We tethered the horses at a fence, walked along a switchback track and then headed down a metal staircase over the rocks to a small plateau called La Chaquira. The voice of a woman singing hovered like birds on thermals. I looked at the ground falling precipitously to the river surging through a winding gorge hundreds of metres below. There were coffee plantations on many of the slopes, but how people managed to harvest them without slipping down into the river I couldn’t imagine.
Examining the view, it felt instinctively like a holy place. Jorge E Peña, my guide, pointed at a rock overlooking the gorge. There was a larger than life-sized figure carved in relief with staring eyes and arms raised. I felt a bit like that myself, gazing at this landscape with its distant waterfalls and rushing river. This was the largest of the incised figures and, with help, I started to make out other images dotted around – of humans and animals. This was a ceremonial site of the people who had lived here well over 1,000 years ago.
Carved in stone
I was on the Colombian massif in the Huila province, an outcrop of mountains where the Andes, the world’s longest mountain chain, unwinds like a rope into three cordilleras that make up the mountain ranges of western Colombia. The river below was the Magdalena, the country’s longest, which is over a kilometre wide when it meets the Caribbean in the Colombian seaport of Barranquilla. But I was standing at its youth where it rushes through El Estrecho, a channel in the rocks 2m wide. “In the local language it’s called Guacacallo, ‘the river of tombs’,” Jorge told me.
This story is from the December 2019/January 2020 edition of Wanderlust Travel Magazine.
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This story is from the December 2019/January 2020 edition of Wanderlust Travel Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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