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Nicaragua: Land of lakes and volcanoes

Rupert Parker discovers why Nicaragua has shaken off its turbulent past to become a tempting escape

April 25, 2024 10:45
MombachoVolcanoandboatCREDITRupertParker.jpg
Mombacho Volcano and boat (Photo: Rupert Parker)

ByRupert Parker, Rupert Parker

5 min read

Looming above me is the distinctly cone-shaped Telica Volcano and there’s a strong smell of sulphur in the air as I warily avoid the small stones thrown up from the boiling mud pools all around me. This is an infernal landscape of super-heated mud, steam and noxious fumes. In the midst of it all a horse grazes nonchalantly.

I’m in Nicaragua, the largest country in Central America, a land of lakes and volcanoes. Situated on the Pacific Ring of Fire, it is characterised by intense volcanic and seismic activity, shifting tectonic plates lie just below its surface. There are 19 volcanoes, with seven classified as active, and the country’s history is just as tumultuous.

First there was the brutal Spanish conquest, then the long struggle for independence, only to be followed by civil war between the two cities of León and Granada in the 19th century.

In the 20th, the long Somoza dictatorship was finally overturned by the Sandinista Revolution in 1979, with the consequent Contra civil war running through the 1980s.