Angela and I just got back to Leon from Canon de Somoto and Telica Volcano. We did both of these trips with a guiding company called QuetzalTrekkers. Quetzal is a nonprofit organization that donates the proceeds from the business to a local charity for street kids. Volunteers sign up for three months to a year and guide volcanos and the canyon for silly gringos such as myself. Its a pretty cool program. The guides do not get paid and they pay for all of their costs while they are down here. This is especially impressive if you have ever been around a guided group full of difficult clients. Angela and I had a great experience with this organization and I highly recommend them.
The trips were great. We did the volcano trek first. Telica volcano is just outside of Leon and you can see it smoking from the city. It took us about 4 hours to walk out to the volcano and then a couple more hours to climb up to the crater. We crested a rise and were suddenly right on the edge of the crater. The crater drops away vertically for several hundred feet to the bottom where the gas pours out of the ground. We hung out around the crater for a bit before hiking down into the old crater where we camped out for the night. After it got dark we climbed back up to the crater rim. Looking into the crater we could see the lava glowing at the bottom. The noise the gas makes as it escapes is incredible. Its a hissing sound like a hot frying pan being put into a sink full of water, well a really big frying pan and a really big sink of water. We could feel the heat radiating out of the crater. We hiked back down to camp and slept out under the stars. We didn't even bother to take tents with us. The next day we hiked back to the road and caught the bus back to town. It was a bit strange having guides that did all the logistics, cooked all the meals, and reminded us to drink lots of water. We just had to sit around and enjoy the scenery.
We stayed in Leon for a night and then got up at 3:30 in the morning to start the long trip up to Canyon de Somoto. It was a really long bus ride made longer by the fact that the bus seats barely fit 5'5'' Nicas and certainly not 6'5'' gringos. I discovered my legs will bend in many extremely uncomfortable ways I was unfamiliar with. We finally reached the canyon after a long bus ride and a short hike. We slept on a gravel beach at the entrance to the canyon, again without tents. In the morning we met our local guide and hiked to the entrance of the canyon. The canyon makes a big 'U' shape so you can hike and swim one way through the whole works. It was incredible the canyon walls come so close together at spots I could almost touch both walls at the same time. We hiked, swam and scrambled through the canyon for six hours before reaching the end. There was a place to cliff jump into the water and places where we swam for several hundred yards through twists and turns so tight the sun did not reach the water. We slept out on the gravel beach again and then took another long bus ride back to Leon. I think we will head up to Jiquilillo Beach tomorrow for a few days. I suppose its probably my turn to step on a stingray now...
I'll try to get some pics up but Angela's card reader doesn't like the computers here so I'm not sure if that will happen.
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