End of the adventure / FIN

Trip Start Mar 13, 2011
1
11
Trip End Apr 04, 2011


Loading Map
Map your own trip!
Map Options
Show trip route
Hide lines
shadow
Where I stayed
Aluna Hostel

Flag of Colombia  ,
Saturday, April 2, 2011

Última parada en nuestra aventura: Santa Marta. Fuimos directas desde Buritaca al hostel Aluna, súper agradable exceptuando el dueño, un irlandés de lo más saborío...

En esta ciudad no hay demasiado que hacer, es más bien de paso para ir a otros lugares y ni siquiera la playa es bonita. Siempre queda Rodadero, a 10 min. en bus, que es un sitio más pijo, estándar local, claro. Toda una experiencia: a mí me recordó mucho a lo que podía ser la playa de Marbella (más bien Benidorm) en los felices 80, con familias, mirones y miles y miles de comerciantes: cócteles, arepas, fotomontajes con tu cara en una lata de cerveza local o en carrillo de un culo colombiano (ésto nos tuvo bastante entretenidas, aunque tenía mérito el hecho de que la foto no fuese digital), y hasta un tío disfrazado de pollo que no sabíamos muy bien que pintaba allí.

También aprovechamos para salir a bailar (¡por fin!). Nos encontramos a Charlie (que trabaja en el hostel de Taganga) con su padre y nos llevaron a bailar salsa... primeras lecciones para Lorraine con el gran maestro... y mucho, mucho gringo...

A Dafi le dejamos en buenas manos, las de Ramona, una amiga mochilera con la que ya viajó por Ecuador. Y nosotras, intentamos aprovechar el último día, que nos cundió hasta para tener una anécdota. Ya el día antes pedí amablemente al dueño del hostel una ducha de cortesía antes de ir al aeropuerto, para poder pasar un rato en la playa. Lo dicho anteriormente, un saborío... imaginad la respuesta. Pues resulta que al levantarnos nos llevamos la sorpresa de que la bomba de agua está rota y no hay ducha ni en la mañana (what goes around comes around...) y el tío se tuvo que comer sus palabras, prometiéndonos una ducha al volver de la playa. El inconveniente, el tiempo colombiano: lo que tarda un par de horas, al final, tarda el doble. Así que al aeropuerto en bikini, chanclas y con arena y sal hasta en el culo. Allí, en el baño, nos lavamos y cambiamos como pudimos, metiendo hasta la cabeza debajo del grifo y bajo el asombro de las mujeres que pasaban al baño. Nosotras, como siempre, con estilo hasta el final.


LORRAINE:

Dancing and beaches. Our final stop in Colombia,

Patricia neatly weighed up the beach at Rodadero. Spain in the seventies. It was indeed like the Costa del Sol in a really old, faded postcard with slightly weird colours. On the beach we spotted:
  • a man dressed up as a chicken
  • a man with a python
  • people offering to take your picture which is then placed on a women's butt cheek
  • a music-blasting pirate ship on wheels selling pina colada
  • ceviche sellers
  • a man selling barbequed meat that is cooked in front of you
You get the picture. In fact, there were more people selling things on the beach than there were people on the beach.

We went out in Santa Marta to a local salsa club, that was also quite popular with the gringos. My comments on salsa are simple. Don't try this at home kids. Unless you’re Colombian. That’s my advice.

On the last day, we had some time to kill so we went to the beach again. We got back to the hostel and there was no running water. So we headed back to Europe sweaty, salty and greasy and burnt. Hahaha. Classy chicas.



P.S.  A little side note on safety in Colombia
Colombia can’t escape the fact that it has one of the highest murder rates in Latin America…I think the morgue-overflowing Venezuela wins that title (google Venezuela and morgue and you will get the picture). But to put things in perspective, the high-number of homicides is directly linked to the fact that Colombia is the world’s largest exporter of cocaine. The government has worked hard over the last few years to isolate the problem and to crackdown on the leftist rebels.

Coca is produced in the south west of Colombia (bordering Ecuador), where it is shipped to Mexico. The other danger zone is the belt along the border with Venezuela where the narcotic passes over the frontier. These are the areas where the majority of the homicides take place. And it is far from the tourist areas.  

For people working in the oil or mining industry then it's a slightly different story. Canadian oil workers were kidnapped in the Vichada province, by FARC rebels in March They were later released, but the proximity of the oil-rich region to the Venezuelan frontier is a problem given you're jostling for territory with cocaine-trafficking gangs.

Luckily this is not on the tourist trail, so for most people, you feel pretty comfortable travelling in Colombia. This is not to say that you’re safe, but it is the usual risks for backpackers and tourists, and being in a large city.

And the one-good thing about being a country labelled “dangerous” is that Americans don’t tend to go there, despite flights being $200 from Miami.


So fear not fellow travels, Colombia is a lot safer than most people realise.


Slideshow

Use this image in your site

Copy and paste this html: