Download GPX file for this article
11.26764-74.19029Full screen dynamic map

From Wikivoyage
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Taganga is a small fishing village 5 km north of Santa Marta at the Caribbean coast in Colombia.

Understand

[edit]

Taganga is a great and idyllic fishing village. Many tourists, local and international, visit this beautiful place every year. It has great charm and the surrounding attractions are plenty.

Although Taganga is a popular place to go, it has also its share of challenges with the infrastructure and public services which is work in progress. It still has charm and might be a nicer place than Santa Marta to explore the surrounding attractions or do some diving.

Taganga
Climate chart (explanation)
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
 
9
 
 
32
22
 
 
 
2
 
 
32
22
 
 
 
3
 
 
33
23
 
 
 
23
 
 
33
24
 
 
 
70
 
 
33
24
 
 
 
78
 
 
33
24
 
 
 
56
 
 
33
24
 
 
 
71
 
 
33
24
 
 
 
114
 
 
33
23
 
 
 
134
 
 
32
23
 
 
 
77
 
 
32
23
 
 
 
24
 
 
32
22
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation+Snow totals in mm
Source: Wikipedia
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
 
0.4
 
 
90
72
 
 
 
0.1
 
 
90
72
 
 
 
0.1
 
 
91
73
 
 
 
0.9
 
 
91
75
 
 
 
2.8
 
 
91
75
 
 
 
3.1
 
 
91
75
 
 
 
2.2
 
 
91
75
 
 
 
2.8
 
 
91
75
 
 
 
4.5
 
 
91
73
 
 
 
5.3
 
 
90
73
 
 
 
3
 
 
90
73
 
 
 
0.9
 
 
90
72
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation+Snow totals in inches

Get in

[edit]

By bus

[edit]

Frequent minibuses (collectivos) go from Carrera 5 in Santa Marta to the center of Taganga for COP$2,000 per person (August 2021). It's about 15 minutes and a beautiful ride. On the way back, the bus goes in Santa Marta on Carrera 1 and then Calle 22.

Coming from Minca, the bus to Tanganga goes near the Plaza de Mercado. Ask somebody there where exactly.

By taxi

[edit]

Taxi fare from bus terminal of Santa Marta to Taganga starts from COP$7,000, but drivers usually charge more for foreigners. Be sure to negotiate before you take. The fare from the main beach of Santa Marta (Carrera 1) to Taganga starts at COP$10,000 and rises to COP$12,000 (all prices as of August 2016) on Sundays, holidays and nights. For cruise ship passengers arriving in Santa Marta there are plenty of taxis and mini-buses waiting in a gated police controlled area to take you.

By boat

[edit]

There is a daily boat service to and from El Cabo San Juan in the Tayrona National Park. It departs for El Cabo at about 9:30AM, and arrives back at Taganga at 4PM. The 1 hour boat ride can be really rough in the open ocean. Protect your belongings with plastic bags, because you can get wet through, especially in the back of the boat. There is a fixed price. The entrance fee for the National Park has to be paid at the beach.

See

[edit]

Taganga is surrounded by beautiful desert mountains covered in natural flora and fauna. There are millions of lovely fish and corals which can be reached by short walks and snorkeling out to corals. People watching and good mellow times are to be had along the beach road and loads of beautiful tourists.

There is a viewpoint called Mirador on the way towards Santa Marta. It's better to take a bus or taxi there and back, as the there is no sidewalk and the street is curvy and narrow.

