The San Blas Islands
Posted by Travel Editor
Why did I start a site about the San Blas Islands, its hotels? Not totally. Because I love the place Panama and especially the San Blas Islands. It’s still an undiscovered tourist destination. You will find in the San Blas Islands: miles and miles of unspoiled, pristine beaches, blue, clear ocean waters, coral reefs and lazy palm trees to find shade under and you’ll meet the Kuna people, a very friendly people.
The San Blas islands off the coast of Panama offer eco tourism at its best, especially on the main islands such as El Pouvenir, Cayos Chichime or the Cayos Holandes, islands that make up the San Blas Islands. This is my favorite place to go when I am in Panama. The San Blas islands are a group of 378 islands off the Caribbean coast of Panama. They are owned and controlled by the Kuna Indians, the indigenous people of Panama. In about 1923, they revolted against the Panamanian government and the outcome of this was that the government of Panama gave them the San Blas Islands where they could live their traditional lives, hunt and fish and speak their own language and carry out their customs.
If you go to the San Blas Islands, you should make sure you arrange your trip with a travel agency that is familiar with what the San Blas Islands offer, what lodgings are available, etc., because if you are looking for luxury hotels in the San Blas Islands like what you are accustomed to in, say, North America or Europe, you are not going to find it. Everything here is commonly described as rustic.
The San Blas Islands, Panama, are best described as a tropical island paradise. The San Blas Islands hotels and resorts do not have 24/7 running hot water and electricity. You arrive in the San Blas Islands by way of airplane to an air strip called Achutupo and then will be taken by boat to whatever island you are staying on. You can also travel by jeep or boat to the islands. Your hotel might be a sort of cabin on stilts over the water. You may or may not have a private bathroom. You will have a hammock where you can relax big time. The sunrises and sunsets are glorious.
For these types of accommodations, you can pay anywhere between $80 to $300US+ per night. These hotels are quite rustic and wonderful and are run by the Kuna people. You will have peace, beautiful scenery, snorkeling, fishing, swimming, trips to other islands, fresh sea food for your meals and be able to visit a Kuna Village and experience the culture of the people.
It is a wonderful experience if you want to get lost on a tropical desert island – somewhere on one of the San Blas Panama Islands, relax on the beautiful beaches and escape from it all. If you arrive here stressed, you will lose all that stress and not want to leave this paradise.
My Trip to the San Blas Islands
Posted by Travel Editor
My vacation to the San Blas Islands began with the decision that instead of taking a flight from Panama City to the San Blas Islands, we would hire a driver for a change. Yes, you can also get to the San Blas Islands with a driver. It costs $25 US per person for the three hours, very bumpy trip for up to seven people. The driver will take you to the San Blas Islands and pick you up and take you back to Panama City when you wish to leave the Islands. Let’s say, driving is for the more adventurous among us.
A jeep took us to the San Blas Islands. It was a wild ride on very bumpy terrain. Luckily, the car is a four wheel drive jeep. The drive took about three hours, up hills, down hills and through a river. At the end of this wild journey, not for the faint of heart, we were met by a man who worked at the hostel. He took us by boat to the island we would be staying at.
We were very surprised though when we arrived at the island we were going to stay at and saw there was no beach. We had been expecting clear blue ocean, white sand beaches and palm trees as you see in all the photographs of the San Blas. This was not the San Blas Islands we had heard about, nor what we expected to find after our rough and rocky journey to the islands.
However, the next day after breakfast we were taken by boat to a small island with the white sand beaches and palm trees we had been looking for and were expecting to find on the San Blas Islands. Our time that days was spent walking around the island which was very small and took only about ten minutes to complete the walk around. The beach was marvelous and the water clear blue. We sunbathed, snorkeled. At lunch time, a man who had brought us our lunch which consisted of fish and rice. After lunch, we spent a few more hours on the beach and then the guy from the hotel came back in his boat to take us back to the hotel after this lovely day on the island all by ourselves.
The next day we were taken on a tour of a local Kuna village as a sort of cultural immersion into their way of life. They still live in their traditional ways, having won the right from the Panama government to own the San Blas Islands, maintain their traditional life and speak their own language. They are friendly people and very welcoming to us. They live in a village of bamboo, palm leaf houses with dirt floors. They don’t have a lot of money, electricity or running water. Coconuts used to be their currency. Now it seems, they are accepting American dollars. If you want to photograph them, you must pay them a dollar for the privilege. But that’s okay.
On another day, we went fishing with a Kuna guide on his boat. We caught some big ones and they were prepared and cooked for us that night – delicious! Nothing like fresh fish.
Another days we were taken by boat to other islands and one of the best was where there was a shipwreck off shore. We spent a lot of time snorkeling around the shipwreck and taking photos. Lunch was again dropped off for us – sometimes fish, sometime chicken.
Our stay on the San Blas Islands wasn’t glamorous, we were roughing it. The total cost was $35 a day for lodging, food, and our transport to the beaches on the islands. The price was a good deal and our hosts were attentive and very friendly. The food was really good, lots of freshly caught fish, crab and lobster, chicken, rice and lots of fruit. It was all we needed.
All in all, my trip to the San Blas Islands was an adventure, roughing it a bit and staying in very rustic basic accommodations. The food was really good. But we wanted to get away from it all and this was a great escape and being taken to other beautiful islands where we could spend the day in an island paradise was perfect.

