Colombia Uncovered | Coffee, Coasts & The Lost City — 14 or 22 Days

📍 Colombia | Guided | All Essentials

Choose 14 or 22 days to uncover Colombia’s coffee country, Caribbean coasts, and the Lost City (Ciudad Perdida). Wander Cartagena’s old town, hike Tayrona trails, and tackle a multi-day jungle trek with Indigenous guides—plus Medellín and Cocora Valley on the longer route.

Bogotá → Cartagena  → Santa Marta

Bogotá → Cartagena → Santa Marta

Moderate | Ages 12+

Moderate | Ages 12+

Hotels/Camping

Hotels/Camping

200% CO₂  Offset

200% CO₂  Offset

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Colombia Uncovered | Coffee, Coasts & The Lost City — 14 or 22 Days
Tour Overview

Colombia Uncovered | Coffee, Coasts & The Lost City — 14 or 22 Days

Trace Colombia from Caribbean sands to Sierra Nevada jungle trails and into highland cities where coffee is a craft and street art sings. Choose 14 days for a coast-to-jungle arc capped by the Lost City (Ciudad Perdida) trek, or step up to 22 days to add Bogotá, Medellín, and Cocora Valley’s towering wax palms.

Expect colourful old towns, Tayrona’s jungle-to-beach paths, and a multi-day trek guided by Indigenous teams to an ancient city hidden in the hills. Your CEO handles the logistics; you choose the tempo—plaza wanders, river swims, valley hikes, and the kind of meals you’ll talk about on the flight home.

Quick Facts

  • Duration: 14 or 22 days (two itineraries)

  • Style: Small-group Classic | Standard service level

  • Difficulty: Demanding (4/5) — heat, humidity, long jungle days on the Lost City trek

  • Start/Finish:

    • 14-day: Cartagena → Santa Marta

    • 22-day: Bogotá → Santa Marta

  • Transport: Private vehicles, 4×4 access to trailheads, walking; internal flight on 22-day

  • Stays: Hotels/guesthouses; rustic camps (hammocks or bunks) on the Lost City trek

  • Age: 12+ | Group size: Small group (max ~16)

Trip Highlights

  • Cartagena city walk through walled-city lanes and plazas

  • Tayrona National Park guided hike (jungle to coves)

  • Lost City (Ciudad Perdida) trek with Indigenous guides (multi-day, river crossings, stone steps)

  • G for Good: Visit to the Katanzama community (learn living culture and stewardship)

  • Taganga seaside orientation and coastal downtime

  • Cocora Valley wax-palm hike & Salento coffee-country vibes (22-day only)

  • Medellín city tour & transformation stories (22-day only)

  • Hacienda stay in the coffee region (22-day only)

Good to Know

  • Trek conditions: Expect hot, humid days, steep ascents/descents, river crossings, and very basic camps (shared hammocks or bunks; mosquito nets provided). Main luggage stays in town; carry a small duffel/daypack on trek.

  • Meals: Most breakfasts included; trek meals covered on trail. Exact counts vary by option (more inclusions on the 22-day).

  • Seasonal note: Tayrona NP has scheduled closures; when closed, the route swaps to Minca + Tayronaka + Don Diego River experiences with no loss of value.

  • Health & safety: Hydration, electrolytes, and broken-in footwear are essential. Insects love jungles; bring repellent and long, light layers.

  • Baggage: Soft luggage packs best in vehicles; keep your daypack lean for steamy trail sections.

Booking Terms & Conditions

14-DAY | Live Dates & Availability
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22-DAY | Live Dates & Availability
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Itinerary
Days 1 & 2 | Capital Kick-off & Into Coffee Country

Day 1 | Bogotá Welcome

Arrive at any time and ease into Colombia’s high-altitude capital. In the evening, meet your CEO and travel crew at the Welcome Moment, swap first hellos, then (optionally) wander out for a casual local dinner—think ajiaco, arepas, and your first Colombian coffee done right.

Stay: Hotel (Bogotá; e.g., Hotel Regina or similar).

Included meals: None.

Included moment: Welcome Moment – meet your CEO and group.

Day 2 | Bogotá → Armenia: Hacienda Nights

Breakfast, then a short flight lands you in the Coffee Axis. Roll through green folds to a traditional hacienda set amid plantations—wide verandas, birdsong, and mountain air. Unpack, breathe, and sink into the slower rhythm of coffee country.

Stay: Hacienda/Hotel (near Armenia; e.g., Hostal Mi Monaco or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Transport: Flight Bogotá → Armenia.

Days 3 & 4 | Markets, Coffee Craft & Cocora’s Wax Palms

Day 3 | Armenia: Market Wander & Coffee Farm Tour

Start local at Armenia Market—colour-splashed fruit pyramids, flower stalls, and snack counters buzzing with morning trade. Later, tour a coffee farm in Calarcá from shrub to roast: walk the rows, see processing up close, and taste the good stuff at origin. Lazy hacienda evening to close.

Stay: Hacienda/Hotel (near Armenia).

Included meals: Breakfast, Lunch.

Included activities: Armenia market visit; Coffee farm tour.

Day 4 | Cocora Valley Hike → Salento

Trace a 2–3 hr trail through Cocora Valley, where wax palms spear the sky and cloudforest mists cling to ridgelines. Continue to Salento—balconied streets, artisan cafés, and a soft Andean pace. Explore on foot, camera handy.

Stay: Hotel (Salento; e.g., El Rancho de Salento or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Transport: Private vehicle Armenia → Salento (~30 min).

