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Categories: Adan Camp
Categories: Apiay
Categories: Arauca
Categories: Araura
Armenia is one of the three largest cities in Colombia, and is located in the Quindio Department. The local economy is primarily based on coffee production, as well as bananas and plantains. Ecotourism is popular in Armenia, and many traditional plan...
Categories: Armenia (Colombia)
Categories: Bahia Concha
Bahía Solano is located on the Chocó coast, Columbia. An area rich in biodiversity, Bahia Solano is home to the leatherback turtles and humpback whales. It is an ideal location for diving and whale watching, and famous for deep-sea spor...
Categories: Bahia Solano
Founded in 1629, Barranquilla was a sleepy tropical town until the mid-19th century, when steamboats began navigating the river and railroads connecting it with other cities in the region were built. The port was enlarged in the 1920s, and the city g...
Categories: Barranquilla
The Andean city of Santa Fe de Bogota, the capital city of Colombia, is where most visitors begin their experience in the country. Founded in 1538 by Spanish conquistadors, Bogota lies at the Western base of a mountain range that includes the shrine-...
Categories: Bogota
Categories: Boqueron
A small beach town on the Carribean coast of Colombia, Buritaca has long beaches, big waves, a relaxing atmosphere and an active surfing community. The town lies between the river and the sea. Travelers can enjoy many water sport activities, dance to...
Categories: Buritaca
Cabo de la Vela means “Cape of Sails” and is located on the western cape of the La Guajira Peninsula surrounded by the La Guajira Desert. The open flat desert runs along miles of beautiful coastal beaches of both the Pacific and Atlantic ...
Categories: Cabo de la Vela
Categories: Calamar
The industrial city of Cali, Colombia, is best-known in foreign minds as the country's capital of salsa dancing and cocaine, although the notorious Cali cartel was destroyed by the government a decade ago. Also the center of sugar production and the ...
Categories: Cali
Categories: Capurgana
Cartagena is full of history and charm. At La Popa Monastery, you will have a panoramic view of the city and harbor. Enjoy the artisan center of Las Bovedas (The Dungeons), Plaza Bolivar, the Palace of Inquisition and the Church of San Pedro Claver, ...
Categories: Cartagena (Colombia)
Categories: Cerro La Asomadera
Categories: Cispata Bay
Categories: Ciudad Perdida (Teyuna)
Categories: Coffee Region
Categories: Cordoba (Colombia)
Categories: Covenas
Categories: El Banco
Categories: Gamarra
Categories: Gambote (Palenque)
Colombia's Gorgona and Malpelo islands are located on the Pacific Ocean, 216 mi/346 km west of Bogota and 38 mi/58 km west of the small landlocked coastal town of Guapi. Gorgona, Malpelo Fauna and Flora Sanctuary are UNESCO World Heritage sites. Gorg...
Categories: Gorgona and Malpelo Islands
Complete with swinging monkeys and a range of other animal and plant life, Gorgona Island makes for a fascinating visit. The island also has a few unspoilt sandy beaches and the area is great for nature tours, bird watching and snorkeling. ...
Categories: Gorgona Island
Categories: Guajira Peninsula
Located in the Casanare department of Colombia, Hato La Aurora is a private reserve and a working cattle ranch with amazing birding and wildlife viewing opportunities.
Categories: Hato La Aurora
Categories: Isla Baru
Malpedo island is located off the coast of Colombia and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. At first glance, the island seems to be barren rock, but it is in fact a plant and wildlife sanctuary. Malpelo is home of a unique shark population; sw...
Categories: Isla Malpelo
Categories: Jardin
Natural beauty abounds in Colombia's La Guajira, located 380 mi/610 km north of Bogota and about a two-hour drive toward Venezuela from Santa Marta, and some of the country's most stark desert scenery is found there. Part of the Guajira desert is enc...
