A A
RSS

Managua Slide Show

Snaps from the mean streets of Nicaragua’s capital, Managua, a city forged by dogged necessity. Everywhere there is evidence of revolutionary upheaval, natural disasters and a curious love of cement. Many thanks to Juan Fransisco, a local taxi driver who guided me safely between the sights. If you want to learn more about Managua, please read my short story, March of the Red Ants.

Bookmark this post:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Tumblr

Related Posts

  1. Río San Juan Slide Show
  2. Michoacán Slide Show
  3. Granada Slide Show
  4. Nicaragua’s Caribbean Coast Slide Show
  5. Day of the Dead 2008 Slide Show

3 Responses to “Managua Slide Show”

  1. Great stuff. Nice to read some well written posts. A long way between them.

  2. great ideas. I always follow your ideas and apply them.

    Just one question though. Have you made writing this blog as your profession or do you do this in your spare time?

    Just curious..

  3. richardarghiris says:

    Hi,

    Thanks for your comments – much appreciated.

    To answer your question, this blog is something I do in my spare time. I don’t make money out of it. This is a self-publishing platform.

    My paid profession is guidebook writing and freelance journalism :)

Leave a Reply

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

Subscribe by emai
Pic of the week
advert
About Interamericana
Richard ArghirisInteramericana is an intrepid new travel blog about the people and places surrounding the Carretera Interamericana - a 6000 kilometre stretch of highway that links Mexico and the seven nations of Central America. Created by guidebook writer and journalist Richard Arghiris, Interamericana combines photography, video and the best in alternative travel writing.
Latest Flickr photos
Recommended reading
Ad Ad Ad Ad
Web 2.0 Profiles
Interamericana on Flickr Interamericana on Youtube
Interamericana on Twitter Richard Arghiris on Linkedin

Mr Edgar ‘Rasta’ Coulsen is a native of the Caribbean town of San of Juan del Norte – an end of the world settlement perched at the mouth of the Rio San Juan. In this short video interview, Interamericana talked to him about the changes that have taken place in the region since his childhood.

One day, me and my compadres took a trip up the Río Istiam – a tranquil waterway that meanders inland at the isthmus between Ometepe’s two volcanoes, Concepción and Maderas. The river is home to abundant bird life, caimans, turtles and herds of indolent livestock. Many thanks to Jennifer Kennedy and the three Matts – Barwick, Hicks and Ashford, who appear in this video clip.

Via Via is something of a León institution, attracting Nicas and foreigners alike with its buzzing multi-cultural atmosphere, dirt-cheap bottles of rum and rousing Friday night music sets. Amalgama, featured in this video, are an institution in themselves, playing everything from rock ballads to crowd-pleasing revolutionary classics. In this clip they are accompanied by itinerant musician Richard Crandell and his Zimbabwean imbira.

As a poor chele, or white boy, rhythm was never going to come naturally to me. Nonetheless, my militant salsa instructor, Angel, patiently tried to teach me to dance. And when he could be patient no longer, he simply ordered me to the nearest disco…

Granada’s international poetry festival kicked off yesterday, 14th February 2010, with a belting set from Katia Cardenal. Performing at the Plaza Independencia, Katia sang a mixture of rousing folk songs and revolutionary ballads, including a superb homage to the Miskito people of the Atlantic coast (2nd song featured, actually in the Miskito language). Turn up the volume, pour yourself a rum, kick back and enjoy…

The land is scorched and broken. Piles of dark volcanic rubble litter the scene, yet to be properly eroded by sun, wind and rain. Years from now, these rocks will be transformed into fine, fertile silt. But for today, dead, black lava fields cling to the slopes like some monstrous reptilian hide – coarse, inscrutable, alien…