Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Surfline now has La Libertad surf reports!

No kidding! El Salvador continues to emerge as a surfing destination. Here's Surfline.com's link to the El Salvador surf forecast page:

http://www.surfline.com/reports/report.cfm?id=5801

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Surfing in El Salvador

If you're interested in surfing along El Salvador's coast, I'd recommend you contact Ernesto Vladimir Flores, a surf guide that I met at Casa de Mar. I met him in July 2005 at Casa de Mar while he was guiding another American surfer to breaks all along the coast. He met the surfer at Casa de Mar and if they didn't surf at Sunzal right outside of Casa de Mar, he drove him to breaks up and down the coast. Vladimir spoke English really well, and though I didn't personally use him as a guide, the fellow surfer highly recommended him. On my next surfing trip to El Salvador, I'm defintely going to contact Vladimir. Here's his contact information in case you're interested:

Ernesto Vladimir Flores
Surf Guide
vflores27@hotmail.com
vflores@integra.com.sv
Home: +503 2243-6257
Cell: +503 7815-1106

Note: +503 is El Salvador's country code

- Jeff

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

2006 March Elections in El Salvador

Tim's El Salvador Blog

I just found this great blog from an American election observer in El Salvador. If you're interested in the political happenings on the ground, check this one out.

Monday, March 06, 2006

Casa de Mar




On my second trip to El Salvador, I wanted to go surfing on some breaks that I had only read about in magazines and books. My cab driver from the airport recommended the break at Playa Sunzál. Stephanie looked online, and she found some pictures of a new hotel, Casa de Mar. It was really nice for a reasonable $120/night plus 13% in taxes, so we decided to check it out. Wow, what a find! The hotel had just opened that weekend, and we believe we were the first guests there (we stayed in the Yellow Suite, which had the best deck view of the whole place). The food at Cafe Sunzál, which is at the top of the complex had some great food for about $7-$12/plate for lunch and dinner. The restaurant also had a very solid collection of wines that complimented the meals well. My favorite was the breakfast "plato tipico" (included in the price of the room) which includes eggs, refried beans, rice, pancakes, and bread along with orange juice and coffee. It really hit the spot after surfing.

Speaking of surfing, it rocked! The break at Playa Sunzál is definitely not for beginners. I recommend only going out if you're already comfortable in the water on a surfboard. If you are, then this place is pretty sweet. You can longboard or shortboard on this break. The lines are long, but the breakpoints shift around, so they're a little hard to read. But if you do get one, the ride is pretty awesome. Be sure to go early...like around sunrise. The water is calm and warm (around 80 degrees), and there usually aren't more than a few people in the water. Also, the locals are cool, so it's pretty friendly out there. Even better is that Casa de Mar stocks a whole set of long boards and short boards and rents them for $20/day. For the $20, you can go out on a longboard, come in for breakfast, and then go out with a shortboard later. The $20 lets you rent any board in their collection of about 8 really high quality boards. If you want lessons, I recommend contacting Vladimir Flores (vflores2@hotmail.com or vflores@integra.com.sv). He knows the breaks up and down El Salvador, and he can show you where to go outside of Sunzál including breaks for beginners and more advanced surfers.

The best part of the hotel by far, though, is the staff. Daniel, Ceci, Blanca, Amanda, David, Jimmy, and Ernesto, are super friendly and provide some amazing service without being intrusive. They do everything from bartending to cleaning the rooms to being the wait staff at the restaurant. It's hard to explain in words, but you'll know what I mean if you go there. You'll leave loving these folks. We like to tip them a collective $10/day, so if Stephanie and I stay for 2 nights, we tip them a total of $40 above and beyond the normal 10% tip the bar charges automatically. The service is that good.

After spending five weekends there, we're looking to buy a condo on the beach from Alfonso, the owner of Casa de Mar who is planning to expand the development. We certainly hope that we'll be able to return there at least once per year to just relax and enjoy the warm weather, water, and most of all friendly people of Casa de Mar who truly represent the best of El Salvadoran hospitality.

- Jeff

For Jose


I'd like to dedicate most of what will appear in this blog to Jose Gomez. He is a symbol for the reasons why I keep El Salvador so close to my heart and my memories and why El Salvador has forever changed the way I see the world. Without Jose, most of what I experienced and learned would be a lost.

During my musings I'll try to organize my thoughts and share what impacted me the most throughout my 9 months living in El Salvador. But I can almost guarantee, like any writer, events will jump forward themselves, asking to be told out of order.

I do remember that when I left home for my year abroad someone told me to keep a blog, for those interested in reading what I might encounter. Well, here it is, 18 months later. Please forgive my tardiness.

I'll leave you with this: Jose's first lesson to me was all about Salvadoran slang and how to say things in Spanish that were completely useless. But he taught me how to laugh in another language and communicate with people without knowing exactly what they were saying. We shared a 4 hour bus ride together to visit some communities my 2nd weekend in El Salvador and he patiently worked with me on my vocabulary. At the end of the of the trip I knew I was living in the middle of something that was forever going to change me. I just didn't know how much. I invite you to share it with me as I look back and try to make sense of it all.

-Stephanie

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Welcome to Discover El Salvador!

Hi everyone! Welcome to Jeff and Stephanie's blog on El Salvador. Stephanie spent nine months in El Salvador working at CEBES Fundahmer as a coordinator and liason of solidarity relationships between communities in rural El Salvador and sponsoring communities in the United States, Canada, and Australia. Jeff worked with Santa Clara University to establish an exchange program for engineering students with the Universidád Centroamericana - Jose Simeón Cañas - San Salvador. We met in El Salvador in 2004, and we are still going out! We both share a passion to somehow improve the lives of the people in El Salvador, and we hope that this blog will provide information about El Salvador that will be helpful for others to understand why we are so passionate about dedicating part of our lives to making an impact there. - Stephanie and Jeff