Travel
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Reel
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Future
  • More
    • Music
No Result
View All Result
Monday, December 8, 2025

TRAVEL

  • Home
  • Culture

    BBC – Travel – Why wild swimming is Britain’s new craze

    BBC – Travel – The Indian way to ‘maximise value’

    BBC – Travel – The woman who walked around the world

    BBC – Travel – How Vienna built a gender equal city

    BBC – Travel – Europe’s language that few speak

    BBC – Travel – Kihnu: Europe’s last surviving matriarchy

  • Food & Drink

    BBC – Travel – Alaska’s ‘mushroom of immortality’

    BBC – Travel – The star legume of southern France

    BBC – Travel – Chimichurri: The Argentinian sauce eaten as a ritual

    BBC – Travel – Doubles: Trinidad’s addictively spicy street snack

    BBC – Travel – A Finnish drink with a heroic past

    BBC – Travel – The secret history of Angostura Bitters

  • Discovery
  • Destinations
    • All
    • Africa
    • Antarctica
    • Asia
    • Australia & Pacific
    • Caribbean & Bermuda
    • Central America
    • Europe
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • South America

    BBC – Travel – Funazushi: The fermented predecessor of modern sushi

    Why Brazil fell in love with beans

    BBC – Travel – Where a meal without beans is incomplete

    BBC – Travel – Pice hotels: A lifeline for Kolkata’s hungry workers

    BBC – Travel – Jollof Wars: Who does West Africa’s iconic rice dish best?

    BBC – Travel – South Africa’s language spoken in 45 ‘clicks’

    Trending Tags

    • AfroCaribbean
    • Brazils
    • Nebraska
    • gastronomy
    • California
    • Travel
    • Australia
    • tradition
  • Experience
28 °c
Denpasar
26 ° Sun
26 ° Mon
26 ° Tue
25 ° Wed
Travel
No Result
View All Result

BBC – Travel – Where people were sent to disappear

May 22, 2020
in Central America, Destinations
5 min read
660 7
0
Home Destinations Central America


Panama’s Isla Coiba bears all the hallmarks of a perfect desert island: gin-clear water, powdery white sand, a fringe of palm trees against a backdrop of dense, unexplored rainforest. When I arrived on the island, the peaceful beach was scattered with a handful of travellers bobbing in the bath-warm water or taking lazy afternoon naps on the salt-encrusted hammocks.

It was hard to imagine that this island paradise harboured such a dark past – or has such an uncertain future.

For almost a century, Isla Coiba – which along with 38 other protected islands forms Coiba National Marine Park – was home to a notorious island prison, rumoured to be where the country’s most dangerous criminals were sent and where political prisoners disappeared. With the island home to various venomous snakes and insects and surrounded by shark-infested waters, there was no hope of escape for the thousands of prisoners, known as Los Desaparecidos (The Missing).

Over the last century, Panama has undergone – and continues to undergo – enormous environmental change. But in Coiba, a lack of human interference means that nature has been able to thrive. About 80% of Coiba’s rainforest, which is Central America’s largest at 194sqkm, is virgin, and in 2005, shortly after the jail was shut down, the national park was declared a Unesco World Heritage site. 

A lack of human interference means that nature has been able to thrive.

Coiba’s biodiversity is a huge draw for both scientists and nature-loving travellers. There are a high number of indigenous mammals, birds and plants, and the island is a last refuge for some endangered species, such as the crested eagle and scarlet macaw. Situated on the same underwater mountain range as the Galapagos Islands, Coiba also has very diverse marine life. Coral has formed reefs on top of volcanic rock, and the waters serve a migratory corridor for rays, turtles, pelagic fish, dolphins, whale sharks and humpbacks.

I was drawn to Coiba because of its reputation as one of the world’s most thrilling places to dive. Unlike the Galapagos ­– or Malepo in Colombia or the Cocos Islands in Costa Rica, both renowned diving destinations on the same underwater mountain range – it is possible to take day trips to Coiba, with most visitors setting off from Santa Catalina, a small mainland fishing village about 20km away. In order to explore more of the marine park’s dive sites, I arranged a three-day excursion with the Panama Dive Center, staying in basic accommodation in Coiba’s ranger station.

The first day’s diving did not disappoint. In addition to a dazzling array of fish that included parrot fish, trumpet fish, frog fish, moray eels, jacks, groupers, barracuda and white-tip reef sharks, we also saw bottlenose dolphins and a school of pilot whales. We saw a colourful display of local wildlife on land, too. While eating lunch, a menagerie of animals assembled nearby, creeping out from the forest. As well as orange-coloured iguanas, cappuccino monkeys and vultures, I also spotted a creature that looked like a cross between a beaver and rabbit. My diving instructor David said it was a ñeques, one of the island’s many endemic mammals. With such an abundance of nature, I wondered if Isla Coiba was like Dr Moreau’s, with all sorts of beast folk lurking within the unexplored rainforest.

The second day was a touch more dramatic than the first. Looking out to sea early in the morning I spotted an enormous cruise ship – an increasingly common sight in the park. Coiba’s sleepy beach quickly became a hive of activity, as dozens of cruise staff set out sun loungers, shades, towels, water-sports gear, a barbeque station and a bar. Speedboats then ferried about 150 guests from the ship to the island for the day. Little did the guests know that their advertised “desert island experience” would turn into more of a Robinson Crusoe-style affair after they left.

