
| Lo
que dicen en internet nuestros huespedes acerca del hotel. Este es un lugar maravilloso para permanecer y relajarse cerca de un jardin y un lago hermoso de agua cristalina. El hotel esta localizado cerca de la entrada al Parque Nacional Tikal y cerca de varias otras ruinas significativas de Los Mayas. Es un hotel seguro, limpio, y con precios bajos. David es originario de Florida y ha vivido en Guatemala por veinticinco años. El construyó el primer hotel de la selva a la orilla del lago. Los nativos los nombran un gringo perdido… Él ahora no es dueño de este hotel, pero tiene un bonito hotel pequeño con el nombre de "La Casa De Don David". La esposa de Don David es guatemalteca, y cocina muy bien. El nos ofrecio tours de la selva con caballos y a pie. Son muy interesantes y aprendimos mucho de la selva. . Hay viajes en lanchas para conocer el lago y pasear en los rios, notando los pajaros etc. viajes de pesca, y excursiones a Tikal y a otro las ruinas. Par los tours de grupos pequeños y organizados, David los ensenya y explica de los tarantula con oportunidad a tomar fotos cerca. ---E. Lorenzo, 06/98 Me gusto la seguridad del estacionamiento. Estacione mi carro afuera del cuarto. Me sentí muy seguro en este hotel y ha sido un buen lugar para visitar en mis varios viajes estos últimos seis años. Lo he recomendado a varios de mis amigos. Tikal vale la pena a cualquier costo, pero con lo económico que es alojarse aqui y de la facilidad del servicio a Flores, esto hace que sea un gran lugar para visitar. L. Bailey, 04/99 Este es un
excelente lugar para alojarse y es una ganga por $20 para dos personas,
y $29.00 para cinco. Hay algunos nuevos cuartos que tienen agua
caliente
para $26.00 y $30.00 doble por noche. Las comidas son ricas y es un
buen
menú. La esposa de David, Rosita, es una cocinera excelente y
prepara
los almuerzos para llevar a Tikal. Tambien me gustan los ventiladores.
Son major que aire acondicionado y no hacen ruido. Las brisas del lago
por las noches son muy agradables. Hay tambien un kiosco grande con
hamacas. 9 Agosto 2005 3 de Agosto 2005 19 de noviembre de 2004 10 de Septiembre 2004 18 de Julio 2004 22 de Marzo 2004 El servicio y la amabilidad del personal fue excelente. El lugar y ambiente es un verdadero encanto. Gracias y hasta la próxima visita. Nuria, April
2002 November 1999 WE ARE IN PARADISE! This is how I
describe
the small village of El Remate, our beautiful hotel, Don David, and the
Mayan Ruins of Tikal that are set deep in the jungle! Rich and I
decided
to leave our little beach town of Panajachel yesterday and travel to
Tikal
to see the famous Mayan ruins there. In order to do this, we had
to take a 3 hour bus ride to Guatemala City and then a 9 hour night bus
ride to Santa Elena. After arriving in Santa Elena (Flores) at
5:00
a.m., we were faced with the obstacle of how to get to Remate, where we
would hopefully be staying. As we got out of the bus, many people
offered us rides...for a large fee. We went with a collective
minibus
which charged us 20 Quetzals per person (under $3 per person) to take
us
to the doorstep of Don David. Don David is a beautiful hotel with
an open air dining room, beautiful white tiled, clean bedrooms with
private
bathrooms and a porch which overlooks Lake Peten Itza;.
There are a lot of trees in the back yard as well as hanging
hammocks.
At the price of $16, we decided to stay immediately! As we ate a
delicious breakfast in the open air dining room, we saw a parrot fly up
into the tree right next to us! El
Remate Seen at: http://www.2goglobal.com/2GoChronicals/best.htm FAVORITE ACCOMMODATIONS: *
DON
DAVID'S BUNGALOWS, El Remate: Located about 2 miles north of the
intersection
of the main road from the Belize/Guatemala border and the road from
Flores
to Tikal, this is a perfect stopping place for visits to Tikal and Lake
Peten Itza. After entering El Remate, his place is about 200 yards past
the first building on the left or west side of the road to Tikal. Over
the past two years I have stayed at Don's and found it charming and
very
reasonable. David Kuhn and his lovely wife and daughter run a very
clean,
small set of about eight rooms that sleep from two to six. The main
house
is two-story and includes the office and storerooms on the first floor
with a kitchen, dining room, and the owner's living quarters on the
second
floor. There are four outbuilding that house nice size rooms, each with
its own bath. There is no electricity in El Remate, but David uses
solar
collectors and a generator to power up batteries to power the 12-volt
lighting.
(The hotel now has electricty and fans.) Water is from a community
spring
that he filters. I treated it again just for caution's sake. The
showers
are clean and well made of ceramic tile. The buildings are well kept
and
the rooms are very clean. The windows are screened and we did not
suffer
from mosquitoes. Obviously there is no air-conditioning or fans, but
being
near the lake, it is not too bad. There is a slight breeze from the
lake
in the evening. There is a thatched raised open hut that has four
hammocks
strung that overlooks the lake which is due west less then 50 yards
from
the back of his property. Sunsets are very nice and some elect to sleep
here. There is a sandy beach, quite small, about 100 yards up the road
that is open to the community. There is a seven-foot fence around the
hotel,
and you can park your vehicle inside the fence next to your room.
