{"id":3218,"date":"2018-01-05T04:59:30","date_gmt":"2018-01-05T04:59:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/onewaytickettoparadise.com\/?p=3218"},"modified":"2018-01-05T04:59:30","modified_gmt":"2018-01-05T04:59:30","slug":"leon-the-city-that-was","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/onewaytickettoparadise.com\/leon-the-city-that-was\/","title":{"rendered":"Le\u00f3n, the city that was"},"content":{"rendered":"
Le\u00f3n or Granada<\/a><\/span>? Pick a side. Mirror mirror on the wall, who’s the prettiest of them all? Whoever keeps asking these questions must have alternative motives. (Like bringing tourists into town?) For there is no contest. None. At least not regarding colonial architecture, preservation, restoration, maintenance, charm, beauty, cleanness and many, many other things. Le\u00f3n doesn’t even stand a chance. It passed its prime long time ago. So, stop asking.<\/p>\n The two cities have been fierce rivals ever since the day they were founded by Spanish colonialists. Be it capital town privileges, number of historic churches, spectacular residences or this or that. It never ends. Until now?<\/p>\n Even though Le\u00f3n is the second largest city in Nicaragua, home to the second oldest University of Central America and the largest cathedral in Central America, political center of Nicaragua, cradle of Nicaraguan nationalism (Sandinista Front) proudly documented on numerous murals, the nation’s intellectual and cultural center attracting many students, artists, poets, and most probably plenty of other things I don’t know about… still, the vibe of the city feels more like a vibe of small provincial village in the middle of nowhere than a prominent city.<\/p>\n I found Le\u00f3n ugly, dirty and poor. Over 200.000 people living in the same dirty grey looking one-story houses on very much the same dirty grey looking streets. Only a few houses have a fresh coat of paint. The rest is… dirty grey. Once you leave the center (I imagine) the only difference you may notice will be different shades of grey. With only a few exceptions, all cars, including police cars, are wrecks that belong in the junkyard and not on the streets. Locals seem to love their local beer more than anything else. Bars begin to fill up first thing in the morning and are busy all day long. What a contrast from smoothie drinking Costa Rican men. The climate is much hotter than in other places I visited with almost no breeze at all.<\/p>\n