Archive for June, 2007
Travel: Golum’s Getaway to Shark Mobiles
by Chris Mason
Nicaragua is fast becoming known as a fresh and relatively un-traveled tourist destination. Some even go as far as calling it the “new Costa Rica.” With giant smoldering volcanoes and vast lakes speckling the landscape, it sometimes feels more like being in a lost world.
Nicaragua is definitely not lost, though it is overlooked by the majority of world travelers. This was not without reason since over the last fifty years the country and its people have suffered many hardships such as natural disasters and civil wars, which made it difficult and dangerous to travel here. Things are better now, with relative political stability and no hurricanes on the horizon. It’s not hard to understand why everyone here enjoys hanging out in hammocks and relaxing. People are enjoying a peaceful life they deserve. The quiet after the storm. (more…)
Posted in Full Stories, Previous Issues, Travel, Issue 19: June - August 2007 | No Comments »
Tags: Between, magazine, nicaragua, the, Waves
Art: Making of “The Nicaraguans”
by Richard Leonardi
To create this unique photography book Nicaragua’s finest 32 photographers were assigned a specific zone somewhere in Nicaragua, given a detailed list of possible images for that zone and sent out at the exact same time. For a two day period the photographers saturated the country, spreading out around Nicaragua’s breadth, seeping into its corners, walking its countryside, villages and cities. For some this involved flying in light aircraft to inaccessible locals like Waspam, Corn Island or Bonanza, others used 4×4 vehicles to penetrate deep into the interior of rural Nueva Segovia, Jinotega, Matagalpa, Boaco and Chontales. Many traveled in boat, cradling their gear while splashing through bodies of wave swept water from Lake Nicaragua and the Río San Juan to Pearl Lagoon and Solentiname, some mounted horseback or mule to arrive to shoot sites, while others enjoyed the relative comfort of working in the cities of Managua, Chinandega, Rivas, León and Granada. Regardless of location, all 32 photographers were presented with challenges unique to their professions. (more…)
Posted in Full Stories, Previous Issues, Art, Issue 19: June - August 2007 | 1 Comment »
Tags: Between, magazine, nicaragua, the, Waves
Community: Changing Tears into Smiles
by Robin Hooper
Since its inception, the photographic image has changed the way society views itself. That frozen moment in time, captured through a camera lens has led to radical shifts in societal attitudes and beliefs. One such moment captures an image of a group of children running down a road, soldiers in the background, at center frame a nine-year-old Vietnamese girl, naked, her mouth agape, screaming in agony as napalm eats down through her skin. The photo by AP photographer Nick Ut went on to win a Pulitzer Prize, and like much of the filmic work documenting the Vietnam War, contributed to a groundswell of US opposition to the conflict.
Posted in Previous Issues, Community, Issue 19: June - August 2007 | No Comments »
Tags: Between, magazine, nicaragua, the, Waves
History: Strolling Through Granada
by Pat Werner
One of the favorite parlor games of gringos new to Granada is to haul out their favorite book on Nicaragua, one that gives some sort of deep insight into Nicaragua and the character of its people. Since 1990 there has been a spate of books, some a heady brew of fact and fiction, and others that are quite good at introducing Nicaragua to the newcomer. I have read most of them and have served as a source of information for more than one of them, sometimes attributed, sometimes not. But for me, none of them holds a candle to the mother of them all, Ephraim Squier’s magnificent, Nicaragua: People, Scenery, Monuments, Resources, Condition, and Proposed Canal.
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Commentary: Coast Law: Access and Abuse
by Al Burton
There is a lot of concern in the air regarding a proposed Law for Coasts. The current proposal before the National Assembly is based on the Agrarian Law of 1917, an arcane piece of legislation that stipulates that the State is owner of the land for two kilometers from the high-tide line and for 800 meters from lake shores and the banks of navigable rivers.
That law applied to lands not already titled to private parties by the time it was enacted, thereby establishing a sort of Federal or Crown land zone, as exists in many other countries. Not much attention was ever paid to it. An attempt to revive that law under a new legal framework has caused consternation among tourism developers and shrimp farm operators along the coast, while cattle ranchers in the interior wonder how it will affect their ability to water their livestock.
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Real Estate: A healthful paradise in an extinct volcano
by Kathryn Belcher
Nicaragua is a small but diverse country with vast mountainous north-central plains, eastern jungles, and numerous volcanoes. Although
Nicaragua is the fastest growing tourist destination in Central America, it is largely unexplored by foreign tourists. While most tourists flock to
Granada and the Pacific coastline many of Nicaragua’s most beautiful places remain hidden from the typical traveler.
Laguna de Apoyo, the “Crown Jewel of Nicaragua”, was once an unknown destination but is now one of the most popular hot spots in Nicaragua. Travelers who have never viewed the blue waters of the crater lake can’t possibly understand what they have missed. It’s because there is no other place like Laguna de Apoyo anywhere else in the world.
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Activity: “Driving Nicaragua”
by Al Burton
I often get asked by newcomers to Nicaragua, “What’s it like driving here?” The adjective that sums it up best is “entertaining.” Which is why, I suppose, gamesters around the world are eagerly awaiting this new virtual reality product, soon-to-be-online.
There’s rarely a dull moment. You have to be on your toes at all times in an exercise of hand-eye-machine coordination.
No matter how beautiful the scenery, you must keep your eyes peeled, glancing around 360 degrees, expecting the unexpected, never assuming that things are as they appear.
The vehicle in front of you with its turn signal flashing left may not turn at all, or it may go right. It might even turn left.
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Culture: Idols of Zapatera
by Ronald Betancourt, M.Sc.
Zapatera Island in Lake Nicargaua, with an area of 52 square kilometers, is the second largest island in the lake after Ometepe. It is believed that it once was an active volcano given the evidence of volcanic formations from its base to the heights of 625 meters. It has tropical rainforest vegetation and several rocky streams. Some of the land is ideal for cattle ranching.
This eroded ancient volcano formed on the volcanic fracture of Nicaragua’s Pacific, possibly even before Lake Nicaragua was formed. It is roughly rectangular in shape, with the longest diagonal 11 kilometers in length. Rocky peninsulas jut out from its shores. The shoreline is very broken with rock outcroppings and numerous coves. Some anthropologists believe that the island was a sanctuary or ceremonial site for the original inhabitants of the land, mainly of Chorotega origin.
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