Nicaragua Travel Articles and Photos Travel That Cares for Our Planet and Its People Fri, 26 Apr 2024 19:48:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://uncorneredmarket.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-UncorneredMarket_Favicon-32x32.png Nicaragua Travel Articles and Photos 32 32 Nicaragua Vacation Refresh: Fourteen Memories https://uncorneredmarket.com/nicaragua-memories/ https://uncorneredmarket.com/nicaragua-memories/#comments Fri, 21 Dec 2012 15:48:31 +0000 http://uncorneredmarket.com/?p=12373 Last Updated on April 22, 2024 by Audrey Scott Have you ever returned to a country and felt you were visiting for the first time, the experiences and locations so utterly different than before? That was our recent visit to ... Continue Reading

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Last Updated on April 22, 2024 by Audrey Scott

Have you ever returned to a country and felt you were visiting for the first time, the experiences and locations so utterly different than before?

That was our recent visit to Nicaragua.

Nicaragua Vacation, Beach Time
Enjoying the shadows and shapes on the beach during the last light of the day.

During our first visit to Nicaragua in 2009, we aimed to climb volcanoes, chill out in quaint colonial towns and relax in hammocks on Ometepe Island. We'd been “beached out” from Honduras (not possible, you say?) and chose not to seek out any of Nicaragua’s famous surfing outposts or coastal vistas.

This time around, just a couple of weeks ago, we visited Nicaragua with fresh eyes. We spent time on its Pacific Coast for the first time. The country – its landscapes, nature, and people – surprised me. Sure, I enjoyed our first visit, but I honestly didn’t remember Nicaragua being quite this beautiful.

Here are just a few of the memories from our twelve days in the western part of the country — most of our days on the Pacific Coast at Morgan's Rock Ecolodge with two days on an isleta on Lake Nicaragua at Jicaro Ecolodge.

Fourteen Memories from Nicaragua's Pacific Coast and Lake Nicaragua

1. Sunset: Mother Nature's daily show

Nicaragua Vacation, Sunset on the Pacific Coast
Another evening, another stunning sunset.

I know, I know. Sunsets are often overdone, but really, the ones in Nicaragua – whether on the Pacific Ocean or Lake Nicaragua – were stunning each and every night. It was as if someone flipped a switch, and the show began. Even the Costa Ricans we'd met admitted that the sunsets were better on the Nicaraguan side…although they'd never make such an admission publicly.

2. Taking to the hills on horseback

Nicaragua Vacation, Horseback Riding
Taking to the hills on horseback. What a view.

Dan and I have done quite a bit of adventurous stuff these last six years, but getting comfortable on horses has not been one of them. But when the views are like this and the horse isn't trying to sit down in a puddle with you on it (I have flashbacks to Kyrgyzstan), it's easy to forget one's fears and just enjoy the ride. Literally. Yes, even when the horses begin to gallop across the beach.

3. Walks on the beach

Nicaragua Vacation, Pacific Coast Beach
Clearing one's head with a walk on the beach.

Morning, afternoon or evening, I never tire of this view. Therapeutic, relaxing, mind-expanding.

4. Fresh lobster ceviche right on the boat

Nicaragua Vacation, Fresh Lobster
Fresh lobster. Ceviche time!

Need I say more? OK, maybe I will. The captain's first mate dove for lobsters along our morning sail.

5. Meeting a howler monkey family on the way to breakfast

Nicaragua Vacation, Monkeys
Howler monkeys, mother and baby.

One early morning, as I walked the suspension bridge to breakfast, I looked up to see a momma howler monkey sleeping in the tree with her baby tucked behind her. Reminds me of how moms keep a tight grip on their young ones, right across the animal kingdom.

6. Boogie boarding competition on the beach

Nicaragua Vacation, Beach Time
In full disclosure, I had an advantage as boogie boards are a little short for the likes of Dan.

Well, the competition was really only between Dan and me. If you know us, you know that our marital rivalry occasionally runs deep. Now, I'm not going to say who won…(hint: not in the photo above).

