{"id":1694,"date":"2017-12-06T15:00:00","date_gmt":"2017-12-06T19:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/normpyle.com\/2017\/12\/06\/should-i-stay-or-should-i-go\/"},"modified":"2019-09-01T11:28:31","modified_gmt":"2019-09-01T15:28:31","slug":"should-i-stay-or-should-i-go","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/kneedeepinit.com\/should-i-stay-or-should-i-go\/","title":{"rendered":"Should I Stay or Should I Go?"},"content":{"rendered":"
We’re wrapping up our time on Utila and are starting to wrap up our thinking on the place as well, the good, the bad, and the in-between. We definitely love the people here. We love the low cost of living, the snorkeling, and the waterfront bars and restaurants. We love the Utila Cays, but of course they are boat access only (something I would certainly solve if we decide to stay here). We don’t really love the beaches, they’re just not that special. There are other detractors as well, trash comes to mind, and the noise in town. So, the good with the bad, that’s what you get in any place.<\/p>\n
Those are some of the considerations for us. Our new friend Mamita told us that she was “island shopping” and when she found Utila she knew she had found the place<\/em>. And that’s what we’re doing, island shopping. It’s kind of a big “purchase” so to quantify some of the important points, I put together a list of things to consider and discuss, for each place we go. I didn’t want to turn it into a number for each place (Island A adds up to 67 points and Island B is only 65, so we’re going to live on Island A), but I do want to have points of comparison, points of discussion. As we see more places this will likely morph, but the list below is what we’re starting with.<\/p>\n This must be the place!<\/p>\n So, for Utila, here’s where we are on these points:<\/p>\n Safety \u2013 this is a negative for us. We knew coming in that Honduras has a high crime rate, and along with El Salvador, they are the top two in murders per capita. But we were coming to the Bay Islands and nowhere near the high crime big cities and their drug problems. So, a few weeks ago, I would have said that safety has been a real positive, we felt very safe here. But then there was a rape of a tourist woman, 100 yards up the hill from our house. It was followed up by much local discussion that nothing will be done and the guy will never get caught or face consequences. There was also a robbery at knife-point (both crimes at night of course), but they actually caught that guy trying to get on the ferry back to the mainland the next day. Just last week, someone was begging the authorities to come and arrest\/remove a guy from smoking crack on the street in front of her business. But nobody came all day long – it was always someone else’s job and the police did not show. So the pendulum swung in the other direction pretty hard for us. I should say that on an island this size, you hear absolutely everything, so we should be careful not to overreact vs. back in Colorado where we wouldn’t hear every last thing. But if there is poor enforcement (and that’s been a theme of conversations around town) this will get worse over time rather than better, and that’s a big deal. There is also no 911 service here that anybody seems to know about, you have to put the local clinic phone numbers in your phone and the police as well. If they will bother coming to help. Finally, the country had rioting after the recent election, quite bad at times, road closures have had an impact on what goods can be moved around the country. We have had some shortages in the islands because of it, but thankfully no violence here. Still, it’s not a great look for Honduras.<\/p>\n This box must be served!<\/p>\n Utilities \u2013 this is somewhere in the low-middle. We had the initial electrical problem\/repair on our first day, and then electricity was solid for a couple months. Just this week we lost electricity for about 18 hours and that means no running water for us, so not so good at all. There’s also the issue of paying for electricity in advance with a little box that hangs on the wall. You have to pay for and punch in a new code every 10 days or so (whenever you get low on your kilowatt-hours) and hope the box communicates properly. This is frustrating because it’s very flakey, but it does eventually work. If you let it go to zero, your electricity turns off and that’s a big hassle nobody wants. It’s never gotten to that point for us (we have been below 5) but the threat is always there and you see the numbers ticking down day by day. This is the same system used all over Africa, probably many other places in the world too, but it’s new to me and I don’t like it. Tap water isn’t