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- November 5, 2008: Nicaragua's 'Golden Route' to the Caribbean, Rio San Juan - marketwatch.com
- October 19, 2008: The unseen virtues of Managua, Nicaragua - miamiherald.com
- October 18, 2008: Top 5 Latin American Real Estate Markets - nuwireinvestor.com
- September 13, 2008: thestar.com - Rediscovering Nicaragua
- August 19, 2008: southafrican.co.uk - Nicaragua Magnifica
- August 7, 2008: mercurynews.com - Group lists top 10 'ethical destinations'
- July 31, 2008: De propertywire.com - Property market reviving in Nicaragua as worries over political regime subside
- June 28, 2008: Nicaragua has become the major hot spot of Central American tourism
- May 18, 2008: JOSEPH HOOPER said in New York Time
- May 5, 2008: From Canada.com - Tourists discover peaceful Nicaragua
Archive for the Leon Category
southafrican.co.uk - Nicaragua Magnifica
August 19, 2008 by sacuanjoche.
STEPHANIE GRIMMETT visits Nicaragua in Central America for an action-packed adventure in a place few people have ever thought of visiting.
Nicaragua only seems to make the news when something bad is going down: earthquakes, political uprisings and of course, the infamous Iran-Contra Affair. But, currently this little battler of a country is enjoying a period of relative political stability and it’s a great time to visit. Nicaragua is clearly on the make.
Settled by the Spanish in the early 1500’s, much of Nicaragua was densely populated by indigenous peoples hundreds, probably thousands of years before their arrival. The Spanish quickly discovered the so called “womb” of Nicaragua: a large lake separated from the Pacific Ocean by only a narrow strip of land. Its umbilical cord: the Rio San Juan snakes its way from the lake all the way across the country to the Caribbean. This interesting quirk of geography meant that Nicaragua was nearly the site of the “Panama” Canal and several countries vied hotly for control of the region. For many years, the British also held interests on Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast, and this area was (many say it still is) the haunt of pirates.
Unfortunately, colonisation by the Spanish led to the subjugation of the local peoples, and much native culture has been lost. Poverty is still endemic in Nicaragua and life is hard for many of its residents. However, prosperity is returning, and today Nicaragua has a lot to offer the inquisitive traveller: beautiful colonial architecture, tropical Caribbean islands, bustling markets, lively music, surfing beaches, a remarkable political history, and if that’s not enough, a whole chain of live volcanoes for added interest. Travelling in Nicaragua can be intensely thought provoking. It has been said that Nicaragua’s volcanoes are similar to the country’s political situation; certainly both have tended to dominate the country’s landscape.
Nicaragua can be roughly divided into two distinct regions: east and west, and currently, no paved roads link the two. If you want to travel between coasts, you have to fly or take a boat. The west coast of Nicaragua, bordered by the Pacific Ocean is the most populated area, containing most of Nicaragua’s major cities: Managua, León and Granada. The people are mostly Spanish speaking mestizos (people of mixed indigenous and Spanish blood). All of the country’s surfing beaches are on this coast. The locals bop to Latino pop, or sizzle on the dance floor to sultry Salsa, and as you sit in a beachside bar sipping mojitos, watching the sun go down, you can sample the local staple: Gallo Pinto (rice and beans).
The Caribbean coast is very different. The tropical “Mosquito” coast is sparsely populated and locals speak English with the most fantastic Caribbean accent. The dress is pure Cuban, the music plays to reggae beat and life is quite laid back, especially on the islands. But despite enormous differences in appearance, language, culture and music, Nicaraguans are proud of their country. And they’re always willing to celebrate something, which is probably all due to the excellent local rum.
If you’ve only got a few days in Nicaragua, don’t spend them all in Managua. There are some great bars in Managua but there are also some very bad parts of town. A great alternate first destination is Granada.
There are several sights worth taking in on the road to Granada. The first is the still active Masaya Volcano. You can drive up close to the crater and after a short walk, you’re staring down into the volcano’s open maw. Interestingly, and somewhat disturbingly, a nearby sign warns you to park with the car facing down hill and to run if you smell choking gases.
Another good stop is the Masaya market. There are actually two markets in this area: the tourist market and the local market and both are worth a look. Buses go direct from Managua to the local market, where you can change to go to Granada, and when you finally roll into Granada, you won’t be disappointed there either.
