TAYRONA NATIONAL PARK, COLOMBIA | "Where the Jungle Meets the Caribbean"
Tayrona National Park is the most biodiverse coastal landscape in Colombia and one of the most extraordinary convergences of ecosystem and topography in the Americas — a 150 square kilometer protected area on the Caribbean coast of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta where the world's highest coastal mountain range descends directly into the sea, creating a landscape of palm-fringed beaches, coral reefs, cloud forest, and the ancient Tairona city of Pueblito accessible only on foot through the jungle above the shore. The Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta is simultaneously the highest coastal mountain range on earth and the sacred territory of the Kogi, Wiwa, and Arhuaco indigenous peoples who have maintained continuous cultural occupation since the decline of the Tairona civilization in the 16th century.
The colors are tropical and saturated: the brilliant turquoise of the Caribbean where it meets the white sand beaches, the deep green of the Sierra Nevada cloud forest above, the terracotta of the Tairona archaeological sites visible through the vegetation, and the specific deep gold of the afternoon light when it falls across the palm-lined coves of Cabo San Juan at the golden hour.