drinkable so you have to pay for and haul 5 gallon jugs of drinking water. Internet is on and off, reasonable when on, but worthless a lot of the time (down for a 24 hour stretch this week). They literally unplug it now when there’s a lightning storm because they got a direct hit last month. There’s a joke that says “I want to live where the rum is strong and the wifi is weak”. That’s fine until you start to upload and crop pictures for your blog! \ud83d\ude42 It will be interesting to see how this compares with other islands. None of this was unexpected except paying for the electricity up front. Deb doesn’t mind that, nor does she mind the drinking water jugs, it’s just me. Maybe this is just normal for the islands.<\/p>\n Incredibly inexpensive meal but really, what is that fish?<\/p>\n Food & Drink \u2013 I should note that we buy and cook most of our food, with only occasional restaurant meals. But the quality of the food we see will also extend to the restaurants because that’s what they have to work with as well. That said, in my opinion the food is only average here. You can get fresh vegetables with a few limitations. The quality ranges from excellent (potatoes, tomatoes, onions, green beans, cucumbers) to terrible (molding broccoli and cauliflower, rotting anything, swarms of flies around the fruit). We have been very pleased with patastes and sapote, a local veg and fruit. Pineapples are excellent, truly excellent. As for meat, the chicken and pork are also very good. We never tried the beef because we were told it isn’t very good here and we’re just not that big on it anyway. The seafood should be good but we’ve been told more than once that many of the fishermen aren’t trustworthy. That means you could be getting barracuda when you paid for something else. Unless you buy a whole fish which would be fine if we had a fish cleaning table outside, but we don’t. We even heard that some local restaurants can’t be trusted, so we mostly just didn’t eat much seafood here. Prices for local foods are quite good though.<\/p>\n The main room of our place – living room, dining room, and kitchen<\/p>\n Housing & Neighborhood \u2013 our apartment here is quite basic, but it meets all our needs. After a while we get a little tired of cooking on a plywood countertop and boiling water for dishes (no hot water in the sink). We really don’t like that the salty tap water is rusting all of our utensils, especially our good knives. It is a very good place for the doggies, and the greenery around is beautiful. The location is noisier than it might be because our landlords are very motivated people, always working on maintenance or improvements. It’s hard to complain about that but it is noisy, as is the road. We are on a curve and local custom says that you must honk your horn before going around a curve. We mostly ignore the horns now, but they are there, from early morning through most of the night. But the place is pretty nice and we’re glad to not be in town which is surprisingly busy and noisy. When we were researching this place we read that there are only a few cars on the island and that this was the quiet choice as compared to other places like Roatan. Our experience is not a quiet one – the narrow streets with no sidewalks put you right next to all the engines and their noise and exhaust. The proximity from our place to town is actually very good, I would say just right – easily walkable but we’re not in the middle of it all. The open trash cans everywhere do stink and the ditches aren’t a lot better. The cost for our place is good at $550 a month; with work we could get something lower, but it would have its own issues to deal with.<\/p>\n It looks more peaceful than it is!<\/p>\n Beaches and the Sea \u2013 this is one of the real weaknesses of Utila. We’ve mentioned this before, there are only two easily accessible beaches for us, one public and one private, both small. Both are \u201cserviceable\u201d, but neither are great, and we didn’t come all this way for \u201cserviceable\u201d beaches. They both look beautiful in pictures, and they aren’t crowded like some beaches we’ve seen in SW Florida, but the up-close reality isn’t quite what we want. There are also grasses in the water in many places which don’t quite give the same ambiance as standing in and swimming around a white sand ocean bottom. Other beaches on the island are littered with trash and very few are swimmable. If you’ve been to the beautiful beaches of Florida, California, the Bahamas, the Caymans, etc. you will be pretty disappointed with these. There are<\/em> some good snorkeling spots that we’ve enjoyed many times. We have to take care to avoid the sea urchins which can be very prevalent, so one of the best things here has this mark against it, but it is something we’re getting used to. No spearfishing is allowed in the Bay Islands (except spearing Lionfish with a permit), and the only line fishing is by boat.