Sunday, 8 February 2026

El Salvador - A volcano in a volcano…

 February 7


Hello everyone!


The Land of Volcanoes, one of El Salvador’s self-titled nicknames, has a wide variety of them throughout the country. One of them, with a bit of effort, you can stand…in


Sitting in El Boquerón

Standing on Boqueróncito


I live in the shadow of one of these large volcanoes: San Salvador Volcano. It’s rarely called that, instead being known by its popular name of El Boquerón, meaning ‘big mouth’ (Google Translate actually says it’s anchovy but…not this boqueron!). It looms large over Santa Tecla, where I live, and I see it every day when arriving at work.


The volcano is north of Santa Tecla and northwest of San Salvador

The volcano seen from school

In spite of it being so close, I don’t head up the volcano that often. I went to the top in my first week of living here, back in 2022. I’ve gone up the higher side once to its tip, called Picacho, on a hike, and to the top of the crater itself one more time as part of a trail run. Other than that, it’s something I’ve looked up to rather than down into.

Up at the top in August 2022

At the top of Picacho in October 2022

Of course, when you look into most volcanoes, you may be expecting to see bubbling magma and fissures of steam. In El Salvador, it’s not uncommon to be looking at a beautiful crater lake. El Boquerón apparently had a lake in it until its last eruption in 1917.

Mum looking into Ilamatepec - Santa Ana Volcano - in 2024

Maxi looking slightly stressed in a crater lake at Ilopango


What you’re probably not expecting to see is a second crater. A smaller crater, hence the name Boqueróncito (the suffix -cito is used to add that something is small and often cute, like a small coffee sometimes being called a cafécito). But that brown mound, over 550 metres below the crater’s rim, is another cone with another crater.


The top of the original crater is over 1800 metres above sea level

The little crater was formed after the 1917 eruption

Looks interesting from up high. What I discovered early on after moving here is that, with the right people, you can hike into the volcano to stand in Boqueróncito. One of those people was Rudolf, the man who led my hike up Picacho. That hike was supposed to include going into the Boquerón crater, but we didn’t get to as others in the group couldn’t keep pace. This time was going to be different. We would head into the volcano.

I don't think doing this is illegal - I'm not sure how legal it is, though...

Rudolf with our group at the top of the volcano

So it was that eleven of us joined him a little after 6:30am on a Saturday morning to descend into the crater of El Boquerón. A short walk took us to the rim, which has a circumference of about 5 kilometres. We followed that path for a little while before turning right. Turning down.

The positioning of the route meant that
the sun was rising on the other side

Starting our descent

The start was easy enough, with a seemingly well-worn dusty path covered by fallen leaves and branches. This changed soon after, with the path turning into rocks and requiring us to start holding on to tree roots to secure us. Health and safety officers in the UK would have had a heart attack.

The fertile volcanic soil has meant that a
plethora of trees have grown inside the crater

I think the yellow caution tape is actually used to show the route down


They may have spontaneously combusted at a section roughly halfway down the crater wall. I hadn’t done a lot of research, so hadn’t expected a rope to be brought out. Holding the rope with the left hand, we then had to manoeuvre around a boulder - through a tree - before sliding down another root. I didn’t realise how high this particular part was when reaching down with my left leg, leaving my right foot up towards head height. Good stretch.


How it starts...

...and how it ends.

When obvious, the path became a bit slippery from the mass of dust that hadn’t been washed away due to it being our dry season. Hands got increasingly dirty as we navigated down towards the bottom.

My watch was playing up a bit, but I believe it when it said
that this kilometre had an average of a -22% gradient

Lots of careful steps required!

About two-and-a-half hours after starting, we suddenly came to an opening and were surrounded by tall, yellow, straw-like grass. We were in the crater itself. 

Suddenly felt warm at this point - the sun,
not an imminent eruption from below

This is the other side of the crater


Of course, getting into Boqueróncito would involve climbing up the side of that particular cone. At 37 metres, it’s not that tall, so soon enough, we were on our second crater rim of the day. Much yellower than it looks from the top!


Some of the grass was very high as well as yellow!

Hiking down into the little crater - the path was mainly
made of loose rock with occasional lava remnants

It’s impossible to see from the very top, but there are painted white stones inside the baby crater, which are often manipulated by successful hikers to spell something. Hilariously, when we arrived we found that they already spelled out the name of one of our group members. Once we had headed into the crater, we changed it to do a bit of school advertising.

