
The Blue Hole, Mayan ruins, and the second-longest barrier reef.
Was ist eine Individualreise nach Belize?
Belize is best across the Blue Hole dive (advanced open water required, USD 300+ liveaboard day trip), the ATM cave (USD 80 guided, the most accessible intact Maya ceremonial cave in the world), and Hol Chan snorkelling with nurse sharks (USD 30–40, Caye Caulker boats). Fly into Belize City (BZE). Best season: February–May (dry, 28°C). Caye Caulker over Ambergris Caye for budget travel; reverse for diving infrastructure.
Belize is Central America's only English-speaking country (a British colonial legacy — it was British Honduras until 1981), a nation of 400,000 people with 500 km of Caribbean coastline and the Belize Barrier Reef — the second-largest barrier reef in the world after the Great Barrier Reef (226 km of continuous reef, UNESCO 1996). The Blue Hole (Lighthouse Reef Atoll, 70 km offshore, a perfectly circular 300-metre wide, 125-metre deep karst sinkhole — the most recognisable dive site in the Caribbean) is the iconic Belize image; Jacques Cousteau's 1971 Calypso survey brought global attention. The Blue Hole is a dive for advanced certification holders (the dive descends to 40 m to see stalactites and blacktip reef sharks in the overhanging roof of the sinkhole — visibility is typically 30 m in the blue water, the top of the hole is turquoise, the depth is midnight blue).
The Belize interior contains the most intact primary tropical rainforest in Central America north of Amazonia — 60% of Belize's land surface remains forested. The Mountain Pine Ridge Forest Reserve (Cayo District) is a 200,000-acre plateau anomaly: mountain pine forest at 700–1,000 m surrounded by tropical lowland, containing the highest concentration of jaguar (Panthera onca) den sites in Central America, the 1,000-foot Hidden Valley Falls (the highest waterfall in Central America), and the Caracol Maya site (the largest Maya archaeological site in Belize — the Caana pyramid at 43 m is still the tallest human-made structure in Belize, predating the arrival of Europeans by 1,200 years). Actun Tunichil Muknal (ATM cave, 45 km west of San Ignacio): the sacred Maya cave with 14 complete skeletal remains in situ, the Crystal Maiden (a calcite-encrusted teenage girl sacrificed approximately 900 CE), and intact ceramic offerings on the cave floor.
The cayes (pronounced 'keys') — the 200+ coral islands on the reef — are the centre of Belize's tourist infrastructure: Ambergris Caye (the largest, with San Pedro town and a 40-km golf-cart-only island) and Caye Caulker ('go slow' — the laid-back backpacker alternative, car-free) are the primary bases. The reef snorkelling (Hol Chan Marine Reserve and Shark Ray Alley, both within 10 km of San Pedro, USD 30–40 half-day boat tour) puts nurse sharks and southern stingrays in clear 5-metre-depth water at snorkelling range — the nurse sharks are habituated to tour boats and approach to within touching distance (touching discouraged). Manatees are frequently sighted in the channels between Ambergris Caye and the mainland.
Unsere empfohlenen Monate sind December–April. Hier ein monatlicher Überblick mit Planungshinweisen.
Handverlesene Erlebnisse unserer lokalen Veranstalter. Jede Individualreise beinhaltet eine Auswahl davon — oder etwas noch Besseres.






Zwei Ausgangspunkte — Ihre echte Reiseroute ist individuell. Wir bauen darauf auf.
The Great Blue Hole is a perfectly circular marine sinkhole 70 km off the coast of Belize at Lighthouse Reef Atoll — 300 m in diameter and 125 m deep, it formed as a limestone cave during the last ice age when sea levels were 120 m lower. When sea levels rose approximately 15,000 years ago, the cave flooded. Jacques Cousteau brought it to global attention in 1971 when he listed it as one of the 10 best dive sites in the world. The dive descends to 40 m inside the hole where stalactites from the original cave hang from the limestone ceiling — visible evidence that this was once a dry cavern. Blacktip and Caribbean reef sharks circle the rim. The dive requires Advanced Open Water certification (the depth exceeds the PADI Open Water limit of 18 m). Snorkellers can see the surface of the hole but cannot experience the stalactites at depth.
Actun Tunichil Muknal ('Cave of the Crystal Sepulchre' in Yucatec Maya) is a sacred Maya ceremonial cave 45 km west of San Ignacio that was used for ritual sacrifice and offerings between approximately 300–900 CE. Access requires a guided tour (mandatory, USD 80 including park fee and guide — guides must be licensed by the Belize Tourism Board). The visit involves a 45-minute forest hike, three knee-to-waist-deep river crossings, and a 10-metre swim into the cave entrance. Inside: 14 complete human skeletal remains of sacrificial victims (including children), intact ceramic vessels with faces shaped into the clay ('characterised' ceramics), and the Crystal Maiden — a teenage girl's skeleton that has been fully encrusted in calcite mineral over 1,000 years, making the bones appear iridescent. Photography is prohibited in the cave since 2012 (a tourist dropped a camera on the skull of one of the skeletons).
Caye Caulker and Ambergris Caye serve different visitor types. Caye Caulker (population 2,000, 8 km long) is car-free, has no ATM until recently, has a backpacker and budget-travel orientation, and enforces a genuinely slow pace — accommodation is USD 40–100/night for guesthouses. The Split (the swimming and sunset bar area) is free and sociable. Ambergris Caye (population 18,000, 40 km long with San Pedro town) has a developed tourist infrastructure — restaurants, dive shops, golf-cart rental, boutique hotels and resorts (USD 100–400/night), and the widest diving operator choice. Both have access to the same reef sites (Hol Chan is equidistant). Caye Caulker is better for budget and independent travellers; Ambergris is better for diving packages, watersports variety, and comfort. Most visitors to Belize choose one and do day trips to the other by water taxi (35 minutes between the two).
The Garifuna people (population approximately 600,000 in Belize, Honduras, Guatemala, and Nicaragua) are descended from Carib and Arawak Indigenous people of St. Vincent who intermarried with African enslaved people who escaped from shipwrecked or captured slave ships in the 17th century. They were deported by the British from St. Vincent to Roatán (Honduras) in 1797 and spread along the Central American coast. Their language (Garifuna, or Garínagu) is a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage — a Creole of Arawak, Carib, French, English, and West African elements. Garifuna Settlement Day (November 19, a public holiday in Belize) celebrates the 1823 arrival of Garifuna settlers in Belize by canoe. Hopkins Village is the most accessible Garifuna cultural centre: the drum circle tradition, punta dance (the contemporary Garifuna music genre derived from ritual mourning dance), and hudut (coconut milk and cassava meal with whole fish stew) are experienced here.
Belize has one of the highest biodiversity indices in Central America per square kilometre: 600+ bird species (the keel-billed toucan is the national bird), 4 cat species (jaguar, ocelot, margay, jaguarundi, puma — Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary has the highest jaguar density accessible to visitors), Baird's tapir (the national animal, largest land mammal in Central America), howler and spider monkeys, Morelet's crocodile, manatees (West Indian manatee, Swallow Caye Wildlife Sanctuary in the Belize City lagoon). Marine: whale sharks aggregate at Gladden Spit from March–June (at full moon when cubera snapper spawn — the whale sharks feed on the spawn cloud at 25 m depth, dive operators run full-moon whale shark tours USD 150–200). Belizean reefs: hawksbill and loggerhead sea turtles, green sea turtles nesting on Tobacco Caye beaches (June–August).
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