 Colombia’s back. After decades of civil conflict, Colombia is now safe to visit and travelers are discovering what they’ve been missing. The diversity of the country may astonish you. Modern cities with skyscrapers and nightclubs? Check. Gorgeous Caribbean beaches?  Check. Jungle walks and Amazon safaris? Check. Colonial cities,  archaeological ruins, high-mountain trekking, whalewatching, coffee plantations, scuba diving, surfing, the list goes on. No wonder the ‘magic realism’ style of Colombian author Gabriel García Márquez emerged from here – there is a dreamlike quality to Colombia. Here at the equator, with the sun forever overhead, the fecund earth beneath your feet, heart-stopping vistas in every direction and the warmth of the locals putting you at ease – you may find it difficult to leave. Colombian culture, like the country’s weather, varies by altitude.
Colombia’s back. After decades of civil conflict, Colombia is now safe to visit and travelers are discovering what they’ve been missing. The diversity of the country may astonish you. Modern cities with skyscrapers and nightclubs? Check. Gorgeous Caribbean beaches?  Check. Jungle walks and Amazon safaris? Check. Colonial cities,  archaeological ruins, high-mountain trekking, whalewatching, coffee plantations, scuba diving, surfing, the list goes on. No wonder the ‘magic realism’ style of Colombian author Gabriel García Márquez emerged from here – there is a dreamlike quality to Colombia. Here at the equator, with the sun forever overhead, the fecund earth beneath your feet, heart-stopping vistas in every direction and the warmth of the locals putting you at ease – you may find it difficult to leave. Colombian culture, like the country’s weather, varies by altitude.
Soaring Andean  summits, unspoiled Caribbean coast, enigmatic Amazon jungle, cryptic archaeological ruins and cobbled colonial communities. Colombia  boasts all of South  America's allure, and more.
Colonial Charm
 Led by Cartagena's extraordinarily preserved old city,  Colombia offers an off-the-radar treasure trove of cinematic cobblestoned towns  and villages that often feel bogged down in a different century, content to  carry on as they have since the departure of the Spanish without a care in the  world. Unweathered Barichara and happily sleepy Mompox feel like movie sets,  impossibly unspoiled by modern progress; while whitewashed Villa de Leyva  appears stuck in 16th-century quicksand – and these are just the villages that  people do visit.
Led by Cartagena's extraordinarily preserved old city,  Colombia offers an off-the-radar treasure trove of cinematic cobblestoned towns  and villages that often feel bogged down in a different century, content to  carry on as they have since the departure of the Spanish without a care in the  world. Unweathered Barichara and happily sleepy Mompox feel like movie sets,  impossibly unspoiled by modern progress; while whitewashed Villa de Leyva  appears stuck in 16th-century quicksand – and these are just the villages that  people do visit.Diverse Landscapes
Colombia's equatorial position affords it a diversity of  landscapes matched by few countries. A slight tinkering in altitude takes you  from sun-toasted Caribbean sands to coffee-strewn, emerald-green hilltops in the  Zona Cafetera. Continue to climb and there's Bogotá, the bustling cradle  of Colombia and third-highest capital city in the world. Throw in another few  thousand meters and you find snowcapped peaks, high-altitude lakes and the  eerie, unique vegetation of the páramo. The bottom drops out as the  Andes give way to Los  Llanos, a 550,000-sq-km swath of tropical grasslands shared with Venezuela,  often called the Serengeti of South America. 
Outdoor Adventures
 Colombia's varied terrain is fertile ground for outdoor  adventurers to dive, climb, raft, trek and soar. San Gil is the undisputed  adventure capital, but Colombia boasts alfresco pleasures in all corners. Some  of the continent's most iconic trekking is here, and is dramatically varied:  Ciudad Perdida is a multiday jungle walk to the ancient ruins of the Tayrona  civilization, while numerous ascents inside Parque Nacional Natural El Cocuy  places intrepid hikers on the highest reaches of the Andes. Providencia's  world-class reef spells aquatic heaven for scuba divers, and whale-watchers on  the Pacific coast can see majestic humpbacks in the wild.
Colombia's varied terrain is fertile ground for outdoor  adventurers to dive, climb, raft, trek and soar. San Gil is the undisputed  adventure capital, but Colombia boasts alfresco pleasures in all corners. Some  of the continent's most iconic trekking is here, and is dramatically varied:  Ciudad Perdida is a multiday jungle walk to the ancient ruins of the Tayrona  civilization, while numerous ascents inside Parque Nacional Natural El Cocuy  places intrepid hikers on the highest reaches of the Andes. Providencia's  world-class reef spells aquatic heaven for scuba divers, and whale-watchers on  the Pacific coast can see majestic humpbacks in the wild.Extraordinary Culture
A wealth of ancient civilizations left behind a  fascinating spread of archaeological and cultural sites throughout Colombia. The  one-time Tayrona capital, Ciudad Perdida, built between the 11th and 14th  centuries, is one of the continent's most mysterious ancient cities, arguably  second only to Machu  Picchu. Even more shrouded in mystery is San Agustín, where more than 500  life-sized ancient sculpted statues of enigmatic origin dot the surrounding  countryside. And then there's Tierradentro,  where elaborate underground tombs scooped out by an unknown people add even more  mystique to Colombia's past. 
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