7. Morning coffee with a view

Nicaragua Vacation, View from our Ecolodge
If you stay at Morgan's Rock Ecolodge, try cabana #8 or #9 for this view.

Now this is something to get your day started on the right note – this view paired with a delivery of freshly brewed coffee. Only thing this photo doesn't convey: the sound of waves crashing below.

8. Learning to milk a cow

Nicaragua Vacation, Rural Life
Ricardo, our cow-milking instructor.

Now, I get that for those of you who grew up on or near a farm, milking a cow is old hat, a complete non-event. For the rest of us, however, this is pretty exciting stuff. Getting your hand on a cow's udder and learning the tug and squeeze motion to yield milk may be a bit bizarre for the unaccustomed, but it does teach something about rhythm and touch. We were motivated, ultimately on a mission: fresh milk for our morning coffee.

9. Purisima celebration and Nicaraguan hospitality

Nicaragua Vacation, Local Festival
Local families gather at each other's homes, singing songs and collecting Purisima gifts.

This visit to Nicaragua happened to coincide with Purisima, a Nicaraguan celebration for the Virgin Mary. Festivities include local families fashioning altars in their living rooms. On the final day (December 8), many families open their homes at 6 PM to allow people to view the altar, sing songs and in return for their participation, receive candy, food and gifts. When we showed a little curiosity outside of a local home in San Juan del Sur, we were whisked in and invited to share in the celebration. When we left, the family literally ran after us insisting we take our Purisima gifts — maracas, noisemakers and lots of food. Generosity of spirit at its finest.

10. Nicaraguan Food

Nicaragua Vacation, Shrimp Tacos
Shrimp tacos at Jicaro Ecolodge

I'd be lying if I said you should go to Nicaragua for its cuisine. It's not bad, but it just doesn't feature the culinary diversity or flavor of Mexican or Peruvian food. While much Nicaraguan street food is fried, when you take a step up, you can get a lot of fresh seafood, beef, fruit and vegetables. So while we did eat our fair share of gallo pinto (beans and rice) — a Nicaraguan staple eaten morning, noon and night — we also chowed down on as much seafood, fruit and salads as we could. Don't expect much on the spice front. Keep your Spanish handy and ask often for salsa picante.

Another thing that surprised us on this visit: the quality of Nicaraguan beef. If you're a meat eater, give it a try, especially churrasco style beef served thinly sliced, grilled and often with a chimichurri sauce.

11. Early morning kayak ride on Lake Nicaragua

Nicaragua Vacation, Kayaking
Not a bad way to get your day started…

When you're on a quiet lake framed by a two-volcano backdrop and scattered with over 2,000 little islands, it's worth an early rise to hop in a kayak. Water birds, big and small, keep you company on shore and overhead you as you quietly paddle your way through caches of water lilies and scrubby isletas (small islands). This is their territory.

12. Bird puns

Nicaragua Vacation, Birds and Wildlife
The egret, one of our many neighbors on Lake Nicaragua.

While getting close to the egret below during our kayak ride was memorable, what I'll recall most from this bird is Dan's commentary:

“I've done a lot in life. Although not everything has gone quite as I had planned, I can say I have no egrets.”

Groans. Smiles and laughter, too.

13. Catching my first tuna, old school style

Nicaragua Vacation, Fishing
Excitement over catching my first tuna.

I can count on one hand the amount of times I've gone fishing in my life; and even fewer fingers counting what I'd actually caught. So imagine my surprise (yes, there was a squeal) when my traditional fishing contraption — a flat wood spool wrapped with fishing line — almost jumped out of my hand. The result? This beautiful, though admittedly not enormous, tuna fish.

Maybe I should try fishing more often.

14. Oh, and did we mention the sunsets?

Nicaragua Vacation, Sunsets
Shooting into the light of another sunset, Morgans Rock Nicaragua

Yup, they're really that spectacular.

So, did Nicaragua surprise you like it surprised us?