Days 5 & 6 | Road to Medellín & Stories of Transformation

Day 5 | Salento → Medellín: Across the Andes

Settle in for a scenic 8–9 hr public bus ride as valleys give way to the broad Aburrá basin. Arrive in Medellín by evening—plazas alive, skyline ringed by hills, and endless places for a relaxed bite.

Stay: Hotel (Medellín; e.g., Hotel Seven Inn Medellín or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Transport: Public bus Salento → Medellín.

Day 6 | Medellín City Tour & Free Time

Unpack Medellín’s story on a guided neighbourhood tour—public art, green parks, and the civic projects that reshaped the city. Afternoon is yours: museums and murals, viewpoints and café crawls, or ride the Metrocable for wide-angle sunset views.

Stay: Hotel (Medellín).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Included activity: Medellín city tour.

Optional extras (own expense): Metrocable; sightseeing bus; day trip to El Peñol/Guatapé.

Days 7 & 8 | Medellín Your Way & Fly to the Caribbean - 14 Day Tour Starts Here

Day 7 | Medellín Free Day

Dial the pace to suit: head for Guatapé (colour-blocked zócalos and the famous rock), join a food tour, or slow it down with plazas, bakeries, and good coffee.

Stay: Hotel (Medellín).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Optional extras (own expense): Guatapé day trip; museums; food tour.

Day 8 | Medellín → Cartagena: Walled-City Afternoons

Morning flight to Cartagena. A CEO orientation walk (30–60 min) maps out ATMs, plazas, and local tips. Then roam ramparts and shaded squares; by dusk, the walled city hums with buskers, music, and sea breezes.

For 14-Day Tour Guests. Arrive at any time and meet your C.E.O for introduction

Stay: Hotel (Cartagena; e.g., Hotel Don Pedro de Heredia or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Transport: Flight Medellín → Cartagena.

Days 9 & 10 | Cartagena at Leisure & UNESCO City Tour

Day 9 | Cartagena Free Day

Your Discover Moment: boat to the Rosario Islands, climb Castillo de San Felipe, browse the Gold Museum, or simply wander the old town with stop-offs for jugo natural and patacones.

Stay: Hotel (Cartagena).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Optional extras (own expense): Rosario islands day trip; fortress entry; museums.

Day 10 | Cartagena City Tour

See Cartagena’s highlights on a 4–5 hr guided tour by private transport: Clock Tower, Plaza Bolívar, Castillo de San Felipe, hilltop Convento de la Popa, plus an old-town walk between San Pedro Claver and Santo Domingo. Afternoon free to chase that Caribbean vibe. (Hot water is uncommon on the coast—expect cool showers.)

Stay: Hotel (Cartagena).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Included activity: Cartagena city tour.

Days 11 & 12 | Into the Sierra: Minca & Katanzama Community

Day 11 | Cartagena → Minca: Mountain Air

Private vehicle to Minca (~4 hrs). The heat eases as the road curls into the Sierra foothills. Free time for café patios by the river, bird-spotting, or a sunset wander. (If the group is full, multi-share rooms may be used here due to property size.)

Stay: Hotel (Minca; e.g., Hotel Minca La Casona or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Transport: Private vehicle Cartagena → Minca.

Day 12 | Katanzama Community Visit → Tayrona Area

Meet the Katanzama (Arhuaco) community near Tayrona: a welcome at the ceremonial centre, stories of land stewardship and resilience, and a textile-weaving demonstration—lunch included. A short hop brings you to a lodge just outside the park; hammocks, garden paths, and ocean air fill the afternoon.

Stay: Hotel (Tayrona area; e.g., Posada Villa Margarita or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast, Lunch.

Included activity: Katanzama community visit.

Days 13 & 14 | Tayrona Trails & Taganga Seaside

Day 13 | Tayrona National Park: Jungle-to-Beach

A 3–4 hr moderate guided hike through Tayrona—macaws overhead, forest shade, and coves where jungle meets sand—lunch included. Return to the lodge to unwind. (If Tayrona is closed on your dates, you’ll visit Taironaka Park for Kogi culture, river time, and museum insight.)

Stay: Hotel (Tayrona area).

Included meals: Breakfast, Lunch.

Included activity: Tayrona NP excursion & hike.

Day 14 | Tayrona Area → Taganga: Fisher-Village Vibes

Short transfer to Taganga. A CEO orientation walk maps the malecón, beach, and cafés; then it’s your time—fresh seafood, soft sand, and an easy Caribbean sunset.

Stay: Hotel (Taganga; e.g., Ocean Taganga or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Transport: Private vehicle Tayrona → Taganga.

Days 15 & 16 | Taganga & Santa Marta: Coast Time Before the Trek

Day 15 | Taganga Free Day → Santa Marta

Snorkel in clear shallows, laze with a cold jugo, or daydream from a beachfront café. Late day, transfer to Santa Marta and (optionally) head out with the group after dark.

Stay: Hotel (Santa Marta; e.g., Hotel Tayromar or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Transport: Private vehicle Taganga → Santa Marta (15–30 min).

Optional extras (own expense): Snorkelling; beach time.

Day 16 | Santa Marta Free Day

Prep for the trek: dial in snacks and electrolytes, pack light layers, and enjoy a gentle coastal day.

Stay: Hotel (Santa Marta).

Included meals: Breakfast.

Days 17 & 18 | Lost City Trek: River Valleys & Jungle Camps

Day 17 | Santa Marta → El Mamey → Ricardito Camp (Trek Day 1)

4×4 ride into the hills to El Mamey (Machete Pelao) for lunch, then start the Lost City trek: 4–5 hrs / 7–8 km along the Buritaca River, through farms and humid jungle to Ricardito Camp (Vista Hermosa). If skies are clear, sunsets here are next-level.

