Update:
Belize Telecommunications Limited (BTL) has
a new Numbering Plan for Belize, effective
from May 1, 2002. With this numbering plan,
a new 7-digit number will be applied
countrywide, replacing the existing 4 or
5-digit telephone number, plus area code.
The new system has no area codes
(similar to the system introduced in
Guatemala several years ago). You'll now
need dial the entire 7 digits for all
calls whether within the same area or
district or to another area or district. I
wish I could tell you about a simple way to
convert the old numbers into the new, but in
many cases the conversion code depends on
whether the number is a landline and on the
current area code, or a fixed or mobile
cellular phone. However, here are two ways
to find out: You can visit one of two
websites set up for the conversion: and ,
then click on the New Numbering Plan
icon and type in the old number in the box.
If you're already in Belize you can pick up
a booklet listing conversion codes from any
BTL office (locations of the main ones are
covered in the Rough Guide ). BTL
introduced this change with very little
warning. Certainly they made no mention of
it when I interviewed a member of their
customer service team last year, while
researching the current (2nd) edition of
The Rough Guide to Belize . Many
businesses had no idea of the forthcoming
change until I told them, sometimes only
weeks before May 1st. I've tried using the
conversion box on the website and I've found
it (generally) works for landline phones
(most numbers in Belize) but didn't do too
well on cell phones. I hope this helps. If
you continue to have problems, contact me at
and I'll try to find out the correct number
for you. Please note that most of the
numbers listed on this website have been
updated.
-Peter
Eltringham
Wedged into
the northeastern corner of Central America
between Mexico's Yucatán peninsula and the
Petén forests of Guatemala, Belize
offers some of the most breathtaking scenery
anywhere in the Caribbean. The country
actually consists of marginally more sea
than land, with the dazzling turquoise
shallows and cobalt depths of the longest
barrier reef in the Americas just
offshore. Here, beneath the surface, a
brilliant, technicolour world of fish and
corals awaits divers and snorkellers.
Scattered along the reef, a chain of islands
- known as cayes - protect the
mainland from the ocean swell and offer more
than a hint of tropical paradise. Beyond the
reef lie the real jewels in Belize's natural
crown - three of only four coral atolls
in the Caribbean.
Belizeans
recognize the importance of conservation and
their country boasts a higher proportion of
protected land (over 40 percent) than any
other. This has allowed the densely
forested interior to remain relatively
untouched, boasting abundant natural
attractions, including the highest waterfall
in Central America and the world's only
jaguar reserve. Rich tropical forests
support a tremendous range of wildlife
, including howler and spider monkeys,
tapirs and pumas, jabiru storks and scarlet
macaws; spend any time inland and you're
sure to see the national bird, the very
visible keel-billed toucan.
Despite being
the only Central American country without a
volcano, Belize does have some rugged
uplands in the south-central region, where
the Maya Mountains rise to over
1100m. The country's main rivers rise here,
flowing north or east to the Caribbean,
forming along the way some of the largest
cave systems in the Americas, few of
which have been fully explored. These caves
often bear traces of the Maya
civilization that dominated the area
from around 2000 BC until the arrival of the
Spanish. The most obvious remains of this
fascinating culture are the ruins of dozens
of ancient cities rising out of the
rainforest.
Officially
English-speaking , and only gaining full
independence from Britain in 1981, Belize is
as much a Caribbean nation as a Latin one,
but one with plenty of distinctively Central
American features, above all a blend of
cultures and races that includes Maya,
mestizo, African and European. Spanish is at
least as widely spoken as English, but the
rich, lilting Creole is the spoken
language understood and used by almost every
Belizean, whatever their first tongue.
You'll hear this everywhere - and though
based on English, it's less comprehensible
to outsiders than you might expect.
With far less
of a language barrier to overcome than
elsewhere in the region, uncrowded Belize is
the ideal first stop on a tour of the
isthmus. And, although it's the
second-smallest country in Central America
(slightly larger than El Salvador), the
wealth of national parks and reserves, the
numerous small hotels and restaurants,
together with plenty of reliable public
transport make Belize an ideal place to
travel independently, giving visitors plenty
of scope to explore little-visited Caribbean
islands as well as the heartland of the
ancient Maya