
The Colombian city loved by Harry and Meghan (and it's safer than London)
When Alejandra Velasco visited London, she didn't dare take her phone out in public. In the Colombian city of Cartagena, she's walking around the backstreets wearing an enormous emerald pendant and matching earrings.
We've just been for dinner at her friends' restaurant (whose cauliflower tacos were so flavoursome, I had to ask the owners to confirm they hadn't given me meat by mistake). It's late, and the streets are quiet, but Alejandra seems impervious to any potential threat.
I too, feel at ease in her hometown. This Caribbean port seems less lawless and run-down than many of the British cities I've visited recently. There's hardly any litter, no intimidating groups of youth, and everywhere you go in its Unesco-listed old town, you'll see freshly painted restaurants and swish independent clothing stores.
Cartagena, though long considered one of Colombia's biggest tourism draws, has lately emerged as something of a South American St Tropez, helped in no small part by the country's dramatically improved crime rate. All the jet-set are coming to this unique city, which pairs a stunning, walled Spanish colonial old town and a Miami-like new town, with the added bonus of laid-back island getaways for snorkelling, sailing and scuba diving on its doorstep.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle visited last August, and Alejandra says she has served everyone from Asian royalty to Amazon's billionaire owner, Jeff Bezos, at her mother's emerald store, Lucy Jewelry. Her friend Diana, she adds, has met half of Hollywood volunteering at the international film festival held here each April. 'Will Smith, Willem Dafoe, Susan Sarandon, Owen Wilson...' She reeled off more than a dozen A-listers. It's quite the list, and likely to grow further – the luxury Four Seasons hotel chain is opening an enormous outpost opposite the 16th-century ramparts this summer.
It'll cement Cartagena's place on the luxury travel circuit. Not that this is the sort of destination you can only visit with an A-lister's bank balance.
While I used a local tour operator, Sulit Experiences, to arrange my airport transfers and a guided history walk, I organised everything else through the holiday comparison site Kayak. You can find return flights from the UK with well-timed connections for between £750 to £1,000, and there's no shortage of affordable yet sumptuous accommodation options.
The four-star Townhouse Art Hotel, for example, has spacious doubles from just £86, B&B, and comes with everything you could ask for in a sultry Latin stay – from a sexy piano lounge to a rooftop bar with plunge pools and sweeping views across the pantiles.
For a little more money – from £214, B&B – you can even stay in a converted bishop's palace, Casa Carolina. Incredibly chic, it has a zen-like pool built into its courtyard, with stepping stones connecting its lobby to the yoga studio at the far end. Influencers wander in off the street to sit on its rope swings and pose beside doric columns.
The city is just as Instagrammable – even its shopping mall is gouged into the old La Serrezuela bullring. Cartagena often doubles for New Orleans or Havana in films – although it's far grander. So much gold and silver passed through here during colonial times that it was almost constantly besieged by the French and English – including Sir Francis Drake. It's why the fortress and city walls are so monumental, and why every other building within its seven-mile-long battlements seems to be a sumptuous palazzo.
Most are now bars and restaurants, like Casa Bohême, whose collonaded courtyard and rooms have been turned into a series of restaurants and lounges by Parisian Franck Azoulay and his Vogue stylist wife, Jeannette.
The couple discovered Cartagena while touring the world, throwing glamorous parties for their high-end events brand. In many ways, this sophisticated city offers the sort of lifestyle they're used to when working in Ibiza or Tulum. A 30-minute speedboat ride, and they can be moored off some mangrove islet, partying or reclining on deck. It's part of what makes this historic city that little bit special.
As a tourist, you can book a trip to the nearby Rosario Islands for around £40pp. Or, for £205, you can charter your own 10-man vessel through Boating Cartagena, as I did.
These Caribbean islands are nothing like glitzy St Barts. One minute you're dropping anchor off a private beach owned by a Swiss billionaire. The next you're snorkelling on the reef, surrounded by men in kayaks making 'coco-loco' cocktails from the cool boxes on their prows.
On the car-free Tierra Bomba, I had to ride a horse to get between Amare Beach Club, where I had lunch, and the Blue Apple Beach House, where I'm told Jeff Bezos came to relax when he wasn't shopping for Colombian emeralds.
This beach club with rooms looks like any other cabana-fanned hangout in the Caribbean – except you won't find the usual pizzas and burgers on its menu. Blue Apple's Venezuelan chef Pedro Mosqueda has worked under several Michelin-starred maestros in the West. Colombia is full of first-rate, highly trained chefs like Pedro, who were keen to return to South America when the drug wars fizzled out. So many have come back that Blue Apple puts on regular 'secret suppers' so Pedro and other fine-dining protégés – now working in kitchens across Colombia – can come together and cook.
It's not just returnees who are transforming Colombia's food and drink scene. At Nia Bakery, back in the old town, I gorged on pastries topped with edible flowers and oozing with some of Colombia's 1,000 native fruits. The owners – Cali, one of the cities most affected by narco bombings and kidnappings – are trying to help farmers transition away from the drug trade they were once forced to participate in. They're also attempting to reclaim the coca leaf itself, using ground versions of it – known as mambé – to make ice creams and lattes.
It's not my cup of coffee, but I admire the ingenuity. Colombia has far more going for it than the troubled history Netflix seems determined to forever tar it with. At Lunatico Experience, they're trying to showcase their contemporary reality by hosting everything from cooking classes to rum tastings.
