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Charles Wiegand

Roaming South America

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There are 466 blog posts for you to enjoy.

Oxapampa - Looking Beyond Tourism: Finding a Real Hometown in Perú

March 21, 2026

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I spent a week in each of Villa Rica and Oxapampa. These are my finalists for a new hometown. Both of these towns are in the Selva Central of Perú. In other words, they are on the Amazon side of the Andes in about the middle of the country. Selva refers to the jungle or jungle region. In Perú it refers to the entirety of the Amazon region/tropical rainforest/dense jungle. It can also, in slightly different forms, take on slightly different meanings. For example, silvestre refers to "wild" as the natural wildlife in general. Salvaje refers to "wild" as in untamed/undomesticated wild animals. Anyway, enough Spanish for one blog. So, yes, now into my 4th backpacking journey of South America and I've narrowed my list to those two towns. Keep reading to learn a bit more about each.
References: My Villa Rica blog, July 2, 2025
My Oxapampa blog, April 8, 2024

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Juanjuí — A Selva Town That Just Works

March 17, 2026

juanjui-sign.jpg The city name sign is in the Plaza de Armas in the city center.

Juanjuí, Perú - I've been here several times before and I like this town. It has nothing special, no historical architecture, no archeological sites, no anything. It's just a riverside town that is calm, relaxing, full of friendly people. The streets are not congested, the drivers are not laying on their horns, in fact, they use them very sparingly. The main plaza is pleasant, and the linear park is mostly finished with new ponds with fountains and lots of open grass space. I've written other blogs about Juanjuí which include the history, so I won't bother with that in this blog.
References:
Juanjuí, Perú - Feb. 8, 2023
Juanjuí, Perú - Aug. 14, 2023

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Lagunas — A 350-Year-Old Amazon Town Still Alive

March 13, 2026

lagunas-sign.jpg The Lagunas city name sign is in the main plaza across from the city municipal building.

Lagunas, Perú - population probably somewhere around 10,000 (depending on source, 7,000 - 15,000). It is located on the Huallaga River east of Yurimaguas. Yurimaguas is the end of the paved road in the Amazon region of north-eastern Perú. From Yurimaguas, you take a boat to Lagunas. Lagunas traces its origins back to 1670, when Jesuit missionary Juan Lorenzo Lucero founded it as Santiago de la Laguna. It was established near a natural lagoon and inhabited originally by local indigenous groups, particularly the Cocama and Cocamilla. This makes it one of the earliest mission towns in the Loreto Amazon, predating many better-known regional centers.
Reference: Loreto News Journal

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Where the Highway Stops and the River Begins

March 9, 2026

moyobamba-sing.jpg The Moyobamba sign is in the Plaza de Armas.

I was in Moyobamba for about a week, and this was my fourth visit. I like Moyo, but as with my previous visits, the mototaxis are just overwhelming. I had this town on my list of possible new hometowns, but I've removed it. As much as I would love to live here, I can't. The noise and congestion, the chaos and stink, those mototaxis cause make it impossible for me to consider this as a new hometown.

After visiting Moyobamba, I spent 2 full days in Tarapoto. Not because I like it, but because the place I stayed - a 2-bedroom apartment - was quite nice. I've visited Tarapoto twice before, and it's never been on my final list of potential new hometowns. It's dirty - littered streets, sand/dirt in every street and building up and piling at every corner, chaotic traffic with those damnable mototaxis being the root cause. And it's quite hot, with high humidity, very uncomfortable, and sweaty.

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Finding the Quiet: Why My Shortlist for a New Home Ignores the Coast

March 5, 2026

What is it about coastal towns that makes them pretty much always "messier"? I'm talking specifically about these countries: Colombia, Ecuador, Perú, Chile, and Uruguay. The vast majority of interior towns are almost always cleaner, friendlier, prettier, etc.

I'm not imagining it. This pattern shows up everywhere I've been, and that includes 7 countries and over 300 towns/cities (in South America), and it’s not a cultural coincidence. It’s geography, economics, and human behavior piling up in the same places.

Here’s the straight, unsentimental anatomy of why coastal towns skew messier, while interior towns often feel cleaner, calmer, and more human. The comparisons below are to be taken with a very general understanding.

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Chip Wiegand

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Contact me:

chip at wiegand dot org

I used to teach English as a foreign language in Barranquilla, Colombia. Now I'm retired and traveling throughout South America.

I'm from Kennewick, Washington, USA. In my previous life, as I call it, I was an IT guy, systems administrator, computer tech, as well as a shipping/receiving guy and also worked as a merchandising guy in a RV/Camping store.

©2002 - 2026 Charles Wiegand