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<title>Travel Blog | KyleJared</title>
<link>http://www.travelblog.org/Bloggers/KyleJared/</link>
<description>Travel adventures in journals and photos from KyleJared</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<pubDate>Wed, 22 May 2013 09:52:02 +0000</pubDate>
<lastBuildDate>Wed, 22 May 2013 09:52:02 +0000</lastBuildDate><item>
                    <title>Tebowing in Tikal 2</title>
                    <description>As we continued on an outer circle around the ruins we came across some areas called complexes which were identified with letters instead of numbers. The complexes did not features such large temples and some none at all. The one thing that they all did feature was a set of impressive hieroglyphic rock carvings the best of which are now in museums which contained the text of the ancient Maya.A</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/Guatemala/Peten-Region/Tikal/blog-706455.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Tebowing in Tikal 1</title>
                    <description>After one more day in Lanquin at the highly suggested El Retiro Lodge we hopped a shuttle from Lanquin to Flores  our base for our tour of Tikal.I39ve started to learn that posted arrival times are rarely ever met as we left at 8 am and arrived near 6 pm the trip was supposed to last 7 hours.We got off the shuttle with a hostel called La Union in mind. As we were waiting to get our bags o</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/Guatemala/Peten-Region/Tikal/blog-695390.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Semuc Champey</title>
                    <description>While the dorm settings were less than ideal the morning39s light showed that the place we were staying in wasn39t awful  if I put myself in the frame of mind that I39m staying at summer camp.The following morning as we were leaving to stay at another hostel recommended to us by the Israeli39s in San Pedro we met a couple of travelers from Uruguay and a mother and daughter traveli</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/Guatemala/Verapaz-Region/Semuc-Champey/blog-694528.html</link>
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                    <title>The Only Thing that Sucks About Travelling is the Travel Part</title>
                    <description>Since it39s always a guess when I39ll have a good internet connection down here and whether I39ll actually be able to get a blog entry up I39ve maintained a journal in which I39ve kept track of the trip and from that I plan to continue this blog online. That being said the first line I wrote in my journal after arriving at our hostel in Lanquin may have been a little exaggerated </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/Guatemala/Verapaz-Region/Lanquin/blog-692836.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>San Pedro and Volcano Climbing</title>
                    <description>ltstrong stylefontweight normalgtltstrong stylefontweight normalgtA shuttle for 75Q 10 brought us into San Pedro. The entrance was spectacular as we turned off the Pan American Highway for about an hour of driving through giant pot holes steep grades and blind turns around the many switch backs on the road.To cros the mountain ridge we first ascended into a cloud such that</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/Guatemala/Western-Highlands/San-Pedro-La-Laguna/blog-690666.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Arrival and Antigua</title>
                    <description>ltstrong idinternalsourcemarker0.95655662775971 stylefontweight normalgtAfter arriving in Guatemala City or Guate as all the locals refer to it I immediately cancelled my fake return ticket. For those who I havent told me return ticket strategy heres the background. Most Central American countries have very old laws stating that anybody entering the country must have proo</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/Guatemala/Capital-Region/Antigua/blog-688026.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>First Post</title>
                    <description>A few friends have asked that I make sure that I keep them up to date with the trip along the way and I39m already misplacing email addresses on scraps of paper that I received before moving back to Illinois. So I figured that doing a blog would be the best way to let those people follow my trip without me having to worry about forgetting someone on a list of email addresses.By the way this is</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/North-America/United-States/Illinois/Springfield/blog-680602.html</link>
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