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n We have to admit, this is pretty relaxing<\/p>\n People – We’ve talked repeatedly about the people we’ve met, we really have enjoyed everyone here. The tourists, expats, and locals alike have given us extremely positive experiences. It’s fun to talk with them and learn about their lives, and fun to talk about our plans. A couple of conversations we had with locals reminded me of a Jimmy Buffet story. He once said he lives his life 20 years behind the times, because everywhere he goes somebody says \u201cyou should have seen this place 20 years ago!\u201d. We heard a bit of that here too, and expect to hear it some more as we travel. I won’t belabor the point, the people are a huge plus for Utila and Honduras.<\/p>\n Transportation \u2013 the transportation here meets all of our needs, but falls pretty short when we think about our wants. We love walking and that’s an adventure in it’s own right because of the narrow busy streets and no sidewalks. All the basics are within easy walking distance. We tried to buy bikes the first 2 weeks but we found no sellers. So we rented a couple of them for a day and frankly they were terrible. Rusted everything, crooked wheels, soft tires, sketchy brakes. That killed the idea of a longer term rental, we just decided to walk everywhere. The tuk-tuk taxis are plentiful and pretty cheap, so that’s great when you get caught in the rain with 4 bags of groceries. Bottom line, the needs are met, but the wants are lacking a little bit.<\/p>\n An ugly reality here<\/p>\n Environment \u2013 some effort goes into environmental protection here but not a lot. The reefs are getting more and more tourist traffic which means more people doing dumb things like standing on the reef and killing it. It also means more sewage, trash, etc. finding it’s way into the water and harming the reef. To show the importance of the natural environment to their students, the dive shops do have mandatory cleanup days for getting their dive master certifications, but the ocean trash on the beaches is discouraging to say the least. Some people are putting energy into saving the mangroves while others are mowing them down with impunity, to build vacation houses. There is a group working hard to save the Utila Swamper Iguana, an endangered species found nowhere else on Earth. But most of the environmental work is being done by non-natives – Honduras and Utila has work to do in this respect.<\/p>\n Weather \u2013 the weather has been oppressively hot and sunny, wonderfully cool and breezy, and everything in between. We’ve had at times days and days of rain and that hasn’t bothered us at all, so we know we don’t mind the rainy season (this has been a revelation and a valuable bit of info for the future). That may very well be because we don’t live on schedules, i.e. there’s always ma\u00f1ana. When the weather doesn’t cooperate with our plans, we make new plans. I know we’ve only had a small slice of time (we haven’t experienced a Honduran summer), but we have no complaints at all with the weather from October to December in Utila. In fact, it’s really been great.<\/p>\n Intangibles \u2013 the intangibles are the final factors in deciding whether a place is for us. The feelings we get are a blend, a melange of all the other factors listed above. This doesn’t happen overnight either. We have gone through our share of \u201cWe could live here\u201d, \u201cI couldn’t live here\u201d, and \u201cIf we lived here…\u201d conversations. I think you start to get an honest feel for a place after about 6 weeks there, which is why we won’t be deciding to move somewhere after a cruise stop, or a 2 week vacation. You have to really live there, not in a resort with umbrella drinks, but in the pulper\u00eda and on the streets with real people, feeling the heat, smelling the odors (many not pleasant), and seeing the way the community works. Malcolm Gladwell wrote a great book called \u201cBlink<\/a>\u201d, which describes how your instincts will lead you almost instantly to the right conclusion, and I got a “blink” feeling on this place pretty quickly. But I’d never make a call on a place to live in less than a month or two. Beyond that, I’d never buy a place until having lived there much longer, a year or so. You have to live through all four seasons: dry season, rainy season, dead-hot-and-muggy season, and tourist season. \ud83d\ude42<\/p>\nIsland Shopping List<\/h3>\n
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