Saturday, 11 January 2025

Colombia - Salt of the Earth

January 3


Hello everyone!


Last time out I talked about one of Colombia’s historically important resources: gold. This blog will focus on another mineral which is the focus of the ‘First Wonder’ of the country. Imagine if they added pepper…


Zipaquirá Salt Cathedral

To build it, 250 thousand tons of rock salt had to be extracted


About 50 km north of the capital, Bogotá, is the small town of Zipaquirá. This town is arguably the most popular day trip from the big smoke. I visited on a larger day trip, having spent the morning at Lake Guatavita. Having lunch before entering the main attraction allowed me to try one of Colombia’s national dishes: bandeja paisa. Imagine that you needed to use up everything in the kitchen and cooked it up before tossing it all on one plate. Huge meal.


Colombia is massive!

Plantain, chorizo, blood sausage, beans,
egg, rice, pork rind, meat, avocado...


Allowing myself to digress slightly, the food has been generally wonderful. The fruit is juicy and fresh, the sweets are…very sweet. I found a possible new favourite random food at a restaurant in Bogotá. In El Salvador, I often buy crisps called patacones - plantain slices which are double fried. Imagine that…but a crisp the size of a large pizza. Then imagine that with a ton of toppings. San Salvador needs this restaurant!


Fresh mango - big mango - less than $1

Looks amazing...until you try to eat it!


The food didn’t need salt. If it did, I could have easily brought some from Zipaquirá. That’s my terrible segue back to the main point of this blog. Zipaquirá has a cathedral. No biggie, a lot of places have big churches. We even passed one on the way, in a beautiful town called Sesquilé.


The Cathedral in Bogotá

Sesquilé is a charming little town where
we stopped on the way to Lake Guatavita


Zipaquirá Cathedral is different for two reasons. Firstly, it is underground. About 200 metres underground, actually. Secondly, incredibly…it is made of salt.


The old temple was the world’s first underground cathedral

The most recent cathedral was created and opened in 1995


That’s why it’s such a popular place to visit. I have been to an underground salt cathedral, near the Polish city of Krakow. There aren’t many, though!


It was declared the First Wonder of Colombia on February 4, 2007

This mine was temporarily closed in 1975 and 1992 for safety reasons


Like the Polish version, Zipaquirá started out life as a mine. The indigenous Muiscas were able to use basic techniques to extract salt, before colonists later used more modern technology to mine more of the mineral. 


Zipaquirá became one of Colombia’s biggest cities due to the salt trade


There have been four levels of extraction thus far


Entering the mine, you head steadily down to about 180 metres below the entrance. On the way, you pass under a fun set of lights which illuminate the flags of different countries.


Vamos Argentina!

The passageway is 386 metres


Before entering the main halls of the cathedral, you walk through the 14 Stations of the Cross. Many of these are made by creating rock-hewn structures and images.


An example of one of the stations

Station 14 took 2.5 years to finish due to polishing


After seeing the final station, you pass under a large dome before heading through a small labyrinth. At the end of this, about 200 metres below the ground, are the three main chambers of the cathedral.


The dome is 11m in diameter, built by 7 miners


It’s not a ‘working’ cathedral, as it has no bishop


At this stage, most of the cathedral looks more rock than salt. There are elements here which are made of marble and granite; however, the vast majority is salt rock known as halite.


This is Pope Francis, who visited in 2017

Some sculptures like this angel are made of sandstone - you can’t put that much detail on salt due to impurities


The eye-catching part of the main chamber is the cross. It is the largest underground cross in the world, with a height of 16 metres and a span of 10 metres. The changing, colourful lights around it add to a mysterious aura.


The cross

The largest cross in the world is in Spain,
and is ten times larger at 150m tall

The cathedral’s main chamber had a light show - more like a shadow show - to celebrate the birth of Jesus. Also underground, there is a 3D cinema which charts the history of the mine and cathedral.


I wonder if they do shows like this throughout the year


The film featured a slightly scary robot made of rocks


As I said earlier, it is a popular visit and pilgrimage site. This is reflected in the number of shops at the bottom of the mine - it looked like a garish bazaar.


There are also two museums and a 'hand spa'

I bought this, and I'll be amazed if it makes
it back to El Salvador in one piece


Apparently over 13 million people have visited the Zipaquirá Salt Cathedral. Constantly reminding yourself of the difficult and intricacy of its construction makes you realise how special this place is.


The world's largest underground cross

Amazing place

Love you all,


Matt

Thursday, 9 January 2025

Colombia - Fool’s Gold

January 2-3


Hello everyone!


When the Spanish arrived in the Americas, they were keen to find treasures to enrich both themselves and their country. The resource they were particularly enamoured by was gold. Colombia, and specifically this area of the country, was a significant area of focus to find gold and the city they called ‘El Dorado’.