Stay: Jungle camp (hammocks or rustic bunks; mosquito nets provided).

Included meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner.

Transport: 4×4 Santa Marta → trailhead.

Day 18 | Ricardito → Teyuna Paraiso Camp (Trek Day 2)

Push deeper into the Sierra: ~8 hrs / 14–15 km with steep climbs from the riverbed and long green corridors of shade. Pass circular Kogi huts and small clearings before reaching Teyuna Paraiso Camp—river rinse, dinner, sleep to jungle sounds.

Stay: Jungle camp (hammocks or rustic bunks).

Included meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner.

Days 19 & 20 | The Lost City & Return Through the Green

Day 19 | Lost City Summit → Mumake Camp (Trek Day 3)

Ascend 1,200 ancient stone steps to Ciudad Perdida (Teyuna). Walk sacred terraces as your guide shares the story of the Tayrona—most of the city still sleeps beneath the forest. After lunch and a cooling river stop, descend toward Mumake Camp. ~8–9 hrs / 8–9 km today (mostly downhill after the site).

Stay: Jungle camp (hammocks or rustic bunks).

Included meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner.

Day 20 | Mumake → Las Cascadas (Trek Day 4)

Break camp early and follow the familiar trail back through banana groves, Kogi communities, and open grasslands to Las Cascadas (Ricardito). If the weather plays nice, expect another stellar jungle sunset. ~3–4 hrs / 8–9 km.

Stay: Jungle camp (hammocks or rustic bunks).

Included meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner.

Days 21 & 22 | Back to the Coast & Farewell

Day 21 | Las Cascadas → El Mamey → Santa Marta (Trek Day 5)

Final stretch 5–6 hrs / 7–8 km back to Machete Pelao, then 4×4 out to Santa Marta. Hot shower, clean clothes, and a slow afternoon to celebrate fresh legs and big views.

Stay: Hotel (Santa Marta; e.g., Hotel Tayromar or similar).

Included meals: Breakfast, Lunch.

Transport: 4×4 trailhead → Santa Marta.

Day 22 | Santa Marta Departure

Depart at any time—filled with sea air, jungle sounds, and a new respect for ancient stone steps.

Included meals: Breakfast.

Key Tour Info

Route Map
Food & Accommodation

Where You’ll Be Staying & What You’ll Be Eating

Where You’ll Be Staying

  • Night 1 — Bogotá: Hotel in a central district (multi-share possible). Walkable to cafés, ATMs, and the evening meet-up.
  • Nights 2–3 — Coffee Region (Armenia/Calarcá): Traditional hacienda amid coffee fincas; verandas, gardens, mountain air.
  • Night 4 — Salento: Hotel/guesthouse near the plaza—easy for cafés and craft shops.
  • Nights 5–7 — Medellín: Hotel in a lively neighbourhood with access to the Metro/Metrocable.
  • Nights 8–10 — Cartagena: Hotel inside/near the walled city; expect colonial ambience and cool showers (hot water uncommon on the coast).
  • Night 11 — Minca: Small hotel/guesthouse in the Sierra foothills; birdsong, river breeze. (If the group is full, multi-share rooms may be used due to property size.)
  • Nights 12–13 — Tayrona Area: Jungle lodge just outside the park; hammocks, gardens, ocean air.
  • Night 14 — Taganga: Hotel near the malecón; sunset over the bay.
  • Nights 15–16 — Santa Marta: Hotel close to the seafront and old town.
  • Nights 17–20 — Lost City Trek: Jungle camps (shared hammocks or rustic bunks, mosquito nets provided; basic facilities, cold-water washes, generator power where available).
  • Night 21 — Santa Marta: Hotel to regroup post-trek.
  • Rooms & facilities: Simple Standard service level. Expect Wi-Fi in cities/towns; fans/air-con on the coast; cooler nights inland. Luggage storage in Santa Marta before the trek; carry a small duffel/daypack to camps.

What You’ll Be Eating

  • Included meals: 21 Breakfasts, 8 Lunches, 4 Dinners (more inclusions on trek days and specific cultural days; see day-to-day).
  • Style & examples:Breakfasts: Hotel/guesthouse spreads—fruit, breads, eggs where offered, hot drinks (good coffee countrywide).On-trek meals: Hearty, simple dishes prepared at camp (rice, beans, vegetables, chicken/beef/eggs, fresh fruit) to keep energy high.Coast days: Fresh seafood, patacones, ceviches, arepas de huevo—mostly own choice so you can sample widely.Coffee region: Farm-to-cup tastings; countryside lunches on activity days.
  • Dietaries: Common needs can usually be accommodated with advance notice, including on the trek (vegetarian/vegan/gluten-light). Bring favourite snacks if your diet is very specific.
  • Hydration: Safe water refills available regularly in towns and at many accommodations; on the trek your team will manage treated/drinking water—carry two 1L bottles or a 2–3L bladder.
  • Notes: Alcohol is own expense (BYO where permitted). On the Caribbean coast, cold showers are typical and refreshing after hot days.
What's Included & What's Not

✅ What’s Included

Core (both 14 & 22 days)

  • CEO throughout + local/Indigenous guides where required
  • G for Good: Katanzama (Arhuaco) community visit with textile weaving demo + lunch
  • Tayrona National Park guided hike (lunch included) — contingency to Taironaka Park during official closures
  • Taganga orientation walk
  • Lost City (Ciudad Perdida) 5-day trek with permits, camps (shared hammocks or rustic bunks, mosquito nets), and trek meals as listed
  • Private vehicles, 4×4 to/from Lost City trailhead, public transport where specified
  • Park/site entrances where included in the day-to-day
  • Luggage storage in Santa Marta during the trek