Granada is the relaxed, old conservative capital and many of the beautiful, colonial buildings are being lovingly restored. There are some great spots to eat out and some funky little bars playing salsa music live. From Granada, it’s only a short bus ride to San Juan del Sur and Nicaragua’s collection of surfing beaches. The water’s clean and the waves are worthy of the serious surfer. What could be better than that?
Omotepe Island makes an excellent next stop. Formed by two volcanoes: one active, one dormant, Omotepe Island lies in Lake Nicaragua (home of the famous, fresh water sharks). Several eco-hotels have sprung up around the island, the mood is relaxed and you can actually climb both volcanoes. The active volcano is the more strenuous, but an interesting hike. Plan to spend a few days and do the hike early, your muscles might need some time to recover afterwards.
León has a very different feel to Granada. León buzzes with energy and is the home of Nicaragua’s more socialist ideals. Political slogans appear everywhere and near the main square is a memorial to those lost in the revolution. Despite this, the town does not feel at all menacing and it’s quite the cultural centre. León was also the birthplace of Rubén Darío, one of Latin America’s most famous poets.
Just out of town is Cerro Negro, another active volcano, the slopes on which the world mountain biking speed record was set. This volcano is easy to climb, easier to descend as you glissade on tiny balls of pumice and there is great bird watching on the road there too.
Having done the west coast, it’s time to pop back to Managua and take a plane flight to the Corn Islands in the Caribbean. The plane lands on Big Corn Island, but take the boat to Little Corn Island which is much nicer.
Be careful in this region: cocaine smuggling is active and theft can be a problem so you need to be sensible.
That aside, Little Corn really is like Paradise lost, it’s stunning. The island is covered with mango trees, banana trees and coconut palms, the beaches are spectacular, the diving is good, and the best thing? There’s hardly anyone else there.
When you’ve finished your intrepid travels in Nicaragua, there’s nothing left but to buy a bottle of the local rum and some salsa CDs to remember your trip by. When you’re back at home and it’s cold outside, make a round of stiff mojitos and pop on the local music. You’ll want to go back.
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How to ride a wild volcano
February 22, 2007 by sacuanjoche.
By Robin Esrock
Special to the Tribune
Published February 18, 2007
The 29-year-old former tour guide has spent two years perfecting his “volcano boarding” on Cerro Negra, an ominous-looking active volcano located about 45 minutes from Leon. The colonial Nicaraguan town is surrounded by 13 volcanoes, including Cerro Negra, a cone of blackened rock that usually erupts every seven years. Perfect, it turns out, for tourists to hold onto a board and slide down its 40-degree sandy slope, reaching speeds of 25 m.p.h.
“We tried everything,” explains Webb, an Australian who runs the activity from his popular Bigfoot Hostel in central Leon. “Volcano boarding is like flying in an airplane. We want people to come down safely.”
Standing on a board, the most common method of sandboarding, was too painful. Cerro Negra’s hard volcanic rock is sharp, and any serious tumble can put the boarder through a natural meat shredder. The solution was a piece of wood with a strip of laminate, usable only twice (the wood becomes too scratched to gain speed in future runs), before being recycled into bookshelves. Considering more than 4,000 people have already boarded down the volcano, Webb must read a lot of books.
Boarders can choose between a fast new board, and a slower board that has been used once before. They are also provided with orange overalls and goggles, which helps avoid cuts and abrasions should you fall. For the time being, there are no waiver forms. “If backpackers want to pay me to throw them off a volcano, that’s their problem,” explains Webb. And, I suppose, mine too.
Webb personally guides his clients up the volcano, enjoying the opportunity to show backpackers why he has made Leon his home.
On the climb up the side of this black mountain, the scenery is breathtaking. A string of nearby volcanoes sit like pearls on a necklace as the sun begins to sink into the horizon.
My group of 18 backpackers, an even gender split, carry their own boards as locals visiting the surrounding national park look on curiously.
Webb stops along the way, enthusiastically explaining the flora, local history and a few facts about volcanoes.
At 160 years old, Cerro Negra is a young volcano. It currently is at the end of its fourth seven-year eruption cycle. The last time it erupted in 1999, it covered Leon in snow-like sand, much like the fine sand that the wind blows to its west face, from which we will descend.
It takes 40 minutes to walk to the top. Webb asks if anyone wants to join him for a run into the crater. There is no lava, but sulfuric gas is steaming from the earth, and digging your hand into the sand can result in a serious burn. He warns of the strenuous nature of this little jog, and then takes off into a cloud of gas. A couple of us follow, sprinting and sliding down to the bottom, fighting for air amidst the fumes. We slide down more than 300 feet of soft ash in seconds.
