Another beautiful day in paradise as the team headed for the Cenotes. Once at the site, Mike, Bob and Sandra walked back down the limestone road. One of the muchachos had explained that the water pipe pulls water from six different cenotes. Really, he meant pozos (wells). While he had indicated that they were slim holes, Sandy understood this to perhaps be something similar to Vaca Ha, a solution tube through which gear and divers are lowered in order to obtain entrance to a beautiful cave system. Sandy was being overambitious, as the water is actually pulled from pozos, man-made wells, rather than sky-blue sun-kissed cenotes. However, the walk was nice. Again, the muchachos proved to be invaluable, carrying 26 tanks into the jungle two at a time. Some of the team had fashioned shoulder straps (or tank slings) to make carrying the tanks less of a hassle. The muchachos used the slings, placing the padding against their foreheads and marching quickly along the treacherous rocky jungle trail. While the trail measures out at .6 of a mile, the terrain is inconsistent, primarily craggy hard limestone and a variety of holes, some filled and some opening into solution tubes a dozen feet deep.