$0.20 - twenty cents american |
driving back to the border the road had dried out enough in washed out places that traffic was moving quickly.
we all had valid stamps for Guatemala in our passports and since we had not been stamped out [just stamped into Honduras] i drove past the immigration buildings and to the Guatemalan border gate. i get challenged by someone in the car who was either just thinking out loud or wanted to go stand in more immigration lines. i say let's see what happens and let's not make it more complicated than it needs to be. it takes a minute for the guard to walk out of his shack and he lifts the gate and waves us through. i shout a 'muchas gracias' and it was that easy. i don't believe we did anything improper but remote border crossings are always unpredictable so someone else might have a different experience.
the route we took back was not the same because of a navigation error. i had fallen asleep in the back seat and when i woke up we were off route. so, not a big deal but driving in remote areas does require both a skilled driver and some with navigation skills. roads are poorly marked and google maps/waze was not 100% reliable.
when i return the rental car there is of course a final surprise, the contract is in US$ but when you return the car if you don't pay in US$ cash then they convert using a very bad exchange rate and charge your credit card at the much higher Guat quetzales rate. this pissed me off because it's just a blantant rip off but i need the transaction to go on my cc for coverage reasons. i told them i would dispute the added costs with my cc company - which i did because i had a contract in US$ and didn't pay the extra amount.
this was a great adventure and i had a wonderful time. i hope that my travels take me back to Honduras.
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