22-Day Option (Bogotá → Santa Marta) — additional inclusions

  • Welcome Moment (Bogotá)
  • Flight Bogotá → Armenia and flight Medellín → Cartagena
  • Hacienda stay (2 nights) in the Coffee Region
  • Armenia market visit & Coffee farm tour (Calarcá) with tastings
  • Cocora Valley hike & time in Salento
  • Public bus Salento → Medellín
  • Medellín city/neighbourhood tour (transformation focus)
  • Cartagena CEO orientation + Cartagena city tour (walled city, Convento de la Popa, Castillo de San Felipe, key plazas)
  • Meals: 21 breakfasts, 8 lunches, 4 dinners

14-Day Option (Cartagena → Santa Marta) — what’s included

  • Cartagena CEO orientation + Cartagena city tour (walled city, Convento de la Popa, Castillo de San Felipe, key plazas)
  • Taganga orientation, Tayrona NP guided hike (with lunch), Katanzama visit (with lunch), and the full Lost City 5-day trek
  • Surface transport only (no domestic flights): private vehicles, public buses where used, and 4×4 to/from trailhead
  • Meals: 13 breakfasts, 7 lunches, 4 dinners

🚫 What’s Not Included

Applies to both options

  • International flights (to trip start / from trip end)
  • Airport transfers (arrival/departure) unless specified
  • Travel insurance (strongly recommended)
  • Visas/entry documents and associated fees (as applicable)
  • Optional activities not listed as included (e.g., Rosario Islands boat day, Guatapé/El Peñol day trip, snorkelling in Taganga, museum entries, food tours, Metrocable rides)
  • Meals & drinks not specified as included; personal drinks (alcohol is own expense)
  • Personal trekking gear for the Lost City (see What to Pack)
  • Laundry, phone/Wi-Fi charges, souvenirs and other personal expenses
  • Tips/gratuities for CEO, drivers, porters, and local guides (at your discretion)

Option-specific notes

  • 22-Day: Domestic flights are included (Bogotá → Armenia; Medellín → Cartagena) — checked-bag limits apply; excess fees are not included.
  • 14-Day: No domestic flights included; route runs entirely by surface transport plus 4×4 to/from the trek.
Weather Expectations

Seasonal Weather Expectations

Overview
This route spans high-altitude Bogotá, the Coffee Axis (Armenia/Salento/Cocora), Medellín, and the Caribbean coast (Cartagena → Minca → Tayrona → Taganga/Santa Marta), plus a multi-day jungle trek to the Lost City. Near the equator, temps are steady; rainfall and altitude drive the feel. Pack light, quick-dry layers you can mix and match.

Rainfall rhythm (rule of thumb)

  • Wetter windows: Apr–Jun and Sep–Nov (Andean slopes and jungle).
  • Drier windows: Dec–Mar and Jul–Aug (showers still possible).
  • Caribbean coast gets brief downpours any month; mountains see afternoon showers and cooler nights.

By Region

  • Bogotá (~2,600 m)Temp: ~10–20 °C; nights 8–12 °C.Rain: Peaks Apr–May & Oct–Nov; light drizzle possible anytime.Feel: High-altitude UV + cool breeze—carry a warm mid-layer and sun protection.
  • Coffee Axis — Armenia/Salento & Cocora (1,500–2,400 m)Temp: ~14–24 °C; nights 12–16 °C.Rain: Frequent mist/showers; trails can be muddy (Cocora).Feel: Lush, cooler than the coast. Waterproofs and sturdy footwear pay off.
  • Medellín / Aburrá Valley (1,500–1,800 m)Temp: ~17–26 °C (“eternal spring”); evenings 16–19 °C.Rain: Short, clearing showers—more in Apr–May & Oct–Nov.Feel: Very comfortable; a light rain shell is smart most months.
  • Caribbean Coast — Cartagena / Taganga / Santa Marta (sea level)Temp: ~25–32 °C; nights 24–27 °C.Rain: Heavier Sep–Nov; Dec–Mar tends drier.Feel: Hot, humid, and sunny; seek shade, hydrate, and expect cool (not hot) showers.
  • Minca (650–700 m) & Tayrona area (coast + jungle)Temp: ~20–30 °C; fresher mornings in Minca, warm/steamy by midday.Rain: Regular showers; jungle stays damp under canopy.Feel: Jungle humidity; dusk mosquitoes—long, light layers help.
  • Lost City Trek — Buritaca River valleys (200–1,200 m)Temp: Hot & humid: days 24–31 °C; nights 20–24 °C.Rain: Showers likely in wetter seasons; river levels can rise after heavy rain.Feel: Steep, sweaty, and rewarding—expect mud, river crossings, and slick stone steps.

Sun, Wind & UV

  • UV is strong everywhere, even on cool Andean days—hat, sunglasses, SPF 30+.
  • Coastal breezes help heat; mountain valleys can funnel gusty winds near passes.

Daylight

  • Near-equatorial: ~11.5–12.5 hours of daylight year-round. Early starts = cooler hikes and calmer sites.

Trail & Conditions Notes (Cocora + Lost City)

  • Surfaces range cobbles/boardwalks → dirt/mud → stone steps. After rain, expect slick sections.
  • Carry a light waterproof, packable mid-layer, dry bag for phone/camera, and electrolytes.
  • For the trek, plan on two 1L bottles or a 2–3L bladder, quick-dry socks, and foot care for humid conditions.
⭐ Reviews
What To Pack

What to Pack

Bags & carry

  • Soft duffel/backpack (50–70 L) for main luggage.
  • Small trek bag (20–30 L) for the Lost City (your main bag stays in Santa Marta).
  • Dry bags / zip sacks (3–10 L) for clothes, electronics, and snacks on wet days.