Do

[edit]
  • Swimming. The main beach is shared with small boats laying in the water. It's good for swimming and very crowded with Colombian tourists on weekends.
  • Walk to Playa Grande. A 25-minute walk north of town lies Playa Grande, nicer than Taganga's beach but maybe even more crowded (follow the coast line to the north and take the path which seems to end at a house). OsmAnd or Mapy.cz cover the hiking paths. It's better to not flash expensive things on this path during day time. Avoid this hike after sunset. It is also possible to take a boat to Playa Grande for COP$10,000 (can be haggled down, September 2021).
    Or take a boat to one of the more remote beaches in Tayrona Park like Concha, Chengue, Neguanje - real unspoiled paradise. There are no people except some fishermen.
  • [formerly dead link] Hike to Bonito Gordo, Carrera 2, #17a-20, +57 312 510 4791. A longer walk goes to Bonito Gordo via a steep but rewarding mountain path and from there on the Bahia Concha. Reserve a full day for this and ask around to decide if you need to contract a local guide. You can spend the night at Bonito Gordo or Bahia Concha, but you may need to take your own hammock. Thui Tours organizes a guided walk, in partnership with a local environmental foundation, Fundacion Calipso [dead link], to Bonito Gordo where they manage a protected area of the reef for study. It is possible to snorkel here. For the return journey you are able to retrace your steps, take a bus to Santa Marta, or via boat to Taganga. COP$80,000.
  • Mountain Biking, Calle 18 #3-31 (by the football pitch), +57 5 4210870. The best way to see Tayrona park, unspoiled beaches and dense tropical forest away from the heat up in Sierra Nevada.
  • Tayrona National Park. An unspoilt natural paradise of jungle, birds, ocean, and absolutely gorgeous beaches. A boat leaves for the backpacker beach haven of El Cabo every morning around 10AM. If you find enough people there is also a boat heading for Playa Cristal.
  • Minca. You can also be in the Minca, a small town in the Sierra Nevada Santa Marta in less than an hour. You can get there by bus for COP$8,000 (Sep 2021) or taxi. A taxi should cost from COP$35,000 to 40,000.
  • Hike to the Ciudad Perdida de Teyuna (Lost City). Takes several days and is quite pricy. To be organised with tour companies or in your hostel.

Tour operator

[edit]
  • 1 DivaExpe, Calle 11 # 3-05 (In Casa Divanga), +57 5 4219092. This office offers free information in English, Spanish and French. It promotes local operators for short treks, fishing, diving and ecolodges around Tayrona park. The office represents the local indigenous community Wiwas agency which organizes the Lost City trek with an indigenous guide explaining the culture, the Lost City story and the nature of Sierra Nevada. Also a good source of practical Taganga information such as accommodation, restaurants, bars, events and transportation.

Scuba diving

[edit]
Brain Coral in Tayrona Park

Taganga has become a popular scuba diving spot. Diving spots are usually near the small island "Aguja", a part of Tayrona National Park. The underwater of Taganga has a big diversity of marine life. There are a dozen diving schools in town, but be careful where you do your courses. There are many reports of travelers doing their courses, paying and never receiving any certificate. Be careful for your safety: some diving centers have pretty old equipment, never follow safety rules such as safety-stop and even skip important skills/exams during the course or have dive masters teaching courses, check if you will be with a real instructor. For more information check padi alerts.

A small review of available dive centers:

  • [dead link] Aquantis Bed Breakfast & Diving, Calle 18 No 1-39, . Organized and honest, classroom with AC, long dives. Includes coffee, towels, books and warm shower after diving; and you do not have to carry or wash your equipment. Small groups, fantastic food. Great people, amazing service, you can stay in the dive center for hours meet each other before and after the dives. COP$580,000 for OW course, underwater pictures for free..
  • Calipso Dive Center, Calle 12 No 1-40, +57 5 421 91 46, . Calipso is the only center that offers a Tayrona Park Safari, where people can spend 2 nights in hammocks on a beautiful beach in the park and dive. The diving is good. They are also pioneering a project to restore coral, which is rapidly degrading worldwide. In conjunction with the C-Force Foundation they are growing coral in a coral nursery. They are the only agency doing this in Colombia and one of the few in the world. You can even take a coral growing/ gardening course. The people are really kind and you can stay at the center before your safari. (note per http://www.calipsodivecenter.com.co/en-us/secpages/voluntariado_EN.php [formerly dead link] it is a 4-week full-program US$2,000) Calipso is a member of NAUI, the second largest Scuba Diving Association in the World. Any certification between NAUI and PADI is mutually recognizable, but this is NOT a PADI facility according to the PADI website. Prices for OW or Advanced Tayrona Park Safari with 2 nights 3 days sleeping in the park are COP$780,000 or for both is COP$1,100,000 with safari. They offer cheaper courses if you don't want to do the safari. For a 3-day and 2-night safari with 7 dives it's COP$550,000.
  • Centro de Buceo Poseidon (Poseidon Dive Center), Calle 18 No 1-69 (first street when you get to Taganga, turn left, big red door with the diving flag), +57 5 421-9224, . Dayily 7:30AM - 7PM. German-owned diving center. Price for OW+Advanced COP$1,300,000 (COP$670,000 for OW). One of the most professional diving centres, headed by a well known PADI course Director. Has a swimming pool inside and well-maintained equipments, also are very strict about safety local regulations. This is the place where instructors from Colombia, come to take their course, as they are a PADI 5* Instructor Development Dive Resort. Even some divers from the Colombian Navy come to take courses here. Without any doubt has the best boats in town, 2 well-maintained very comfortable Catamaran boats. And there for the only ones that could take you to the furthest dive sites on the Park. They also let you dive until your tank reaches reserve, no time policy (as some others in town do). Courses could be taken in different languages: English, Spanish, Portuguese, French, German and some others. Has free amazing coffee at the shop, kind and nice staff. Could be a little bit pricey compared to other dive centers in town, but the price is still way below average worldwide, totally worth it if what you're looking for is safety, comfort and a good experience. You also have the option of getting accommodations on their facilities.
  • Tayrona Dive Center, Carrera 2 No 18A-22, +57 5 421 5349, . Tayrona is the oldest dive center in Taganga. This is where Colombian anti-narcotics policemen take their courses. They also know great sites for diving in the areas of the Tayrona national park. The instructors are very experienced and staff is very nice. They also offer accommodation in very clean rooms with sea view. The founder and owner, known as “muñeco” is one of the best PADI instructors in Colombia. They take great underwater pictures for no extra charge. They also have very good equipment. Courses can be taken in English, Spanish or German.
  • [dead link] Under Pressure, Calle 15 No 1 B – 40, . Excellent courses, serious about safety, excellent teaching, great dives. COP$680,000 for PADI OW course (COP$640,000 for Naui) (Feb 2016), underwater pictures for free.
  • Nautilus, on the waterfront. A little bit cheaper than others but not always the newest equipment.

Volunteering

[edit]
  • UNILOT, +57 5 421 92 17, . UNILOT is Divanga's foundation in tourism research (Unilot means "Unidad de Investigacion-Accion Local en Turismo"). B.A. graduates travellers can participate in sustainable tourism research, the foundation is linked with the local public University Universidad del Magdalena. You can ask for free accommodation and food against research work, may be on the field, surveys or secondary research directed by Master degree graduates
  • Coral Conservation Program, Calle 12 No 1 - 40, +57 5 4219146. Volunteer in Coral Conservation Program Santa Marta - Taganga
  • Midwater marine nursery. Calipso Dive Center and Tayrona National Park in Taganga Colombia are running a midwater marine nursery to recover species of corals around the marine area, control lion fish, educating the local fisherman and monitoring the coral reef. This is a opportunity for volunteers to enjoy scuba diving and support conservation.
  • Taganga Schwarb.

Learn

[edit]

Buy

[edit]

Get homemade seasonal sweets and delicious frozen fruit treats at Kelly seasonally.

There are minimarkets throughout the town. The next big supermarket is in Santa Marta and called Exito. The bus from Taganga goes to Carrera 5/Calle 22 in Santa Marta. From there it's a short walk. The bus back to Taganga goes from in front of the supermarket.

  • 1 ATM Bancolombia. In Taganga is only one ATM of Bancolombia in town. Reports that the ATM is broke or out of cash are common, so maybe it is a good idea to bring some money from Santa Marta. Paying with credit cards is quite common in international hotels or at booking agencies.

The bus goes to Santa Marta's Parque Bolívar, where there is a BBVA bank branch with three ATMs. The bus goes on Carrera 5 back to Taganga.

Eat

[edit]

Mid-quality restaurants that specialize mainly in fish dishes are clustered on the beach, with a main dish starting at COP$10,000-15,000 (September 2021). It's worthwhile to walk up two blocks.

There is some street food along the Carrera 3. Most food stalls are there in the late afternoon and in the evening. Special Colombian style hot dogs are from COP$3,000, Hamburgers from COP$5,000 and typical Colombian snacks from COP$1,500 (September 2021).

