Ambergris Caye, is
Belize's most popular island destination, lying some 35 miles from
Belize City. The island is a very flat, twenty-five mile long slice of
limestone with mangrove on the west and narrow beaches on the east. It
takes two hours to reach from Belize City by boat and twenty minutes
by plane.
Visitors arrive
on the island at San Pedro town, the most populated and renown area on
the island. San Pedro Town, located near the Barrier Reef, is on the
southern tip of the island. The white sand streets of San Pedro ,in an
area six blocks long and four blocks wide, accommodate bicycles, golf
carts and mostly walking in your bare feet
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Once a
fishing village, San Pedro has within the last twenty years
become the nation's major tourist destination. With a population
of 1,200, San Pedranos as they call themselves, are mostly
descendants of the Mestizos and some French and British
buccaneers. They speak both English and Spanish.
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Ambergris Caye was
formed from the accumulation of coral fragments, which formed a shoal
patch, by building up in long lines parallel to the mainland. This
formation is said to have been formed by submarine geological strata
instead of by the flow of the sea currents.
The first inhabitants
of San Pedro were the Mayas, the caye being a stopover for the Maya
traders.
Pirates also settled there in the 17th century. In the 1840's,
during the Caste War in Mexico, Mestizos fled Mexico, settling on
Ambergris Caye. By 1851,Mexico wanted control of the territory, but
after the locals protested, the dispute was settled by a treaty in
1893. In 1874, James Blake purchased the entire island. A century
later the Belizean government forcefully purchased the island and sold
lots to the locals.
The economy of San Pedro originally depended on logwood. Then
chicle and coconuts and in 1920 lobster became the most valuable
export. The earliest tourists began arriving in San Pedro in the
1920's, with the first real hotel being established in 1965. By 1979,
flights were available to the island by Tropic Air.
San Pedro
is the perfect place for swimming, diving and snorkeling which is
probably the reason why most tourists come to Belize. The structure of
the Belize Barrier Reef is such that in the northern part of Belize,
the reef actually touches Ambergris Caye, while in the south the reef
lies almost 4 miles from shore. Close by San Pedro lies the Hol Chan
Marine Reserve and Bacalar Chico Marine Reserve. Mexico Rocks, a
beautiful collection of coral heads also near San Pedro, is slated for
protection status soon. |