Help choose the location of the 2007 Wikitravel Get-together!

Honduras Travel Guide

From Wikitravel

Jump to: navigation, search
noframe
Location
noframe
Flag
Image:ho-flag.png
Quick Facts
Capital Tegucigalpa
Government democratic constitutional republic
Currency lempira (HNL)
Area 112,090 sq km
Population 7,326,496 (July 2006 est.)
Language Spanish, Amerindian dialects
Religion Roman Catholic 97%, Protestant minority
Electricity 110V/60Hz (two-prong North American plug)
Calling Code +504
Internet TLD .hn
Time Zone UTC -6

Honduras [1] is the second biggest country in Central America. It has colonial villages (Gracias, Comayagua), ancient Maya ruins (Copan), natural parks (Moskitia), and Pacific and Caribbean Sea coastline, and the Bay Islands, with great beaches and coral reefs where snorkeling and diving is a must. The country is neighbored by Guatemala to the northwest, El Salvador to the west and Nicaragua to the southeast.

Contents

Regions

Cities

  • Tegucigalpa - The capital and largest city of Honduras (1.5 million). It has international airport and offers connections by plane to San Pedro Sula and La Ceiba, the door to the Bay Islands and the Caribbean Coast.
  • La Ceiba - The door to the Caribbean Coast and the Bay Island. Great beaches, and daily ferries to either Utila and Roatan, where snorkeling and diving is a must.
  • Comayagua - The former capital of the country is today a quiet colonial town with a beautiful cathedral and historical town center.
  • Gracias - This nice colonial mountain town hosts Parque Celaque in which the highest mountain of Honduras and a wonderful cloud forest can be found.
  • Omoa- A small beachfront town with Spanish colonial fortress to the west of Puerto Cortés.
  • Puerto Cortes - The main harbour of Honduras in the Caribbean Coast
  • Puerto Lempira
  • San Lorenzo - The main harbour of the whole Central America in the Pacific Coast. Close to Amapala, the historical port based in the Isla del Tigre.
  • Tela - Turistic city about 1 hour from San Pedro Sula has beautiful coastline.
  • Trujillo - This is where Columbus first set foot on mainland America, founded in 1525, overlooking a beautiful bay with nice beaches against mountainous backdrop with nature reserve.
  • San Pedro Sula - Second city and industrial center in the north of the country. It has international airport and is close by car to Tela and La Ceiba, the door to the Bay Islands and the Caribbean Coast.
  • Santa Rosa de Copán - This city is in the western part of the country, not to be confused with Copán Ruinas (the town, one of the most toursity in Honduras) nor with the actual ruins of Copán.

Other destinations

  • Bay Islands - Útila, Roatán, Guanaja, and the Hog Islands. A natural paradise in the Caribbean Sea where snorkeling and diving is a must.
  • Copán - One of the most impressive ruins of the Maya civilization, known for the quality of its sculpture.
  • Lake Yojoa - The biggest lake in Honduras. It used to be a great spot for fishing but today is too contaminated.

Understand

Honduras is a poor country where tourism is still undeveloped. Good amenities can be found in cities like Tegucigalpa, San Pedro Sula, and La Ceiba but elsewhere conditions can be primitive, especially in the rural areas. You can find good hotels even in small towns if you are willing to pay a bit more (Honduras is not really an expensive country). Nevertheless a visit is worthwhile, especially to the ancient Maya ruins in Copán, the colonial towns of Gracias and Comayagua and the fantastic Caribbean Coast.

Climate

Subtropical in lowlands, temperate in mountains. Natural hazards: extremely susceptible to damaging hurricanes and floods along the Caribbean coast. The small Pacific coast region is susceptible to earthquakes.

Terrain

Mostly mountains in interior, narrow coastal plains. Has only a short Pacific coast but a long Caribbean shoreline, including the virtually uninhabited eastern Mosquito Coast. Experiences frequent, but generally mild, earthquakes. Highest point: Cerro Las Minas 2,870 meters.

History

Part of Spain's vast empire in the New World, Honduras became an independent nation on 15 September 1821.

After two and one-half decades of mostly military rule, a freely elected civilian government came to power in 1982. During the 1980s, Honduras was a haven for the Reagan-sponsored anti-Sandinista contras fighting the Sandinista government of Nicaragua and an ally to Salvadoran government forces fighting against leftist guerrillas.

