It appears you have not registered with our community. To register please click here ...

+-

+-PL Gallery Random Image


Author Topic: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost  (Read 4308 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline buencamino

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 602
  • Country: co
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Committed 0-1 year
  • Trips: Resident
Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« on: January 18, 2014, 11:58:50 AM »
The site won't allow me paste paragraphed text so here's a repost with forced paragraphs:
 
With expat, RA and Bc-1 talking about tourism on the “real age” thread I think it would be interesting to talk about some destinations for tourism in Colombia.  My first such trip was to Bahia Solano on the Pacific coast. It was many years back and things have probably changed. There were direct flights from Cali then but now you have to fly into Medellin first. The outpost (as I would call it) of Bahia Solano has a small airport but no beach. Once you land you need to go to either Playa Huina about thirty minutes in lancha where there is a hotel and some other lodging or take the jeep for a 40 minute ride to the tiny fishing pueblo of El Valle on the coast. This is a better choice. The beach is incredibly wide at low tide and the waves are incredibly intense at high tide. There’s a nice but very basic hotel,  Hotel El Valle in the village or fancier cabañas out along the beach. During our stay the hotel’s small generator broke down (no big deal, just had to use candles at night). There was an old German “engineer” who lived with a huge Black women in the village who was the only one who could fix those things.  The problem was he was drunk all the time and Janeth the hotel owner had to catch him on the rare day when he was sober. I don’t know if he’s still there but at the time there was a guy living with his woman in one of those stilt houses on the beach who everyone called Rambo. They said he was an AWOL FARC but who knows. He was a good guide and took us up river into the mangroves in his dugout canoe. You have to balance carefully in those things, their very tippy. From El Valle you can hike a jungle trail that parallels the beach all the way down to Parque Reserva La Utria  (takes better part of a day) which is popular for whale watching because it has a cove that the whales enter with their young so there are close up views.
 
.............................................................................
 
Another place I like a lot and have visited a couple of times is Nuqui also on the Pacific coast. From Bahia Solano it’s about ten hours en lancha by sea.  From the interior the way to get to Nuqui also by air from Medellin. The last time I went there was a three hour layover in Quibdo which is the capitol of Choco department. It is a very remote very small “city” along the Rio Atraco in the heart of the Choco jungle and surely has to be the inspiration for Joseph Conrad’s novel  “Nostromo”. When we arrived at the airport (brand new and built by the Chinese) I went up to a policia and said hey we want to see the tourist section of Quibdo.  (the city certainly doesn’t get much tourism per se just the occasional Euro backpacker but there is a big iglesia and malecon along the river). He took us outside and talked to a taxi driver. I didn’t hear all of it but I’m pretty sure he said to the driver “look you make god dammed sure this gringo and his girlfriend are back here at the airport in three hours or else! The guy just parked by  the iglesia and waited for us I think per the cop’s instructions while we walked around El Centro. The population looked to be about 89% Black, 10% Indian and 1% White.  When we got back to the airport I really had a sight. There were two Black guys talking in front of us who had the “pinta” of bad guys. One of them had completely gold capped teeth, gold earrings of course and necklaces but of all things all his fingernails were covered in gold…real gold.  The flight from Quibdo to Nuqui is another thirty minutes and you arrive at a tiny little landing strip surrounded by jungle.  My favorite lodging is the Piedra Piedra Lodge which is reached via a forty five minute ride in lancha south along the coast (bring pancho…it rains a lot).  They have a nice Japanese made generator that runs off running water which comes out of the mountain behind the lodge. It can handle the refrigerator compressor that keeps the guests’ food cold, a tv and about ten light bulbs.  As well as enjoying the sea you can make jungle hikes to crystal clear streams with deep pools in front of stunning waterfalls. There’s even a natural hot spring pool a half hour’s hike from the lodge.
 
.................................................................................
 
