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Colombia is rapidly changing its negative image as a hotbed of
criminal 'bounty' kidnappers, drug overlords and gangsters, and
travellers are returning to this rewarding country crowning the
continent of South America. While both the US State Department and
British Foreign and Commonwealth Office still advise against travel
to Colombia, the country is statistically safer than most countries
in the region. Those intrepid and curious travellers and tourists
who do venture here are rewarded with the most diverse destination
in South America: an exhilarating fusion of shabby, colourful
towns, Caribbean and Pacific coasts, Andean valleys, Amazonian
jungle, and wide plains.
Most visitors see the capital, Bogota, the legendary resort town
of Cartagena and the duty-free offshore island province of San
Andres. In recent years Cali and Medellin are also popular
stopovers. Wherever one chooses to explore, a fascinating, exciting
and trouble-free experience is likely to be had.
The fortunes of modern Colombia had their foundations laid in
the coffee plantations, but the onset of political violence and
civil war in the 1950s effectively cauterised the industry. The
exception to this can be found in the pretty hilly Quindio
province, where many former farmers have turned their traditional
red-tile roofed homesteads into good quality bed and breakfast
establishments, set among exotic gardens and rows of leafy coffee
bushes.
Urban Colombia centres on Bogota, home to about 20 percent of
the country's inhabitants. This ancient city was the pre-Columbian
capital of the Chibcha Indians and remains a blend of old and new,
teeming with Spanish colonial buildings and plazas alongside modern
skyscrapers. Beggars rub shoulders in the streets with smartly
dressed business people, while mule trains wind their way through
the traffic jams.
A major drawcard for tourists is the Spanish colonial port of
Cartagena with its spectacular walled old town, a medieval
wonderland of palaces, monasteries, plazas and overhanging
balconies. To the south of the town are Colombia's major seaside
holiday resorts with excellent beaches and scuba diving
opportunities.
The country's equatorial rainforests clothe the river valleys,
riddled with magnificent airplants, vines, creepers and brilliant
flowers and birds. The Los Katios National Park in Choco contains
hundreds of species of plant and animal life that have yet to be
listed. The country's jungles also shelter wondrous archaeological
treasures, like the ancient city of La Cuida Perdida and the
monuments, tombs and burial mounds at San Augustin and
Tierrodentro.
Colombia is a gem of a destination slowly starting to shed its
unpalatable reputation to reveal its unique beauty.
Tour operator G.A.P Adventures has for the past 14 years
specialised in unique, small group, grassroots adventure travel
experiences to the world's most wild places, going off the beaten
track into the heart of the destination. G.A.P Adventures offers
several expeditions to Colombia and her surrounds.
iExplore designs made-to-order, privately-guided adventure tours
to Colombia and over 200 other world wonders. Come Back
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