Documents & money

  • Passport, required visa/entry docs, travel insurance (digital + printed).
  • Credit/debit card + small COP cash for markets/tips.
  • Copies of key docs stored separately.

Footwear

  • Broken-in hiking shoes/boots with tread (trail runners OK if you’re used to them).
  • Light sandals/flip-flops for showers/camps.
  • Hiking socks (merino/synthetic, 4–6 pairs) + blister kit (Compeed/tape).
  • Optional: Trekking poles (collapsible) for the Lost City steps.

Clothing (quick-dry everything)

  • 3–4 quick-dry tees + 1–2 long-sleeve sun layers.
  • 1–2 hiking shorts, 1 light long pant (convertibles handy).
  • Light mid-layer (fleece) for Bogotá/coffee region evenings.
  • Waterproof shell (hooded) + light rain pants (Cocora/Tayrona showers).
  • Sleepwear for warm, humid nights at camp.
  • Swimwear (coast, rivers, hot days).
  • Buff/neck gaiter, cap/sun hat, light beanie (Bogotá can be cool).

Trek-specific (Lost City)

  • Head torch (+ spare batteries).
  • 2 × 1 L bottles or 2–3 L bladder (treated water provided at camps).
  • Electrolyte tablets/sachets (1–2 per trekking day).
  • Light towel (microfibre).
  • Sleeping bag liner (hammocks/bunks have nets; liner adds comfort/hygiene).
  • Insect repellent (DEET/picaridin) + after-bite.
  • Small first-aid kit (pain relief, plasters, antiseptic, rehydration salts).
  • Personal meds (incl. motion sickness for winding roads/4×4).
  • Silicone earplugs + eye mask (jungle camps can be lively at night).
  • Compact clothesline/pegs (things won’t fully dry—aim to manage damp).

Sun & hygiene

  • Sunscreen SPF 30+, lip balm SPF, after-sun.
  • Hand sanitiser, wet wipes, toilet paper (small roll in zip bag).
  • Basic toiletries (biodegradable where possible).
  • Small laundry soap for sink washes in towns.

Tech & power

  • Power bank (10–20k mAh); charging cable(s).
  • Universal adapter (Type A/B, 110–120 V).
  • Phone in a waterproof pouch; optional compact camera.

Nice-to-haves

  • Binoculars (birds in Minca/Tayrona).
  • Gaiters (useful in muddy Cocora/Lost City sections).
  • Reusable mug/spork for camp comfort.
  • Notebook/pen for community/coffee notes.

Packing notes

  • Aim carry-on weight for the trek bag—humid climbs feel heavier.
  • Expect cool showers on the Caribbean coast; they’re a blessing after hot days.
  • The 22-day version includes internal flights—bag limits can be tighter; pack light and soft.
Local Insights

Local Insights

  • Coffee is culture, not just caffeine: In the Coffee Axis, “un tinto” is a small black coffee. Try both a farm pour-over and a cheap-and-cheerful tinto from a corner café to taste the spectrum.
  • Cocora = cooler, muddier: Trails sit higher and stay damp. Start early, wear waterproof shoes, and expect slick bridges and cow-friendly mud (it’s their valley too).
  • Medellín’s “eternal spring” isn’t code for dry: Afternoon showers blow through fast—carry a light shell and enjoy the fresh air they leave behind.
  • Cartagena showers run cool by design: On the Caribbean coast, hot water is uncommon. After a humid day, that cool rinse is the post-sunset reset you didn’t know you needed.
  • Tayrona closures are intentional: Indigenous communities ask the park to “rest” at set times. If your dates align, the Taironaka/Kogi alternative isn’t a downgrade—lean in, it’s culturally rich and crowd-light.
  • Katanzama etiquette: Follow the local guide’s cues, ask before photos, and consider buying hand-woven textiles—it directly supports the community that’s hosting you.
  • Lost City reality check (the good kind): It’s hot, humid, and steep with river crossings and 1,200 stone steps. Pace yourself, sip electrolytes, and use two trekking poles if knees are fussy. A liner in hammocks/bunks = better sleep.
  • Feet win the trek: Rotate quick-dry socks, air feet at lunch, tape hotspots early. A tiny foot powder works miracles in jungle humidity.
  • Water wisdom: Camps provide treated water—carry 2–3 L capacity. On trail, sip steadily, don’t chug; cramps love heroes.
  • Cash & connectivity: ATMs are easy in Bogotá, Medellín, Cartagena, Santa Marta; rarer near the trek. Pull out in cities and bring small notes for snacks/tips. Expect patchy signal around Tayrona and none on much of the trek.
  • Street food, done smart: Follow busy stands, watch it cooked hot, and go for fresh juices (ask sin hielo if you skip ice). In Cartagena, try arepa de huevo; in Medellín, buñuelos with coffee.
  • Safety basics that work: Zipped daypack, phone away on crowded streets, registered taxis/rideshares at night, and CEO guidance for neighbourhoods. On trails, give wildlife space—always.
  • Altitude head start: Bogotá sits at ~2,600 m. Take day one easy, hydrate, and skip all-out workouts until you’ve slept on it.
  • Packing hack for the trek: Line your daypack with a garbage bag or big dry sack. Jungle rain respects no zippers.
  • Sun is sneaky: High UV even on cloudy Andean days. Reapply SPF, wear a brimmed hat, and don’t forget lip balm SPF—sunburned lips equal sad arepa bites.
  • Tipping & change: Small coins/notes help for café tips and porters. Keep a separate small-wallet for day use.
  • Spanish sprinkles go far: Buenos días, por favor, gracias, muy amable. A little courtesy returns a lot of warmth—Colombia’s superpower.
  • Leave No Trace, tropical edition: Stay on trail, pack out wrappers, keep toiletries biodegradable, and respect sacred sites at Teyuna—photos are memories; footprints shouldn’t be.
CO₂ Footprint Report
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CO₂ Footprint

