Set up in 1994, Aguas Turbias Reserve is unique as this is where the three countries of Belize, Guatemala and Mexico meet. This remote, 7,000 acre reserve, near the Rio Bravo, has wildlife, flo...
Altun Ha, which means ‘rockstone pond’ in the Maya language, is the most extensively excavated Maya site in Belize. Altun Ha is believed to have been a major ceremonial centre during the ...
The history of Ambergris Caye goes back to the days of the Maya, European Pirates, and Mexican Refugees who fled during the Caste War. The descendants from Mexico make up most of the island's populati...
Bacalar Chico Marine and Wildlife Reserve encompasses an area of sixty square kilometres at the northern tip of Ambergris Caye overlooking the Bay of Chetumal and Mexico, and only accessible by sea.&n...
Barranco is the only Garifuna village that is a member of the Toledo Ecotourism Association. Activities in this isolated village include fishing along the river as well as travelling by dugout canoe ...
Barton Creek is a large river cave possibly over 4.5 miles long. The cave consists of giant passages covered with numerous large stalactites and stalagmites, over a navigable river. It is believed tha...
Belize City is oozing with character, and the best way to sample this is on foot. There are many fascinating gems located within easy walking distance of each other, including Museums – the Mari...
The Community Baboon Sanctuary was established in 1985 to protect one of the few healthy black howler monkey populations in Central America. Unlike any other existing wildlife management projec...
The Belize Zoo and Tropical Education Center was started in 1983, as a last ditch effort to provide a home for a collection of wild animals which had been used in making documentary films about tropic...
Blue Creek is a village of some 275 Keckhi and Mopan Maya which was first settled in 1925 and is also called “Ho Keb Ha”—“the place where the water comes out”, describing...