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For accommodation
in El Salvador, visit All
World Vacation Station
El Salvador, Part 1: The
Trip by Alex
Out of the way, with nothing
extraordinary for the camera, and with a marred reputation, El Salvador
remains one of the least travelled Latin American destinations. A perfect
place to go off the beaten track?
El
Salvador was almost an accident. I was on my way from the South to the
North of Mexico when the proximity of the Guatemalan border sucked me in.
Guatemala was nice but my time was very limited and the terrain didn’t
allow to go too far off the Great Central American Dope Trail. The Lonely
Planet felt particularly evil on that trip. Everyone was on the way to
that village where turtles lay eggs, their noses buried in the book. I
suddenly realised that I don’t know a single person at home who has ever
considered watching turtles lay eggs. This abnormality, plus Bob Marley,
the stench of dope and fashion cult of the indigenous made me dizzy. Luckily
I met Luke and we decided to escape to El Salvador. Because no one else
did.
Why? There are a few reasons.
Some people read in the Lonely Planet that there isn’t that much to see.
In addition, it’s way too off the main drag – Guatemala to Utila, North
Honduras, where everyone has to scuba dive. Yet others feel nervous. In
case you were not aware, the civil war in El Salvador finished in 1992,
after 12 years of brutal carnage. But people got so used to sleeping with
firearms that the country is still armed to the teeth. For many years after
the war the streets remained violent and gangs multiplied. All in all,
El Salvador has a reputation of a small, out of the way, dangerous country
with not much too see. Great, more for us.
We met a couple of people
who had been to San Salvador airport and then jumped onto a bus straight
to Guatemala, but we failed to meet anyone who had actually seen the country.
So we didn’t know what to expect and we were nervous too.
It was a pleasant ride, with
plenty of coastal colours. In 2 hours we had already crossed a third of
the country and arrived to the capital. San Salvador immediately charmed
us with its phlegmatic and strong presence. For a capital, and after Guatemala
City, there was quite a sense of order, a sense that things have a direction
and are more or less under control. Although it is a city where edges are
in all respects sharper, a city that may show you teeth from time to time,
chaos definitely would not be part of the description.
The scars of the war appeared
immediately, however. There were no ruins but as we were checking into
the hostel we were received by a one-armed lady and as soon as we walked
out we bought a coconut from a one-legged old woman.
As for danger, we didn’t
feel it. But that day we did stay in a heavily protected part of the city.
Over time I decided that El Salvador was only slightly more dangerous than
Guatemala. It is one of those countries, like Colombia, great to visit
while everyone still thinks it is unsafe. The shotguns were indeed numerous:
at a pharmacy, at an internet-café, at McDonalds. You would see
one every 50-100 metres. But they were all security. Normal people kept
guns at home and walked around with machetes. Those were everywhere. I
still don’t know if it’s just a universal household item, or a poor man's
shotgun.
However, for Luke this was
a disappointment. Guns were the reason he came to El Salvador. He had read
in his Lonely Planet that you could buy them on a market. So we spent the
whole first day trying to do that, he would just come up to the stalls
and ask if they sell shotguns. Eventually we realised that LP betrayed
us. Again. We did find lots of holsters though and bought two huge machetes,
just to blend in.
Next day Luke remembered
that in Cambodia (another everyone-has-a-gun country) they had shooting
ranges. So we had a drink in the evening and decided to ask the girl at
the hostel reception if there is one around here. But all we could manage
in our broken Spanish was "donde es possible alquiller armas?". The worried
girl dialed the manager's home number and said that two drunk gringos are
asking where they can hire guns right now. We had lots of explaining to
do in the morning and I began feeling stupid.
Luke
was running out of options. Throughout the next day he kept coming up to
security guards on the streets and leech them with "I want to play with
you gun. Let’s go to the field. I'll pay you". Some politely shook their
heads, some frowned (naturally, the phrase could be misinterpreted). The
following morning destroyed Luke decided that enough is enough and crossed
over to Honduras.
If you stay in El Salvador
for a while, you do tend to spend a lot of time in the capital. It is not
that San Salvador is that fascinating. It is quite low on things to see,
in fact, seeming more residential. Particularly unpleasant is the stuffed
centre, which has turned into one dirty market. But the country is so small
and the travel arranged in such manner, that it is much more practical
to venture to and fro the capital, wherever you go, unless you get far
East. However, the city is fairly pleasant and has decent places to go,
both in the day and at night, and a more cosmopolitan atmosphere. Besides,
tourism there is still new and it is mainly the capital that can offer
decent hostels (even there you will find only a few).