Categories: La Guajira Desert
Categories: La Linea
Categories: La Macarena
On the Amazon River at the southern tip of Colombia, Leticia is the kind of landlocked city you might expect to find in the midst of the world's largest jungle, far from "civilization." Nonetheless, it's cleaner and has better facilities than most ju...
Categories: Leticia
Categories: Magangue
A lovely city high atop a ridge in the Cordillera Central, Manizales, Colombia, lies 157 mi/254 km south of Medellin. The city is one of Colombia's most attractive and least threatening urban centers, and is the most convenient access point for explo...
Categories: Manizales
Colombia is famous for its gold, and Marmato is where a lot of it is found. Marmato is a small mining town that lies south of Medellin, above the Cauca River Valley and the Pan American Highway. If you're traveling by road between Medellin, Manizales...
Categories: Marmato
Medellin the Colombia's second largest city, and is located in the department of Antioquia in the Aburra Valley of the Andes Mountains. This historic city has been revitalized since the 80's and 90's, and now is filled with museums, art g...
Categories: Medellin
Categories: Minca
Categories: Monteria
Categories: Mosquera
Categories: Nare
Categories: Necocli
Categories: Nueva Venecia
Categories: Nuquí
Categories: Palanquero
Categories: Palomino
The 144,062-acre/58,300-hectare national park Parque de los Nevados, Colombia, is centered on three snow-capped volcanoes, most notably El Nevado del Ruiz, a 17,750-ft-/5,325-m-tall volcano that exploded in 1985, devastating everything and everyone i...
Categories: Parque De Los Nevados
Pasto, Colombia, 310 mi/500 km southwest of Bogota, is home to the Colombian National Volcano Observatory, on Volcan Galeras. This volcano remains in a volatile state, and the wildlife sanctuary that surrounds it is currently closed to visitors. The ...
Categories: Pasto
Pereria is a small coffee-producing town on the slopes of the Andes mountain chain of Colombia. Long before this town was a settlement it was a civilization of gold artisans called Quimbaya, the indigenous people of Pereira. The town was colonized in...
Categories: Pereira
Categories: Planeta Rica
The lovely colonial town of Popayan, Colombia, is set at a comfortable altitude of 5,700 ft/1,760 m in the Andes, 230 mi/370 km southwest of Bogota. It is a great place to escape the heat and steep in the atmosphere of a colonial center pickled in as...
Categories: Popayan
Providencia, is one of a group of islands in the Caribbean, to the north of the coast of Panama but belonging to Colombia. It is the second largest island of the group and is volcanic island and much older than San Andrés, the largest island. The hi...
Categories: Providencia Island
Puerto Nariño is located on the shore of the Amazon River in Colombia's Amazonas department, and is home to many bird, aquatic, land mammal and reptile species.
Categories: Puerto Narino
Categories: Punta Gallinas
Mountainous Purace National Park, south of Cali, encompasses an impressive collection of volcanoes, thermal springs, rivers and waterfalls accessible by hiking trails. It's a large park, covering some 320 sq mi/830 sq km.Along the way you may encount...
Categories: Purace National Park
Dating before pre-Colombian times, Quindío is a department of Colombia located in the western central region. Quindio is famous for coffee plantations producing some of the highest quality Colombian coffee. Coffee cuisine, unique coffee cockta...
Categories: Quindio
Categories: Riohacha
Categories: Rosario Islands
Categories: Salento
The small village of San Agustin, Colombia, lies in the center of an assemblage of ancient archaeological sites noted for their stone monoliths, in one of the most beautiful areas in the entire country.The civilization existed there AD 500-1100 and r...
Categories: San Agustin
San Andres is located to the northeast of Colombia's Caribbean coast and has beautiful beaches characterized by white sand, red corals, and transparent water with seven different shades of blue, and for this reason it is known as the "Sea of Seven Co...
