Monday, June 7, 2010

Disgrace Book


It's official: Facebook blows! Especially for uploading pictures.  
Constantly failing, freezing, forgetting = LAME! 

I was trying to share some photos from the trip I took to Belize, Honduras and Mexico with my vast, accumulated  network of "friends" (there are some very real friends in that network), but the damn site was just being a bitch.  So, I decided to post some of the pics here.  Honestly, this is more fun.  So enjoy these. And there will be more...many, many, many more!  

Dave Schubert scaling the front of an ancient Mayan pyramid. Belize City, Belize.


Swimming in the Sibun River with Belizan locals during our trip to Belize, City.


Amazing urban decay in Belize City, Belize.  The beauty of second world realness juxtaposed with tourists searching for their next lame activity, scared that they might be mugged in this "dangerous, smelly" city...

The main drag, Belize style.  Rows of houses, fishing shanties, restaurants and other businesses situated along the city's main waterway.

Ancient Mayan pyramids in Belize.


 Modern art can happen anytime, even in the middle of a snack on the island of Roatan, Honduras.


View from atop an ancient Mayan pyramid.  A spiritual and historic experience.


Relaxation, Honduras style.  The deckhand, Kevin, taking a break from the sun in Roatan, Honduras.



Rasta Mon.  A local in Belize showing off his knotty-dreadlocks.


This picture happened because David, Stephanie and myself rented scooters, found an abandoned mansion in Roatan, Honduras, parked our scooters in the back yard of the mansion, which was the beach, and proceeded  to swim from the mansion's boat dock that extended into the Gulf of Mexico.


Wake, somewhere in the Gulf of Mexico, one week before the oil disaster.

A lazy beach in Cozumel, Mexico.



David laughing it up before dinner aboard the Carnival "Dream," one of the world's largest cruise ships.


Hallway art:  These lovely ladies were painted just outside our stateroom on the Carnival "Dream." A lovely sight, indeed.



Classic palm tree shot in Costa Maya, Mexico.

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