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Venezuela, travel to an emotional destination: from Canaima to Los Roques

2024-02-04T05:11:43.311Z

Highlights: Venezuela is an emotional destination but you have to live the challenge. Everything is worth it, even the realization of the obvious: that everything is too expensive for many Venezuelans. The Canaima National Park is a UNESCO world heritage site since 1994. Angel Falls is the highest waterfall in the world: 1,283 meters, masterfully recreated in the Pixar film Up (2009) The El Hacha and Wadaima waterfalls will remain in memory as one of the great moments of the trip.


An adventure that begins in the national park where Angel Falls is located, the highest waterfall in the world, and ends in the desired archipelago of Los Roques, as well as a joyful stop at Isla Margarita


Venezuela is an emotional destination but you have to live the challenge.

You don't come here to relax.

Everything is worth it, even the realization of the obvious: that everything is too expensive for many Venezuelans, that there is hardly any international tourism and that any attempt to do something alone—the photographer tried several times—is settled with a polite: “I we accompany.”

We flew from Madrid to Caracas, capital of Venezuela, to leave the next day for the star destination of this trip: the Canaima National Park.

A mysterious and spiritual site, especially for Venezuelans who since they were children have studied the geography of this place in school, a UNESCO world heritage site since 1994. They know that it extends 30,000 kilometers to the border with Brazil and Guyana, that there are tepuis, geological formations that hide, according to some scientists, the origin of life.

A good Venezuelan will passionately defend all these theories, but it is more than likely that he does not know how to get to Canaima, or that he has never walked under Angel Falls, the highest waterfall in the world: 1,283 meters, masterfully recreated in the

Pixar film

Up (2009).

More information

15 wonders of Latin America that you should see once in your life

To get to Canaima, 409 kilometers from Caracas, you have to fly one hour from the Maiquetía airport with the state airline Conviasa.

Until a little over a year ago, the runway at the Canaima airport was very short and medium-sized planes could not land, now its lengthening is allowing the arrival of more tourists.

Landing here, especially if you are traveling with a Venezuelan, is to enter into an infinite whirlwind of gratitude to the universe or to whoever has the luck of being in a place that gives off such magnetic energy.

In the park you sleep in camps.

The one chosen this time is Campamento Canaima, the largest hotel in the territory, five minutes by van from the tiny airport.

It has 88

perfectly equipped

suites and several private villas.

In any case, there is little in the rooms.

Arrival at the

lobby

with the scenery of the tepuis and the El Hacha and Wadaima waterfalls will remain in memory as one of the great moments of the trip, the perfect promise of what we are going to experience.

Views from the lobby of Camp Canaima, in the Canaima National Park (Venezuela). Mauricio Donelli

That same afternoon we make the first excursion to El Hacha waterfall.

The guide, Carlos, is 27 years old and is a Pemón from the Kamarakoto ethnic group, originally from the area (100% of the employees at Camp Canaima belong to that community, settled very close to the accommodation).

The excursion lasts two hours, it begins by sailing in a curiara (boat used by the local population to go up the rivers and the thickness of the jungle) until disembarking next to El Hacha.

The force of nature is the only presence and the noise of the water is thunderous, although according to the locals this is a jump for beginners.

You will still have to walk a little further to cross the overwhelming curtain of water of the waterfall.

“Shoes off,” suggests the guide, who jumps from stone to stone barefoot.

Carlos urges you to walk with socks on the wet rock.

Much safer and more stable, he says.

It will be one of the great lessons of the adventure: “Any sole on wet rock will be much more slippery than a wet sock,” tells us the guide who is studying English on the Duolingo application to prepare for the imminent arrival of Anglo-Saxon and American tourists.

The second subliminal message is evident: this is the time and no other to come to Canaima.

Five days are enough to understand that the El Hacha jump was, indeed, the appetizer.

From Camp Canaima we will fly by small plane over the Kurun and Kusari tepuis, we will go to the Kavak caves and bathe in its multiple waterfalls and pools of cold water.

We will also eat grilled chicken with the locals of the village and we will almost touch the Angel Falls with our hands.

When we return, exhausted, they always wait for us at the camp with a very cold glass of papelón with lemon (a traditional soft drink) and some meat empanadas.

The Campamento Canaima restaurant serves a closed menu of delicious Creole food.

For breakfast there are arepas, shredded meat, fresh cheese and fruits, good coffee and natural juices to get energy.