Less remote is another of my favorites: Capurgana, a village that faces the Golfo De Uraba and is only a few kilometers from the border with Panama. It has electricity, phone service and most other modern conveniences. There are a couple of comfortable hotels along the beach that are the principal destination for paisa couples on honeymoon. The last time I was there the hotel Almar (now Nautilus) had a yacht that you could take to the San Blas Island in Panama. It’s the home of the Cuna Indians who use coconuts for currency. Very touristy though and not worth it.  The village of Capurgana its self is very scenic with everything painted in bright colors. There are no cars because there is no road system but lots of transport by air and sea. You can also hike into the jungle here. There’s a trail that goes along the edge of the landing strip which continues on into the jungle. It crosses a crystal clear stream about four times and at the end there is a natural pool and waterfall. All the above offer snorkeling and diving, all are reached by small plane from Medellin and each are destinations a guy could take in with a compañera during a two week visit to Colombia.  My fourth recommended beach destination is Isla Providencia which is a thirty minute flight further on from San Andres. It has comfortable cabañas with A/C, nearly deserted white sand beaches, a restaurant, Donde Martin owned by a gourmet chef from Bogota where Cangrejo Negro is on the menu and of course the spectacular snorkeling/diving you expect in the Caribbean.
 
...........................................................................................
 
If your taste runs to mountain hiking I have another sugestion. Several weeks ago I went up to Salento outside Armenia. I's a typical pueblo except for being heavily geared to tourism. It has 62 hotels and hostals! We stayed in a nice one and and they found us an experienced guide named Oscar. The next day we left at six for the Valle De Cocora. After driving up one of the most scenic valleys in Colombia dotted with the national tree, Palma de Cera you reach a restaurant and some other buildings where you can park. From there we left on foot and continued on a trail that led uphill into the forest. That trail which is well marked will take you eventually all the way up to paramo and then into the snows of Nevado de Tolima but that's a serious multiday backpacking trip with cold weather gear. We hiked uphill until about noon then veared off on another trail that would loop back to the parking area via a trail on the other side of the river. In all we covered fifteen kilometers of trail and had to cross the river seven times on suspended foot bridges. Man was I bushed! This area is really popular with European hikers and we passed maybe thirty foreigners mostly young couples on one two hour stretch. Oscar is kind of a mountain gear junky. He was wearing an expensive Gor-Tex jacket a Canadian had given him and when we got back to the car he asked for my friend's REI day pack instead of payment for his guiding service. Funny. He is a good guide and very enthusiastic but I wonder what his wife said when he got home and showed his wife his new back pack...and no money.
 

Offline Hector_Lavoe

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 825
  • Country: us
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Looking 0-2 years
  • Trips: 4 - 10
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #1 on: January 18, 2014, 02:48:44 PM »
Thanks for the re-post Buencamino. 

I am typically more a beach guy than a mountain guy but Salento sounds really interesting/beautiful. Looked up some photos and WOW that is some gorgeous country. The town itself looks real picturesque as well.

That entire region of Colombia (Armenia/Pereira/Manizales) looks really nice.

So how many years have you been living in Colombia?


Offline benjio

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2505
  • Country: us
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouse's Country: Brazil
  • Status: Committed >1 year
  • Trips: > 10
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #2 on: January 18, 2014, 03:05:55 PM »
Thanks for the re-post Buencamino. 

I am typically more a beach guy than a mountain guy but Salento sounds really interesting/beautiful. Looked up some photos and WOW that is some gorgeous country. The town itself looks real picturesque as well.

That entire region of Colombia (Armenia/Pereira/Manizales) looks really nice.

So how many years have you been living in Colombia?


My profile picture is of a hostel in Salento I stayed at a few years ago. I've spent a lot of time there and it's an awesome place to visit. Some of the most beautiful landscapes I've seen on the entire planet.

« Last Edit: January 18, 2014, 05:33:06 PM by benjio »

Planet-Love.com

Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #2 on: January 18, 2014, 03:05:55 PM »

Offline Hector_Lavoe

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 825
  • Country: us
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Looking 0-2 years
  • Trips: 4 - 10
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #3 on: January 19, 2014, 02:37:34 PM »
Interesting. Looks/sounds very nice. 

So the obvious question is how are the women?

Offline buencamino

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 602
  • Country: co
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Committed 0-1 year
  • Trips: Resident
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #4 on: January 20, 2014, 12:25:41 PM »
Hector best bet is to bring your girl from Cali, Bogota etc. Not a lot of local beauties.

