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2 weeks in colombia: how I fell for coffee fincas, colonial streets and wild pacific beaches

2 weeks in colombia: how I fell for coffee fincas, colonial streets and wild pacific beaches

2 weeks in colombia: how I fell for coffee fincas, colonial streets and wild pacific beaches

On my first morning in Colombia, I woke up to the slow hiss of a moka pot and the distant crow of a rooster. Mist was rising from the hills, the air smelled of damp earth and roasted beans, and for a moment I forgot that just 48 hours earlier I’d been stuck in a grey London drizzle. Two weeks later, I would have fallen head over heels for this country — for its coffee fincas wrapped in cloud, its colonial streets washed in pastel light, and its wild Pacific beaches where the jungle literally melts into the sea.

If you have two weeks in Colombia, you can taste all of these worlds: the Andes, the Caribbean, and the Pacific. You won’t see “everything” (no one does), but you’ll feel the pulse of the country — in the clink of tiny coffee cups, the echo of church bells over tiled roofs, the crash of waves on an empty black-sand beach.

Why Colombia for Two Weeks?

Colombia is a country of edges: mountain edges, ocean edges, cultural edges. In just a fortnight you can move from 2,600 meters above sea level in Bogotá to the warm Caribbean breeze in Cartagena, then to the humid, untamed Pacific coast. Each stop demands a different rhythm: Bogotá is all energy, the coffee region is slow-breathing, Cartagena sparkles, and the Pacific… the Pacific whispers.

My route looked like this:

It’s a loop that feels coherent yet surprising: colonial streets in three different climates, three different seas of green and blue, one constant presence — coffee.

Bogotá: Thin Air and Thick Culture

Bogotá is where the altitude hits first. Walking up a gentle hill in La Candelaria, I caught myself breathing as if I’d just sprinted. The city sits at 2,600 meters, and you feel it in your lungs, but also in the clarity of the light: sharp, almost metallic, cutting between red-brick buildings and colourful murals.

I based myself in La Candelaria, the old quarter, where houses lean into one another like gossiping neighbours. Cobblestone streets climb and curl; tiny cafés hide behind heavy wooden doors. My first coffee was in a café barely wider than my outstretched arms, where the barista looked like a university student and spoke about beans with the seriousness of a sommelier.

With two or three days, you can let Bogotá slowly reveal itself:

In the evenings, I found myself huddled in bars in Chapinero, sharing bottles of Colombian craft beer with strangers who quickly became friends. This city is a good place to land, to adjust, to listen. It asks for your attention, then sends you on your way.

Coffee Fincas: Mist, Mornings and the Art of Slowness

From Bogotá, a short flight brought me into the heart of coffee country: the Eje Cafetero. Outside the tiny airport in Pereira, the air felt instantly softer, more humid. A taxi wound me through rolling hills, across narrow bridges, past simple roadside eateries where steam rose from giant pots of soup.

I stayed near Salento, in an old coffee finca perched on a hill. The house had a creaking wrap-around balcony painted bright blue and red, hammocks swaying in the breeze, and a kitchen that always smelled faintly of panela and citrus. At night, the frogs and insects held their own improvised orchestra; in the early morning, it was the birds’ turn.

A coffee tour here isn’t a tourist trap; it’s an initiation. One cool morning, I followed the owner, Don Carlos, between rows of coffee trees heavy with red cherries. His hands moved quickly, almost tenderly, selecting the ripest fruit. We spoke about climate change, about how the rain has become erratic, about the patience required to tend something that takes years to bear fruit.

We watched as the cherries were washed, pulped, dried, roasted. When I finally held a small white cup of the finca’s coffee, its surface trembling slightly from my hands, it felt almost ceremonial. The first sip tasted of chocolate and citrus, warm and clean. I understood suddenly why coffee isn’t just a drink here; it’s history, economy, ritual.

