Colombia’s Mighty Magdalena

By Joe Berk

I felt a mix comforting mix of “been there, done that” and smugness when I read the Wall Street Journal yesterday.  The lead photo in the paper’s “Off Duty” section was strangely familiar, and as the coffee kicked in I realized it was because I’d been there:  Colombia’s Magdalena River.  My Magdelena photo (one of many) is the photo you see above.

The Wall Street Journal article featured places not part of the borscht belt (i.e., typical tourist destinations), and the stops it recommended along a Magdalena River cruise were locales I’d been to: Barranquilla, Cartagena, Mompox, Magangué, and others.  I’ve been luckier than most because I’ve had enjoyed incredible motorcycle adventures:  China, Mexico, the Three Flags Classic, Baja, the Western America Adventure Ride, and more.  The ride through Colombia and along the Magdalena River, though, was in many ways greater than the other motorcycle adventures.   The Journal’s story had me thinking about Colombia again, and I thought I would share a few photos of the places it mentioned with you.

Mompox

Ah, Mompox.  It’s pronounced and sometimes spelled Mompos…an amazing city, unlike any I had ever visited.  The night we were there I wanted to stay in the hotel and post a blog for my CSC readers, but good buddy and ride leader Juan told me:  Joe, your readers will wait.  You need to see Mompox.  He was right.

A street along the riverfront in Mompox. People actually live here. Wow.
One of several churches in Mompox.
Carlos, me, and Juan having dinner in an Italian restaurant run by a German in Colombia.

Magangué

We began our ferry ride to Mompox from Magangué (pronounced ma gong gay). It was brutally hot and humid and we had to wait a couple of hours for the ferry to arrive, but that ride down the Magdelana was worth the wait.  Dreamlike, it was a scene from a 1930s adventure movie.  Peaceful.  Indiana Jones.  That ferry ride had it all.  There are more adjectives I could use, but you get the idea.

The ferry at Magangué.
Headed downstream and facing north on the Magdalena River.

Barranquilla

I first saw Barranquilla (pronounced bar en key ah) on an earlier business trip to Colombia.   I’d just purchased a new Nikon D200 (the cat’s meow back then), and it had a backfocus issue I later had corrected (you can’t see it in these photos, though).   I felt like Indiana Jones at a beauty pageant.  If there are unattractive women in Colombia, I couldn’t find them.

Business beckoned in Barranquilla…good buddy Paul Smarr and yours truly examining manganese dioxide.

Cartagena

Yep, that Cartegena, the same one as is R0mancing the Stone (although that movie was actually shot in Mexico).  On that same business trip, we took an afternoon to visit Cartegana, about an hour and a half down the coast from Barranquilla.

Two Colombian highway patrol officers on the road to Cartegena. My friends thought I was nuts when I jumped out to grab this photo. The Colombian police officers probably thought so, too.
A shopkeeper in Cartagena who agreed to let me take her picture.
Cartagena is a very photogenic city.

There were many things in Colombia well beyond what the WSJ article covered:  Honda (the town, not the motorcycle), Covenas, Volcan Los Nevados, La Playa de Belem, Barichara, Villa de Leyva, and more.   I saw them from my RS3 motorcycle (the carbureted version of the RX3) and you can, too, if you don’t mind living vicariously through my lens and keyboard:


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Telenova Review: Bolivar

You probably don’t see me as a TV junkie who could spend 60 hours in maybe three weeks watching all 60 episodes of a telenova, yet here I sit after doing exactly that.  And I’m not ashamed to admit I enjoyed it immensely.  The series is Bolivar, it is currently running on Netflix, and both Sue and I were hooked on it 10 minutes into the first episode.

Three different actors played Simon Bolivar at different stages in his life. It was confusing when they changed from one to another, but we caught on quickly.

I think what made it special for me were my two trips to Colombia, one about 15 years ago for work, and the other 5 years ago (Good Lord, has it been that long already?) for our Zongshen-mounted circumnavigation of the Andes Mountains.  Bolivar was filmed entirely on location in Colombia, and having been there myself, I recognized many of the places in the series.

When we stayed at Villa de Leyva in Colombia, Juan and Carlos explained that it was often used as a filming location.  While we we were there, a crew was filming a scene one evening.  Juan told me that one of the actors was well known in South America.  I didn’t know who she was at the time, but in watching Bolivar, I realized the woman I had seen that evening in Villa de Leyva was, in fact, the famous Colombian actress Andrea Gomez.

Andrea Gomez, who I saw in person in Villa de Leyva without realizing who she was.
On a movie set in Villa de Leyva. Andrea Gomez would emerge seconds later, but I did not get a photo of her.
An evening scene in Villa de Leyva. The Colombia ride was one of the great ones. I had a fabulous time.

The Colombia ride, as mentioned above, was not my first trip to Colombia.  I had been there about 10 years before on a business trip and we spent a day in Cartagena.  It was a fun trip, too.  Here are a few photos from my 2006 trip.

A street scene in Cartagena. The photos almost take themselves.
Colombia is known for its emeralds. The place is a photographer’s paradise.
One more street scene in Cartagena. One of the amazing things about this city was the parrots. You see them like you see pigeons in a US city. They were everywhere.  Cartegena is a city that explodes with color.

So there you have it.  Bolivar, Colombia, and more.  The Netflix series hit home for me, probably because I had visited Colombia, but even if you haven’t I think you’ll enjoy it.  I’m lucky because I’ve been there, and because I always travel with a Nikon, I captured a bunch of digital memories on both trips.


Want to see more of Colombia from the seat of a motorcycle?  Check out the Colombia adventure on our Epic Rides page!