|
|
|
Feb
25 – Mar 8, 2007
Peñas Blancas – Ometepe – Granada – Esteli (Nicaragua) –
Choluteca (Honduras) – Santa Rosa de Lima – San Miguel – La Libertad –
La
Hachadura (El Salvador) |
|
We spent the first three weeks of our honeymoon in three different countries,
despite our leisurely pace. Our route followed a line of fire from volcano
to volcano, through dry, scorched landscapes, this being the height of
their six-month dry season.
Although probably the three least-visited countries of Central America,
Nicaragua, Honduras and El Salvador do have a certain tourist potential of their
own. |
|
|
|
|
|
Ometepe
was our first stop. This dumbbell-shaped island was formed by two
volcanoes right in the middle of Lake Nicaragua. |
On the ferry to Ometepe |
|
|
Bullock cart with wooden wheels |
The whole atmosphere on this
fertile island is very laid back and many traditional farming methods are
still in use. |
|
Bringing home the firewood |
|
|
It was a lovely change to have
a swim in sweet water again and lounge around on both black and white-sand
beaches. |
Santo Domingo beach |
|
|
Bikes going on holidays |
Volcano towering ahead |
|
|
We happened
to be there for their first music and cultural festival and were lucky to
catch and meet famous Nicaraguan musicians like
Perrozompopo, Mario Montenegro and Amanahuac. Needless to say our
music collection grew as a result! |
|
|
Photo by courtesy of Sophie |
Back on the road, we bumped into Sophie (French) on an interesting round-the-world trip… without the aid of airplanes. Having walked from France to Budapest,
she used various means of public transport across Asia, sailed the
Pacific, walked Mexico, picked up a bike in Cancun and is now
cycling Central America as far as Panama. |
|
|
Granada, the oldest town of the Americas was settled by the Spaniards in 1524. On the shores of Lake
Nicaragua, Granada was a busy trading port for the Spaniards, who used the
navigable San Juan River to connect to the outside world. Today, tourists
can enjoy many colourful colonial churches, arcades and mansions, making
it the Nicaraguan highlight. |
The cathedral, Granada |
|
|
La Merced, Granada |
|
|
Carlos |
In a very touristy town like
Granada, it was very refreshing to find a publican like Carlos in Cafe
Sary, who went out of his way to make us feel valued guests. He even
presented us with the CD he was playing, as a souvenir of our visit. So
it's Baila Bamba and Besame Mucho for the next few weeks! |
|
|
Only 20Km
from Granada is another colonial town. Masaya, famous for its handicrafts,
was a perfect place for us to go shopping for hammocks and leather goods. |
Shop till you drop! |
|
|
|
|
Scenes from Masaya |
|
|
|
|
Lake Apoyo |
Masaya is
also a great base for day trips into neighbouring villages and the
beautiful Apoyo crater lake. |
|
|
Another
excursion worth the effort was our climb of the nearby Masaya volcano… on
the bikes! |
Masaya Volcano |
|
|
Masaya volcano |
This huge cauldron pumps out
sulfuric acid as if it were going out of fashion and gives a real feel for
earth’s powers of destruction. |
|
|
Ray, an acquaintance of Darina’s from Ireland, tracked us down in Masaya,
while on his roundabout way to see Ireland playing cricket (of all things)
in Jamaica!!!
|
Ray |
|
|
Taxi-driver and family |
Nicaragua is
reputedly the second poorest country in the Western Hemisphere (after
Haiti). Granada and Masaya do have their share of beggars, but most
Nicaraguans work hard to make ends meet. This taxi-driver, for example,
sleeps only 4-5 hours a day, so that he, with his wife’s shop’s income,
can feed his family and enjoy some modern luxuries like a TV, DVD and the
odd family holiday. |
|
|
Northern Nicaragua, at this time of the year, is extremely dry. The few
places with a waterhole look like real oases, where even rice is planted. Nevertheless, the towns do
manage to have a functioning water supply and potable water on tap. |
Dry countryside |
|
|
Rush hour |
|
|
Fancy an iguana for dinner? |
On the roadside you can buy fresh live iguana for between
$6-11, depending on the size. The 10-year
old vendor explained: "You
cook it like chicken and it tastes just like chicken”.
Crocodile Dundee,
on the other hand,
reckons “you can live on it,
but it tastes like
S**%!” |
|
If fresh iguana doesn't
appeal, how about a couple of "Hola guapo!" parrots to wake you
from your slumbers in the morning? |
Who's the pretty boy then? |
|
|
Marbi and Cesar |
Darina’s back wheel rim finally cracked on this stretch. We managed
another 100km until we finally found a replacement aluminium rim. Marbi
and Cesar toiled for 5 hours taking the wheel apart and then figuring out
how to put it back together again! And that under a low galvanised iron
roof and 38˚C! Total cost: $6 (to date no problems). |
|
|
We ate very well in Nicaragua, even if the food varied little from the
previous countries. There is always rice and beans with beef or chicken,
but in Nicaragua we did have a few new dishes like the delicious
Jalapeño steak.