Disclosure: Our trip to Nicaragua is conjunction with a consulting project for Morgan's Rock Ecolodge and Hacienda. Our stay at Jicaro Island Ecolodge was also provided to us. As always, all opinions expressed here are entirely our own.

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For Our Friends Robbed at Knifepoint: Nicaragua Photos https://uncorneredmarket.com/for-our-friends-robbed-at-knifepoint-nicaragua-photos/ https://uncorneredmarket.com/for-our-friends-robbed-at-knifepoint-nicaragua-photos/#comments Fri, 21 Aug 2009 23:36:58 +0000 http://uncorneredmarket.com/?p=2189 Last Updated on April 26, 2024 by Audrey Scott We usually share photos to better relate our experiences and provide a more personal look at a country and its culture. Here we do the same, but we add a cautionary ... Continue Reading

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Last Updated on April 26, 2024 by Audrey Scott


We usually share photos to better relate our experiences and provide a more personal look at a country and its culture. Here we do the same, but we add a cautionary tale.

Aside from the garden-variety border scam (from which a group of righteous Nicaraguan women saved us), our time in Nicaragua was pleasant and relatively hassle-free: climbing volcanoes, enjoying colonial cities, visiting revolution and martyrs' museums, relaxing on a volcanic island, and meeting microfinance clients outside of the capital city.

After our visit, we fortunately had little first-hand experience to refute the prevailing guidebook wisdom suggesting that Nicaragua is the safest country to visit in Central America.

Then a few weeks ago we received a message from Nikol and Martin, a Czech couple we became friends with while trekking Nicaragua’s El Hoyo and Cerro Negro volcanoes. The joy of receiving a message from fellow travelers we really connected with (as it happens, we lived just blocks from one another in Prague) was quickly replaced by shock. Their story knocked the wind out of us:

…after Granada we wanted to go to Rivas…one lady asked us where we were going and said she was going in the same direction. She showed us the bus terminal. When we reached the station, she asked us if we wanted to share a taxi to Rivas; there was a car, she asked the price. (1st mistake: we did not check if it was a real taxi and didn’t mark license plate; 2nd mistake: our bags were put behind the seat, not in the trunk). We sat in the back with the lady and driver… on the way to Rivas he took another guy and he sat with us in the back and after a while another guy came in on the front seat… so we did not have any bad feeling … we were talking with all of them…suddenly the car turned down a quiet street and the guy from the front seat pointed a knife at us and screamed ‘DINEROS!’ (MONEY!)
 
…they caught our hands and legs, put something over our heads, punched Martin a few times and started to search us. We did not have lot of money, even on the credit card, so they were getting more and more upset. They drove with us for two hours and went through our backpacks (behind the seats) and took our clothes, trekking shoes, camera, books, all the souvenirs, cell phone, diary, everything. After 2 hours they kicked us out with our day bags, passports and 400 Cordobas ($20) twenty kilometers from Managua.
 
Some locals took us to a Christian community so we contacted my sister through Skype. The rest of our trip we used Western Union.

Nikol and Martin are experienced travelers. They speak Spanish and have seen their share of scams and adventure (for example, Nikol traveled around Northern India on a motorbike). Their story hit very close to home. The thought that it could have easily been us haunted us for days.

Sure, you could argue that no one should take shared taxis, or that you should write down the license plate number of every one you take. But the reality is that after spending months in Central America without any problems, it's easy to become accustomed to doing what the locals do, including taking shared taxis and becoming friendly with people you meet on the street.

You become comfortable, you tire, you trust (and you want to trust); you let your guard down. You find yourself at the intersection of fatigue, trust and vulnerability. As long-term travelers, we have all been there. What separated their fate from ours was fortune and timing.

The reality is that Nikol's and Martin's experience could have happened in any number of countries. Nicaragua, like anywhere else, is not beyond crime and violence particularly where poverty, money and tourists intersect.

——–

So what does this story have to do with photos from Nicaragua?

Nikol’s message to us ended with:

Please, if by any chance, we can see more pictures from your trip it would be just perfect for us to have something to look through at home and to show to our friends.