  • You can buy fresh fish from fisherman at the left side of beach from afternoon into the evening - They will cut it for you and give you just the fillet if you want.
  • Republika Taganguera Divanga's French Restaurant/Bar/Swimming pool. Located in DIVANGA nice hostel with swimming pool 2 blocks straight from Delfin Hostel on the beach. good vibes. +57 5 421 90 92
  • Che Luis, usually very crowded with locals/Israelis. Mostly an Israeli place and very loud as well.
  • El Reef, Cra1 # 15-09. Great panini sandwich and good salad. The speciality: very good waffles with ice cream and Nutella.
  • 1 Café Bonsai, Calle 13 # 1-07 (by the beach, a block from sensation), +57 5 4219495. 08:00-22:30. Great breakfasts (freshly baked breads, wholegrain or rye sour dough, creamy yogurt with homemade jams and granola). Lunch with excellent sandwiches, big, fresh and tasty with some extremely nice sauces. Also available: Lunch Salads, Colombian excelso arabica coffee or tea, tasty brownies, really fresh variant of mojito. AC, WiFi and great music. Café Bonsai also offers Spanish instruction. US$1, 5-8.
  • Babaganoush Restaurant/Bar, above dive center tayrona (cr 1 no 18-22), +57 3188681476. 17:00-23:30. A restaurant opened by the previous (Dutch) chef from Casa Felipe. Beautiful place with nice sea view, lounge area and terrace, international cuisine, pumpkin soup, beef carpacio, vitello tonato, curries, tikka masala, pastas, fresh fish fillet, filet mignon with red wine or blue cheese sauce, homemade desserts. Sunset happy hour 17:00-21:30.

Drink

[edit]

It would be good idea to take a couple of "Stubbie Coolers" (Australian vernacular for an item which keeps the beer in your bottle cooler or longer) as the heat in Taganga will have you drinking warm beer by the time you are at the end of your drink.

Sleep

[edit]
  • 1 Casa Blanca, +57 5 421 9232, +57 300 805 4968. Opened in 1998 by Colombian/Swiss team Carlos Botache and Bernard Gusten, Casa Blanca has become a favorite amongst beach-loving travelers and provides an excellent base for those taking dive courses in town or those wanting to make the most of their time by the sea. Prices are COP$18,000 pp with a COP$2,000 single supplement. Double rooms are COP$40,000. Heavy drug influence on beach in front - be careful at night.
  • 2 Divanga, Calle 12 with 4, +57 5 421 90 92, . Backpackers' bed and breakfast. Includes a beautiful swimming pool that creates a great social area. The staff is friendly. Comfortable and clean rooms with shower/toilet at COP$$34,000 per person, in dorm COP$29,000 including internet and a generous breakfast. The view from the roof is fantastic, especially at sunset and a roof top bar plays excellent music. There is also a comfy TV room with cable TV and DVD player, an internet room with free high speed internet and Wi-Fi access and a restaurant inside serving excellent food. Free luggage storage. Discount for Hostelling International members.
  • 3 [formerly dead link] Casa Divanga, . Divanga's little sister at one block down. You get access to Divanga's pool. Shady patio and communal kitchen. Spanish courses available. Includes a tourism information point with Taganga's map and full information about Tayrona park. Dorm from COP$19,000.
  • 4 Hotel Oso Perezoso, Calle 17 # 2-36, +57 5 421-8041, . Hotel Oso Perezoso is a three-story structure, perfectly designed to catch the cool breezes of Taganga and enjoy a chill atmosphere amid a 360-degree view. The first floor has three rooms and a store, free bag storage, and a book exchange. The second floor has four bright guest rooms with views of the ocean that open onto a breezy open-air corridor. The third floor is a gorgeous rooftop Tsunami bar and cafe with WiFi internet (COP$5,000 extra), a 800GB jukebox, plenty of room for hammock chillin' and a sassy parrot. From here you can watch the sun rise over the mountains, watch the sun melt into the Caribbean, sip on a cold beer, and order something from the full-service restaurant. Restaurant and bar are open to the public. Room prices range from COP$15,000 a night per person (hammocks), to COP$20,000 a night per person (first floor), to COP$28,000 per person per night (on the second floor). All rooms have private baths, excluding hammocks. Big breakfast is included with each room rate.
  • 5 La Casa de Felipe, Carrera 5A 19-13 (behind the football field), +57 5 421-9101, . Popular hostel. Several apartments some with kitchen, dormitory and hammocks if everything else is full. There is a communal kitchen, internet facilities, free wifi, laundry service, nice terraces and a friendly staff. Always crowded by backpackers. 15 minutes by walking from the beach. Prices between COP$$15,000 and COP$45,000. Breakfast COP$6,000. Discount for Hostelling International-members..
  • La Tortuga Hostel, Calle 9 No. 3-116, +57 5 4219048, +57 3202589677, . Check-out: 11:30AM. Clean and comfortable en-suite dorms and privates, a roof bar, garden swimming pool, tour info, private diving instructor, lost city treks, jenga tournaments, super friendly staff, 24-hour reception, free storage, internet access, free Wi-Fi, book exchange, laundry service. From COP$22,000.
  • ReyMARIn (used to stand for Miramar backwards when it was a Miramar hotel, now, it is the sea king). Manager Chichi has 50 years of fishing experience. Family serves nice food next door.
  • Techos Azules, Sector Dunkarinka Cabaña 1-100, +57 5 421 91 41, +57 316 648 0731, . Nicely placed at the entrance of the town, it has hammocks, private rooms with bathroom, "cabañas" (two rooms, sitting room with kitchen, shower with toilet). Beautiful views on Taganga and the bay. Around COP$20,000 per person, discounts can be contracted if you are in a group or staying for a longer period.
  • Another option is to ask around for an apartment to rent. There are gringo shacks and guest houses all over the town. Usually, most places to stay that are geared towards foreign backpackers will have all the creature comforts (read: running water). Taganga has a long history of people's belongings disappearing as everyone in town often have keys and people lose stuff the day they are scheduled to leave. There is always the option of find a person who's renting a room in their house, or seeing who's out of town and turned their home into a temporary guest house. It's a great way of meeting people and really getting to know a town as interesting as Taganga. If you do this, be sure you trust where you are staying, and bring your own locks as a precaution. Also, Taganga has no water due to political issues, so there are times where water can be an issue.
  • 6 Casa Caluca (near Casa de Felipe hostel.). Popular holiday apartment for holiday weekend, short term, and long term rent. In a quiet area with sea views over Taganga. COP$40,000 per day, or COP$650,000 per month.

