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Nicaragua Map

Thu, Sep 3, 2009

INTERACTIVE MAPS, Nicaragua


View Nicaragua by Interamericana.co.uk in a larger map

About this map

This map was generated using googlemaps. The blue markers indicate points of interest – click on one to generate a photo and a set of internal links related to that destination.

Navigation

Navigation buttons allow you to move north, south, east and west. Alternatively, click and hold on any position, then scroll as desired. There’s also a zoom function, and you can switch between road, terrain and a (very cool) satellite view of the region.

Beyond this site

Click here to view a larger version inside googlemaps. From there, you have the option of viewing worldwide content related to Nicaragua, including photos, videos and Wikipedia articles. If you’d like to contribute to the global pool, consider getting a Panoramio account. For die-hard map fans, Google Earth is definitely the thing – and the future. Technology rocks!

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Related Posts

  1. Mexico Map
  2. Bluefields street scene, Nicaragua
  3. Christmas fireworks, Granada, Nicaragua

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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.
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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…

New Year’s Eve in Nicaragua is celebrated with all the incendiary zeal befitting one of the world’s most volcanic and tempestuous nations. Fire-crackers are ignited en-masse. A frenzy of explosions ricochets across the city. A grotesque effigy symbolizing the passing year is paraded through the streets and burned. These are some of the scenes depicted in this short video.

Las Isletas (The Little Islands) are one of Granada’s principal attractions. An archipelago of some 354 jewel-like islets scattered over the surface of Lake Nicaragua, they lure scores of visitors daily. This video was shot on the northern side of the island chain, where we saw a mixture of upscale holiday homes and other more natural settings strewn with lilies and vegetation…

Catholic sentiments reach a fervent peak in Nicaragua during the Purísima, a festival entirely devoted to the Immaculate Conception of Mary. Lasting from late November to 8th December, the Purísima is a protracted celebration involving various family and church gatherings, as well as spirited street parties. Such is the scene depicted in this short film…

From late September to early December, the otherwise sleepy town of Masaya – Nicaragua’s bastion of folklore and indigenous traditions – comes alive with countless animated events, including the shambolic procession of El Torovenado, filmed here. This anarchic spectacle is the very embodiment of Nicaraguan character…