Mexico and Belize family vacation
£2750To£3400 excluding flights
Description of Mexico and Belize family vacation
Price information
Departure information
This trip can be tailor made throughout the year to suit your requirements
Travel guides
First things first, family adventure vacations aren’t all designed for super high-achieving families who spend the weekends up at dawn, donned in match...
Mexico is a land of delicious dichotomies. Just look at its Margarita. Sweet and sour. And yet it works. Landscape wise, it is diverse to say the leas...
Responsible Travel
As the pioneers of responsible tourism, we've screened this (and every) vacation so that you can travel knowing it will help support the places and people that you visit, and the planet. Read how below.
Planet
Carbon ReductionIn an effort to reduce road travel we encourage our clients to hike, kayak or make use of local boat services, where it is possible. In Belize, we recommend using the public water taxis for traveling to Caye Caulker, instead of flying. If including Placencia, we also avoid having people fly back to Belize City at the end of the trip, instead going by road.
You’ll mainly be eating locally sourced food while you are in Mexico and Belize, with several of the lodges and haciendas we use implementing a ‘farm to table’ model, and the seafood is abundant. For vegetarians and vegans there are colourful local salads and an array of tropical fruits.
Environment & Wildlife
In Valladolid and in the rural Yucatan we favour working with hotels and haciendas that work to preserve the local cultural heritage, whether that be in a cobbled town center, or on a historic sisal plantation. We encourage our guests not to over-use the air conditioning and to re-use their towels to reduce energy use. Our local partners check for water refill points to minimise the use of plastic water bottles, and in our trip information we recommend people bring refillable or filter water bottles and avoid buying single-use plastic.
The temple complex at Chichen Itza, and the many cenotes in Mexico, receive many visitors and we ask our travelers to respect the environment here, and not upset any local wildlife or climb any structures that are labelled not to climb. Where turtle hatchlings may be found in Mexico, we do not encourage our guests to interfere with these, so they can make their natural journey into the sea.
Belize is home to a sensitive ecosystem including jungle and coral reef, so protecting the environment is a priority. The jungle lodges we use have preserved their little patches of forest habitats and maintain walking trails, as well as offering employment to the local community. Many of them also grow some of their own fruit and veg, for zero ‘food miles’, and promote historical knowledge of the medicinal plants found here, to help keep those traditions going.
The people who work in the lodges and are involved in guiding are all trained to uphold conservational principles and encourage our guests to visit responsibly. We would urge our customers to heed advice about not feeding local wildlife, sticking to allocated trails only, taking out everything you take in (leaving nothing behind) and keeping themselves and the animals safe as they explore.
The Belizean barrier reef is incredibly special, and we work with our local partners to ensure that all excursions into the reef are done with certified operators. National Park fees and permits help direct revenue into where it is needed to promote conservation.
People
Local EconomyAll our tours in Mexico and Belize are run in conjunction with local partners that have been chosen partly because they provide a fantastic service but also because they share our environmental and social goals.
Where guests enjoy the services of local guides throughout their visit, we ensure that these guides are from the same regional area and will be pleased to answer questions and give an excellent insight into the way of life in the region. Examples include walking guides in Valladollid, the family operating the sisal plantation tour at Sotuta de Peon, and locals running boat trips in Bacalar.
As much as possible, we work with locally owned hotels and lodges, promoting relationships with hoteliers who offer refillable toiletries rather than single-use sachets or minis. We recommend that our clients eat in independent establishments and visit independently owned shops and markets and are constantly adding to our list of recommendations which is sent to travelers before they go.
Employment, Inclusivity & Diversity
Our programmes are run together with partners that are owned and run by local people and who share our belief in the importance of operating in a socially responsible way, paying staff fairly and offering appropriate working hours and conditions.
We also understand that tipping is culturally appropriate and makes up a portion of income in certain job types, therefore we also provide detailed guidelines for our travelers as to suitable amounts.
By booking with us, you will be supporting various local guides, drivers, and service providers (e.g., hotel staff, market stallholders, ticket sellers, boat drivers etc), promoting employment from local communities, and good job opportunities for people coming up through training. This includes members of smaller communities such as Mayans and Garifuna, depending on your tour’s exact route.
This trip is LGBTQ+ friendly and we welcome families of all types on our trips.
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