The crater itself is brown, black, red and white–a mineral-rich, hostile, alien planet. Climbing out of the crater is more than I bargained for, as each step up the ash hill is rewarded with a half-slide back, and a lung full of gases. I am ready to vomit by the time I rejoin the others. Webb does this four times a week. I overhear a group of Irish girls sounding suitably enamored with the “fitness” of their guide.
As the sun sets, we’re ready for our trip down the cone. Webb explains where to put our hands on the board, how to position our body, how to use our feet to brake. Our orange overalls glow in the sunset, contrasting surreally with the dark ash. We do a little practice run, and then it’s time to go.
I hold on as I get a push, and in a second, I’m sleighing 1,500 feet down the side of the volcano. The wood chafing on hard sand sounds like a jet plane, adding to the sensation of flying, and I leave an impressive tail of dust in my wake. An overzealous Israeli traveler takes a huge tumble when he hits a bump, but he’s got such a huge smile on his face he barely notices. Another guy slips and scrapes his arm, laughing as he does. I flip over backwards in a speed wobble but all I get is black dust covering my face and hands (there’s a reason you’re advised not to wear white shoes).
Safely at the base, we drink cold water and talk excitedly about our descent. The sun has set, and the sky is a Monet painting of peach and purple. “We get photocopy sunsets like this from November ’til June,” says Webb proudly. “It’s paradise up here; just nobody knows about it yet.”
It may have taken a lot of work for Webb to pioneer volcano boarding in Nicaragua, but anyone traveling in Central America (with a definite flair for the edge) will be grateful for his efforts.
IF YOU GO
INFORMATION
Volcano boarding in Leon, Nicaragua, is operated from Bigfoot Hostel, with trips leaving every day. The activity is 4 1/2 hours round-trip, with overalls, boards and goggles provided. The cost is $23 per person. For more information: www.bigfootadventure.com
–Robin Esrock
http://www.adventureblog.org/entry/riding-a-wild-volcano-in-nicaragua/
http://www.chicagotribune.com/travel/chi-0702180482feb18,0,4672208.story?coll=chi-travel-hed
Posted in travel, Media, News, Leon, Nicaragua | Print | No Comments »
The Rediscovery of Nicaragua
January 7, 2007 by sacuanjoche.
December 17, 2006
By GREGORY DICUM
LOLL in one of the pools at Pelican Eyes, a new development above the town of San Juan del Sur, on Nicaragua’s Pacific Coast: a tranquil breeze blows up the hillside from the perfect bay below, the pool’s disappearing edge merges with sea and sky, and the only sound is the rhythmic tapping of the bricklayers who are building the place — a compound of whitewashed, tile-roofed houses amid lush greenery and looking out to perfect sunset views. At the bottom is an airy palm-thatched restaurant, where cheerful waiters serve strong drinks and the patrons sit in the warm night air and talk about real estate.
This is Nicaragua as the Next Costa Rica, the sort of hopeful real estate appellation signaling that gentrification may now begin in earnest. In the last few years, as Americans on the prowl for second homes, or just an investment, have found places like the Last Costa Rica already overrun by their own kind, a boom has started in the country just to its north.
Nicaragua is no stranger to American visitors with grandiose plans. That perfect bay at San Juan del Sur was the place Forty-Niners on their way to California from New England embarked upon the Pacific after a journey across Nicaragua. William Walker, a freelance American colonialist, made landfall here in 1855 to undertake a bloody, tragicomic campaign to introduce democracy, railroads and slavery.
Before facing a firing squad, Walker was briefly the president of Nicaragua, an episode that, perhaps even more than the quarter-century occupation by the United States Marines at the start of the 20th century, and even the Contra war of the 1980s, informs a Nicaraguan wariness of American enthusiasms.
So for now, this is still Nicaragua. If you descend the hill from Pelican Eyes and pass its guardhouse at the foot of the drive, the road is pocked and broken. Shanties cluster at its side. Yet toward the water, San Juan del Sur retains an attractive character. It’s a mellow seaside town where blond surfers stroll obliviously past a Sandinista rally, with loudspeakers blaring revolutionary songs.
