p>\n<figure class=\"media-content\">\n<div class=\"media-content__media-holder hide-contextmenu\">\n<div class=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.travelandleisure.com\/sites\/default\/files\/styles\/tnl_redesign_article_landing_page\/public\/1454951832\/san-blas-island-eatery-SANBLAS0216.jpg?itok=fBbSl7CV\" alt=\"San Blas Island\" \/><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media-content__caption\"> <span class=\"media-credit\"> Rebecca Cooper <\/span> <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Victor explains that we\u2019re waiting until 2 a.m. before we set sail to stand the greatest chance of smooth seas. It\u2019s a straight 30-hour sail to the islands, which are much closer to Panama. (It\u2019s best to do this journey from Colombia to Panama, and not the other way around, for that reason.) Around 11 p.m., after a few hours of listening to the lapping waves, we all tuck in, except for Esteban, who takes the night shift.<\/p>\n<p>With Dramamine, I sleep well into 11 o&#8217;clock. I don\u2019t feel sick, but I can\u2019t stay awake. The waves keep rocking me back to sleep. Some hours later, I\u2019m finally steady enough to go on deck.\u00a0We\u2019re traveling eight to ten knots,\u00a0and the sea, cupped around us, looks like cobalt jelly. The crew is fishing. They\u2019ve dropped a line with a seven-inch fish, hoping to catch a two-footer.\u00a0The net of pineapples, sun-ripening in the back of the boat, swings. I realize I can use the pineapples to tell time: one for each morning\u2019s breakfast.<\/p>\n<p>More hours dash by in a daze. At 8 p.m., after a dinner of ham and cheese sandwiches with lettuce and tons of mayonnaise\u2014I\u2019ve started to worry about the culinary part of this expedition\u2014everyone heads back to their cabin. \u201cGood night,\u201d Sophie says in French. \u201cSleep well,\u201d I say in return. \u201dSee you tomorrow in paradise,\u201d she says. I laugh and head into my cabin. \u201cNo, for real,\u201d Sophie calls to me.<\/p>\n<p>At 7:30 the next morning, everything is sticky. It\u2019s been two days since I\u2019ve taken a shower and the air is tropical. I throw on my bathing suit, determined, after a day lost to sleep, to make the most of everything. I walk to the back of the boat. The cobalt blue has changed to the light blue-green of sea glass where the waves stir up the white sand, and just outside that, a deep turquoise that L.A. pools aspire to. Three little islands, like inverse mirages, rise up out of the sea: the Coco Banderos Cays. They\u2019re so picture-perfect desert island, I have to laugh.<\/p>\n<p>We drop anchor and pack snorkel gear into the dinghy while Sophie makes passion fruit-pear-guava tarts, reviving my culinary hopes for the trip. Esteban brings us to one of the uninhabited islands. It\u2019s stunning, and we are the only ones on shore. I snorkel to the coral break, looking for the (harmless!) sharks and barracuda that are supposedly teeming in these waters. \u201cGroupers swim right up,\u201d Esteban had mentioned. I don\u2019t see any, but in a little cove I run into a school of electric yellow fish. I stop swimming and float, suspended in the warm water, moving with the fish, in sync with the waves. I relish the silence that I\u2019d forgotten how much I needed.<\/p>\n<figure class=\"media-content\">\n<div class=\"media-content__media-holder hide-contextmenu\">\n<div class=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.travelandleisure.com\/sites\/default\/files\/styles\/tnl_redesign_article_landing_page\/public\/1454951832\/san-blas-island-SANBLAS0216.jpg?itok=moL_3Iah\" alt=\"San Blas Island\" \/><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media-content__caption\"> <span class=\"media-credit\"> Rebecca Cooper <\/span> <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>After an impeccable lunch (coconut\u00a0eggplant curry; a spinach and avocado salad flecked with mint) that erases any lingering doubts of Sophie\u2019s talents, I head over to the inhabited island with Sophie and Victor, who are gifting the local Kuna oil, milk, and a bag of rice.\u00a0We pull the dinghy on shore and walk the goods past huts strung with hammocks. \u201cThis is Rosalinda\u2019s island,\u201d Sophie explains to me. \u201cIt\u2019s all one big family, and she\u2019s the head of it.\u201d The Kuna are a matrilineal society\u2014women control the money and are often the appointed elders of their island.