• Menu
  • Menu

Author - PTP

Santa Marta Apartment

After lunch it was time to check into the Airbnb, which was a 2 min walk fro the restaurant. After a 10 min wait, our place was ready to check in. It was located on the 2nd floor of a busy retail street. And it was very quirky, to say the least. One bedroom had a window into the living room. The beds in both room were only doubles and they only had sheets, no...

Off to Santa Marta

On Friday, Eduardo and I both took the day off so we could all travel to Santa Marta, a city approximately 4.5 hours away. Santa Marta is the gateway to one of Colombia’s most popular national parks, Tayrona Park. In the park we will hike a couple hours to some beaches where we will spend the day swimming and hopefully soaking up some sun. We left the apartment...

A Birthday?

Eduardo and I had to work Thursday so Jennifer and Owen spent a few hours at the beach. They ended up spending way too much money on beach massages, drinks and food, but they had a blast. In the evening, we all headed back to the wall city for dinner. Eduardo picked the place based on a previous recommendation from his brother. The food was very good. When dinner was...

The Walled City and Navel Museum

The reason we got a 2 bedroom for Cartagena was to accommodate 4 people. Our friends from Ucluelet, Jennifer and her oldest son Owen, decided to join us for 8 days of our trip. They made the long journey from Vancouver to Dallas to Miami to Bogotá to Cartagena starting early Tuesday morning and eventually getting to us early Wednesday morning. I had the day off work...

Cartagena – Our Beachfront Apartment

We flew to Cartagena on Monday evening on discount airline Viva Air. They claim to have one of the newest fleets in the world. The flight was just over an hour; smooth and uneventful, just the way I like them. They don’t use the indoor bridge walkways so we were hit with a wall of humidity when we reached the stairs to disembark. Viva has an interesting way of...

Monserrate

Monserrate is a high mountain over 10,000 feet high that dominates the city center of Bogota. It rises to 3,152 meters (10,341 ft) above the sea level, where there is a church (built in the 17th century) with a shrine, devoted to El Señor Caído (“The Fallen Lord”). All downtown Bogotá, south Bogotá and some sections of the north of the city are visible...

The Gold Museum

The museum displays a selection of pre- Colombian gold and other metal alloys, such as Tumbaga and contains the largest collection of gold artifacts in the world in its exhibition rooms on the second and third floors. Together with pottery, stone, shell, wood and textile objects, these items, represent many indigenous cultures. While the museum was...

Street Art

There is a very narrow street downtown near the university that is full of street art. Here are a few of the really good ones. Also in this area, and really all over downtown there are small street vendors selling what looks like bottles of juice called Chicha de Maiz (or just Chicha) which is a fermented corn drink. In my head, I thought it was going to taste like...

Walking around the Old City

Both before and after the Botero Museum, we spent some time wandering around the streets of the old city. Someone met a new friend along the way too! Santuario Nuestra Senora del Carmen, also known as The National Shrine of Our Lady of Carmen, is situated amongst a myriad of museums in the historical center of Bogotá. Towering high over La Candelaria neighborhood...

Botero Museum

Fernando Botero, born 1932, is a Colombian figurative artist and sculptor, born in Medellín. His signature style, also known as “Boterismo”, depicts people and figures in large, exaggerated volume, which can represent political criticism or humor, depending on the piece. He is considered the most recognized and quoted living artist from Latin America, and...