This town of brightly painted wooden houses with red metal roofs is fronted by a wide, pretty beach. At the open-air restaurants there, you can relax with a setup that includes a bottle of fine, clean Flor de Caña rum, a bucket of ice, a few bottles of Coke and a dish of limes.
You can walk out for a dip in the warm, shallow water from time to time, then return to the restaurant and snack on salty fried cheese and sweet maduros (fried ripe bananas) as you watch kids play soccer on the beach. Boats bob just behind the soft, curling surf.
I visited in August, with the photographer Morgan Stetler and his fiancée, Anne-Lise Reusswig. In preparation for the elections that took place at the beginning of November, all around us were the workings of the democracy that has emerged from Nicaragua’s troubled past. This was the fourth consecutive free election in the 16 years of peace since the end of the Marxist regime of Daniel Ortega.
The Sandinistas won, making Mr. Ortega, their longtime leader, president once again. But he is president of a different Nicaragua, and there seems little chance that the Sandinista victory will lead back to the chaos of the past.
The news in August was of campaigns, scandal and, more pertinent to the visitor, the rolling blackouts born of high oil prices and botched energy privatization. “No hay luz” — “There is no light” — was an apologetic refrain we heard throughout the country, and we found that a generator had become the most important hotel amenity.
In Granada, we stayed at the newly remodeled Gran Francia. Besides being a well-lighted beacon in the darkened city, it was comfortable and well placed, on the corner of the central plaza, right next to the freshly painted mustard yellow cathedral.
In the plaza, the city’s annual weeklong festival for its patron saint, the Virgin of the Assumption, was in full swing. It featured a cacophony of school drum corps, church bells and booming fireworks at seemingly random times (like just before dawn).
The afternoon we arrived, an endearingly bad mariachi band played sad songs of lost loves as the singer hobbled about the plaza’s band shell with one leg drastically shorter than the other. Vendors sold wooden toys and fire-roasted cashews around the plaza, and a breeze brought the sweet smell of the countryside into the city.
Horse-drawn carriages, which serve as taxis — and not just for tourists — lined one side of the plaza, while families sat under spreading flame trees drinking pitaya, a cool and tangy juice of cactus fruit and lime with a stunning fuchsia color that glowed radiantly against the turquoise-painted tables. Old grandmothers sat on park benches watching beneficently as boys fiddled with their cellphones, too shy to flirt more directly with the clusters of laughing girls. It was hot, and everyone wished it would rain.
When the band was done and night had fallen, a town booster took the microphone in the elegant salmon-colored band shell to make a speech about Granada’s sunny future, saying “We’re now the 25th most visited city in Latin America!” When he was done, the power went out.
Granada was founded in 1524, and it was laid waste by William Walker as he abandoned it after losing his grip on power. When we took a tour of the city, our guide introduced nearly every building with a variation of “this church was burned by William Walker, the American filibuster.”
Everywhere, new cobblestones were going in, and new streetlights. Fresh paint in vivid yellow, pink and blue shone on magnificently restored post-Walker 19th-century churches. Visitors — European tour groups, Latin American families, Australian backpackers — wandered about the central part of the town, soaking up the evanescent atmosphere of more than a hundred years of solitude.
Like every city in Nicaragua, Granada is in a spectacular location. A richly forested volcano overlooks the city, which is perched at the edge of Lake Nicaragua. At the foot of the city, an enchanting archipelago of tiny, close-set islands beckons: Las Isletas are heaps of rock that were spewed out of the volcano and are now covered in big, leafy tropical vegetation. Some are private estates, opulent getaways for captains of Nicaraguan industry. Others are modest, primordial knobs concealing rustic cottages.
We took a boat through the islands, marveling at the beauty of such a setting — the white egrets wolfing down sardines, and the laconic fishermen in brightly painted rowboats on the calm water. Here and there “For Sale” signs in English hung low over the water from stout tree branches. They were beseeching, attached to improbable personal tropical paradises that could be had by any American sitting on a chunk of home equity.
But Lake Nicaragua seems too majestic a place for such thoughts. It’s a near-mythical tropical lake, one of the largest in the world, ringed by volcanoes and forest. Its waters are home to strange beasts — including freshwater sharks and sawfish, both sadly in decline — and moving legend: it is said to have been an Eden that was drowned after a Romeo and Juliet tragedy. It is shallow, and turbid from volcanic ash, but it is warm, and clean, lending a freshness to the air along its shores. Toward its southern end is an unexpected gem: the island of Ometepe.