Here we also had our first tortillas (flat corn bread) as an
accompaniment. |
Roadside cafe |
|
|
Hans |
Hans from Germany, travels by public transport, but has his 15kg folding
bike in his luggage to get him around town fast without taxis.
|
|
|
Many buildings bear witness to Nicaragua’s not too distant past. Sandinista
graffiti from the Contra War is a constant reminder of where Nicaragua has
come from and 20 years of democracy is a short time frame to recover from
decades of war and neglect. |
Graffiti |
|
|
|
Road signs have become exotic in this part of the world… you just never know
what’s going to
slither, pound or scurry across
the road! |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately the no dumping road signs go unheeded…
|
$1,000 fine for dumping... |
|
|
|
|
|
Humble abode |
Having spent all of 2 nights in Honduras, we can say that the stretch we
took was very hot and very dry,
|
|
|
...with a long 25km downhill. |
Yee...ha! |
|
Poor cows have to live on sun-dried vegetation! |
|
|
Now that's the life! |
We enjoyed a hotel with a swimming pool after a long day on the bikes…
|
|
School girls en route |
|
|
...but the food and rubbish are 2 things we’d
rather
forget! |
Typical roadside view |
|
|
What a name for a village! |
One village was very appropriately named El Polvo “The Dust”. Just imagine
how hard it must be for José from “The Dust” to be taken seriously! |
|
|
To end on a funny note… the St. Joseph statue in Nacaome church, to appeal
to the local men folk, was sporting none other than a cowboy hat!
|
St. Joseph, himself |
|
|
Honduran farmer |
|
|
|
|
|
Half the size of Switzerland, with half its population, El Salvador is the
smallest but most densely populated country in Central America. Our first
couple of days across the border led us through more dry, dusty
countryside. On the bikes at 6am, oftentimes by 11am it was time to look
for a cool hotel room and strategically position ourselves in front of the
air-con unit. |
|
|
Hotel California |
We often had to do a trail round town to find a hotel where the first
question wasn’t “Do you want to stay the night or…?”
Hotel California was the best of 3 choices in Zacatecoluca. The little
hatches on the door,
to order another Champagne,
may promote privacy...
but reminded us more of a prison. |
|
|
Pupusas are the local speciality. These cheese, bean and ground-pork
crackling-filled tortillas are served with a white cabbage and vinegar
salad. At 50 cents a piece, they're a cheap and tasty way to fill the belly.
|
Pupusa restaurant |
|
|
Traditional roadside restaurant |
We generally grabbed a bite to eat at lunchtime in one of the roadside
restaurants. Many are very traditional cooking on open-wood fires. The
food was good and economical, but the temperature inside in the shade was about 5
degrees higher than out in the midday sun!
One day in a cyber café the air-con
unit was pumping out a cool 35˚C.
We
daren’t hazard a guess as to the outside air temperature! |
|
|
The line of fire continued in El Salvador with great views of the majestic
San Miguel cone towering at 2,130masl.
|
San Miguel volcano |
|
|
Sugar-cane road train |
From that point on, the landscape became somewhat greener with acres and
acres of sugarcane. Men armed with machetes and sporting great hats made
their way to and from the sugarcane fields on bikes and motorbikes. The
roadside was scattered with sugarcane having fallen off overloaded road
trains and a sweet smell of molasses permeated the air. |
|
|
Local farmer with hat and machete |
|
|
This fallen sugarcane proved to be valuable bio-diesel for
John’s amicable donkey. On the road for 11 months, John (USA) has walked
all the way from Oregon. He picked up the donkey in Mexico… but has still a
few km ahead to hit Argentina. |
John and companion |
|
|
Takeshi |
Our paths also crossed Takeshi from Japan, cycling from Canada to Ushuaia,
Argentina.
|
|
|
The family bike! |
|
|
Chicken bus |
A
common feature of Central America is the use of old US school buses for
local public transport. Having served 10 years on the school run in the
States, the big yellow buses are sold off. Generally they are revamped
inside, spray painted outside and topped off with an elaborate roof rack
to carry any cargo/luggage imaginable. They’re generally referred to as
“chicken buses” because of what could be your fellow passenger! |
|
|
The prize for the dirtiest town in Central America has to go to the small
town of Jocoro, where the No Dumping sign was hardly legible because of
all the vulture droppings caked on it. |
Dumping on the roadside |
|
|
Brass band for funeral |
One afternoon carnival music blared through town and we turned round to
discover a funeral entourage consisting of a lively brass band on a
pick-up truck,
|
|
|
...followed by a coffin in a glass cabinet… on another pick-up! The ice-cream man rocked up to make a couple of bob…
|
Selling ice-cream behind the hearse! |
|
|
The Prevention Funeral Home |
..while
we got a great kick out of the undertaker's
trading name: The Prevention
Funeral
Home.
Anyone interested in a franchise?!
|
|
|
A
few km out of La Libertad, we found a delightful place for a short holiday
again. The views from our pool at El Tuncal provided great entertainment
with the surfers strutting their stuff off the black sand beach. |
El Tuncal |
|
|
View from terrace |
|
|
Bye to the Pacific |
As we headed North West towards the Guatemalan border, the road climbed
and twisted in and out with spectacular views of the coast. We relished
each moment as, having first saluted this great ocean in Patagonia some
12’000km ago, this was our last view of the Pacific on this trip.
|
|
|
These tunnels certainly saved us some climbing |
|
|
Our final town in El Salvador was called Cara Sucia (Dirty
Face).
Beats Newtown! |
What a name for a town! |
|
|
The cool, clean hero! |
|
|
Nicaraguan flag |
Nicaragua, Honduras and El Salvador all have a horizontal blue-white-blue-
striped flag,
with a slight personal touch in the centre. We had a great time in the
colonial towns and on the beaches, especially after long hot cycles in
between. However, one common issue all 3 countries have to deal with is
most certainly their litter and dumping problems. |
|
|
Unfortunately, without exception,
we found all roadsides colourfully decorated with everything from plastic
bags and broken beer bottles to pungent calf and pig carcases. Not a
pleasant site, which made it often impossible to find a litter-free
picnic spot. |
|
|
|
|
HOME ABOUT
ANDES RETURN
TRIPS CONTACT
LINKS |