The most travelled route
here is south to the coast. Beaches like El Zonte and El Sunzal are considered
the best surf in Central America and it’s such a large chunk of the (tiny)
tourist economy that you are likely to be approached in San Salvador with
“Are you a surfer”? La Libertad is the coastal hub town that serves as
a portal for the string of those beaches. By day everyone in that town
looks like a pirate and by night they still do, but spun out on crack.
It was a hot and stuffy town and, to be honest, only good for buying some
fruit, so there’s just no reason not to make the extra 10km down the line.
I say this because I met a few people who didn’t bother. Those beaches
are not great but they are ok and convenient so most Salvadorians from
the capital go there. Entirely volcanic, they make you totally black. A
storm in El Salvador, viewed from those beaches, is really something special,
with spectacular thunder and lightening.
My friend Maria also took
me to El Cuco beach, in the East of the country. Another popular spot,
it was again ok, but nothing fantastic. The amazing thing though was that
this well-known beach was entirely domestic, with no thought given to (non-existent)
tourists. To get there we had to cross river Lempa on a newly constructed
bridge. The previous one was destroyed during the war and a third of the
country had been almost entirely isolated for many years. The East has
always been poorer and suffered more in that war, it is still slightly
more edgy. San Miguel, the major city of that area, is a Dusk till Dawn
haunt. Once the darkness comes people seal themselves in and the beasts
walk the streets.
Maria gave me a little tour
of the country, through places like L’Herradura, Zacatecoluca and Usulutan.
It was an off the beaten track dream. The little tourist awareness that
the West of the country has was entirely absent here. A virgin land, free
of any pretence. A pure and genuine welcome.
Santa Ana, a major Western
city was quite sleepy but it had a lot of clowns. Don’t ask, I know it’s
bizarre. I had a clown in my pizzeria, a clown in my hostel and I even
ended up going for drinks with a bunch of clowns. You could say it was
a fun night. By the way, make sure it is a hostel, not a “hostel”, unless
eavesdropping on cries of passion is your thing – the Lonely Planet should
do a more thorough research there.
The centre of the country,
around the capital and to the north is very cosy and modestly lush. There
are some very pleasant routes amongst hills and lakes. Then, there is Perquin
– a place scarred by the history of the war. Ex-guerrillas will show you
around the civil war museum.
El Salvador is not famous
for any of its attractions. It doesn’t have anything particularly special
but it does have the usual set of things that could occupy you. Bohemia
and nightlife in San Salvador, acceptable beaches with a famous surf, volcanoes
(one of which is a pure mountain of ash) where you can do scuba diving
in the lakes, a national reserve El Impossible with rich wildlife, colonial
towns like Suchitoto, Mayan ruins like Joya de Ceren. It is a pleasant,
aesthetic country to see from a bus window, with many charming corners.
And I don’t want to be cheesy
but I did go to El Salvador in the first place to just meet some regular,
genuine people and I do like the Salvadorians a lot. Generous, friendly,
tranquil, they also had this hard inner core, this dignity and respect
for themselves and others. Many had scars of sadness in their eyes, they
have had a difficult life, and it is their inexplicable strength, discipline
and a sense of quiet pride that raised the country so fast from the ruins.
They were really easy to relate to, it is a place where the culture gap
is not as sharp as in many other places. But this article is about the
country, I will tell you about the people in the next one.
El Salvador doesn’t have
Machu Pichu or Foz de Iguacu. You can easily skip it if you are after high
impact photos. But for someone who just wants to get away from the industry
and wander around an unpolluted social landscape, this is one of the last
places in the Latin America. I didn’t want it to be great, just genuine
and good, and it was really good.
As for the safety, I found
nothing out of the ordinary (by Central American standards) apart from
a few more shotguns than in Guatemala. Normal precautions apply. Buses
don’t go after dark, guns are not allowed in bars and everyone talks about
violence. On that last point – myth or reality? I would say that some bodies
have now become ghosts.
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For accommodation
in El Salvador, visit All
World Vacation Station
Alex is the webmaster of
Valencia
City Guide - an independent resource on travelling in Valencia, Spain.
Travel
Articles / Central America
/ El Salvador

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