If you need directions when visiting a
foreign country or even a strange town, ask a local. Right? So, arriving in
downtown Santa Marta, we do just that, asking a bus driver at the central
market, “Which bus do we take to Parque Tayrona?”
We’d already
flagged down a blue bus on the highway near our rental house that, according to
instructions, would take us to town. That bus took us on a bumpy, roundabout wild
ride. Like all local buses, air conditioning in that steamy climate consists of
leaving all windows and doors open. Loud music helps distract me from the hard
seats designed for very small people. Later we learn that we should have taken
another more direct blue bus with the words Yucal. At least, we’ll know better
tomorrow.
Downtown, we
face a line of bumper to bumper blue buses. A guy on a corner gives us
different directions “Oh, the buses for Tayrona are on that street over there.”
We run over there. No, someone else tells us, sending us scurrying back to
where we’d started. At last, we locate the bus, another local one with the same
hard seats that have my back complaining for the hour long trip.
After our hike
in the park, we arrive back at the entrance at closing, when dozens of park
visitors are also waiting for transport back to Santa Marta. I say to my friend
Margery, “Let’s try to get one of those bigger buses with better seats.” People
crowd and push into one of the blue buses. Some must make the trip standing. We
stare down the highway for signs of another bus. The rain begins in earnest.
Thunder crashes. We make a run for a van, more pricey but dry and comfortable.
The next day we
spend a leisurely afternoon at Taganga beach. Sunset comes early on the
Colombian coast, and sunbathers rush to the bus stop around 5 p.m. for the
return home. Again are faced with a survival of the fittest situation. A bus
bulging with passengers pulls away as we arrive at the bus stop. People gather
in clumps. I wonder if we’ll manage to grab a seat on the next bus…. Here it
comes. A gaggle of teenage girls charges for the bus door. I hold out my
trekking stick, blocking their way. “Just a minute! We’ve been waiting much
longer than you.” Margery and I have our choice of seats.
Flexibility and
patience are necessary for getting to Bahía Concha, also part of Tayrona Park.
Again, everyone we ask directs us to a different bus. Finally, after two blue
bus rides, we are deposited at what appears to be the end of the line. We ask a
cluster of men sitting on a wall at the corner. “Bahía Concha? I can take you,”
a man offers. We pile into his battered 1989 Trooper and bounce along a winding
road, clouds of dust billowing behind us.
At the entrance gate, after ordering a fish lunch which will be delivered to us on the beach, we are directed to a pickup truck for “preferential” passengers. Non-preferential must walk. We must rent a small open sided tent and table and chairs. The expensive fish lunch arrives. Far better is the huge avocado (aguacate) we buy, cut in half and eat with our hands.
At the entrance gate, after ordering a fish lunch which will be delivered to us on the beach, we are directed to a pickup truck for “preferential” passengers. Non-preferential must walk. We must rent a small open sided tent and table and chairs. The expensive fish lunch arrives. Far better is the huge avocado (aguacate) we buy, cut in half and eat with our hands.
Palomino beach
is our destination another day. The blue bus leaves us on the edge of the
highway. How do we get to the beach, we ask? A helpful young man points across
the street. “A carro-taxi,” he says.
We climb into what looks like a motorized tuk-tuk and wind through town and fields, maneuvering muddy ruts in the dirt road. We come to a stop, a dump truck and several men wielding shovels blocking the road.
“The
road is being repaired,” says our carro-taxi
driver. “You’ll have to walk the rest of the way.”
So we do.
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