It's a message that needs shouting from the belfries. Even I came to Colombia with outdated preconceptions. As a vegetarian, I was dreading meal times. But I needn't have worried. Even seafood restaurants like Salon Tropical happily swap out ingredients to accommodate awkward travellers like me (using heart of palm and sweet potato in the ceviche, instead of the usual fish, for example). The chefs at Carmen Restaurant even prepared a meat-free version of their seven-course tasting menu at a moment's notice. Talk about the VIP treatment. I can see why Bezos and co have fallen for Cartagena.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
38 minutes ago
- The Independent
Let us tax visitors on overnight stays in England, mayors say
A coalition of mayors has called for powers to be given to local authorities to create visitor levies across England, in an attempt to boost tourist infrastructure and regional growth. The group of mayors from around the country, led by Liverpool City Region Mayor Steve Rotheram, is calling on the government to grant devolved powers to allow regions to create a visitor levy, which could see a small charge added to overnight stays. Mr Rotheram said the overnight charges are 'the kind most of us wouldn't think twice about when travelling abroad' and 'would give us the power to reinvest directly into the things that make our area so special'. Other mayors have echoed his sentiment. Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, said: 'A modest overnight accommodation levy, similar to other international cities, would boost our economy, deliver growth and help cement London's reputation as a global tourism and business destination.' A similar law is already in place in Scotland, passed in 2024, which allows councils to tax overnight accommodation if they wish to do so. Edinburgh has already made headway with this power, voting in January to add a five per cent surcharge on visitors' overnight stays by 2026. A bill has also been proposed by Welsh lawmakers to introduce a small visitor levy that could see visitors to the country paying up to £1.25 per night by 2027. The mayors say England is 'at risk of falling behind' as Scotland and Wales move ahead with their own tourism levies, so are calling for rapid action from the central government. The mayors have argued that the powers to create a visitor levy would unlock 'vital' funding for tourism and cultural infrastructure and drive regional growth, as well as reduce dependence on funding from the central government. English legislation does not allow cities to create a visitor levy; however, using legal workarounds has meant Liverpool and Manchester have introduced a form of tourism levy. The city councils both introduced a tourism-based Business Improvement District (BID), using existing legal power to establish a form of tourist tax that allows hoteliers to charge £1 (in Manchester) or £2 (in Liverpool) per night as part of a 'city visitor charge'. The mayors said that the BID visitor levy in Liverpool has received strong backing, while in Manchester, a recent survey revealed 70 per cent of tourists are willing to pay a small charge if it is used to visibly enhance tourism services. However, the local authorities are hoping to see devolved powers to create visitor levies written into law. The campaign is backed by the mayors of the Liverpool City Region, Greater Manchester, London, the North East, the West Midlands and West Yorkshire. 'These regions collectively attract hundreds of millions of visitors annually and contribute billions to the UK economy,' the group said. 'Yet none currently benefit from a dedicated funding stream to reinvest in tourism resilience and growth.' The Liverpool City Region predicts that a visitor levy could raise nearly £11 million per year for the area from the over 60 million visitors it receives annually. Greater Manchester says that a £1 to £5 overnight tax could raise between £8 million and £40 million per year, which could help fund key infrastructures such as the regeneration of Old Trafford or airport development. Over in the capital, the group said tourism accounts for one in seven jobs and nearly 12 per cent of London's economy, whereas visitor economies stand at £6.1 billion in the North East and £16.3 billion in Birmingham.


The Independent
43 minutes ago
- The Independent
Why travellers are eyeing nation plagued by ‘extreme violence'
Despite Foreign Office warnings, UK travellers are showing renewed interest in Venezuela, with one in 12 Wanderlust magazine readers expressing readiness to visit. Demand is expected to rise following Sir Michael Palin 's upcoming TV series on the country, where he highlights its 'spectacular' scenery but acknowledges the challenging travel conditions. The Foreign Office warns of high murder rates, armed robbery, mugging, and 'extreme violence', while the US State Department advises American citizens to 'prepare a will' before visiting. Lupine Travel's Venezuela tours have sold out, but the operator cautions about increasing tensions and high detention risks for individuals with US links. Sir Michael and travel experts say some of the draws of Venezuela are its 'magnificent' mountains, beautiful beaches, exotic wildlife, and the world's tallest waterfall.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Revealed: How Man United 'helped Liverpool establish huge market price for Luis Diaz' - as Premier League champions 'REJECT' Barcelona approach
Liverpool have rejected an offer from Barcelona for Luis Diaz and made their stance clear that he is not for sale, according to a report. Diaz arrived on Merseyside from Porto midway through the 2021-22 season, and has enjoyed a successful three-and-a-half years at the club, winning five honours in his time so far. But the winger's future at Anfield is uncertain as he enters the latter years of his current deal, which expires in the summer of 2027. Mail Sport understands the Colombia international is due to sit down with Liverpool chiefs to make a decision on his future this summer but, as it stands, there has been no traction regarding a fresh agreement. Liverpool are seemingly content with allowing Diaz's contract to run down, even if that means him departing as a free agent, and getting as much out of their man as they can over the next two years, as per The Atheltic. Liverpool and Barcelona spoke on Wednesday regarding a potential deal, but the response from the Premier League champions was a resounding 'no'. It is believed that Al-Hilal's recent £100million approach for Manchester United's Bruno Fernandes gave Liverpool the confidence to demand a higher fee for Diaz It is believed that the Reds' hierarchy would only be willing to consider a deal if Barcelona came with a mammoth bid for Diaz. The report went on to state that Bruno Fernandes' recent transfer saga with Al-Hilal - in which the Saudi giants offered Manchester United around £100million for his talents - gave Liverpool newfound confidence. Diaz's market price is now believed to be higher than it would have been before Al-Hilal's failed approach to sign Fernandes. Diaz, 28, has become a major asset under Arne Slot due to his versatility, with the Dutch head coach happy to play him on the left wing or up front. The forward was a key figure in Liverpool's title success last season, scoring 13 goals across 36 appearances. His regular contributions as a first-team asset made Liverpool even more unwilling to let him leave for Catalonia.