The country was devastated by Hurricane Mitch in 1998, which killed about 5,600 people and caused almost $1 billion in damage, affecting seriously the development of the country and its main infrastructures.

Get in

By plane

Major international airports with daily flights to Miami and New York are in San Pedro Sula, Tegucigalpa (Toncontin) and Roatan. The main international airlines serving the region are AeroHonduras, TACA, Copa Air, Delta Airlines, Continental Airlines, and American Airlines. Iberia, Spain operates daily flights from Madrid to San Pedro Sula via Guatemala City (connecting with Taca). For interior flights check Isleña, Atlantic and Aerolinas Sosa.

By car

Possible from Guatemala, El Salvador, or Nicaragua. Cars are a good selection, but you must always be careful since the roads are not as well developed but good enough to have a pleasent ride.

By bus

From Guatemala - Tica Bus and Hedmann Alas From Nicaragua - Tica Bus and King Quality From El Salvador - Tica Bus and King Quality

By boat

Boats from Belize come in to the Caribbean ports like Puerto Cortes, but schedules are not regular and cannot be checked through the internet. Cruise ships commonly stop at the Bay Islands, however.

By thumb

Hitchhiking is possible in Honduras, although it might be tricky to leave larger cities because its hard to find the right local bus without good area knowledge.

In rural areas the driver sometimes might expect you to pay him (usually as much as the local bus would have cost). This should rarely be more then 2 USD (40 L).

Hitchhiking is common in rural areas, even for single women, when there is no proper bus connection.

Talk

Spanish is the primary language spoken. English is hardly spoken when leaving the biggest towns or Bay Islands. Native languages (Lenca, Miskitu, Garifuna, among others) are spoken in various parts of the country.

Buy

Handicrafts - Honduras is famous by its Lenca ceramics

Eat

The Honduran "Plato tipico" is the most famous lunch. It consist of rice, beef, fried beans (frijolitos), and fried bananas (tajaditas), and is horrible to your tastebuds.

Other choices are tacos, baleadas, and enchiladas, inherited from the neighbor countries.

Drink

National beers: Salvavida, Port Royal, Imperial and the newest Bahia

Taste Central American rum Flor de Caña (from Nicaragua)

Great "licuados" -fruit juices and milk shakes- (mango, piña, watermelon, banana, etc.)

Sleep

Stay safe

Take special care at night. It is common from time to time for a foreigner to be robbed on the streets of Tegucigalpa at night. Thieves will stake out areas in front of tourist hotels, especially the Hotel Maya in Tegucigalpa. Crime is getting higher, especially in tourist areas. The best tip is not to risk yourself by walking through the poor parts of any towns or taking public transportion. You should cooperate with burglars if one is being robbed. This problem is mainly in big cities. In small towns, robbery is not a great issue. On main cities be sure to never be walking alone (especially at night), but it is definitely better to avoid walking in large cities. The best solution is to travel by car. It is also very important to know that there are parts of the city especially dangerous, and parts which are relatively safe (always ask people).Note, that the situation is completely different in smaller towns. This is type of issues are mainly common on Tegucigalpa, San Pedro Sula and a bit less in La Ceiba. Ask local people about which places are safe and which are not, and follow their advice.

Stay healthy

Purified water is used in big-city hotels and restaurants, but bottled water is definitely recommended for outlying areas.

Malaria occurs in rural areas, Roatán and other Bay Islands.

Dengue fever is endemic in both urban and rural areas.

It is not recommended to buy much food in the streets (people who are selling food just by the sidewalk). Remember Honduran food can be spicy too, so be careful if you are not used to it.

Many travel agencies and different places will tell you that Honduras is a dangerous country concerning illnesses, this is not true. People are just as ill all over Latin America (nothing out of what is normal), just take the necessary precautions. HIV is a problem in Honduras.

Carry a first aid kit and have contact phone numbers with you.

If hiking or spending significant time in the great outdoors, be prepared for a wide range of natural threats and nuisances including snakes, spiders, scorpions, and mosquitoes. On the upswing, however, you can actually pick fruit off the trees.

Respect

Follow the golden rule but do not be duped by the "culture of need". The Hondurans are very friendly but many are poor and uneducated. Demonstrate grace and respect but maintain your awareness.

Cope

Electricity is 110V/60Hz, as in the United States and Canada, however three-prong grounded plugs are not as common, so two-prong adapters come in handy.

Contact

This article is an outline and needs more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. Please plunge forward and help it grow!
In other languages