We had an early start so we could watch flamingos. A 'middleman' connected us to one of the tour boats docked at the nearby beach. The middleman claimed the capital speaks English, and that was not the case. I half-guessed what he was saying; the other half I relied on Tizzy to translate. We saw flamingos in their nature habitat. Late March is the end of their migration period. There was a good size that day, but supposedly there were so many more of them in January. Next, we checked out the mangroves. There were long fish and rounded fish in the water. I tried to capture them with my Insta360 but didn't turn on the entire time. We also stopped by an underground spring gushing out under the edge of the mangrove. It’s so easily to miss because it looked like a current in this water mass. But once you see it, you can’t unseen because the way it’s pushing the water upward instead of with the current. The beach is beautiful white sand and laid laid-back vibe. But it's much too hot to be sunbathing. We headed out shortly after a good seafood lunch. Oh, I also got a cup of coffee from a small shack. Like a barista, the old man brewed it on the spot from the cutest little coffee machine for $1.5.