Results Summary (Topline)

  • 14-day itinerary (Cartagena → Santa Marta): ~1.7 tCO₂e per guest | ~27 tCO₂e per tour (assumed 16 guests)
  • 22-day itinerary (Bogotá → Santa Marta): ~2.4 tCO₂e per guest | ~38 tCO₂e per tour (assumed 16 guests)
  • Counter-impact applied: 200% (targets ~3.4 tCO₂e / 4.8 tCO₂e per guest, respectively)
  • Method note: DEFRA-aligned factors with Well-to-Tank (WTT) and Radiative Forcing (RF) = 1.9 for aviation; +10% uncertainty uplift applied. Conservative assumptions throughout.

Purpose

Provide clear, conservative emissions estimates so travellers understand the impact of these itineraries and the scope of our 200% counter-impact.

Tour Header

  • Listing: Colombia Uncovered | Coffee, Coasts & The Lost City — 14 or 22 Days
  • Style: Small-group Classic | Standard service level | Age 12+
  • Regions: Caribbean Coast (Cartagena, Tayrona, Taganga/Santa Marta), Sierra Nevada (Minca, Lost City trek), Andean cities (Bogotá, Medellín) and Coffee Axis (Armenia/Salento/Cocora on 22-day)

Scope & Boundaries (what’s counted)

  • Guest travel to/from tour: Single official feeder hub → start city; end city → feeder hub after tour (open-jaw where applicable).
  • On-tour transport: Private vehicles, public bus segments, 4×4 to/from the Lost City trailhead, walking/urban transit; internal flights where listed (22-day).
  • Accommodation: Hotels/guesthouses/hacienda + jungle camps on trek (HCMI-style proxies).
  • Meals: All meals over trip duration (included and at-own-expense) using a conservative per-meal factor.
  • Activities: Modest allowance for trek support and a typical coastal boat/snorkel option on free days (kept conservative).
  • Excluded: Long-haul beyond the feeder hub; personal shopping; extraordinary add-ons not typical for this route.

Feeder Hub — Single Origin City

  • Miami (MIA) selected as the hub for Caribbean/Andean Colombia circuits (short, frequent connectivity to CTG/BOG/SMR).

Emission Factors & Conservative Defaults

  • Aviation (economy, short/medium-haul): ~0.158 kgCO₂e/pax-km, × RF 1.9, + WTT.
  • Mini-coach/van/public bus/4×4: ~0.09 kgCO₂e/pax-km (smaller vehicles, mixed terrain; WTT included).
  • Accommodation proxies: Hotel/guesthouse ~12 kgCO₂e/night; jungle camp lower but rounded conservatively.
  • Meals: ~2.5 kgCO₂e per meal (production + prep).
  • Small-craft/trek support: ~50 kgCO₂e per guest allowance (applied once).

Activity Data (applied)

14-day (Cartagena → Santa Marta)

  • Aviation (hub routing): MIA → CTG (~1,820 km); SMR → MIA (~1,760 km) → ~3,580 km total
  • Surface: ~1,000 km combined (private vehicles + 4×4 to/from trailhead)
  • Nights: 13 (hotels/guesthouses; no hacienda nights)
  • Meals: ~42 (14×3)
  • Trek: 5 days Lost City (shared camps; all trek meals included day-to-day)

22-day (Bogotá → Santa Marta)

  • Aviation (hub + internal): MIA → BOG (~2,440 km); BOG → AXM (~180 km); MDE → CTG (~640 km); SMR → MIA (~1,760 km) → ~5,020 km total
  • Surface: ~1,700 km combined (incl. Salento → Medellín public bus)
  • Nights: 21 (incl. 2 hacienda + 4 jungle camp nights)
  • Meals: ~63 (22×3)
  • Trek: 5 days Lost City (as above)

Results — Per Guest (rounded)

14-day

  • Aviation (3,580 km; RF+WTT): ~1.10 tCO₂e
  • Surface transport: ~0.10 tCO₂e
  • Accommodation (13 nts): ~0.15 tCO₂e
  • Meals (~42): ~0.11 tCO₂e
  • Trek/boat allowance: ~0.05 tCO₂e
  • Subtotal: ~1.51 tCO₂e
  • +10% uncertainty uplift: ~1.66 tCO₂e
  • Rounded for communication: ~1.7 tCO₂e per guest

22-day

  • Aviation (5,020 km; RF+WTT): ~1.50 tCO₂e
  • Surface transport: ~0.20 tCO₂e
  • Accommodation (21 nts): ~0.24 tCO₂e
  • Meals (~63): ~0.16 tCO₂e
  • Trek/boat allowance: ~0.06 tCO₂e
  • Subtotal: ~2.16 tCO₂e
  • +10% uncertainty uplift: ~2.38 tCO₂e
  • Rounded for communication: ~2.4 tCO₂e per guest

Results — Per Tour (assumed 16 guests)

  • 14-day: ~27 tCO₂e
  • 22-day: ~38 tCO₂e

Assumptions (key)

  • Single-hub model fixed to Miami (MIA) for consistent reporting; numbers will vary with other hubs (NYC/LAX typically higher).
  • Ground factors set high for smaller vehicles, mixed gradients, and variable loads.
  • Meals counted in full (included + own-expense) to avoid underestimation.
  • One small-craft/boat/snorkel allowance included per guest even if not all participate (keeps estimate conservative).
  • +10% uplift covers itinerary variability (weather reroutes, park closures, idling, load factors).