Between finca mornings and coffee tastings, I explored the region:

Four days in the coffee region recalibrate your internal clock. You wake with the light, eat what grows nearby, and measure your day not in emails or meetings, but in cups of coffee and changing shades of green.

Cartagena: Sunlight on Stone and Caribbean Nights

Leaving the mist of the Andes behind, I flew to Cartagena and stepped into a different painting entirely. The air here was thick and warm, wrapping around me like a shawl. The scent of salt, diesel from passing boats, and ripe mango from street vendors mingled in the streets.

The walled city is a maze of ochre, coral, and soft blue façades, with bougainvillea spilling from balconies like technicolor waterfalls. Early in the morning, the streets are quiet: the click of my sandals on stone, the distant sound of sweeping brooms, the cathedral bells marking time. As the day heats up, so does the noise — music from open windows, guides calling to groups, the occasional shout of “¡Agua, agua fría!” from a vendor with a cooler.

I walked for hours, letting the patterns of the tiled floors and the wrought-iron balconies guide me:

Cartagena is sensual in the most literal sense: everything is about what you feel on your skin, what you taste, what you hear late at night. Music spills from bars until the early hours. One evening I found myself in a tiny salsa club, following the hesitant lead of a local who patiently counted the steps into my ear: “uno, dos, tres… cinco, seis, siete…” My rhythm was far from perfect, but in that cramped, sweltering room, everyone’s clumsy joy was contagious.

The Pacific Coast: Where the Jungle Meets the Sea

If Cartagena is a polished jewel, Colombia’s Pacific coast is a rough, beautiful stone — powerful in its rawness. From Cartagena, I flew via Bogotá to Nuquí, a thin strip of runway between jungle and ocean, or you could choose Bahía Solano. Both are small, remote, and feel like the end of the road, in the best possible way.

The first thing I noticed when I stepped off the tiny plane was the soundscape: a low, constant roar of waves, overlaid with bird calls and the rasping, insistent buzz of insects. The air was heavy, like a warm hand pressed gently against your chest.

From Nuquí, a wooden boat carried me along the coast to a simple eco-lodge. We skimmed over water the colour of liquid metal under an overcast sky, passing empty beaches framed by dense jungle. Every so often, a cluster of houses would appear, bright shirts hanging on washing lines, children waving from the shore.

Here, days arrange themselves around the tide, the rain, and — in season — the whales. I visited from July to October, when humpback whales arrive to breed and give birth. One cloudy morning, we set out early, the boat cutting through a light drizzle. After half an hour we killed the engine and drifted, the silence almost shocking after the chug of the motor.

And then, there it was: a vast, dark shape bursting out of the water, a plume of spray erupting into the air. A whale, close enough for me to see the texture of its skin. It disappeared, then surfaced again alongside a smaller shape – a calf. Time blurred. It might have been ten minutes or an hour that we watched them surface and dive, the sound of their breath carrying across the water like a slow exhale.

Back on land, the coast offered its own quiet adventures:

What struck me most on the Pacific coast was the darkness at night. No neon, no car headlights, just a deep velvet sky and the sound of the sea. Lying in a hammock, I listened to the waves and thought how strange it was that a country so famed for its cities and coffee could steal my heart most completely with a wild, almost empty beach.

Practical Tips for Two Weeks in Colombia

A journey like this is a mix of logistics and letting go. A few practical notes from my notebook:

Two weeks in Colombia pass quickly, yet they stretch too — like those long Pacific waves — leaving salt, coffee, and a bit of red dust in your memory. When I think back, I don’t remember the transfers or the check-in counters. I remember a steaming cup cradled in both hands on a foggy finca terrace, the way my feet slipped on wet jungle stones, the golden glow of Cartagena at dusk, the soft thud of a whale’s tail on water somewhere off a forgotten stretch of coast.

And I remember thinking, as my plane lifted off from Bogotá on the final day, that this was not a goodbye, just an “hasta luego” — a promise to return to the country that smells of coffee at dawn and of the sea at night.

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