Offline Hector_Lavoe

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 825
  • Country: us
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Looking 0-2 years
  • Trips: 4 - 10
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #5 on: January 20, 2014, 01:06:43 PM »
How about a larger city in the region like Pereira? 
 
I know the Colombian stereotype about the women in Pereira (they are easy, etc). And the women there apparently held a protest about it a few years ago.
 
But I have met a few Colombian guys that told me Pereira has a lot of beautiful women.

Offline benjio

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2505
  • Country: us
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouse's Country: Brazil
  • Status: Committed >1 year
  • Trips: > 10
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #6 on: January 20, 2014, 03:57:21 PM »
How about a larger city in the region like Pereira? 
 
I know the Colombian stereotype about the women in Pereira (they are easy, etc). And the women there apparently held a protest about it a few years ago.
 
But I have met a few Colombian guys that told me Pereira has a lot of beautiful women.


There are lots of nice looking girls in Pereira; but I'm sorry. As much as it may sound like a generalization I pretty much lived there for months at a time on three different occasions and the girls just don't make you wait. They really don't. First date sex is the norm there...at least from my experience. I honestly had to tell a couple of girls "no thanks," after meeting them, hanging out for while and going back to my apartment. One just started stripping without a second thought. I even met groups of girls who were friends and they had all had sex with the same guys. I mean groups of 7 or 8 girls that knew each other, and the same guy just gradually ran through them all. It's common there for a group of guy friends and a group of girl friends to agree to meet at a club (with none of them dating seriously); drink until the wee hours of the morning and afterwards pair up and leave to have sex. This happens to the extent that if there's one guy or girl short, someone in the group of the opposite sex will try to find someone elso that wants to go out so there's an even number of people. Young Colombianos sleep around in Pereira. That's just how it is. Casual sex has become an accepted part of their culture. The rumor is most definitely true from my experience. I would challenge anyone who doubts me, to go there and ask a few younger women if they are carrying condoms in their purses. I've been all over Colombia and in no other city do women behave this way. I think the expectation of women to "give it up fast" has a lot to do with why Pereiranas sleep around. I got the impression on many occasions while out with friends that girls didn't like the guys they were talking to, but then heard the following morning they hooked up anyway.


http://fusion.net/justice/story/jezebels-women-infamous-colombian-town-22533


http://www.planet-love.com/index.php?topic=7643.msg111661#msg111661


I would try Armenia if you're hell bent on finding the prettiest girls in the region. IMHO the women there were more attractive than those in Pereira...even though Pereira is a bigger city. Neiva should most definitely be considered as well.
« Last Edit: January 20, 2014, 04:23:58 PM by benjio »

Offline Elexpatriado

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3459
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Looking 0-2 years
  • Trips: Resident
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #7 on: January 30, 2014, 04:43:38 PM »
I tried about 6 times to attach pictures from my recent trip, but this site wont take it - no tiene lA cAPAZ.


I'll tell the story later- too busy

Offline Hector_Lavoe

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 825
  • Country: us
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Looking 0-2 years
  • Trips: 4 - 10
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #8 on: January 30, 2014, 07:53:42 PM »

There are lots of nice looking girls in Pereira; but I'm sorry. As much as it may sound like a generalization I pretty much lived there for months at a time on three different occasions and the girls just don't make you wait. .

I would try Armenia if you're hell bent on finding the prettiest girls in the region. IMHO the women there were more attractive than those in Pereira...even though Pereira is a bigger city. Neiva should most definitely be considered as well.

My co-worker's got a buddy teaching English in Armenia. He said his buddy has taught all over Asia and a few other places (that I don't recall).  And by far Colombia is his favorite place so far......

Offline Elexpatriado

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3459
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Looking 0-2 years
  • Trips: Resident
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #9 on: February 12, 2014, 02:47:02 PM »
I just got back from a trip to Parque Nacional El Cocuy.. my second trip there..went there last year and climbed El Concavo (5250 m), San Pablin Sur (about same altitude) and tried to get up the highest - Rita Cuba Blanca (5400 m), but we were blocked by a big crevasse about 100 m below the summit.
 