<\/p>\n<p>We enter the largest hut, smoky from a palm bonfire. A young boy is fanning the flames with a palm leaf. Victor calls for\u00a0Rosalinda, and she enters a moment later. About sixty-years-old, she\u2019s short\u2014not even five feet tall\u2014but impossibly regal, with a tattooed line down her nose and a gold piercing dangling\u00a0from\u00a0the center. She wears beaded bracelets on her legs up to her knees.<\/p>\n<p>We give her the groceries, and she throws her arms around Victor, beaming.\u00a0 She pulls him, excitedly, to a neighboring hut, eager to show him something: her big new gas-run fridge. It\u2019s for beers to sell to foreigners, she explains in Spanish. I rush outside to take a look and bang my head on the bottom of the hut\u2019s doorway. Everyone laughs.<\/p>\n<p>Back on the boat, four Kuna come by in an <em>ulu<\/em>, a hand-dug canoe made from the lumber of the Kuna Yala forest. They\u2019ve brought a large haul of lobsters, caught probably within the last hour. \u201cThey\u2019re strong sailors,\u201d Sophie tells me, \u201cand extremely strong fishermen.\u201d Victor buys seven for 25 U.S. dollars. He places them in a rope net, and hangs them off the back of the boat to keep fresh for Christmas dinner.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m awoken on Christmas Eve morning by the smell of crepes. Victor\u2019s flipping them, one arm on his hip, and we pile on guava jam as fast as he can make them. \u00a0Later, we pull up anchor and sail another hour (with the lobsters still hanging off the back) to the Holandes Cays. Sophie talks up the snorkeling here, but the current carries me horizontally across the reef and threatens to push me onto the sea urchins. I rest on the beach instead. This island is bigger than the last\u2014I have to turn my head to see the whole thing\u2014with a wider band of sand and a thick forest of coconut palms in the center. Despite the two other groups of tourists\u2014a family and a band of Australians\u2014the island is remarkably not crowded.<\/p>\n<p>Esteban announces that Victor is preparing a real Argentinian barbecue. We follow Sophie and the smell of burning charcoal from the beach to Julio\u2019s hut\u2014he\u2019s the elder Kuna on this island\u2014and meet his wife and dog, Achoo. Esteban moves the slab of ribs on the charcoal to make room for the plantains. He rubs the steak in Victor\u2019s emerald <em>chimichurri <\/em>sauce and layers red peppers on top.\u00a0The crew cracks open beer. Sophie pours everyone else wine.<\/p>\n<p>We eat and drink with the Kuna in the shade of palm trees until we\u2019re tipsy\u2014Esteban is playing footsie with Julio\u2019s wife\u2014and sleep it off on the beach as the crew packs up the gear. For the next two hours, I watch pelicans dive for fish and wander into the palm forest to work up an appetite for Christmas Eve dinner: lobster steamed with cabbage and soy sauce. Sophie follows it with warm chocolate cake, studded with brazil nuts, floating in an expertly prepared cr\u00e8me anglaise. Victor pours champagne in gold-tipped flutes. \u201c<em>Ito malando<\/em>,\u201d we cheer, toasting each other in Kuna.<\/p>\n<figure class=\"media-content\">\n<div class=\"media-content__media-holder hide-contextmenu\">\n<div class=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.travelandleisure.com\/sites\/default\/files\/styles\/tnl_redesign_article_landing_page\/public\/1454951832\/san-blas-island-fresh-fish-SANBLAS0216.jpg?itok=c_nE22Al\" alt=\"San Blas Island\" \/><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media-content__caption\"> <span class=\"media-credit\"> Rebecca Cooper <\/span> <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The next morning starts early. We pull up anchor at\u00a0Holandes\u00a0Cays and head to Porvenir Island to clear immigration. Fifteen minutes into the trip, the fishing line goes taut, and Esteban runs over to reel in a silver Bonnet tuna shiny with beads of seawater. \u201cA Christmas present!\u201d Sophie exclaims. Esteban knifes it in the heart and filets it in the back of the boat. After another hour of sailing, we moor in the Chichime Cays. A number of boats are in the harbor, and husks of old ones that didn\u2019t clear the reef dot the horizon. A few\u00a0Kuna\u00a0are fishing in their\u00a0<em>ulus<\/em>\u00a0in the distance. There is, consistent with this deserted paradise dream, nearly no one on land.