Panama

Mojo 2
Andrew Partington
Sat 25 Jun 2011 21:30
We are now in our 4th full day at Shelter Bay Marina. We have engaged an agent to assist us with the transit and things are progressing well. Today our boat was measured by an officer from the Canal Authority. Tomorrow we pay the money and by tomorrow night we should know our transit date. There has until now been a large backlog of boats wanting to transit but we are told things have now settled down and it may only be a matter of days before we can go.
We have met some other Aussies here and they are berthed right next to us. Terry and Elaine from "Virgo's Child" and John and Sue from "Five Islands" have been very generous to us and have even offered to come with Daniel and I on our transit, to assist as linehandlers. Each vessel in transit must have a minimum of 5 people aboard to handle the lines that keep the boat central in the lock as it is either filled or emptied. I have heard some horror stories of things going wrong but I am sure we will be fine.
Had an interesting time taking Robert to the airport. We finally cleared immigration after some real issues late on Monday and caught the Bus to Panama City about 5.30pm. We had an overnight stay at the Costa Inn and took their shuttle bus to the airport at 5am.  I was very sad to see him go but was pleased to hear from him that he loved the trip and he was determined to do some more travelling.
Instead of taking a cab back to the main bus terminal I decided to mix it with the locals and take the bus. I walked for about 5 minutes and then jumped onto one of those old long nosed school buses you see in the USA. There are literally thousands of them here and they are painted up a little like those taxi cabs in Manilla. The buses are all clearly from the 50's and 60's, are not air-conditioned, and have huge V8's to push them along. Our driver treated the 20km trip to the station as his own personal rally course. This guy drove like he was was auditioning for the V8 Supercars. I'm not sure what speed we were doing but it had to be 100kmh, in traffic, downhill, on a bend, in a rusted 1960's school bus. Yeeha!!!  The trip was around 20km and it cost just 25 cents.
It is incredible how low prices are here in Panama. The local beer "Panama" tastes a lot like Corona and you can buy one for 35 cents. In a large department store in Panama City I bought 2 pairs of jeans for $12 each and 3  t-shirts for $2.99 each!!  A brand new house overlooking the lake will cost you $40,000.
The downside to all of this is that Colon is not such a nice town. Rob and I had to go to immigration right in one of the bad areas and were not altogether comfortable trying to get a cab to stop in the pouring rain after we had finished. Colon also has no road rules, it is survival of the fittest. At intersections cars, buses and trucks all just keep pushing forward until they force a gap in the traffic.
Where we are staying at the Marina is very slick compared to colon. The marina's restaurant overlooks the yachts and above it is an air-conditioned lounge with a plasma TV and leather lounges. Daniel and I take a break from the heat there from time to time and watch some of the tennis. The staff have been very helpful and went out of their way to assist us overcome the isue we had with immigration.
Looking forward to going now though and will spend the next few days preparing the boat.
Andrew.