Returning to the island for lunch after a couple of morning dives, I learned that the Star Pride cruise ship wouldn’t be leaving mid-afternoon as planned. It had in fact run aground on the reef that morning and had holes in its hull.

As the day progressed the cruise ship was noticeably tilting, and over the series of several huddles the captain explained to the guests they would be picked up by another ship that night. I decided to do a light trek into the rainforest to escape the furore on the beach.

After a sweat-drenched ascent, I reached a vista point where I was able to take in the vast scope of the marine park and its many islands. The line between the sea and hazy sky was barely visible, making the sight of a leaning cruise ship plonked in the middle of it all the more incongruous.

Back on the beach, some guests made the best of the situation, enjoying the resulting free drinks and food. But some tempers frayed and others worried about valuables and medication they had left on the boat. In an attempt to placate the situation, one guest strolled up and down the beach singing along with his guitar. I’m not sure at this point if the guests knew about the sandflies that descend on the beach after sunset, or the crocodiles that patrolled it.

I left the chaos again to do a night dive, plunging into the water at dusk when the sky was a milky lilac and emerging almost an hour later to complete darkness. As we returned to the island, the saviour ship was picking up the stranded guests, its lights twinkling like Panama City’s flashy skyline.

The guests were gone by about midnight; the original ship was left behind, I learned, for the next couple of weeks. Staff came the following morning to pick up the rubbish that covered the sand and was being picked at by vultures. It was a relief to return to the tranquillity I’d experienced the first day. 

The island’s growing popularity on the cruise-ship circuit is a concern.

The island’s growing popularity on the cruise-ship circuit is a concern for many. With a limited water supply and waste disposal, the island cannot sustain such large volumes of visitors. Camilo Consuegra, owner of Panama Dive Center, explained that there are no restrictions on the number of guests that can visit the island. While permits are required for an overnight stay, anyone can come here on a day trip. “At Coiba National Park, the responsibility to handle or control the activities has been deposited on the tour operators, which, I think, is a complete mistake,” he said. Maintenance of the island’s facilities, fishing control in remote areas of the marine reserve and tourism education for the rangers “are crucial for the sustainability of this beautiful park”.

On our last day, we took a break on another one of Coiba’s picture-perfect islands: Isla Rancheria, a Smithsonian Institute outpost for scientific research. There was a sign warning about crocodiles, but the most menacing creature I spotted was a hermit crab, crisscrossing the sand. Under a canopy of trees, which threw finger-shaped shadows on to the sand, I rested, eating a freshly fallen coconut. 

Even with the growing crowds and the abundant wildlife, it was easy to find solace in this special park.  While it’s the past lack of human interference that has enabled the park to flourish, it is now up to the visitors, local businesses, scientists, conservationists and Panama’s parks authority to ensure it remains this way for future generations to enjoy.

If you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter, called “If You Only Read 6 Things This Week”. A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Earth, Culture, Capital, Travel and Autos, delivered to your inbox every Friday.



Source link

Tags: BBCdisappearpeopleTravel
Share153Tweet96Share38
admin

admin

Next Post

BBC - Travel - Free holidays on offer for healthcare workers

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular

  • BBC – Travel – Japan’s forgotten indigenous people

    383 shares
    Share 153 Tweet 96
  • BBC – Travel – Four countries with a tradition of kindness

    383 shares
    Share 153 Tweet 96
  • BBC – Travel – Why is New Zealand so progressive?

    383 shares
    Share 153 Tweet 96
  • BBC – Travel – Why only Quebec can claim poutine

    383 shares
    Share 153 Tweet 96
  • BBC – Travel – A mysterious US desert civilisation

    383 shares
    Share 153 Tweet 96
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

BBC – Travel – Japan’s forgotten indigenous people

May 22, 2020

BBC – Travel – Four countries with a tradition of kindness

May 22, 2020

BBC – Travel – Why is New Zealand so progressive?

May 22, 2020

BBC – Travel – Why only Quebec can claim poutine

May 6, 2021

BBC – Travel – Japan’s forgotten indigenous people

0

BBC – Travel – Why is New Zealand so progressive?

0

BBC – Travel – Say hello to the world’s new greetings

0

BBC – Travel – Japan’s formula for life satisfaction

0

BBC – Travel – Funazushi: The fermented predecessor of modern sushi

June 17, 2021

Why Brazil fell in love with beans

June 16, 2021

BBC – Travel – Where a meal without beans is incomplete

June 15, 2021

BBC – Travel – Alaska’s ‘mushroom of immortality’

June 10, 2021
Travel

© 2020 JBC - JOOJ Clone ScriptsJOOJ.us.

Explore the JBC

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Reel
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Future
  • More

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Culture
  • Food & Drink
  • Discovery
  • Destinations
  • Experience

© 2020 JBC - JOOJ Clone ScriptsJOOJ.us.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Travel
More Sites

    MORE

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Reel
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Future
  • More
    • Music
  • Travel

    JBC Travel