<\/p>\n<p>This island is stunning: bright turquoise water, a wide, pristine beach, and photogenic huts that can be rented for $40 a night, I hear. I\u2019ve forgotten my snorkel gear on the boat, but that\u2019s for the best, since the current is still too strong to properly swim. I trek to the hammocks I\u2019d longed for since the morning and swing my sandy legs into the belly of one. Later, I ask a Kuna man for a coconut, and he comes running back with a giant green one. (Coconut trees may cover all the islands here, but I\u2019m warned not to take one for myself. Every tree, and therefore each coconut, belongs to one of the Kuna.) His son waits obediently near his cutting board as he whacks the young husk. He angles his long, thin knife to the center of the nut to cut a hole just large enough for my mouth.<\/p>\n<p>We get back to the boat before sunset. The others shower while Sophie prepares the last meal. I can\u2019t bear to pull myself out of the sea, half because the rushing current feels like a massage, and half because I know it\u2019s the last time I\u2019ll be in those waters.<\/p>\n<p>The next morning, my alarm rings at 6 a.m. and I groggily finish packing. I run to the front of the boat to lie out in the breeze and the quiet one last time while we wait for the speedboat to take us to the mainland\u2019s coast. The full moon is still visible in the west when the Kuna-driven speedboat arrives. An hour\u2019s ride takes us from the open sea to the Caribbean shore of Panama: a vaguely apocalyptic narrowing with tree stumps and a lazy, winding river flanked by lush vegetation. I half expect a crocodile to pop out at any moment. We anchor by tying the boat to roots that poke out horizontally from the shore. I climb off and the ground is wobbly in the good, spent-too-long at the beach way.<\/p>\n<p>I exhale, deeply, and a full-body wave of relief washes over me. I realize, on some level, I\u2019d been holding my breath the whole trip: worried that the relationship with the Kuna would be a Disney-esque tourist show. Or if not that, then that the islands would be surrounded by bobbing trash, or that the current wouldn\u2019t carry me fast enough to catch my flight in Panama. Because, to be honest, it all sounded too good to be true. A week-long trip on a boat with a personal cook that didn\u2019t require being underwritten by a financier? A part of me didn\u2019t let myself believe it until it all had happened, until my glasses were unmistakably dusted with Panamanian dirt.<\/p>\n<p>The last leg of the trip is a four-hour 4&#215;4 ride through the jungle to Panama City. The winding mountain roads eventually give way to industrial stores, giant chain supermarkets, and, finally, the long roadway hung with lights that announces our arrival. My flight\u2019s the next morning, so I have one night to enjoy the city\u2014sunset cocktails in swinging chairs at <a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/fincadelmarpanama\/\" target=\"_blank\">Finca del Mar<\/a>, an exquisite dinner in the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.travelandleisure.com\/articles\/casco-viejo-panamas-up-and-coming-district\" target=\"_blank\">Casco Viejo<\/a> (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/CapitalBistroPanama\" target=\"_blank\">Capital Bistro Panama<\/a>\u2019s seared white tuna served over coconut curry risotto), and a long wander through the boardwalk at night.<\/p>\n<p>At the airport the next day, the immigration officer scrutinizes my passport. She looks at me and flips rapidly through the pages, looking for something. Finally, she finds my entrance stamp and smiles.\u00a0 \u201cAh, San Blas,\u201d she says. \u201cBellas, no?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Harboring fantasies of being a castaway on a deserted island? Consider a trip to Panama\u2019s San Blas islands.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-15839","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-news-articles-panama-perpsective"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.7 (Yoast SEO v27.7) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>What It\u2019s Like to Travel to Islands so Remote, They\u2019re Not on Google Maps - Blog and Newsletter<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/panamaadvisoryinternationalgroup.com\/blog\/what-its-like-to-travel-to-islands-so-remote-theyre-not-on-google-maps\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"What It\u2019s Like to Travel to Islands so Remote, They\u2019re Not on Google Maps\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Harboring fantasies of being a castaway on a deserted island? 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