EZTrip.com Logo
Google
 
Google EZTrip.com
San Francisco Discount Hotels
Cars | Hotels | Flights | Hotel Directory | Car Directory | Destination Guides
 
  Looking for cheap or discount hotels? Want to find special internet only room rates? EZTrip.com has great hotel specials, including discount hotels in Anaheim, Hawaii, New York, London, Memphis, Paris, Las Vegas, Orlando, San Francisco, Sydney, Toronto - anywhere you want to go! For the best hotel discounts click on Hotels to begin your search.

Current Hotel Deals
Sunriver, Oregon
Bethel, Maine
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Biloxi, Mississippi
Telluride, Colorado
South Padre Island, Texas
Grand Canyon, Arizona
Anchorage, Alaska
Annapolis, Maryland

More Specials
 

 

EZTrip.com International Destination Guide and Hotel Listings

Hotel Listings & Destination Guide for Central America & Caribbean - Central America - Panamá


Search For A City: 


Panamá
Where To Go
When To Go
Getting Around
Costs, Money And Banks
Eating And Drinking
Panamá On The Web
Safety And The Police
Work
History
Information
Mail And Telecommunications
Opening Hours, Holidays And Festivals
The Media
Shopping
PANAMÁ
Panamá    view all cities
Top Destinations
Read It Here
Even before the construction of its famous canal, Panamá 's strategic location at the wasp waist of the Americas and at the meeting place of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans made it one of the great crossroads of the world. A narrow, S-shaped isthmus that stretches some 750km between Costa Rica and Colombia, Panamá remains a vital thoroughfare of international commerce, but is rarely visited by travellers. In part this is because the land bridge to South America, the Darién Gap, remains virtually impassable; in part because the use of the US dollar and the relatively high level of economic development make it a more expensive country to visit than other places in the region. But above all it seems that Panamá suffers from a serious image problem. Although the last US troops have now left Panamá and the canal is in Panamanian hands, to most outsiders the country remains a virtual colony of the US, artificially created in order to facilitate construction of the canal, while its culture is seen as a desperately compromised imitation of North America: urbanized, anglicized and Coca-colonized. Yet while it is true that no other country in Central America has been so dominated by the US - Panamá owes its very existence to US intervention - in fact the North American cultural influence, though strong, is but one among many. Spanish, African, West Indian, Chinese, Indian, European - all have contributed to a compelling cultural mix , creating perhaps the most cosmopolitan, open-minded and outward-looking society in Central America. At the same time, it is also home to some of the most unassimilated and culturally fascinating indigenous societies in Central America - within 30km of the high-rise banking district of Panamá City, for example, the indigenous Emberá still practise subsistence agriculture in the rainforest and hunt for their supper with blowpipes.

Most travellers who make it down to Panamá are surprised by its outstanding natural beauty . With 1600km of coastline on the Pacific and 1280km on the Caribbean side, Panamá boasts unspoiled beaches and coral reefs to match any in the region. And although it is Costa Rica that has achieved world renown as an ecotourism destination, in terms of pristine wilderness and ecological diversity Panamá has little reason to envy its neighbour. A biological bridge between continents, Panamá supports an astounding biodiversity, including over nine hundred species of bird, more than in the whole of North America. Over half the country is still covered by dense tropical rainforest, and large areas are protected by a system of national parks and nature reserves.

Although the government is keen to promote international tourism, for the moment Panamá remains one of the best-kept travellers' secrets in Central America. Of course, this means that in comparison to, say, Costa Rica, the infrastructure for visiting the protected wilderness areas is much more limited. But while this may put some people off, for others it simply adds to the sense of adventure - visitors to Panamá's national parks are unlikely to have to share them with more than a handful of other people. Moreover, wherever you travel in Panamá, the absence of a travellers' "scene" means you will be forced into much more direct contact with local people, an experience which, given the natural warmth and open-mindedness of most Panamanians and the fact that they have not yet become jaded with foreigners due to the impact of mass tourism, is undoubtedly one of the most rewarding aspects of any visit to this underrated and misunderstood country.

EZTrip.com Daily Destination Picks
Every day we show you new and exciting destination guides to some of our favorite locations as well as great discounts on hotels available in that area.

The main town of Ischia is ISCHIA PORTO , where most of the ferries dock, an appealing stretch of hotels, ritzy boutiques and beach shops planted with lemon trees and Indian figs fronted by golden sands: Spiaggia San Pietro is to...
more

It's hard to overstate just how stunning the Lauterbrunnen valley is. An immense U-shaped cleft with bluffs on either side rising 1000m sheer, doused by some 72 waterfalls, it is utterly spectacular. The Staubbach falls , the...
more

BLOOMINGTON , by far the liveliest small city in Indiana, is 45 miles southwest of Indianapolis on Hwy-37. It owes its vibrancy to the main campus of Indiana University, east of downtown. The I.M. Pei-designed Indiana University Art Museum ...
more


Copyright Rough Guides Ltd as trustee for its authors. Published by Rough Guides. All rights reserved.
The Rough Guides name is a trademark of Rough Guides Ltd.