San Juan Puerto Rico
Last week we spent four warm and sunny days in Puerto Rico!
It was while planning this trip that I realized how large Puerto Rico really was, we only explored a teeny tiny portion. We are already talking about making a second trip.
On our first day we arrived in the early afternoon and were happy to hear that our room was already ready.
It was while planning this trip that I realized how large Puerto Rico really was, we only explored a teeny tiny portion. We are already talking about making a second trip.
On our first day we arrived in the early afternoon and were happy to hear that our room was already ready.
When visiting somewhere new I like to try the local cuisine. It was hard in PR. We do not eat pork and not a fan of seafood so it limited our choices a bit.
What we did eat
alcapurrias - green plantain dough stuffed with meat
tostones - deep fried plantains
We started the morning with breakfast at Mercado La Carreta.
and then we headed to our first stop San Cristobal Castle which is a fort and not a castle. Thanks to the Puerto Rican government and the Puerto Rico Tourism company, the fort and all other sites under the US Government Park Service were kept open with their own private funds and free to all visitors.
For those not in the know.. Puerto Rico is a US Territory. I was surprised or maybe not - to learn how many Americans were ignorant of this fact.
Castillo San Cristóbal is considered the largest fortress built in the Americas, built between 1634 and 1765 to defend the city from land attacks
From here you can see the walls of San Juan as well as El Morro Fortress in the distance.
The fortification was impressive. Spain ruled the Americas especially from 1492 to 1898 especially part of the Caribbean and Central America. They, like all colonist wiped out the indigenous natives and their existing societies, brought disease and enslavement. Did you know about 17% of the Puerto Rican population identifies as black? When the forced labor of native population didn't suffice the Spanish brought in African slaves.
By the mid-1820s, Spain had lost its colonies in Mexico, Central America, and most of South America, establishing a wave of new, independent nations.
Now that we are done with all the depressing talk.. let's hit the colorful streets of San Juan.
The skinniest door.
We had lunch at El Jibarito
We headed back to Isla Verde, where we were staying. After a jump in the pool and some jacuzzi time we showered and headed out for dinner at Metropol restaurant. This was probably our least favorite meal. Everything was very salty.
Next we head to the rainforest!
Wow, looks like you and your family had such a good time. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI've always wanted to go to Puerto Rico!
ReplyDeleteJennifer
https://curatedbyjennifer.com