General consensus was that our A could have been better 

This plastic tube checks for seismic activity below -
important, as I've been told that El Boquerón erupts
roughly every 100 years...and it's been 108... 

After a much-needed snack and stop in the shade, we headed back the same way which we had come down. I found this much easier and quicker, with a little bit of rock climbing added in. I’m thankful that I didn’t suffer from the new Spanish word I learnt today: one of our group got ‘calambre’: cramp.

Our guide leading us uphill

Some rock scrambling was needed

In total, our hike lasted a little under six hours. Returning to the top a little sore, rather dusty and very glad that I had managed to do this hike before leaving El Salvador. It’s not every day that you can say you’ve stood inside a volcano!

Standing at one of the lowest points in El Boquerón

A cool way to spend a Saturday morning!

Our team of 11



Love you all,


Matt

Wednesday, 4 February 2026

El Salvador - Conquering the Trifecta

January 31-February 1


Hello everyone!


El Salvador has many hidden gems, one of them being a place where you can pretty much be in three countries at once. It’s quite a rare occurrence in the world for the borders of three countries to meet, and there’s one right here. A very cool and rare opportunity. 


El Trifino. Other famous examples include Iguazu
Falls, Vaalserberg and The Golden Triangle.

There is technically a ‘quad border’ in southern Africa - I visited that in the first days of 2022

It was this goal in mind that I travelled with three friends north to Montecristo, a national park in the northwest of El Salvador. If you read this blog regularly, you’ll have seen that name pop up before. I tried - and failed - to go in October 2025.


Looking up at Montecristo on the way into Parque el Limo

Enjoying waterfalls outside of Montecristo


It has been fairly easy to travel in and around Central America’s smallest country since I arrived here…with the exception of Montecristo. Part of the reason for this is bureaucracy, and part of it is due to the weather. 


It is part of the ‘La Fraternidad Biosphere Reserve’,
which spans the three countries


Montecristo was the first protected area declared in El Salvador, in 1987

Firstly, the park is closed at certain times of the year to allow breeding and regrowth. I like that idea. When it is open, entering this national park requires paperwork, as well as pledges to not bring things such as disposable cutlery. I also like that idea. It would be nice if at least some of the proceeds were then spent giving the road from the main gate into the heart of the park a little bit of TLC. Clearly, they don’t like that idea. This is what has scuppered me before - the road becomes impassable during wet weather.


It’s often closed as it is a ‘biological corridor’ for various endangered species


This was a bushy-crested jay

Getting to the point of three borders - called El Trifino - involves a bit of a hike when inside Montecristo. As we wanted to go relatively early, we stayed in the nearby town of Metapán the night before, taking in its lovely square and slightly strange football stadium. Not often you have concrete walls a metre or so behind the goals…

Last time I came, this square had corrugated
iron up around it. Much nicer now!


Isidro Metapán are quite a successful team, and won this match 1-0. We missed the goal.

The following morning was an early start to be collected by Yessica, our guide and driver. Her pick-up truck possibly could have fitted all of us inside; I opted for the traditional experience of sitting in the open air at the back.

A 4x4 is essential - my little Yaris would not have got anywhere near the top


I wouldn't say it's a common method of transport, but
you do see it often enough for it to not be weird

The park opens at 7:30. Getting to the entrance from Metapán is quick, and paperwork is easy enough with names having been submitted in advance. It’s then a little under 20 kilometres from the entrance to the main visiting area called Los Planes. Sitting in the back of the pickup allowed us to see some impressive views as we rose in altitude. When we weren't bumping too much...

View of Metapán from the truck

We stopped at this viewpoint on the way back - that is
Lake Guija, which I briefly visited last October


Montecristo is home to a lot of wildlife. We were never likely to see a puma - spoiler, we didn’t - but did come across a group of pezote, a white-nosed coati. The raccoon-like animals were sniffing around in the brush under increasingly-sparse foliage. We stood up in the truck to see them.