Versioning

  • Method: Zero Trace Standard v1.9 (DEFRA-aligned; WTT included; RF 1.9 for aviation).
  • Date: 2 October 2025.
  • Preparer: Zero Trace (marketplace methodology; not the tour operator).
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Tour FAQ's
How fit do I need to be?

Demanding (4/5). Expect heat, humidity, steep jungle sections, river crossings, and 1,200 stone steps to the Lost City. City walks and Cocora are moderate; the trek is the challenge. If you can comfortably hike 6–8 hrs on consecutive days, you’re set.

How big is the group and who leads it?

Small-group Classic style (typically up to ~16). A Chief Experience Officer (CEO) leads throughout; local/Indigenous guides join for Tayrona/Katanzama/Lost City.

What accommodation is used—and is there camping?

Hotels/guesthouses + hacienda (22-day) most nights. On the Lost City trek (5 days) you’ll sleep in basic jungle camps in shared hammocks or rustic bunks with mosquito nets. No tent camping.

What meals are included—and can you handle dietary needs?

Yes—most breakfasts, several lunches/dinners, and all trek meals (see day-to-day). Common dietaries (veg/vegan/gluten-light) are usually fine with advance notice; bring favourite snacks for the trek.

More FAQ's

What’s the luggage setup for the trek?

Your main bag stays in Santa Marta. Pack a 20–30 L day/duffel for the trek (aim light). Camps provide treated water; carry 2–3 L capacity on trail.

What internal travel is there (buses/flights/4×4)?

Both trips use private vehicles and 4×4 to/from the Lost City trailhead. The 22-day also includes BOG → Armenia and Medellín → Cartagena flights, plus a public bus Salento → Medellín. The 14-day is coast-focused with no internal flight.

Can I book my own room?

A limited My Own Room upgrade may be available (not on jungle-camp nights). Request at booking; it’s subject to availability.

How tough are the camp facilities?

Rustic. Cold-water washes, shared facilities, generator power where available, early starts. A sleeping bag liner, head torch, and earplugs help a lot.

Is Tayrona National Park always open?

No. It closes on fixed dates. When closed, you’ll visit Taironaka Park (Kogi culture, museum, river time) with no loss of value.

What’s the best time to go?

Near-equatorial = steady temps. Drier windows: Dec–Mar & Jul–Aug. Wetter windows: Apr–Jun & Sep–Nov (greener, muddier trails). The trek runs year-round; expect humidity anytime.

Do I need travel insurance and a visa?

Insurance is strongly recommended. Visa/eTA depends on your passport—check before booking flights.

How much cash should I carry—and is there Wi-Fi?

ATMs in Bogotá, Medellín, Cartagena, Santa Marta; scarce near the trek. Carry small COP notes for snacks/tips. Wi-Fi is common in cities, patchy to none in Tayrona/trek areas.

What should I pack?

Quick-dry layers, broken-in hiking shoes, waterproof shell, electrolytes, insect repellent, head torch, and a 2–3 L hydration setup. See the full What to Pack list in this listing.

Is Colombia safe on this route?

These are established travel corridors. Use normal city sense (zipped daypack, rideshares/taxis at night), follow CEO guidance, and give wildlife space.

Are tips included?

No. Tipping is discretionary but appreciated for CEO, drivers, local/Indigenous guides, and trek staff. We can suggest local benchmarks on request.

Can I swim/snorkel on the coast?

Yes—free time around Taganga/Santa Marta often suits a snorkel dip. Always follow local advice on currents and permitted areas.

What’s different between the 14-day and 22-day options?

Both include Cartagena → Tayrona/Taganga/Santa Marta and the Lost City trek. The 22-day adds Bogotá, Coffee Axis (hacienda stay + Cocora/Salento), and Medellín.

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A) "Book with Deposit"

  1. Place a deposit. You’ll pay the deposit at checkout.
  2. Tell us the details. You’ll receive an email asking for your tour name/date, passenger details, and any special requests (room type, extras, dietaries, etc.).
  3. We secure your spots. If everything’s clear, we confirm your booking by email so you can lock flights and plan the rest.
  4. If we need anything (e.g., room configuration, add-on activities), we’ll ask—then issue confirmation once sorted.
  5. Final balance invoice. After confirmation, you’ll be invoiced the remainder in line with the trips booking terms & conditions (each trip/partner has its own timeline but full payment is generally required at least 30 days prior to departure).
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B) Instant confirmation route (selected trips)

  • Some departures use live operator booking calendars. These can deliver instant confirmation inside the operator’s system.
  • If you book this way, the operator’s terms & conditions apply immediately (including payment schedules and change/cancellation rules).

Good to know

  • Each trip may have slightly different deadlines and deposit rules—You can find the terms and conditions for your chosen booking on the listing page.
  • You can still flag special requests after deposit—earlier is better for availability.
What’s your cancellation & refund policy?

Before your booking is confirmed

  • If we can’t confirm your spots after you’ve paid a deposit, we’ll issue a full refund of that deposit.

After your booking is confirmed

  • Cancellations follow the operator’s cancellation schedule (varies by trip and how close you are to departure).
  • Expect possible fees or non-refundable items (e.g., internal flights, permits, certain accommodations).
  • If a refund or credit is due, we’ll process it once the operator releases the funds and pass it back to your original payment method.