Lake Guatavita - part of the 'El Dorado' legend

Golden mask in the Museo del Oro


The history of gold in this region goes back thousands of years. This is expertly charted in the Museo del Oro - The Gold Museum - in the historic central district of Bogotá. 


This necklace would jingle in the wind, apparently showing when spirits were near

This lime container, found in the 19th century, was the
reason for the creation of the Gold Museum in 1939

The earliest remains of metal use in South America have been found in the neighbouring countries of Peru and Ecuador, dating from 2100 BC. Gold sheet hammered into objects dates from about 500 BC in Colombia. They also used a process called annealing, which involved heating the gold until red hot and then submerged in water.


Stones were used to smooth the gold

A shell containing seven sheets of gold, one of the earlier finds in the museum

More complex items have helped historians better understand the prehispanic society which lived in this region, called the Muisca. It helps us know that luxury objects were used to show dominance and connection to ‘other worlds’.


This is a poporo, a container with lime in it. They
were used when the Muisca chewed coca leaves. 

Jewellery was a popular addition


Those other worlds were seen by the Muisca as being ‘upper’ and ‘lower’, with humans occupying the middle, combined world. Birds were often associated with the upper world. The chief would cover themselves in gold in order to appropriate the powers of the sun.


Ducks = birds = higher power. Quackers.

How the gold may have been worn on the head and body


Of course, none of this was able to prepare the Muisca - or any of the Americas for that matter - for the European invasion in the 15th and 16th centuries, with their superior weaponry and deadly diseases. Spain first landed on modern-day Colombian territory in 1499 and established the New Kingdom of Granada, with Bogotá as its capital, by the middle of the 1500s. 


The Spanish coat of arms, in the National Museum

Spain created Bogota as their capital in 1538

The Spanish came and found the Muisca using copious amounts of gold. Excited by this, the conquistadors naturally wanted much of it for themselves. One of the places they were told the indigenous peoples used for gold was a lake now known as Guatavita, found about 60 km north of Bogotá. 


An image depicting the Muisca using bodies of water

Notice the small gap on the left - this is called
El Boquete, which I'll explain later


When I visited the lake the day after going to the Gold Museum, I learnt a bit more about the indigenous ceremonies. Potential successors to the chief had to go into a cave at age 9 and live there, out of view of the sun, for 9 years. When the time was right, these 18 year olds then had to sit in a house for 3 days and stare at a fire whilst the community’s most beautiful woman danced around him. Naked. If he survived that test, he kept his hair and could be a successor. 


The next Muisca ‘king’ is always a nephew from the sister’s side to ensure the bloodline is maintained


The fire would be in the middle, with
the distracting woman dancing around

The Spanish didn’t care too much about that: they wanted gold. Luckily for them, the fact that the Muisca didn’t think they could touch the water helped them find a significant amount of gold pretty easily. When offering their gold to the gods, the local population would instead drop their gilded goods at the shallow edges of Lake Guatavita.


Embossing gold was also popular

This is a Shaman, with his body shape
resembling a basket, to aid concentration 

The fact that so much gold was found at the edges of the lake made Europeans believe that there was far more in the deep. First the Spanish used workers, who were simply scooping water out using plates, to try to dredge the lake. Later, the British decided to use modern technology - TNT - to blow a hole into the side of the lake. The gap that emerged is known as El Boquete. There were some Brazilians on my trip; I learnt that ‘Boquete’ means something very different in Brazilian Portuguese…


This man was responsible for a lot of the
early Spanish exploring of Guatavita

15 metres were dredged, leading to 70 tonnes of gold being found


Lake Guatavita is found in the High Andean Forest, which sits between 2800m and 3400m above sea level. The local way of dealing with high altitude is to drink coca leaf tea. Walking in this area offers incredible views.


Coca, not cocaine. Does look a bit like weed, mind...

Views for days


The lake itself is stunning when the sun comes out. You can certainly sense the allure to foreign powers. The pictures below show its current level - remember that it was much higher before the TNT was used.


The diameter is approximately 40 metres at its widest 

The depth reaches about 30 metres


Seeing the incredible collection of items in the Museo del Oro, and observing the lovely Lake Guatavita from up high, left me with some questions which won’t be able to be answered. What else was made by the Muisca? What items the Spanish melt down, rather than leave in its original, ornate shape? What has been lost to time? With all that in mind, it’s pretty incredible that so much has been preserved and can be shown off in Colombia’s capital city.


A raft in the Gold Museum, created by the
Muiscas in the 14th or 15th century. Amazing skill!

Where the gold at?

We didn't find any gold


Love you all,


Matt