So we dedicate these photo sets to Nikol and Martin and the photos they weren't able to bring home.

Enjoy the natural, architectural and human beauty of Nicaragua in the photos below.

Granada, Esteli, Rivas, and Isla de Ometepe

Climbing Volcanoes in Nicaragua

Microfinance in Masaya

Lazing in Leon

Sunrise in the Valley, El Hoyo Volcano.

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Are We Too Old to Be Climbing Volcanoes? https://uncorneredmarket.com/are-we-too-old-to-be-climbing-volcanoes/ https://uncorneredmarket.com/are-we-too-old-to-be-climbing-volcanoes/#comments Fri, 03 Jul 2009 23:40:59 +0000 http://uncorneredmarket.com/?p=1952 Last Updated on December 17, 2019 by Audrey Scott The weight of my backpack at 5:00 AM was brutal: 9 liters of water, 1 sleeping bag, and sundry other camping bits and bobs. And I was one of the lucky ... Continue Reading

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Last Updated on December 17, 2019 by Audrey Scott

The weight of my backpack at 5:00 AM was brutal: 9 liters of water, 1 sleeping bag, and sundry other camping bits and bobs. And I was one of the lucky ones. Dan carried all that plus an old school (read: heavy) four-person tent.

Even at this hour, it was steamy. Under the weight of my pack, I was glazed in sweat before we reached the crossroads for the chicken bus to the trail head. I looked around at the young, energetic faces – mostly in their early 20s – and wondered, “Am I too old to be doing this?

Hikers Take A Break - El Hoyo Volcano, Nicaragua
Line up at the edge of El Hoyo Volcano, Nicaragua.

A few hours later we were scaling the black ash base of Cerro Negro, an active volcano in northern Nicaragua. As we neared the rim, a crater emitting eggy plumes of sulfur dioxide fumed on my right. The black volcanic gravel of our climb yielded to iridescent mineral deposits, boulders, lava chunks and white ash. On my left, it was a surprisingly long way down to where Mother Nature had drawn a stark line between the slope of black volcanic gravel and the lush, electric green canvas of pastures, rich soil and rolling hills surrounding the cone.

Cerro Negro Volcano Crater, Nicaragua
Looking into Cerro Negro volcano.

In this moment of relative tranquility, it occurred to me that this volcano had given and — as recently as 1999 — it had also taken away.

How NOT to Run Down a Volcano

At the edge of the volcano, a slope of fine volcanic pebbles descended to a base almost 200-300 meters down.

“You should really run as fast as you can…all the way to the bottom.” John, our ebullient guide, implied anything else would be an epic waste of an opportunity. He even took everyone's cameras halfway down to capture our folly.

“Is this really a good idea? Will our insurance cover this?” I wondered, my age again revealing itself.

As the first of our group began their run down — arms and legs flailing and voices cracking in terrified delight — my adrenaline kicked in.

Someone in the remaining group suggested Dan and I run down hand-in-hand for the camera.

OK, c'mon,” I said, grabbing Dan's hand.

He was too willing. A split second later, we were off to the races, bounding and sliding down the cone. Dan's strides were a little too much for me though. Our fleeting moments of coupledom were quickly followed by Dan unknowingly dragging me down the volcano.

This isn't fun anymore. STOP!!” I yelled.

After I took stock of the raspberry gravel wounds down my left leg, we opted to part ways. As in life, some undertakings are more fun as a couple while others are best pursued alone.

Volcano Number Two: El Hoyo

Two volcanoes, one day. That's the trick and the treat of this particular trek.

It was midday and I was drenched only minutes into the steep two-hour climb through the gap at Las Pilas. Fearing heat exhaustion, I slowed and focused on one foot in front of the other. Meanwhile, most of the group bounced Tigger-like up the steep path in the oppressive heat.

One rain storm and a few water breaks later (I was so thankful for each and every one), we arrived at the top of El Hoyo volcano, our campsite for the night. Dazed and exhausted, I barely registered that we and the mountain were enveloped in clouds. Nearly 12 hours of movement had taken their toll.