Categories: San Andres Island
Categories: San Antero
Categories: San Basilio de Palenque
Categories: San Bernardo Islands
Categories: San Juan Del Cesa
Categories: Santa Barbara de Pinto
Categories: Santa Catalina
Categories: Santa Cruz de Lorica
Santa Fe de Antioquia, Colombia, is an appealing and well-preserved colonial town in the Cauca River valley, about 37 mi/60 km north of Medellin. It was the colonial capital of the province of Antioquia and retains the flavor of the period with well-...
Categories: Santa Fe de Antioquia
Santa Marta is the cultural and historic center of Columbia's Sierra Nevada region. Be sure to visit the unspoiled beaches of the Parque Nacional Tayrona.
Categories: Santa Marta
Categories: Santander
Categories: Sapzurro
Categories: Sitionuevo
Categories: Solita
Categories: Taganga
Categories: Tatacoa Desert
Tayrona National Park is located on the northern Caribbean coast of Colombia, and boasts some of Colombia's most beautiful white sand beaches. Swim and enjoy the pristine beach, take a hike in the lush jungle on the beachside trails, keeping an e...
Categories: Tayrona National Park
Categories: Trinidad Colombia
Categories: Tuchin
Categories: Uramba National Park
Categories: Utria National Park
Villa De Leyva, Colombia, is the perfect example of a colonial town and is one of the most popular destinations for tourists. The town, located 110 mi/175 km northeast of Bogota and easily reached on the well-paved road to Tunja, has been declared a ...
Categories: Villa de Leyva
Categories: Zipacon
Colombia could be South America's best-kept travel secret, were it not for its unenviable record in drug trafficking and kidnappings that the country has been working hard to overcome.
Yes, it is true: Colombia hasn't entirely shaken its reputation as a volatile and dangerous country, trapped in a circle of violence. There's been no final act in the bloody drama that is being played out by drug lords, terrorists, guerrillas, vigilantes and corrupt politicians.
Recent years, however, have witnessed remarkable progress. The leftist guerrillas have been pushed into ever-more remote regions and many of their top military leaders have been killed by the Colombian armed forces. Most right-wing paramilitary groups have been disbanded. And the once much-feared Medellin and Cali drug cartels have been squashed, and replaced by smaller, more fractious groups whose internecine feuding accounts for the majority of the country's murders.
Travelers are visiting in increasing numbers, and return from Colombia raving about the country's beauty and its hospitable, friendly people. And no wonder: Colombia's mist-shrouded, snow-capped Andean mountains; charming colonial cities; golden-sand beaches; and vast green stretches of Amazonian rain forest speak for themselves. Add to that its wealth of wildlife and indigenous people, superb hotels and world-class dining, plus a well-developed domestic air network and first-class highways now guarded by the army and police.
History
Following the Spanish conquest of South America in the early 1500s, the area now known as Colombia was administered from Quito and Lima as part of Nuevo Reino de Granada (New Realm of Granada), comprising present-day Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Panama. Several of its many indigenous tribes were wiped out by swords and muskets in Spain's bloodthirsty quest for gold, emeralds and other riches.
By the late 18th century, creole (South American born, as opposed to pure Spanish) sentiment culminated with a campaign for independence under the leadership of the Venezuelan Simon Bolivar. The territories of South America eventually won their independence from Spain in 1819.
For its first 10 years, Colombia was part of Gran Colombia, a federation of Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela (you'll notice the similarity in their yellow, blue and red flags). The federation, however, broke up over issues of local sovereignty in 1830, and Colombia gained sovereign independence. Much of the 19th century was marred by bloody feuding between Liberals, who supported a secular, decentralized government, and centralist Conservatives as the provinces fought with centralist government forces.
The country has since experienced two bloody civil wars between Liberals and Conservatives, the two predominant political factions. In 1948, the assassination of Liberal political leader Jorge Eliecer Gaitain sparked the "Bogotazo"—a riotous mayhem that destroyed much of Bogota and cost the lives of more than 2,000 people. It triggered La Violencia, a civil war that lasted from 1948 to 1957 and took 300,000 lives (in the Americas, only the U.S. Civil War and the Mexican Revolution were more destructive).
