A lot of people write off Ecuador's Pacific coast. It’s too hot, the skies are grey and then there was that awful earthquake. It is hot – in the 90s. Nowhere closer to the sun than here. So when that blinding, white hot equatorial sun burns, cloud cover is a blessing. ‘Only mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the noonday sun.’ And then there was that earthquake.
On a Saturday, April 12, 2016 at 7 p.m., the north Pacific coast of Ecuador buckled under one of the deadliest earthquakes to hit South American in a decade - 7.8 on the Richter scale. The official tally was 280 dead. But off the record they say it was over 2,000. The government may have under reported fatalities.
The northern cities of Manta, Bahia Caraquez and Pendernales were the hardest hit; overpasses buckled, shopping malls, office buildings, hotels collapsed killing hundreds. Most of the ruble has been removed and reconstruction is underway. What can you do? one man said. It’s part of life when you’re living in the ring of fire.
Tourism and fishing are the coast’s most important industries. The fish hadn’t left. And they feared tourists would write Ecuador off. But they kept coming. The beaches were phenomenal. The tourists who came after the quake either forgot there was a recent earthquake or as, many admitted, never even knew one ever hit.
Travelers who want to go see the Pacific in South America have their work cut out for them. Colombia’s Pacific coastline is hard to get to and completely undeveloped. Sparsely populated villages of Bahia Solano and Nuqui, are only accessible by boat or plane.
In the south of the country, Salinas is one of Ecuador‘s biggest resorts and popular with Ecuadorians tourists mostly from Guayaquil. This town is a Miami Beach knock off with hotels, clubs and high-rise apartments appealing to the wealthy locals but the town seems to hold little of interest for foreign tourists.
A coastal town of 7,000 people, it’s a little too touristy with all kinds of souvenir shops, liquor stores, hotels, hostels and all kinds of restaurants: Indian, Italian, fish and chips, beer bars, cocktail bars, fruit juice stands, ice cream.
I was told the town was once eco-friendly with upper end tourism 20 years ago. But now the town caters to surfers and low-end alternative tourism. The residents complain of too much garbage on the beach and a lack of administrative initiative to keep the place clean, high tide at night takes most of the beach strewn garbage away.
Montanita is known as a backpackers, surfer's paradise for people who want to party. But they also complain of a water crisis, not enough water to support all that human activity. It's a problem that plagues most of Ecuador's coastal towns.
These places have a pretty steady following of tourists seeking relaxing/laid back environments.
There are miles of beautiful, empty beach to wander with no party atmosphere - in fact it’s hard to find a place in town selling beer.
A lot of people stay in Olon during the day and take a cab to go party in Mantanitas at night.
During the morning the tide is low, evening is high tide and the surfers come out. You can get a two hour surf lesson for $25, or just rent a surf board for $5 an hour or $15 all day. There's a massage tent on the beach and a lot of thatched huts serving up food, mostly fish dishes with all the trappings throughout the day for $6-$9. Bicycle and walking tours are available. And a walk down the beach will take you to other little beach towns.
In the town's central plaza at night a lot of people come to cool off during the evening hours. There are restaurants and bars grilling meat on sticks and the grill smoke wafts through the air while the kids play and a couple guys with guitars drift through the plaza's restaurants playing for tips.
Puerto Lopez
North of Olon, 40 minutes by bus is a bigger, mid-sized fishing port with plenty of beach. One can use Puerto Lopez as a base to see Playa Los Frailes in the National Park of Machalilla which is considered the most beautiful stretch of Ecuador’s coast. Not easy to get to, get a guided tour from Puerto Lopez or take a motor taxi - $10 round trip.
Just north of Bahia Caraquez it is one of the beach towns easiest to reach from either big city - Quito or Guayaquil. The town is small with a population under 1,000 but has over 7 miles of open beach to explore. It gets some local tourists on the weekends when late night partying can get noisy in town especially at the beach bars and last till late in the night.
But visitors have the place to themselves during the week. There are 8 miles of beautiful sand beach and rolling waves all the way south to the city of Bahia Caraquez.
The sand by the inlet is so soft and fine one would need snowshoes to hike it. The village is only made up of 3 sandy streets with enough services to offer the basics - hotels, hostels, restaurants catering to a younger set of hippy rastafa types. At night with the high tide there is no beach.
From Canoa take a bus to Penderales ($3) to the temporary bus station set up just outside town. The main terminal is still devastated from the earthquake. From Penderales take another bus to Chamanga ($2) and have them leave you on the road to Mompiche. At the intersection there are collectivos waiting to take people to town ($1).
Manta is an easy bus trip from Cuenca. You have to take a bus from Cuenca over the mountains, past the Cana National Park which sits in the clouds, and go to Guayaquil, a 4 hour - $7 trip.
Guayaquil is a huge port town. I was there back in the 1970s waiting a few days for a military plane to take to take me to the Galapagos. It's a big city. The bus terminal is as big as a major airport. On the third floor or the terminal there's a bus company that goes to Mantanita and Olon - another 4 hour - $7 trip.