Venezuela
Santa Elena to Merida
01.07.2008 - 17.07.2008
35 °C
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South America
on Steve-Kay's travel map.
The bus journey took 2 hours longer than planned because it broke down, but we eventually made it over the border and into Venezuela. We got a cab from the bus station into Santa Elena and then found out that none of the cashpoints worked with our card. Luckily, we had some 'emergency' dollars tucked away so our cabbie took us to a money changer on a street corner and we got some Bolivars (a relief for us and the cabbie I think!).
After talking to some people we realised that we'd been stupid to ignore some advice given to us previously, which was to take Brazilian Reals across to change on the black market for a much better rate than the official one given by banks. SO, we jumped into a taxi to the Brazilian border (where Steve got taken into a room and frisked by a scary policeman with a huge gun!) and got out all the Reals we could!
We then went back to Santa Elena and Steve haggled with about 10 dodgy money changers on the street until he got a decent rate from the bloke he'd met the day before. We didn't want to change the money on the street as we were changing so much, so we went inside a shop and counted out the 3250 Bolivars - they were all in 10's so we walked out of there with a HUGE wad of notes and spent the next hour trying to work out how to stash them in amongst our clothes!
We left there and headed up to the Caribbean coast (on yet another bus that broke down), to a place called Santa Fe. A small fishing village with a nice beach....

And lots of Pelicans....

We went on a boat trip to Parque Nacional Mochima and saw some gorgeous islands....

On the way back loads of dolphins started swimming along with the boat. We've never seen so many dolphins at once before, there must have been about 20 of them and it was amazing. It was hard to capture them all in a photo because they were going in and out of the water at different times....

Next we got a 5 hour ferry to Isla de Margarita (which had some lovely views along the way)....

It left 3 hours late so by the time we got to Porlamar (the main town on Margarita) it was about 11pm and the area that we´d planned to stay in looked really dodgy. Our cabbie said his mate had a nice apartment in a good area that he could take us to, we were a bit dubious (not least of all because he seemed to be drunk) but we didn´t have many options at this stage! It turned out to be fantastic and after we´d had a nice cup of tea and our first HOT shower for a while, the stress of the journey disappeared...!
We stayed there for a few nights, even though it was costing us a fortune, enjoying the duty free wine and great food! Then we moved on to Pampatar and got a more basic apartment right on the beach....

Unfortunately, most of the beaches we saw in Venezuela were pretty badly littered. Some locals tend to take a cold box full of beers down to the beach and chuck their empty bottles on the beach and in the sea. Not quite what we were expecting from the 'Caribbean' coast. So we left the island and headed down to the Andes.
The journey to Merida was long but the views were gorgeous and the city had a really nice feel to it - it was our favourite place in Venezuela....

This is a small Andean village near to Merida, called Jaji....

After months of thinking and talking about it, we finally decided to go to Colombia....Unfortunately, we missed the only bus of the day that was going there so we had to get a taxi instead....

There are loads of really old American buses and cars in Venezuela, and some of the cabs we got in were literally falling apart! This one was a bit of a tight squeeze with Steve and me in the front with the driver, and a Venezuelan family in the back. There were loads of checkpoints along the way, where we handed over our passports and the other people handed over 5 Bolivar notes.....no comment on that one!
Posted by Steve-Kay 13.08.2008 22:45 Archived in Backpacking | Venezuela Comments (0)


