Connect

[edit]

There is a great little internet cafe a block to the west of the police station and ATM, which adds little friendly touches like the occasional cup of water.

Stay safe

[edit]

Taganga had a difficult time a couple of years back with drug dealers, robbery and less than ideal police behavior, but it is a town full of hard working friendly people and it has slowly been recovering since, still regular precautions should be taken, enjoy your visit exercising discretion and caution.

There are quite 7 small beaches outside of Taganga (15 minutes walk), which are connected by walking paths covered by vegetation. These paths are not well illuminated, so precautions must be taken on late hours when there are not many people walking to and from. Do not walk there by yourself. Wait for a small group. If you carry valuables with you and don't feel adventurous, it's better to take a boat (3 minutes; COP $5.000).

Go next

[edit]

Hostels have these places:

  • Tayrona National Park — an unspoilt natural paradise of jungle, birds, ocean, and absolutely gorgeous beaches. A boat leaves for the backpacker beach haven of El Cabo every morning around 10AM. On the country road that goes through the national park, there are hostels in El Zaino and Calabazo.
  • Santa Marta — Blue collectivos leave for Santa Marta for every 15 minutes or even more often, passing the roundabout at the malecon (COP$2,000, September 2021). They pass along Av. del Ferrocarril and Santa Marta malecon at Carrera 1C and then Calle 22.
  • Minca – a bit cooler and 20km from Santa Marta. It's 580m above sea level towards the mountain top Cuchilla San Lorenzo
  • Guachaca
  • Cartagena – Direct intercity buses depart from Santa Marta. Berlinas bus company offers shuttle tickets from Taganga hostels to Cartagena. DivaExpe (see tour operator) sells tickets.


Suitable for a trip is:

  • Ciudad Perdida — Taganga, even more so than Santa Marta, is the main jumping off point for the famous trek, and you should be able to arrange a trek on short notice with any of the hostels or tour companies dotting the main road.
This city travel guide to Taganga is a usable article. It has information on how to get there and on restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.