I woke up this morning to insistent tapping on a door. I hoped it was someone else’s, but after a
couple of unanswered attempts, my door was unlocked and pushed partly
opened. I yelled at them In English not
to come in. The door closed. Indignant, I checked the time. It was 10 AM.
Oops. I’d just missed breakfast/ Oh, well.
I guess I needed sleep more than food.
I made coffee in the room, had a protein bar and headed
out. Good Friday is not the day to
explore Panama City. They told me all the museums were closed. I
went out anyway, taking the well-strolled and well-patrolled Costa Cintura
along the water, enjoying the beautiful flowers and people-watching.
The old section of Panama, which was about an
hour’s walk, was a really mixed bag.
The
only open restaurants I could find were in a central plaza, populated by
locals, with mostly fish on the menu.
That’s probably the freshest fish you can get but I was still a little
paranoid that fish might be a great place to harbor unfamiliar bacteria if it
weren’t carefully prepared, so I kept going.
There was a lot of beautiful old architecture, much of it in disrepair
(but some being rebuilt) and a lot of poverty if you looked down the side
streets.
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The new Panama City, seen from the old section. |
That, of course, contrasted
with the eclectic architecture of the new office buildings and luxury
apartments.
I finally ended up having lunch at a restaurant with an
outside porch`- shrimp in tomato sauce, a nice salad, Perrier but not the beer
I requested because it was Good Friday and sale of alcohol was prohibited. They spoke very little English but I was
surprised at how much rudimentary Spanish I remembered and I had a good
meal. On the way home I stopped at a
convenience store and, still ravenously thirsty, bought Diet Coke (“Sin
Calorias”), a couple of bottles of Pellegrino water and a fruit pop.
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Entrance to my hotel, the Bristol. |