Instant-confirmation bookings (live operator calendars)

  • The operator’s T&Cs apply immediately on these. Some departures are non-refundable or have stricter windows.

How to cancel

  • Email us your booking reference, names on the booking, and a one-line request (“Please cancel”).
  • We’ll reply with the exact penalties/refund or credit per your operator before proceeding.

If the operator cancels or significantly changes your trip

  • You’ll be offered an alternative date, a travel credit, or a refund according to that operator’s policy. We’ll advocate for the best outcome for you.

Good to know

  • Refunds are returned to the original payment method; bank/FX fees aren’t usually recoverable.
  • Travel insurance is your friend for recovering non-refundable costs.
  • The earlier you contact us, the better your options typically are.
Can I change dates or transfer my booking?

Short answer: Usually yes, but it depends on the operator’s rules and how close you are to departure.

Date changes

  • We’ll check new-date availability with the operator.
  • If a change is possible, you’ll pay any applicable operator change fee plus any price difference for the new date.
  • The closer to departure, the tighter (and costlier) changes become; some trips treat late changes as a cancel + rebook under the operator’s policy.

Transfer to another person (name change)

  • Many operators allow a name change/transfer up to a certain cut-off.
  • Fees and deadlines vary by operator and services booked (e.g., flights may be non-transferable).

Instant-confirmation bookings

  • If you booked via a live operator calendar, the operator’s T&Cs apply immediately. Some departures are non-changeable or have stricter windows.

How to request a change

  • Email us with your booking reference, preferred new date/person’s details, and any flexibility.
  • We’ll confirm options, fees, and any price differences before making changes.

Pro tips

  • Ask early—more seats = more options, lower fees.
  • Consider travel insurance that covers change/cancellation costs.
  • Always check booking terms and conditions, links displayed on each tour page under the overview.
Are you accredited / is my money protected?

Yes. Your money is protected by our own accreditation and safeguards, plus the protections of our tour partners and the payment methods we use.

Our business safeguards

  • Legally registered business with documented booking & refund policies.
  • Commercial insurance appropriate to our operations.
  • VTIC Quality Tourism Accreditation (Quality Tourism Accredited Business) confirming we meet industry standards for customer service, safety, and risk management.

Operator-level protection

  • We partner only with established operators who maintain their own financial protections and clear refund/credit policies.
  • When you book via a live operator calendar, payment is processed directly by the operator and their protections/terms apply immediately.

How your payment is handled

  • All card payments run through a secure, PCI-compliant gateway; we don’t store your full card details.
  • If you book through a live operator calendar, payment is processed directly into the operator’s system, and their terms & protections apply immediately.

Your legal rights

  • Your purchase is also covered by consumer laws in your country/state (fair trading/refund rights). We reference the applicable jurisdiction on your paperwork.

Extra peace of mind

  • Paying by credit card may add chargeback protection from your card issuer.
  • We strongly recommend travel insurance to cover situations outside operator/consumer protections (your own cancellation, medical, delays).
Do you offer price matching?

Absolutely. Our prices update live from the operator, but if you spot the same tour on the same dates with the same inclusions and terms advertised for less — even in a public sale or promo — we’ll match it.

Already booked? We’ll refund the difference to your original payment method (eligibility applies, based on the final checkout price including taxes/fees from an authorised seller). And yes, the matched price still includes our 200% carbon offset — no dilution of benefits.

Do I need travel insurance?

Not for every trip—but for most travellers, we strongly recommend it

Some itineraries and partner operators do require insurance (especially remote treks, glacier walks, or bookings made via live operator calendars with mandatory cover).

When it’s required

  • Certain partners/departures make insurance compulsory and may ask for proof before departure. If you book one of these, their T&Cs apply immediately.

What good cover includes

  • Medical treatment & emergency evacuation/repatriation (high limits).
  • Trip cancellation/interruption (protects your deposit and balance if plans change).
  • Baggage & travel delay, and supplier default where available.
  • Coverage for all activities on your itinerary (e.g., trekking, glacier hikes, kayaking) and any relevant altitudes/conditions.
  • 24/7 assistance hotline and a clear claims process.

When to buy

  • At booking. That way, cancellation benefits start immediately and you’re covered if something crops up before you travel.

How to share proof

  • Email us your policy certificate (names, policy number, assistance phone).
  • If you booked via an instant-confirmation operator calendar, follow their proof instructions and deadlines exactly.

Are departures guaranteed?

Most departures run as planned, but guarantees depend on the operator and minimum numbers. If there’s a wobble, we’ll tell you fast and give you options.

How it works

  • Minimum group size: Most partners need a minimum number of travellers to confirm a trip.
  • When we confirm: Each operator has a confirmation window (often 30–60 days before departure). We monitor load and update you as status changes.
  • Any listing from "G-Adventures" will be guaranteed to run with a booking

If a trip is under-subscribed

  • We’ll contact you with clear options:

Move to another date (same tour)

Switch to a comparable trip

Full refund of monies paid (per the operator’s terms)

  • Any price differences for new dates/trips will be discussed before you decide.

If a trip is suspended (weather, park closures, strikes, force majeure)

  • First, we’ll look to re-route or adjust (e.g., alternative park, similar activities).
  • If that’s not viable, you can move dates, choose a different trip, or receive a refund/credit according to the operator’s policy.

Our promise

  • Proactive comms: We’ll keep you posted as soon as we know more—no last-minute surprises if we can help it.
  • No pressure choices: You pick the outcome; we handle the admin.
  • Flight advice: Until your tour is confirmed, book flexible/refundable flights or add insurance that covers schedule changes.

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