BELIZE:
A PEACEFUL, STABLE AND INDEPENDENT COUNTRY
Belize, formerly British Honduras,
is located on the Caribbean coast of Central America,
with Mexico to the north and Guatemala forming its western
border. The whole coast line is protected by a barrier
reef while the inner waters are shallow and dotted with
numerous islets. As of 2002 Belize's population was
250,000 approx. Its language is English, though many
residents speak Spanish.
The Mayan culture reached its height in what is now
Belize about 1500 years ago, and many ruins of their
temples, stelae and hieroglyphics still exist. Among
the earliest are the ceremonial buildings in the Corozal
area, in the northernmost district, across the Bay of
Chetumal from Yucatan. Consejo Shores is a retirement
and vacation spot for Americans, Canadians, Europeans
and Belizeans. Thirty-five miles to the Southeast is
Ambergris Caye and the barrier reef, the second longest
in the world, and teeming with tropical fish. It is
perhaps the most productive fishing and diving area
in the Western Hemisphere.
On September 21, 1981, Belize became a fully independent
nation which remains a member of the British Commonwealth.
The Government is a parliamentary democracy based on
the Westminister model, with a House of Representatives,
Senate and Prime Minister as head of state. The laws
of Belize are based on the British legal system and
its Common Law tradition.
Interesting Facts About Belize
• Sunny outdoor living with moderate, tolerant
tropical climate.
• Water excellent for boating, swimming, sailing
and wind surfing.
• World's second longest barrier reef.
• Some of the worlds best dive locations.
• Archaeological sites and Mayan Temples.
• Abundance of natural wildlife.
• Low cost of living.
• Minimum energy/fuel requirements.
• Ease of access : airports, roads.
• Low population density.
• Communication: two principal languages, English
and Spanish.
• Population: mixed Mayan, Spanish, Creole, Carib,
Indian.
• Stable political climate.
• Judicial system based on British Law.
• Land ownership: fee simple title.
• No tax on capital gains. No estate duty.
• Currency: $1.00 US = $2.00 Belize.
Life
in Belize
Belize has an area of 8,866 square miles, about the
size of Massachusetts, and a population of only 240,000.
By air, Belize is about two hours from Miami or Houston.
Driving through Mexico from Texas takes about four days.
Belize is a true multiethnic, multicultural society.
About 40 percent of Belizeans are Mestizos, persons
of mixed Indian and European heritage, most originally
from neighboring Latin countries and most living in
northern and western Belize. Thirty percent are Creoles,
of mixed African and European descent, concentrated
in and around Belize City. Ten percent are Maya, and
another 10 percent are Garifuna, of mixed African and
Carib Indian. The Garifuna live mainly in southern Belize
along the coast. Kek’chi and Yucatec Maya are
in southern, western and northern Belize. The rest are
Americans, Europeans and other Anglos, plus Chinese,
East Indians and others.
Belize is a stable democracy, a member of the British
Commonwealth with an English common-law tradition. The
country -- formerly British Honduras -- has been independent
since 1971. The Westminster-style system has a prime
minister, an elected house of representatives and an
appointed senate. The current prime minister is Said
Musa, a British-educated lawyer of Palestinian and Belizean
heritage. He heads the People’s United Party,
which swept the last national elections in 1998. The
main opposition party is the United Democratic Party.
The two parties are centrist, and their policies and
ideologies are not very different, but Belize politics
are often intensely personal. Everyone seems to know
everyone else, and party loyalties are rewarded and
remembered.
Belize continues to maintain strong
ties to both the United Kingdom, as a member of the
Commonwealth, and to the English-speaking Caribbean,
as a signatory member of CARICOM. Belize is a constitutional
monarchy, with the British sovereign as Head of State.
Executive authority is vested in the sovereign and is
exercised by the Governor General who is appointed on
the advice of the Prime Minister. Legislative power
is vested in the bicameral National Assembly, comprising
a Senate (12 appointed members) and a House of Representatives
(29 elected members). Since gaining independence in
1981, Belize has enjoyed a stable, three- branch system
of government.
Belize is one of the few countries in the world where
English is the official language, and Spanish also is
widely spoken. All official government documents, deeds
and papers are written in English. If there’s
a lingua franca in Belize, it’s Creole, a mixture
of English and other vocabulary and West African grammar
and syntax. Garifuna and several Maya languages also
are spoken in Belize, and many Belizeans speak two or
three languages.
There are few countries towards whom we feel a greater
degree of respect. Its tiny population is numerically
less than many of the world’s cities. ( Note that
while the country of El Salvador consists of approximately
the same land area as Belize, El Salvador contains thirty
times as many people; with an overall population of
almost six million people compared with Belize’s
240,000. ) Yet despite its small population Belize manages
to attract the worlds attention for its modern attitudes,
stable government and respectful treatment of its indigenous
peoples.
The climate of Belize is subtropical,
similar to that of South Florida. Daytime temperatures
generally are in the 80's most of the year out in the
Cayes. In areas of higher altitude, such as the Mountain
Pine Ridge and Maya Mountains, winter temperatures may
occasionally fall into the high 40s or low 50s. Humidity
is high year-round, tempered on the coast and cayes
by prevailing breezes from the sea. Rainfall varies
from 150-200 inches a year in the far south, feeding
lush rainforests and jungle, to 50 inches in the north,
about like most of the Southeastern United States.
Belize is in the hurricane belt, but the western Caribbean
does not get as many hurricanes as the Southeastern
U.S. Atlantic coast or the Gulf coast of Texas. On average,
Belize is visited by a hurricane about once every 30
years. Tropical storm and hurricane season in Belize
is June through November, with most storms coming late
in the season, particularly September through early
November.
General
Belize is beautiful and its people want to keep it that
way. The coral in its crystal clear waters is healthy
and thriving, 70% of its tropical rain forests are still
intact and the interior of the country is full of incredible
limestone caves to explore. Native animals range from
the jaguar and howler monkey to the manatee, and there
are more than 290 species of birds. Every now and then
a "norther" from the U.S. brings Belize a
couple of cool and windy days in the winter, but only
four hurricanes have hit the country in the last 50
years.
Within Belize (and Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico, too),
you'll find the ruins of the ancient Mayans, a civilization
that developed an alphabet, calendar, complex mathematics
and breathtakingly beautiful cities while their European
counterparts were still in the Dark Ages. This civilization
ended abruptly, however, sometime in the 12th century
after flourishing for 800 years. It is now being rediscovered,
with archaeologists revising their theories almost daily
about how and why the Mayans lived, and died.
But for the boater, the best thing about Belize is the
water. The longest barrier reef in the Western Hemisphere
runs offshore, letting you reach along inside with 15-
to 20-knot wind on a flat sea.
Even the "downside" of boating in Belize --
the shallow waters and the lack of perfect charts --
has an equally strong upside. You need to charter catamarans,
not monohulls, to explore these incredible seas. Catamarans
may not go to windward as well as monohulls, but the
extra space and the sheer exhilaration of sailing fast
-- almost always on a reach -- more than make up for
it. And besides, catamarans don't heel.
A week gives you enough time to get in some wonderful
sailing, but if you can stretch it to 10 days to three
weeks, you'll have a chance to see the interior of Belize,
too. You should begin your trip by flying into Belize
City and then hopping on a small plane to Ambergris
Cay, to pick up your boat. The flight to Ambergris Cay
alone is reason enough to visit Belize, as you gaze
far below at the many-colored reef and three of only
four coral atolls in the Western Hemisphere -- Turneffe
Islands and Lighthouse and Glovers Reefs.
|