Ometepe, composed of twin volcanoes rising from the lake, is like a magical little freshwater Hawaii. It is a true backwater — the rough road around the island was finished just 15 years ago, and the only access is by ferry — with the feel of a place where nothing ever happens, in the best sense.
As though by providence, the island was spared the centuries of violence that unfolded all around it. Ancient pre-Colombian petroglyphs and sculptures dot the volcanoes’ flanks. Above the plantings of plantains, sugar cane and sesame, the mountains’ upper reaches remain as they have always been.
With the aid of a guide, Leonel Barrios, who had grown up on its shoulder, we attempted to climb Volcán Maderas, the more southerly peak. The trail wound up past fields of rice and corn accessible only on foot or horseback. Then it passed pasture and entered the cloud forest, where howler monkeys roared at us from above.
But as we climbed, the clouds closed in. Halfway up, we were forced off the steep mountain trails by driving rain.
At least we had the beach to console us that afternoon, once the rain stopped. The fresh water was warm, with wind-blown waves rolling onto a long stretch of sand empty but for a few horses. I sat on a beach chair in front of the modest Hotel Villa Paraíso and listened to the clatter of coconut fronds. A boy ran up the beach to the hotel, carrying the day’s catch in a bucket.
Nicaraguan food has a hearty simplicity: a local fish, with tostones (medallions of fried plantains) and gallo pinto, or red beans and rice, washed down with a Toña, a classic tropical lager. Local specialties like vigorón (fried pork skin and yuca, a popular roadside meal around Granada) and nacatamales (corn tamales stuffed with meat and wrapped in banana leaves) are worth trying as well.
If Nicaraguan food tends toward sweetness, especially in its sauces, it is perhaps a symptom of its being a sugar-producing country. Regardless, in such a small country with so much agriculture and so many climate zones, virtually everything is fresh and holds up well to simple preparation.
After Ometepe, volcano fever seized us. Central America is one of the world’s most vigorous volcanic zones, and Nicaragua alone has 19 active volcanoes. And they are very accessible — there are one or two outside every city. Most are protected as parkland and make popular excursions, but even so, on many volcanoes you’ll find yourself alone with nature at its most potent.
Volcán Masaya, between Granada and Managua, is a huge heap of geology, with a road that lets visitors drive right to its lip. Past the parking area, right over a distressingly low wall, one stares directly into Hell. Sheer walls drop nearly 1,000 feet into a rumbling, smoldering hole a third of a mile across; fumes rise up in an ominously dirty-looking cloud. When wisps float by, the effect is like being tear-gassed.
Incredibly, a flock of specially adapted green parrots lives in the crater walls, safe from predators and mocking our coughs with their bright squeaks.
Masaya is at the center of a well-organized park that features guided tours through volcanic caves, a visitor center with a thorough explanation of the geology, history and ecology of the area, and trails that let you wander around the cone. Next to where our car was parked, a sign recommended we back in, in case we had to make a quick getaway, and warned, “In case of expulsions of rocks, protect yourself under the car.”
This kind of casual at-your-own-risk approach is refreshing if you’ve ever felt infantilized by the signs, guides and boardwalks at places like Yellowstone. Near the village of San Jacinto, outside León, we visited a field of bubbling mud and hissing fumaroles. There was a half-completed and abandoned overlook, built by an American volunteer during the 1980s, and a few concrete footings built by Soviet engineers who had planned a geothermal plant here. And there was a trail down into the shifting, boiling inferno.
The only safety measure — but a very effective one — was provided by a handful of local kids who shouted “No, No! Peligro!” (“Danger!”) whenever we were on the verge of a false step. From time to time, pigs fall in and are cooked alive.
Nearby is Cerro Negro, a big, black cinder cone that began erupting only in 1850, and quickly grew to more than 2,300 feet. I was eager to visit since, as a boy, I had been entranced by stories of this magical mountain.
The climb is a hot slog over crunchy lava on which absolutely nothing grows. The trail leads over the lip and directly into the crater, where smoking fumaroles emit noxious gas, coating the surrounding rocks with sulfur. The ground there is too hot to touch; all reminders of a habitable world are gone. There is nothing but heat and fumes and the sharpest, blackest rock: a visit to our planet before it was ours.
But from the high point of the rim above the crater, Nicaragua spreads out in all its glory. A line of big volcanoes extends north and south, with the green coastal plain below. León’s tight cluster marks the center of the area, and beyond it the Pacific shines in the west.
