jueves, 23 de abril de 2020


El Salvador is one of the smallest countries on the continent, but that does not prevent its tourist places from being enormous in natural beauty. Are you looking for packages to visit the tourist places in El Salvador? Here you can surely find several that you will love to do.

Package from 4 to 8 nights.

- Airport transfers
-Accommodation available
-Daily Tours and activities






jueves, 26 de marzo de 2020

El Salvador Holidays and Festivals

Most El Salvador Holidays and Festivals are religious in nature and take place in the summer, which is during wet season, though it rarely rains all the time. Easter is held in high esteem and main cities make a big deal out of honoring their patron saint. San Salvador has the biggest events, including the August Festival and Independence Day.

Holy Week: This important El Salvador Tradition is a religious festival known as Semana Santa in the Spanish-speaking world and features a carnival-like atmosphere across Latin America. Best experienced in San Salvador with street parades and performance art, the week-long event is usually held in late March through Easter Sunday.

Palm Festival: The Panchimalco Flower and Palm Festival in May is a good time to take in local culture. Admire beautiful floral arrangements and garlands displayed throughout the towns, villages and beach resorts nationwide. Accompanying the event is music and traditional dress.

July Festival: The best time to be in Santa Ana—though perhaps not if you want peace and quiet—is Fiesta Julias which runs through the month of July. There are street parades, masses and cultural events galore in this most colonial of Salvadoran cities. There are also fairground rides and clowns for the kids.

August Festival: Of all El Salvador Holidays, Fiestas Agostinas, in early August is one of the most popular ones. Held in the capital of San Salvador, a marching band wakes the city up at 4:00 a.m., after which parades, sports, food, and art exhibitions take place.

Balls of Fire Festival: This fun, fiery event in late August is held in Nejapa—just north of San Salvador—and sees fire-throwers with elaborately painted faces on the streets and a general appearance of anarchy.

Independence Day: September 15 marks El Salvador's independence from Spain in 1821 with flag-waving, parades and fireworks on the beaches, in the cities and mountain towns. The biggest national day celebrations take place in San Salvador.

San Miguel Carnival: November in San Miguel is party time, with beautiful dancing girls and parades to honor the San Miguel patron saint. Bands from the region play reggae, samba and funky, local merengue on the streets.

Typical food of El Salvador

  • Pupusas: ground corn with any combination of cheese, beans, chicaharrones, lorocosquash, garlic, etc. in the in middle, fried on a griddle and eaten with your hands with tomato sauce and curtido (cabbage relish).
  • Enchiladas: fried corn tortillas with fried beans, curtido, hard boiled eggs, shredded cheese, radish.
  • Empanadas: plantain-based dough with condensed milk or beans on the inside and fried. 
  • Corn tortillas with beans/egg/cheese/avocado/anything
  • Atol: corn-based drink.
  • Tamales
  • Yuca frita: fried cassava with curtido,chicharrones, sauce.
  • Elote loco: corn on the cob on a stick with ketchup, Worcestershire sauce, mayo and shredded cheese.

  • Sopa de gallina india: Free-range chicken soup (from the chickens that just live in your house).