La Ruta Del Sol by Camila Bernal

The long bus rides, unpaved streets and cheap almuerzos, children running barefoot through the streets, juice stands, late nights, sunny days, street dogs, seafood, friendly locals and hippy foreigners. The list actually goes on but when I close my eyes and think of the journey we had when we did La Ruta del Sol, these are things that come to mind. 

La Ruta del Sol (The Sun Route) or more recently known as La Ruta Spondylus, is a highway (sometimes small road) that travels parallel to the Pacific coast of Ecuador passing by miles and miles of virgin beaches, small towns, and slightly more metropolitan cities. 

We technically started in Machala and then went to Salinas, Santa Elena and Ballenita, then to Montañita, Puerto Lopez and Los Frailes, and finally Canoa. We ate, we surfed, we partied, we got lost, we fought and almost broke up, we talked to locals, we laid naked on the beach. It's no wonder we found so many lost souls along the coast, Argentinians, Chileans, Peruvians, Colombians, Europeans and even Americans, all who looked as if they fell down a rabbit hole and didn’t really want to find their way out.

Cuenca, Gualaceo, Chordeleg & Ingapirca by Camila Bernal

We made our way to the southern regions of Ecuador around Carnaval. We went to Cuenca (10 hour bus ride no big deal) a very beautiful and colonial city and we also went to smaller towns nearby where we saw the Incan ruins of Ingapirca, a shawlmaker that dyes and sows everything using the techniques of his ancestors, and ate some delicious traditional food.

Quito Lindo by Camila Bernal

My partner is from Quito, Ecuador, it was a pleasure to finally see this place that I had heard so much about. It was absolutely beautiful, it is metropolitan but manages not to feel as dense as Medellin. It is modern but still manages to maintain that colonial feel with the preservation of the historic center. The people are nice, the weather is perfect, the altitude is a bit hard to get used to, and the food is to die for. 

La Ciudad Perdida by Camila Bernal

I should have made this post earlier since I was trying to go in order of the places we visited but I just recently finished this lot so here goes. After Cartagena we took a bus to Santa Marta, we planned an excursion with a group of other hikers and guides to go to the Lost City. The Lost City is the Colombian equivalent of Machu Pichu, the Tayrona were an indigenous people that inhabited the Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta hundreds of years ago. Much like other civilizations, they had to face the invasion of Spanish colonizers who brought with them war and disease. They were forced to abandon many of their cities and move higher and deeper into the jungle, where to this day virgin tribes still reside. It took 5 days and 4-6 hours of hiking per day to reach the Lost City, it was hot, humid and gruelingly exhausting but definitely one of the most exciting and memorable experiences I had on the trip. 

Cali by Camila Bernal

When we finally reached Cali we were really excited, the salsa, the food, the culture. I was born in Tulua, a small city about 45 minutes from Cali, so it felt the most familiar. I had aborrajados, a fried plantain and cheese delicacy, we ate sancocho de pezcado, we went to a salsa club, we walked around the old neighborhoods and took late nigh strolls.

 

Pereira & Salento by Camila Bernal

By the time we made it to Pereira we were pretty beat, after a few weeks traveling it was nice to settle down and spend time with family. We went to the thermal waters in Santa Rosa, we ate their famous chorizos. Salento was our next stop, it was a small town, with beautiful coffee fields and farms. We took a tour through a coffee plantation, mountain biked , got caught in multiple thunder storms, and hiked up to El Valle del Cocora.