Early Bird Gets the View

“Guys, you have to come out here and see this rainbow!”

It was 5:20 AM. My first thought: “Ugh.”

My second thought: “This is John's ploy to draw us out of our tents.” Dan concurred.

I went outside just to be sure.

And there it was: a rainbow (which multiplied to two – Alexander's Dark Band) and a rapidly clearing sunrise view of Lake Managua, Momotombo Volcano, Lake Asososca (our destination later that day) and the vast, awesome green valley that lay among them.

Those bruises on my hips, the muscle ache in my legs. It was all worth it.

I decided I'm not too old for this after all.

A Word about Quetzal Trekkers

We did this in 36 hours with Quetzal Trekkers in Leon, Nicaragua. We will write more about them later. For those interested in this hike, it's referred to as El Hoyo. It's really three-in-one (Cerro Negro, El Hoyo and Lake Asososca). It's kicks your ass, but it kicks ass.

For those interested in trekking in Guatemala or Nicaragua, Quetzal Trekkers is a fantastic social enterprise. They not only deliver a unique experience, but 100% of their profits goes towards helping street kids. Their prices are reasonable and they can lend you virtually all the equipment you'll need. All their guides are volunteers who give a minimum of three months of their time to the organization. Their jobs are not easy, but somehow they make it look so. These guys and gals are some of the most dedicated and passionate we've had the pleasure to meet on our travels.

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An Ode to Barber Shops Around the World https://uncorneredmarket.com/barber-shops-around-world/ https://uncorneredmarket.com/barber-shops-around-world/#comments Sun, 28 Jun 2009 06:07:33 +0000 http://uncorneredmarket.com/?p=1904 Last Updated on April 26, 2024 by Audrey Scott Ah, the local barber. A ritual, a comfort of home. Not so for me. Every haircut is a new adventure: a different country, a new language and yet another man with ... Continue Reading

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Last Updated on April 26, 2024 by Audrey Scott

Ah, the local barber. A ritual, a comfort of home.

Not so for me. Every haircut is a new adventure: a different country, a new language and yet another man with scissors (or God forbid, clippers) who has his own ideas about style.

During a recent ear-lowering interlude in Leon, Nicaragua, it struck me that barber shops are less about haircuts and more about history and culture.

Barber Shop in Nicaragua
The Barber of Leon.

An Ode to Barber Shops

I'm rather drawn to barber shops. Not because of vanity (rarely do my results echo “excessive pride in one’s appearance”), but because of their social relevance.

From Nepal to Nicaragua, barber shops offer a clip and a chat. Fathers take their sons, whose first visits invariably feature the fearful, tearful haze of a universal rite of passage.

Weather, life, family and politics. These topics are barber shop currency, forming a link in the chain of traditional social networks. Barber shops are the modern day remains of the oral tradition; their pace rings of a bygone era.

The barber shop feels like a dying breed. Fifty and sixty year-old men will continue to ply their trade until their hands can no longer clippity-clip with the scissors. But who will replace them when they are gone?

The Barber of Leon

No place better typifies the old-style barber shop than the one I visited in Leon, Nicaragua. It exuded a cluttered, timeless aesthetic that, if not examined closely, could be mistaken for a barber out of any number of old towns, from Havana to Siracusa.

Barber shops around the world
A regular client gets his hair cut at a traditional barber shop in Leon, Nicaragua.


Framed original newspaper clippings from a John F. Kennedy visit (Kennedy Ganar Simpatica – “Kennedy Wins Sympathy”), a grade-school drawing of a large knobby-kneed bird downing a frog, prominently placed NO FUME signs, and a string of permanently dust-encrusted plastic tarantulas and angels dangling from the ceiling.

The rule it seems: once something goes up, it never comes down. A living time capsule.

I’m thankful for places like this. Maybe that makes me stuck in the past. Maybe that makes me nostalgic. Maybe that makes me old school.

Or maybe I just like to get my hair cut.

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