For our port stop in Roatan, Honduras on the Majestic Princess we booked an excursion through Vacations to Go that included a visit to a sloth sanctuary, a horseback ride, and snorkeling. Instructions were provided on when and where to meet for the tour. Since it was not purchased through the ship we had to meet outside of the port area one hour after the ship arrived at the port in Mahogany Bay. We expected a long line to get off the ship so we went down before any announcements and before seeing any other passengers walking down the dock. We had to wait for a short while, but were the first ones off the ship. We were not the first waiting to get off, just the closest to the stairs when the barrier was removed.
Instructions included walking through the port shopping area and out to the road into the port, passing through the green gate which has the security check for port entrance, and meeting a representative from the tour beyond the gates. There wasn’t anyone directly beyond the gates, but after walking a bit farther we came across a small open area next to the road full of locals with signs for various tours people had booked through outside sources. The representative for our tour was near the back of the group by a banana plant. We were the first to arrive for the tour. There was also a zipline tour meeting with the same representative. Some of the next people to arrive said there had not yet been any announcements, but they had seen other people leaving the ship. We had to wait there awhile and the banana plant came in handy for shelter when it rained a bit.
Eventually the zipline group left and a few more people showed up for our bus. They walked us up a hill lined with cars, vans, and busses to pretty much the end of the line at the top of the hill. After waiting in the bus for awhile another group gathered from the waiting place boarded the bus. By then it was well past the hour in which people were supposed to arrive and not everyone had shown up. As is usual with these excursions they eventually gave up waiting for people who can’t be bothered to get there on time and left. Most of the people were just doing the sloth sanctuary and snorkeling, but there were a couple zipliners who had missed the bus for that excursion. Pretty much every excursion we have ever booked through outside sources has waited well beyond the time people are supposed to meet. The people who booked it and didn’t arrive on time never show up so I don’t know why they always wait so long since the ones who are actually coming manage to get there on time. Not sure why so many people book excursions they neither cancel nor attend either. They don’t get their money back for no-shows.
First we went to the sloth sanctuary, which was for monkeys as well as sloths and also had some birds and a couple of kinkajous. Before going into a monkey cage people had to empty their pockets and take off hats, glasses, dangly earrings, and anything else a monkey might try to steal. There were shelves people could put their belongings on. We were allowed to take cell phones in to take photos.
The monkeys spent a lot of time hopping from person to person so everyone ended up with a monkey on them at some point. One monkey took quite a liking to one man’s cell phone. It kept trying to eat it and trying to take it. When the phone’s owner kept a good hold on it and wouldn’t let the monkey run off with it the monkey punched him in the face. These were little capuchin monkeys so it probably didn’t hurt.
They hardly weighed anything and their fur was very soft. They are little thieves though. One managed to get a kleenx left in someone’s pocket and ran right up to the top of the enclosure with its prize. When they say to empty your pockets they mean everything whether it has any value or not. The monkeys were allowed to move about freely within their enclosure. Whether or not they chose to hop on anyone was totally up to the monkey, but the guide did sometimes put a bit of food on people to encourage a monkey to hop on that person.
After awhile the refuge guide said the longer we stayed in there the more likely one of the monkeys would pee or poop on somebody, which is probably their way of getting people to move along, though he did warn us before going in that there was no guarantee that wouldn’t happen. Luckily it did not.
We went up a little hill into a large pavilion at the top. 12 sloths live there. The sloths did not have a cage. Some were in the roofed pavilion, which had some leafless trees inside, probably fake or not living. Some of the sloths were in trees just outside of the pavilion, which the guide said grow their favorite fruit. He said one especially speedy for her species sloth disappeared for a couple days once and she now wears a tracker. Sloths may not be so speedy as the monkeys, but they moved along a lot quicker than what their reputation causes people to think.
The sloths did not make physical contact with anyone. They just moved about the trees and structure of the pavilion as they pleased. Occasionally one of the workers brought a sloth into the pavilion from the surrounding area and let it climb into the trees there, but nobody else touched them. He put them down low in an easily viewed spot, but it didn’t take them all that long to climb up higher and farther away from all of the people taking photos of them.
After spending some time with the sloths we moved into a cage with some scarlet macaws and one green one. The guide said in the wild they stick with their own color for mates, but not always in captivity. They had some rainbow macaws in another cage that were offspring of the green one and one of the scarlets. Most of the birds could fly, but there was one who had previously been the pet of an owner who had clipped the wrong feathers so it could not. The green one could fly, but was too lazy to fly much, preferring to climb the screen at the outer edge of the enclosure or hop along the ground.
One of the red ones came down to sit on people’s heads. When it was done the green one sat on people’s arms. Apparently the red one was jealous of the crackers the green one got because it swooped down from its perch and landed on my head while I had the green one sitting on my arm. It hopped over to the next lady’s head when she had the green one too, but nobody else had two birds at the same time.
On the way out we stopped to see a couple of little kinkajous in a cage. They are very cute. The pathway between the kinkajous and the parking area passed several booths selling souvenirs and refreshments as well as a bathroom.
Before we went to our next destination the bus made a brief stop to let the two stray zipliners out at the zipline course. The bus must have gone back to get them at some point after dropping the rest of us off at a little beach resort that had everything else included in that tour because they were back on our bus when it was time to leave rather than returning to the ship with the rest of the zipliners.








































































































