The food varies between a Mexican menu, a grill or a black roast, accompanied by banana cake, rice or lentils.

Dinner is usually chicken, meat or fish accompanied by pasta, rice and vegetables that are bought from the conucos of the Pemone communities.

Mount Roraima or Roraima tepuy, in the Canaima national park (Venezuela).MaRabelo (GETTY IMAGES)

The helicopter flight to Angel Falls is out of this world.

The device gains altitude while the pilot alternates Venezuelan salsa from the seventies with the exalted song

Venezuela

by Luis Silva, which is heard with unusual frequency during the trip.

The captain clings dangerously to the rock walls (or so it seems to us) so that we can closely admire this prodigy of nature, whose height was measured for the first time in 1949 thanks to an investigation by journalist Ruth Robertson for the National Geographic Society.

The helicopter flies over Devil's Canyon and the Churun ​​River at full speed, and passes low over the bright ocher surface of a tepui.

The feeling is clear: you will never live a similar experience again.

Our veteran captain has taught the hidden secrets of Canaima to Steven Spielberg and several producers of video games and legendary television series.

He is the best, he knows it and he makes it known.

From the jungle to the Caribbean

The next stop is Margarita Island, but first we spend the night in a Caracas that surprises with a magnificent Japanese restaurant, Otokam by Makoto.

The next morning it's time to get up early to go to Margarita, a well-known destination in Europe that will once again have a direct charter flight from Madrid in 2024.

The Caribbean island is still coming out of the pandemic stoppage in fits and starts.

Its people are waiting like May rain for confirmation of this direct flight from Europe.

We slept at the San Patricio hotel, a few meters from Playa El Agua.

Margarita continues to be a destination with crystal clear waters, white sands and palm trees.

For breakfast or lunch there is a must-visit place: Los Hermanos Moya, an arepera that is an institution on the island and also on Instagram (the small place has 50,000 followers).

In addition to sun and beach, Margarita offers excursions to its historic center, lots of nightlife and an excellent gastronomic offer.

Amaranto is recommended, a neotropical restaurant halfway between a

concept store

and a very well-curated bookstore.

The great attraction of Margarita is the direct connection with Canaima and the miracle of mixing a Caribbean plan with an adventure in the Amazon jungle.

View of Guacuco Beach, on Margarita Island (Venezuela).Philippe TURPIN (Getty Images/Photononstop RF)

The last stop on the trip is Los Roques, an almost virgin archipelago, an aspirational place par excellence where the

beautiful people

of Venezuela get married and spend the summer, converted into an object of global desire after the Puerto Rican rapper Jhayco said in his song

Holland

that he took to his girl “pa Los Roque” and that Arcángel and Quevedo chose Los Roques as the setting (and title) of a song.

Los Roques, just 176 kilometers from Caracas, is the largest coral reef in the southern Caribbean.

The show begins from the air, with aerial views of the islands and sandbanks that make up the atoll, a structure more typical of the Pacific than the Caribbean.

Once on land you have to go through strict passport control because entry is very restricted.

Here you sleep in inns, family hotels run by locals, where you have the best mango juice in the world for breakfast.

We stayed at Sabbia, an eight-room inn with air conditioning and private bathroom.

Gran Roque, the largest island, has two streets: the first line of the beach occupied by the inns and the second, by the houses of the Roqueños, the school and the small hospital.

One of the islands of Los Roques, in the Caribbean (Venezuela).Cristian Lourenço (Getty Images)

To the rest of the islands, some with unique names such as Madrisquí, Mosquitoquí or Cayo Nordisquí (the suffix “quí” corresponds to the phonetic sound of the English term

key

, cayo, and is assigned to the inhabitants who arrived from the Netherlands Antilles, Aruba and Curacao. in the 19th century), you arrive by sea, transfers that are usually included in the services of the inns.

They also offer to deliver food to any of the tiny islands.

Eating a fresh lobster in front of the calm Caribbean sea is an experience worth paying once in a lifetime.

Los Roques is the dream paradise of divers. In its seabed, protected since 1972, live 280 species of fish, 200 species of crustaceans, 61 types of coral and 45 species of sea urchins and starfish.

Leaving Los Roques by small plane to the Maequetía airport and quickly taking the flight back to Madrid is the definitive proof that all good things come to an end, but no one said that traveling meant staying in places forever, but rather accumulating desire and strength to return.

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Source: elparis

All news articles on 2024-02-04

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