We visited Cerro Negro with Mario Munguia, a leader in a tourism cooperative based in León. The cooperative movement has been strong in Nicaragua since the Sandinista revolution and includes businesses from coffee farms to ice cream factories. A nationwide network of co-ops was founded in 2004 to help spread the benefits of the country’s boom.
As recently as five years ago, almost no facilities existed for foreign visitors, yet now development is brisk. Social development projects like the tourism co-ops and a scholarship and job training program associated with Pelican Eyes, as well as many others, tie the growing sector to society more broadly, as rarely happens elsewhere in Central America. As a visitor, there is the refreshing feeling that how it all turns out is, in part, up to you.
AFTER Cerro Negro, we stopped at Mario’s small farm by a sandy road in the woods. We met his son and his wife, who teaches at the village school. We saw his horses and the grapefruit trees he had planted and felt, for a moment, the slow pace of country life. Mario, of the generation that had lived — and fought — through the revolution, has an earnest and intense patriotism.
“I could have left here,” he told us, waving his hand across his home, “and gone to the United States, but this is my country.”
From there, we went on to nearby León. We stayed at the Hotel el Convento, a gorgeously converted 17th-century convent in the center of town. Surrounding a perfectly manicured courtyard and fountain, high wooden cloisters are decorated with enough religious artifacts to resemble a museum (including an entire golden altar in the expansive open-air lobby).
Not so recently destroyed, León seems older than Granada. And not so recently restored, it has a more lived-in feel. Historically the liberal city, in opposition to the conservative pole of Granada, León is today the Sandinista Party’s stronghold. The city was draped in Sandinista black and red in anticipation of the election season and there was an expectant bustle on the sidewalks, which teemed with students from the university in the center of town.
León bears the weight of its history with cultured if slightly shabby ease. It is a repository of folkloric tradition but is strongly influenced by classical European forms. The city cherishes its inheritance, on display in its newly restored theater and in its art galleries and poetry museums.
Indeed, poetry seems ideally suited to the Nicaraguan disposition. The daily papers include poems, along with cartoons and news. Nicaragua has produced poet-heroes like Rubén Darío, the 19th-century diplomat and journalist whose seminal influence on Spanish-language poetry has been likened to Whitman’s on English.
In León, Darío is buried to the side of the altar in the hulking Basílica de la Asunción, said to be the largest church in Central America. His words are carved in the marble, but like history itself, they live on all around Nicaragua.
One night on the beach at San Juan del Sur — the same beach where thousands of Americans once decamped for the gold rush, and where others are, maybe, rushing back again — I met John Oliver, a poet from Nicaragua’s eastern coast. He recited a poem of his, in his rich Caribbean English.
Then he switched to Spanish, and Darío’s heartbreaking “Melancolía.” His strong voice blended into the soft surf as he hit the last line: “¿No oyes caer las gotas de mi melancolía?” (“Can’t you hear the drops of my sadness falling?”)
VISITOR INFORMATION
GETTING THERE
American, Delta and Continental all fly to Managua, usually with one stop from New York. Recent online round-trip fares from New York for mid-January started around $680.
GETTING AROUND
Highways between the main cities in Nicaragua are in good shape: both Granada and León are each a little more than an hour from Managua, but in opposite directions. Navigating is not difficult, although it is reassuring to know at least some Spanish. When Nicaraguans do speak English, it is often excellent — many have spent time in the United States.
Many establishments will accept U.S. dollars rather than cordobas.
Budget Rent A Car (800-472-3325; www.budget.com) has four locations in Managua, including the airport. In January, the rate for an economy car will be $11 a day plus taxes and fees; a small four-wheel-drive S.U.V., $35 a day. When I rented, I was offered a free cellphone, too.
The other alternative is to hire a car with a driver. Any hotel or tour operator can arrange this for about $60 a day. Taxis within cities are cheap and easy to find — within central Managua, shared taxi rides can be had for as little as 30 cents.
WHEN TO GO
The best time is December and January, when the rains have stopped but the country has not yet dried to hot dust. The seasons are less pronounced on the Caribbean coast.
GREGORY DICUM is the author of “’Window Seat Europe,” about reading the landscape from 35,000 feet in the air, published by Chronicle Books.
http://travel.nytimes.com/travel/guides/central-and-south-america/nicaragua/overview.html
Posted in News, Media, Sn Juan del S, Leon, Granada, Nicaragua | Print | No Comments »
