Jane, a new graduate student from University of Florida here for trapping, rented a car for the weekend. Today we headed off to El Yunque for some good quality hiking and bathing under a waterfall. Not ten minutes before we reached the entrance, it started pouring rain. We are both adventurous souls, however, and continued up to the trail entrances. Lucky for us, it quickly stopped raining and so we were able to stay dry as we made our way down to La Mina waterfall. I took a few pictures for Jane as she swam under the waterfall, and as we were hiking back up we took a dip in a pool upstream from the waterfall. It was awesome because the waterfall was packed with people, yet no one seemed to care that there were perfectly beautiful pools just upstream, so we were allowed to enjoy ourselves in peace. We then took a quick 20 minute trail and headed back to the car to catch the sunset on the beach.
View from the trail
Weird tourist shop on the road from El Yunque
On our way back into town, we passed by "The Rum Bar", a place advertising free rum tasting. Obviously we stopped. I gotta say, this place was better than the Bacardi factory tour with regards to the fact that you could get half-shots of any rum (or alcohol for that matter) they had, including mixed drinks with rum. So, if we really wanted to, we probably could have gotten very drunk without paying at all for the drinks. Jane had to drive and I didn't feel like getting drunk, so we headed to Luqillo for drinking beers while watching the sunset on the beach.
In Luqillo, I found "Cutis", an ice cream shop that sold home-made ice cream. This included "carrot cake", with chunks of real carrot cake. It was some of the best ice cream, and definitely the best carrot cake ice cream, I've ever had! After grabbing some ice cream, we went next door to "Guavas", a bar and restaurant that brews its own beer from, you guessed it, guava. I don't know how to describe beer, but it was bold (NOT keystone or corona) with a hint of fruitiness (but definitely not cruddy fruit beer you'd find in the states). To put it simply- this was a very good home brew. At Guavas, we talked to the owner and inventor of the guava beer, Freddy, an ex-air force turned USDA agent by day, bar owner/beer maker by night. It was some great conversation and some great beer to finish off a fantastic day.
Freddy also makes his own coconut moonshine!
Oh Puerto Rico