Central America as a region has more than 7% of all the species on the planet, many of which are not found elsewhere on Earth


Montecristo is said to have the most biodiversity in the country, alongside El Imposible National Park


It was almost at this point - specifically, about 30 seconds later - when it dawned on those of us in the open air that we had been quite sheltered from the cooling temperature and rising wind. All of a sudden, it was Arctic. This was also the moment when I realised that I had definitely not packed enough clothes. A pair of gloves would have been very much appreciated by my hands as they started turning white whilst we rattled along at quite a clip up the path. We eventually made it to Los Planes, with my teeth chattering and my brain telling me that a baseball cap was not the type of hat I needed.


We were rising quickly - from 500 metres in
Metapán to almost 1900 metres at Los Planes


Near the start of our hike - it started relatively steeply

Added to my naivety was the fact that the country was on the cusp of a cold snap. Hiking through El Salvador’s only cloud forest was therefore going to be…brisk.

Not wearing shorts. Fools.


Some of the trees are up to 30 metres tall


The forest itself was stark yet stunning. It started with trees soaring high into the increasingly milky sky. Leaving early - we started walking just after 9am whereas others waiting for public guides left at least 30 minutes later - allowed us to have the trail and the trees to ourselves. Tranquility at its finest.

Common tree types are pine, cypress and oak

I don't think this was caused by the wind, though as you'll see
in the video below, the trees were having a good ol' time...


As we ascended, the types of trees changed and the air became damp. Greenery was now less from foliage and more from creeping moss, which hung heavy with moisture on the trunks and branches. Yesica pointed out some indigenous trees to us as we walked onwards and upwards. Not particularly steep at this point, and still beautiful in a slightly haunting way. Also still cold whenever we were slightly exposed to the wind.


An indigenous tree fern

Mossy

After a while, you reach a door: Puerto Trifino. Getting to the top from here would have been very challenging without the artificial additions, specifically a boardwalk (slippery) and a couple hundred or so steps (slippery). An impressive construction considering what the weather must have been like for the workers responsible for making it. They probably had raincoats or windbreakers. I should have thought about that, this being a damp cloud forest.

The door to the top

I read that this was built in 2011

After many steps, a clearing. The top of Cerro Montecristo. 2418 metres above sea level, El Salvador’s third-highest peak…and a small, white obelisk. The border. To the northwest: Guatemala. To the northeast: Honduras. For a British citizen, possibly the easiest way to get into Honduras, given their visa requirements at present. 

I think that this particular border was established in 1821


The obelisk is about 3 metres tall

We didn’t expect a view from the top, being a cloud forest and hiking through cool weather. It was also to be expected that the wind would feel quite strong up top. Luckily, we were able to escape it in ‘Guatemala’ behind the strange monument you see below.

Can't see much of Guatemala...


This dwarfs the obelisk a bit...

This is the observation tower (it didn’t look particularly climbable). It was built to represent three pillars of Mayan culture, each of which are shown on one particular side: the sun, the wind and the moon. We also learnt at the top that no such hike exists to reach El Trifino from neither Guatemala nor Honduras. Seems like a missed opportunity.

The tower is a monument to the fact that this is a
recognised UNESCO World Heritage Site

This stub marks the official border between Guatemala
and Honduras - it's about 20 metres from the obelisk

After enjoying the fact that we had reached the peak, and smashing a variety of nuts and chocolate bars (breakfast hadn’t really happened), we started our approximately 6 km descent. It was close to the door that we started to come across other hikers. Quite a few groups, meaning it would have been crowded at the top. Certainly made me glad we paid a little bit more for a guide who could leave earlier. 

Other parties heading up what I read is
about 750 steps to the top

You can't start hiking after a certain time, as every
day visitor must leave the park by 3pm

I wouldn’t say it was warm when we returned to Los Planes, but certainly warmer. We were pretty hungry by this point, so the sopa de gallina (chicken broth soup, served with a side of a large bit of chicken amongst other things) we were then given was timed to perfection. 

Without the clouds, there were stunning views

The soup on its own was great - the huge
plate came after I took this picture

Montecristo is an effort. An effort to get to, an effort to be allowed in to, an effort to scale. But it is absolutely worth it. Incredibly peaceful and a world away from city life. Worth the cold (if you come, dress much more appropriately), worth the sore legs the next day, and worth the wait. Count on Montecristo.

An amazing spiderweb that looks like a cube

Total hike of just under 11km, taking just under 4 hours




No phone signal throughout - a blessed escape


Trifino: conquered!



Love you all,


Matt