I had spent the past night perusing the internet and a variety of guide books at the hostel, and talking to the hostel guests and staff. I was trying to find out about Buritaca. A guy back in Medellín had explained to me that of the many beaches in the vicinity of Santa Marta, Buritaca was the place to go; that it's where
El Rio Buritaca (The Buritaca River) empties into the Carribean and where a small town (also called Buritaca) has been built. It's a name that's easy to remember because it sounds like some combination between a burrito and a taco. (I should point out that both burritos and tacos are in fact Mexican and are not commonly found in Colombia.) But my investigation of the previous night had revealed very little– only where I could catch a
busitica (little bus) that allegedly passes by Buritaca– whether the bus would stop there was something I would have to find out. I also posted on
TripAdvisor regarding this pursuit.
At the intersection of Calle 11 and Carrera 11 in Santa Marta there indeed was a little bus whose luggage-handler/passenger-recruiter assured me could take me to Buritaca. I sat in the shot-gun seat, but the bus was so crowded that soon another guy was sharing the seat with me. He was wearing some kind of indigenous outfit that consisted of a white poncho tied at the waist, a brownish woven sholder-bag, wavy black hair down to his shoulders, and a white cap shaped like a tall frustum. He spoke some language into his cel phone that was clearly not Spanish. I tried asking him the two questions I know in Quechua. He was not at all impressed, but patiently explained to me in Spanish that he was speaking
Arawako (Arawak.) I knew from years of being a nerd that Arawaks once lived all over the Caribbean, but as this guy told me, they now only live in the foothills of the
Sierra Nevada which is an isolated cluster of tall, snow-capped mountains near Santa Marta. He had learned Spanish as a child in a school in Santa Marta, but his people live independently, practicing agriculture and foraging, deep in
El Campo (the countryside;) an 8-hour walk from the nearest road. I couldn't solicit from him what he was doing in Santa Marta or why in particular he had learned to associate with the
Urbanos (non-indigenous Colombians), but he said the tourism industry was encroaching on his homeland. I know there's a lot of coal mining taking place there too– and I wonder if his people have any legally recognized right to their land or if they're being forcibly displaced.
Our conversation didn't last long before he became annoyed with me and moved to another seat. I thought I had taken the following photo stealthily, but he clearly saw me take it. Unfortunately, the photo doesn't quite capture the guy sitting next to him, who was cradling a fighting cock in his arms.
There was also some nice scenery along the way:
The bus indeed stopped at the town of Buritaca, which has two components: along the roadside and along the beach. Because I had a voracious appetite I ate at a restaurant along the roadside. First the guy at the restaurant showed me a fish they had on hand:
And then he fried it for me:
This was a bit closer to my ideal coastal meal. The fish was spectacularly tasty– but it was still overpriced and had regular rice instead of arroz con coco. After eating, I paid $1,500 COP to ride on the back of a guy's motorcycle for a few miles along a dirt road to the beach.
After arriving on the beach I went about looking for some kind of sleeping arrangement. The options available are either an overpriced hotel, or camping. At the camp ground one can rent hammocks or tents. There's a patch of sand underneath trees, next to a sort of stagnant pond where you can pitch your tent or tie up your hammock.
They also had this strange lighting system– which was crucial for me because I had left my headlamp at the hostel in Santa Marta! (I was able to recover it the next day.)
And this is where I spent the night:
It took nearly all day to set up this hammock because Rocky, the guy who rents camping equipment, kept telling me he'd come back with the hammock in 5 minutes, and then would disappear for an hour or two. It was boring waiting around for him too, because I couldn't go swimming or try to socialize with strangers, because there was no secure place to put my backpack. Once I had set up the hammock, I was able to put my backpack inside it and I think thieves might have found it less appealing that way. Anyway, nothing was stolen– but by that time the sun had set.
No one spoke English at Buritaca, which provided a great opportunity to practice Spanish. I eventually met some people and was able to speak with them about something other than, "Where's Rocky? Does he actually have hammocks?" And we played dominoes:
I was too busy being attacked by mosquitos and sandflies all night to do any sleeping. After the sun rose and I exited my hammock I sat down at one of the restaurants on the beach and had patacones and scrambled eggs, which was the yellowest breakfast I've ever seen:
I thought about trying to enjoy being at the beach for a while, but knowing no one to watch my bag, having no access to clean water or bathrooms, having not slept at all the previous night, and being covered in insect bites, it seemed that getting back to Santa Marta as soon as possible would provide the best chances of getting to experience something like pleasure. So I left.
Instead of Buritaca I could have gone to Parque Tayrona. All the photos of beaches that appear in any advertisements for Colombian tourism were shot at Parque Tayrona. I drove past the entrance to it on my busride to Buritaca. Tayrona is full of tourist backpackers from North America and Europe, they have infrastructure for bathrooms, showers, internet, and they charge more money than other places to stay along the coast– which some people think isn't very authentic. I think if you have your own car, and you bring your own food and beverages, your own camping equipment, and your own huge Colombian family, Buritaca could be a great place to go. But if you're a gringo backpacker like me, you might regret going to Buritaca instead of Tayrona.