El Salvador Tourist Attractions: 15 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit El Salvador? Check out our El Salvador Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in El Salvador.
Top Places to visit in El Salvador:
Lake Ilopango, San Salvador, El Boqueron National Park, Lago de Coatepeque, Cathedral of Santa Ana, Tazumal, National Palace, San Salvador Cathedral, Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo, Estadio Cuscatlán, Teatro Nacional de El Salvador, Casa Blanca, El Salvador, Casa Presidencial, Museo de la Palabra y la Imagen, Estadio Óscar Quiteño
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El Salvador Travel Guide - An Amazing Adventure
El Salvador Travel Guide - An Amazing Adventure
El Salvador is a country in Central America and, geographically, is part of continental North America. It is bordered on the southwest by the Pacific Ocean, and lies between Guatemala and Honduras. It is divided into 14 sections called Departments. It has 25 volcanoes, 14 lakes, and three large cities and is divided in to East, Central and West with the the capital San Salvador in the central region, Santa Ana in the west and San Miguel the largest city in the east.
The civilization of El Salvador dates from the pre-Columbian time, around 1500 BC, according to evidence provided by the ancient structures of Tazumal in Chalchuapa. El Salvador has a tropical climate with pronounced wet and dry seasons. Temperatures vary primarily with elevation and show little seasonal change. The Pacific lowlands are uniformly hot; the central plateau and mountain areas are more moderate.
Departments and Cities of El Salvador :
Ahuachapán (Ahuachapán)
Santa Ana (Santa Ana)
Sonsonate (Sonsonate)
La Libertad (Santa Tecla)
Chalatenango (Chalatenango)
Cuscatlán (Cojutepeque)
San Salvador (San Salvador)
La Paz (Zacatecoluca)
Cabañas (Sensuntepeque)
San Vicente (San Vicente)
Usulután (Usulután)
San Miguel (San Miguel)
Morazán (San Francisco Gotera)
La Unión (La Unión)
San Salvador - national capital; San Salvador department
San Miguel, San Miguel department
Acajutla
La Libertad
Puerto Cutuco (La Union)
San Francisco Gotera, Morazán department
Santa Ana
Santa Tecla
Suchitoto
The countryside of El Salvador is breathtaking, with volcanoes and mountains offering green adventurers exactly what they are looking for. Many of environmentally-oriented community-based organizations promote eco-tourism, and there are a number of beautiful and secluded beaches and forests scattered throughout the country.
A well-maintained and sparsely populated national park is found in the west at Bosque El Imposible. Additionally, there is Montecristo Cloud Forest, and a quaint fishing village with incredible local hospitality and remote coconut islands in La Isla de Méndez. Isla de Olomega in the department of San Miguel is an excellent eco-tourism destination, as are the beautiful Isla El Cajete in Sonsonate, Isla San Sebastian, Conchagua, Conchaguita, Isla Conejo, Isla Teopan, and Isla Meanguera.
One should also visit the colonial towns of Ataco, Apaneca, Juayua, Panchimalco, and Suchitoto as well as the Mayan sites of San Andrés, Joya de Cerén (The Pompeii of Central America and an UNESCO World Heritage Site), and Tazumal, whose main pyramid rises some 75 feet into the air. The on-site museum showcases artifacts from the Pipil culture (the builders of Tazumal), as well as paintings that illustrate life in pre-Hispanic El Salvador. Souvenir hunters will find some of the best artisans in San Juan el Espino and in La Palma (the artisan capital of El Salvador).
The capital, San Salvador, is a cosmopolitan city with good restaurants highlighting the country’s fresh seafood, as well as plenty of shopping, entertainment and nightlife. San Miguel in the East offers tourists a more authentic way to see El Salvador by getting off the beaten track to see its countryside, coastline and lakes
A lot to see in El Salvador such as :
El Tunco
Coatepeque Caldera
Santa Ana Volcano
San Salvador
Joya de Cerén
Tazumal
Ruta de las Flores
Los Volcanes National Park
Izalco
El Boqueron National Park
El Imposible National Park
Lake Ilopango
Puerta del Diablo
San Andrés, El Salvador
Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo
San Salvador Cathedral
Conchagua
Plan de la Laguna Botanical Garden
Lake Suchitlán
Montecristo National Park
National Palace
Museum of Art of El Salvador
San Vicente
San Miguel
Playa Costa del Sol
Playa El Cuco
Playa El Espino
El Rosario Church
Laguna de Alegria
Termos del Río
Chorros De La Calera
Playa Los Cobanos
Museum of Children's Tin Marin
Playa El Cuco
Cihuatán
Playa San Diego
Walter Thilo Deininger National Park
Cathedral of Santa Ana
Playa El Majahual
Atami
Paseo El Carmen
Furesa
Santa Teresa hot springs.
Guazapa
Teatro Nacional de El Salvador
Libertad Plaza
Punta Mango
Parque Nacional Cerro Verde
Playa El Tunco
Playa El Sunzal
El Salvador is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting El Salvador. Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in El Salvador.
Join us for more :
Viaje a Playa El Cuco El Salvador - VIDEO SV
La playa de El Cuco se encuentra en el este de El Salvador,
específicamente en el departamento de San Miguel y es una playa ideal pasar un día compartiendo con familiares y amigos
desconectado de todo el ajetreo y el bullicio de la ciudad.
Video grabado y compartido por VIDEO SV - Videos de El Salvador.
Siguenos en Facebook
Centro de Saint Luis, Missouri
El arco que se ve al fondo y que me alegra la vida cada vez que lo veo, es en homenaje a la función que tuvo la ciudad en la expansión hacia el oeste.
Steve Bunker Dec. 7, 2003 Oral History Interview
Steve Bunker's background and a major love is the sea. Also a history buff, he originally came to Baltimore to help build a Baltimore Clipper in Baltimore Harbor, stayed on for a few years as Baltimore's maritime historian and eventually opened his shop in Fell's Point, The China Sea, a marine-salvage and antique shop complete with live parrots. A community leader for many years, Steve is remembered for representing the working waterfront community and helping to moderate development. He and Sharon Bondroff moved their shop to Maine in 1999 after they decided they could no longer afford the rents in Fell's Point.
In this interview, Steve tells his stories about Fell's Point and its history. The interview was conducted in his home in Maine on February 8, 2003 by Jacquie and Kraig Greff of Tonal Vision LLC in preparation for the documentary, Fell's Point Out of Time.