Jun 26 2009
Second Star to the Right and Straight on to El Salvador
I recently returned from a trip where I drove through Mexico and all of Central America (sans Belize): Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, back through Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and finally Panama. Browsing through the Central America section of the store, I came across Joan Didion’s Salvador. As always, Didion captured her subject through her lens of unsettling physical disconnection. Given the country’s violent, bloody, and war-torn history, this lens was a perfect fit.
In planning our El Salvadorian itinerary, we found the Pacific coast to be a much more pleasant option than the north, where the main attraction, according to both the Rough Guide and the Lonely Planet guide, was the Genocide Museum. We opted instead for two days on the beach. And they were very pleasant.
Despite the bad rap El Salvador gets, or maybe because of it, we were able to find not just beach front, but “beach on” accommodations for the night. The highway simply ended at the water and opened up to a series of colonial homes converted into restaurants and sleeping accommodations. Families frolicked in the water, while street vendors shooed the stray dogs hoping to catch a bite of their french fries. At high tide, the veranda-style restaurant where we ate was surrounded by the ocean. One had only to walk down three steps to be in the water. We shut the joint down with drinks and fresh seafood only to find that the entire beach front area was closed by 7:30 pm.
Read more: Beach Travel, Central America, El Salvador, Travel
