"Sir, are there any captains around here. I have an OFFER for them."
(never ask for a favor, offer something instead).
-"What do you mean?"
"Well, if he could take me on his ship I could pay hime like 200 bucks, off the record of course, and it wouldn't cost him a dime."
-"Manaña maybe the captain will come..."
In the port, I am told to talk to Mr. Castillo. A security guard takes it very serious when I ask him if it is possible to talk to a certain Mr. Castillo. He calls him up and spells out my name over the phone. A certain mr. V-e-r-w-e-r is waiting for you. No no, I say, he has never heard of me. I am told I should call his secretary and come back tomorrow. I had the feeling that this tomorrow would be the beginning of a very long chain of tomorrows that would keep me in the ugly city of Panama for weeks. And I wouldn't have any guarantee that a vessel would take me as a passenger. Pondering along those lines, I promenade along the port f
It might be the ants that help me taking that decision. I see a tree with hundreds of ants climbing its bark. They all carry a piece of leaf with the size of a fingernail. The ants are moving along a certain path, it's like a highway. I follow it across the pavement, under a car, through a ditch and then into the ground on the other side of a fence. This is discipline, zeal, perfected diligence. It's actually quite unbelievable, the way a group of ants can organize itself to accomplish the very comp
I visit the Casco Antigua, Panama's Old Town. It doesn't exactly blow my mind, though it's allright. Just another World Heritage Site, some interesting churches and a pretty square. I walk around like tourists do and climb some ruins at the coast. A man shows me the entrance, and I climb some stairs to reach the upper level. How pretty these ruins are! And how pretty the view towards the skyline of Panama's financial city! It's a rugged concrete structure, nothing else, but it's gently draped with bright red flowers. I take some photos while the man is waiting for me downstairs.
That man wants something, of course. He has a story that is either a laughable rip-off cliché or an inhumanely bitter situation. He needs babymilk. He needs a pot of powdered babymilk for his kid. I fail to believe him. He takes me into a supermarket and shows me the milkpowder that cost about four dollars. I still don't believe him. To get rid of the beggar, I put one dollar in his hand.
Back in the hostel I cook a big meal for myself to fill my stomach before the next long bus ride to San José, Costa Rica. I overcook the meat and the barely cooked risotto tastes sour. The other night, when I cooked beef and fried potatoes together with DJ, it was way tastier. But DJ has already gone. It's time for me to go too. We take a taxi to the terminal and get on a 25-dollar-bus to San José.
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