This week made it to the summit of Pan de Azucar (5100 m) and finally to the top of Rita Cuba Blanca. The crevasse that was there last year was covered , but the big "Bergschrund" crevasse  (about 10 M wide)at the tip-top summit was still there. We  climbed around the extreme edge of it above the great rocky West (I believe) face on a 45 degree ice slope with about 700m of exposure. Quite exhilirating.
 
Later if I have time, I'll try to post fotos.

Offline Elexpatriado

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3459
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Looking 0-2 years
  • Trips: Resident
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #10 on: February 12, 2014, 03:19:43 PM »
I also climbed Nevada Tolima in Paque Nacional de Los Nevados from Salento and Valle Cocora and alento about 2 weeks ago on a 4 day expedition.
 
Been many other places in Colombia,,La Guajira (whole thing-right up to Punta Gallena), Cano Cristales, climbed Nevado Del Ruiz, 1 peak (so far) on Nevada Santa Isabel, been to Popayan, Minca,Cali, Manizales, Periera, (yuk) , Santa Marta, artagena,Parque Tayrona, Minca,Parque cafetero, San Pedro antioquia, Venezia, Rio Claro,all around Medellin, Guatape several times, ante Fe,Cali area-Pance, Dapa, Lago Colima, Tulua, Cartago, other stupid places, Bogota several times,Popayan, Monteria , Puerta Libano (worked in the stupid mine in Cerra Matoso), stupid [snip]ty little hick towns in Tolima- Espinal, chicaal, Megar bunch of other stupid places, Villavicencio and a bunch of other stupid places.
 
Haven't been to Capurgana and area- really want to go- or along the Caribbean coast anywhere between Cartagena and Panama. Neither have I been to the Pacific , the Amazon, or to San Augustin, or Pasto- anywhere South of Popayan or to Bucarramanga or San Gil area-or Jericho, Jardin or San Geronimo- or Ciudad Perdida all on my liat (except maybe the amazon cuz of the bugs) Also, I have an idea for a real "Off the Wall" exotic mountain expedition to the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, but I need to contact other crazed local Alpinists with "Deep Pockets" and risk takers.

Offline Elexpatriado

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3459
  • Spouse's Country: No Selection
  • Status: Looking 0-2 years
  • Trips: Resident
Re: Colombian Adventure Travels Repost
« Reply #11 on: February 12, 2014, 03:25:54 PM »
 
I don't know if I am allowed to say this, but the President of Petro Rubiales was in Cocuy the same time I was there with his compatriots. They climbed Rita Cuba Blanca the day before  we did. Even went to the effort of dragging skis up there and skiing down. Funny part of it was, because he was there , there was also a battalion (?) of about  a hundred Colombian Ejorcito there around the Cabins, supposedly to protect his ass..
 
I din't bring my "Hoja de Vida" but I'm not really interested in working anyways..
I just got back from a trip to Parque Nacional El Cocuy.. my second trip there..went there last year and climbed El Concavo (5250 m), San Pablin Sur (about same altitude) and tried to get up the highest - Rita Cuba Blanca (5400 m), but we were blocked by a big crevasse about 100 m below the summit.
 
This week made it to the summit of Pan de Azucar (5100 m) and finally to the top of Rita Cuba Blanca. The crevasse that was there last year was covered , but the big "Bergschrund" crevasse  (about 10 M wide)at the tip-top summit was still there. We  climbed around the extreme edge of it above the great rocky West (I believe) face on a 45 degree ice slope with about 700m of exposure. Quite exhilirating.
 
Later if I have time, I'll try to post fotos.

 

Sponsor Twr1R

PL Stats

Members
Total Members: 5885
Latest: Josephymip
New This Month: 1
New This Week: 0
New Today: 0
Stats
Total Posts: 133148
Total Topics: 7867
Most Online Today: 336
Most Online Ever: 3955
(June 16, 2025, 12:34:04 AM)
Users Online
Members: 0
Guests: 194
Total: 194
Powered by EzPortal