La Violencia also spawned FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia), a ruthless Marxist guerrilla movement that for five decades has perpetrated indiscriminate murders in an effort to topple the government. (The other major group is ELN, National Liberation Army, following the Cuban line). As a response, large landowners sponsored right-wing paramilitary groups to defend their interests; these groups perpetrated their own ruthless pogroms against anyone considered to have leftist sympathies.
In the 1980s and '90s, weakened state institutions proved ineffective in countering the rise of powerful drug cartels led by Pablo Escobar, who built the world's largest cocaine empire by assassinating policemen and politicians. His murderous tactics (he offered a choice of "silver" or "lead") included a bombing campaign and the storming in 1985 of the Supreme Court by M-19 guerrillas underwritten by Escobar.
In the 1980s, the government finally began to crack down, breaking up the cartels. However, FARC and other militarized groups have stepped into the breach and fund themselves today by control of cocaine production.
The security situation vastly improved under President Alvaro Uribe, who served from 2002 until 2010. Uribe reversed his predecessors' appeasement policies of FARC, and their tolerance of wholesale corruption. His policies have been continued by President Juan Manuel Santos, a publisher and former Minister of Defense, elected in 2010.
Snapshot
Colombia's foremost attractions include beaches, the Andes, indigenous culture, the Amazon, the Casco Viejo (Old City) in Cartagena, colonial villages, La Guajira desert, Bogota's Gold Museum and La Candelaria district, wildlife-rich national parks and scuba diving.
Colombia appeals mostly to adventurous travelers, especially those who have a good appreciation of Latin American history, speak Spanish and want to explore jungles, mountains, beaches and historical sites, but its wealth of excellent hotels and restaurants and its extensive highway system and domestic air network will appeal to those seeking comforts.
Potpourri
Colombia boasts 20% of the world's bird species, more than any other country in the world; by comparison, the entire African continent has only 15% of them.
The Pacific coast of Colombia has some of the highest rainfall levels in the world. Quibdo, in Choco department, holds the world record for the most rainfall in a 12-month period.
Eighty different languages, most of them known only to small indigenous communities, are still spoken in Colombia. However, Spanish is the national language, which nearly everyone speaks.
Miguel Caballero, a tailor in Bogota, opened the first boutique in the world that sells highly fashionable, bulletproof shirts and suits, using fabrics made from his own patented weave.
Despite the decades of violence, Colombia managed to have the most stable Latin American economy during the 20th century, has never defaulted on its debts, and is today a sophisticated and cosmopolitan country.
Most of the coal imported into the U.S. comes from Colombia, as do most of the flowers.
Colombia is as big as Portugal, Spain and France combined. And, aside from Chile, it is the only South American country with both Pacific and Atlantic coastlines.
In Colombia's interior, people address each other with usted (the formal "you" in Spanish), whereas in the Caribbean region, they say tu (the informal, familiar version of "you").
Colombia has six active volcanoes, and the explosion of Volcan Nevado del Ruiz in 1985 led to the deaths of 23,000 people—the largest natural disaster of its kind in the Americas in recorded history.
The word tinto is a Colombianism. In Argentina, it will get you a glass of red wine; in Colombia, you'll get a cup of black coffee. However, most Colombians prefer tea or hot chocolate to coffee, despite growing some of the best coffee beans in the world.
Colombia is the world's leading producer of emeralds, and no other country in the world competes for quality. A 632-carat emerald, one of the largest in the world, was discovered near Boyaca in the 1900s.
Panama was once a part of Colombia, as were both Venezuela and Ecuador. It separated from Colombia in 1902 with U.S. connivance, when U.S. gunboats prevented the Colombian Navy from landing troops to quell a separatist insurrection. The action served as a prelude to building the Panama Canal.