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Tuesday, December 24th 2024

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Tagged Pages Archive | South America

2024
25
November
Halifax to Bogota, Colombia - $479 to $534 CAD roundtrip [Business Class for $1074]

Bogota, Colombia

Delta has dropped the price of their flights from Halifax to Bogota, Colombia down to $479 CAD roundtrip including taxes.

The flights have 2 stops each way in New York and Atlanta.

You can also find flights for a similar price with Air Canada and LATAM through Montreal and Miami.

You can also find Business Class fares from Halifax to Bogota for $1074-$1128 CAD roundtrip.

UPDATE: Dates as far away as October 2025 are available for $534 roundtrip.

Availability for travel

October, November, December 2024

January, February, March, June, late August, September, October 2025

How to find and book this deal

1. Start with the following Google Flights search:

Google Flights: Halifax to Bogota, Colombia

Google Flights: Halifax to Bogota, Colombia [Business Class]

- Click on the departure date box to open up the calendar view and browse for cheap date combinations.

- Adjust the trip length at the bottom.

- Look for the dates that are $480-$518 roundtrip

2. Go to Skyscanner

3. Search for a flight from Halifax (YHZ) to Bogota, Colombia (BOG)

- Try the same dates you found on Google Flights.

In February I had the opportunity to visit Colombia for the first time

It's a decent sized country and getting around isn't always quick or easy.

The red squares in the pic below show how little I covered in 2.5 weeks...



When researching where to go, I found there were about 10 areas in Colombia that I would have liked to see but it quickly became apparent I would have time for about 3.

In the end after some tough decisions I went with:

1. Salento / Filandia area. (hummingbirds, thermal baths, wax palm trees, condors, Valle de Cocora hike, howler monkeys, coffee tours)

2. Medellin

3. Eastern Plains (pink river dolphins, giant anteaters)

Area #1: Salento / Filandia area.

Rented a car in Pereira for exploring this area.

Driving in Colombia: roads were usually pretty good, with nice pavement. A ton of motorcycles and scooters on the roads, so you do need to be constantly checking your mirrors and shoulder checking. I always tried to avoid going *through* any major population centers, and drove around the outskirts.

Area #2: Medellin

Uber is very cheap in Medellin (Uber is technically illegal in Colombia, but everyone uses it, along with Cabify and Didi).

Great botanical garden (iguanas, turtles). Lots of great restaurants and rooftop hangouts.

Area #3: Eastern Plains

Pretty remote, and not many foreigners. There are some off the grid farmstays.

Colombia Entry Tips

- Don't forget to fill out the online Colombia entry form (Check-mig - Migración Colombia) before your flight to Colombia.

- Upon arrival in Colombia, Canadians are required to pay the equivalent of $85 CAD for entry (before blaming Colombia, it's actually because *we* charge Colombians this amount for entry into Canada).

- After landing at BOG airport I found that there weren't any signs about a special line for Canadians to pay this fee, although I remembered reading that there was supposed to be a sign or a Canadian flag. After asking I was told to go to the second kiosk from the left, seemingly the only one with a credit card machine for paying this fee.

In my case, I was coming from Aruba, and there weren't any other Canadians, so I was the only one at this special kiosk. It still took about 20 minutes for some reason, and made me wonder how long it takes when a plane full of Canadians arrives from Toronto or Montreal.

Getting Around Colombia

- Internal flights are cheap, and Colombia has a *lot* of airports (see map below). Clic Air is the most common low cost carrier and I had no issues.

- I took a couple of longer distance buses, and they were fine, but count on delays. Depending on where you are, I found that there wasn't always a bus 'terminal', especially in smaller places. Sometimes the bus from A to B is just parked somewhere seemingly random in town and it's up to you to know where to find it. Trust me, Googling won't help. The best way is just to tell a taxi driver that you want the bus to X destination and they usually know exactly where to take you in town to catch the bus.

Colombia: Cell Phones, e-Sims, and Apps

- Claro is known for having the best cell coverage in Colombia, especially outside the cities. The Airalo e-sim for Colombia is actually using Movistar as your provider. Ubigi on the other hand, uses Claro.

I decided to try both, and found that both Airalo and Ubigi worked pretty much the same throughout my trip. They both worked well, and there were a handful of times where one would work, and the other wouldn't, and vice versa, but that was very rare.

- Colombians use WhatsApp for *everything* (restaurant reservations, hotel reservations, booking tours, everything).

WhatsApp has built in translation, although sometimes I found that it was better to copy/paste into Google Translate, which seemed to have better translations.

- Install the Merlin app before you go: Colombia has a LOT of bird species (the most in the world), so it's kind of fun/helpful to use Merlin to identify them by sound and see how many are around you.

Colombia: My Itinerary and Google Map of Research

Here's a rough itinerary along with the hotels, airbnbs, and rental car companies that I used...

https://tinyurl.com/3h8frv8r

And here's a Google Map with the result of what I researched for all 10 areas of Colombia, including: sights, airports, nice towns, hikes, wildlife, well reviewed accommodations, etc.

https://tinyurl.com/2cf6b3vm

Is Colombia Safe?

The name 'Colombia' carries a lot of baggage along with its name, but these days you find it full of digital nomads and it's becoming a pretty popular place for Canadians to visit. It feels like it might not be long before it's one of those places a person wishes they had visited before it became too popular.

The Salento/Filandia area has tourists from all over and felt as safe as anywhere else. I saw plenty of solo backpackers. In the larger cities like Medellin and Bogota I'm sure there are some sketchy neighbourhoods.

In Medellin I stayed in Poblado which is known for being a nice area with great restaurants and then Ubered to the area in the north with the botanical garden, science center, etc. I also took the Metro train to the outskirts, where you can transfer to a cable car (part of the metro) and climb the hills up to Parque Arví. The Metro was very nice and clean, a lot better than most in North America really.

If there's one place where things felt gritty it was Bogota. There's certainly a lot of graffiti everywhere which doesn't help, and while taxing/Ubering around it felt like one moment I would be in an area thinking 'Oh this is kind of nice' and then the next moment 'Ok, this isn't so nice.' It could change quickly. Chapinero and La Candaleria are known for being two of the nicer areas. But again, I didn't actually see any crime, and for the most part it just felt like being in any big city.

I know that Medellin does apparently have some foreigners coming in looking for sex and drugs, and that always leads to problems. Personally as someone not looking for either of those things, Colombia felt pretty similar to anywhere else in terms of safety.



screenshot from Skyscanner



screenshot from the Delta website



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