David's
wife cooks excellent meals on request and will pack you a lunch if you
plan to be out during the day. The meals are family style with some
choice
each day. Fresh fruit and vegetables were always available. David is
formerly
from Florida and much of his hotel shows his Florida background. He has
made extensive use of local materials and help, but it would make most
visitors feel at home. His family helped to make me feel at home. The
discussion
during the evening meals were very interesting. During my visits he had
guests from Israel, Denmark, England, and Germany. I believe they all
felt
at home. The stay is about US$5 to $8 per person per night depending on
the room. Three of us stayed for $22 in a room with one double bed, two
bunks, and a single. Meals are US$2 to $3 for breakfast and US$3.75 for
lunch or dinner. There is a community phone +502-926-0269 that you can
call to make an appointment to reach David or his wife. If you tell
them
it is a fax call, they can handle that as well. He will take
reservations.
He does not accept credit cards. He does offer a fair rate of exchange
for US and Belize currency and will accept traveler's checks. Hint:
Take
Guatemalan currency, Quetzales $25 for entrance fee for Tikal. The
federal
ticket taker will take US currency, but only at a lower rate than you
can
get anywhere else. It is about 6 Quetzales to 1 US dollar most places,
but at the gate, they will only give 5 to 1. Bruce McNellie, May-June
1997
Monday October 14 I got up at 4am, in order to get to Tikal, and
the top of Pyramid 4, by "sunrise". I had Rosa make me 2
sandwiches
the night before. The road was paved the 18 miles to the park,
but
for the 3rd time this trip my PIAA lights came in handy, as I
encountered
several horses standing in the middle of the road. I say
"sunrise"
because the jungle is generally shrouded in fog, and one cannot
actually
see the sun rise. What one sees instead from the yop of Pyramid 4
is the fog slowly lifting and As I was putting my riding gear on to return
to
El Remate, I heard what sounded like a motorcycle approaching, and
shortly
two bikes pulled up, a Honda NX650, and a Kawasaki KLX 650. Shaul
and Lior were Israelies who had bought the bikes in San Francisco, and
were touring through Central America. Amazingly, they had left
San
Francisco 2 days after me, and from After dark that night, David took us out to
the
back yard with flashlights to catch Tarantulas. They have small
circular
tunnel-like burrows among the rocks at the edge of the garden, and they
hung out just outside their burrows. One had to quickly block the
hole to prevent them from retreating inside. Then David would
pick
them up and show us their Arriving
in El Remate I pulled up at Casa de Don David, where I would be staying
tonight in preparation to make my assault on the grand-daddy ruin of
Tikal
in the morning. I got a nice room on the lakefront for Q75 ($12) and
strung
my hammock out front. Don David informed my that dinner of Spagetti
would
be at 7:00 these evening if I cared to join the rest of his guests.
Sounded
fine. David is originally from Texas, but came down to the shores of
Lake
Peten Itza in the 70's to build a vacation cottage. Well, it soon
became
a guest lodge and he found himself down here running it
year-round.
In the 70's David said it was all the rage for Americans and Europeans
to buy a VW bus in the US and drive it down into Central America
camping
out all along the way. In the '80's the Guatemalan civil war forced him
out for a few years, but he's back now, married to a Guatemalan woman
and
the place is a den of activity again. These days David says he sees few
folks driving vehicles down from the North anymore, prefering to fly
down
and travel by local buses- but Im thinking that perhaps the next golden
era Over
dinner I made the acquaintance of a British couple Nigel and
Dianne
who were English and Scottish respectively. They had been to Tikal
today
and were raving about it. They adivised: dont miss viewing the sunset
from
high above Temple IV (the tallest pre-columbian structure in the
Western
hemisphere). Others I have spoke to said be sure and get there
Just
before sunset I headed back down and made my way back to the entrance.
I wanted to be back on the road before dark and back at Don David
for dinner at 7:00. I made it just in time. After dinner I consulted
David
Birds of Guatemala book to ID all my sightings. I know I've
forgotten a few but just to have seen the Toucans and Parrots was more
than I had even expected. We stopped at Don David's, a Floridian
who married Rosa, a Guatemalan, and moved down to Guatemala 25 years
ago,
and now runs a nice guest house. We lucked out and got their last
room. By 1:00pm, we were under a grass roof palapa relaxing
in hammocks sipping ice cold lime-aide as we looked over the beautiful
blue Peten Itza lake feeling the cool Overnight trip to Tikal (Guatemala) If
you
can spare the time, don't go on an organised trip. We were easily able
to do it for less than half the cost by ourselves - it was very
straightforward
(ask Wally at Tropicool Hotel), bus to border, bus to El Remate (at the
turn off for Tikal), stay over at Don Davids (great place on
the
lake) and take bus at 5.30 am from Don David's to Tikal to return by
2.30,
in time to catch bus around 3.30 or 4.30 back to border - all for less
than $35 versus the $85 the tour companies charge! Tikal is great to
see
for the site (great wildlife etc., such as toucans, parrots, and little
furry animals as yet unidentified by us!). You can really imagine what
it is like to discover ruins, as everything is hidden in the jungle.
There
was less to see than we had expected though and overall we felt the
ruins
in Mexico were better. |