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Travel Guide

Outdoor Adventures Close to Bogota

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Outdoor Adventures Close to Bogota

Bogotá is one of the densest, most chaotic cities in the world. And it’s pretty darn beautiful.

But sometimes a big city can become really tiring. Well, as it turns out, there are a lot of places to go on outdoor adventures close to Bogota! Whether you’re a Bogotano looking for something to do on the weekend or a foreigner looking to take a break from the urban tourism that Bogotá offers, we have got you covered!

The following is a list of places where you can have epic outdoor adventures close to Bogotá. We have been there and recommend them. You can even check out directions for how to get there by clicking on the links that are on each of the places’ names. Get out there, go an an adventure!

Chingaza National Park: directly to the east of Bogotá, this gigantic national park is a treasure of the Andes Mountains.

Chicaque Natural Park: to the south of Bogota lies a magical natural park known as a Cloud Forest. We love this place for its lookouts, starry nights, how wild it is, and, of course, its clouds.

Pionono Park: straight above the town of Sopó is this Ecological Park that offers beautiful hikes and views of the savannah of Bogotá. There is also a place to go paragliding right outside of the park.

Laguna Verde (Green Lagoon): way above the Neusa Dam is the Laguna Verde. This place is pristine and so fresh. You’ll be surrounded by frailejones and every shade of green. If it’s about getting to know the Colombian páramo (alpine), this place is exemplary.

Las Moyas Trail: with a trail-head right on the outskirts of the city, this trail will lead you up the mountains on the east of Bogotá to a height of about 3,100 meters (10,200 feet) above sea level.

The Neusa Dam: known for its cold water, comfortable camping, and closeness to Bogota, let me tell you a little more about this place – starry nights, perfect stillness at dawn, and wooded pine forests. Dam. Here are some tips for car camping!

The Sisga Dam: we love biking, and there’s a route that goes all around the Sisga Dam. On top of being moderately difficult, which we love, you get to enjoy the landscape from all of its angles.

The Tatacoita Desert: this desert that lies hidden outside the town of Nemocón is a wonderful place to hike, bike, picnic, and camp.

Check out videos for most of these places on our YouTube channel!

*We will update the list many times throughout the years! Be on the lookout or subscribe to our mailing list to stay on top of updates!

Travel Guide

How to get to Las Moyas Trail

How to get to Las Moyas Trail, hike in bogota, colombia, nature

The Las Moyas Trail, or Sendero las Moyas, was closed for years. But it’s been open to the public since 2022, and the whole process was re-organized to be efficient, quick and safe. I appreciate Live Happy Colombia and the land owners, who opened this trail for people to enjoy it, while still taking care of the area and all its beauty. This is how to get to Las Moyas Trail!

But first, a comment from the heart. Bogota, with its mountains, could be like Santiago, Chile or Boulder, Colorado. If Colombia’s Eastern Mountains (Cerros Orientales) were full of hiking and mountain biking trails, Bogota would be completely different. However, that culture just doesn’t exist, and trails get damaged due to bad use or over-use when they do open. The only way that culture can change is by organizations taking the initative and taking the risk of opening lots of trails to share the load, teach people to take care of what they have and regulating their use. It looks like that’s already starting to happen, and we’re SO excited for what the future holds!

If you like hiking, click here to read about Quebrada la Vieja, which is 6 blocks from Las Moyas!

How to get to Las Moyas Trail

*Note: You can find the map to get to Las Moyas Trail at the bottom of this post!

Walking:

  1. Get to the Transmilenio station called Calle 76 and then walk to Carrera 7 (towards the mountain).
  2. Cross Carrera 7, and keep walking towards the mountain on Calle 74. You’ll get to the Circunvalar, which is Carrera 1. Cross it and continue on Calle 74, which bends to the left becoming Carrera 1 East.
  3. Turn right on Calle 77 and then take the next left, which is Carrera 2 East.
  4. Walk along this road until you find the entrance to the Horizontes – Las Moyas Trail. It’s on the right after a sign that points you to the Metropolitan Club.
  5. Hike for about 2 hours until you get to a boulder field past the antenna on the summit.

In a car:

With a GPS: Use Waze or Google Maps to look up “Umbral Cultural Horizontes” and follow the instructions. Parking is prohibited on the street, but there’s a parking area for the hike next to the Metropolitan Club (I marked the spot on the map).

Without a GPS:

  1. In Bogota, get to the Carrera 7 and go up towards the mountain on Calle 74 until you get to Carrera 2.
  2. Take a right on Carrera 2 and then take the next right turn and then your next right turn again to be on Diagonal 76. Cross the Circunvalar, which is Carrera 1.
  3. Once you cross the Circunvalar, the road will turn left becoming Carrera 1 East.
  4. Take the first right turn onto Calle 77 and then take a left where the street ends, which is Carrera 2 East.
  5. On this road, go right and park at the Metropolitan Club. The spot is marked on the map below. The Las Moyas Trail begins at the end of the road going up to the right.
  6. Hike for about 2 hours until you get to a boulder field past the antenna on the summit.

Some things to know:

  • The trail opens from Tuesday to Friday from 6-9:00 AM and you have to be starting the hike between 6 and 6:30 AM. Entry on the weekends is subject to group outings, which are organized on their Telegram.
  • The entry fee to Sendero las Moyas is $15,000 pesos, and you can buy a monthly “membership” for 60,000 pesos. This money goes towards the trails conservation and some social inclusion projects.
  • The trail is totally safe during the authorized hours.
  • The hike is 4.2 kilometers or 2.6 miles long.
  • To make a reservation and pay, click on this link to go to Live Happy Colombia’s website and follow the instructions. You’ll also find your QR code at that link, which you have to show to start hiking the trail.
  • Pets are not allowed.

What to do in Las Moyas:

Picnic on top of a rock: have your breakfast at the summit of Las Moyas Trail, with amazing landscapes whichever way you turn.

Take care of your surroundings: people sometimes damage beauty while they try to enjoy it, like when they’re eating on top of a boulder. Don’t graffiti the boulders or even engrave anything on them. Take everything you brought with you back to the city, even organic waste. The beauty of a pristine place is that it’s pristine. Let’s keep it that way.

This hike is my favorite one on Bogota’s eastern mountains, partly because it has some amazingly photogenic views. The only thing missing is the Pine Forest of Quebrada la Vieja but, you know, nothing’s perfect! I hope you get to it now that you know exactly how to get to Las Moyas Trail!

Read some more posts about outdoor adventures close to Bogota to get psyched for more!

Travel Guide

How to get to Pionono Park

How to get to Pionono Park, ecological, nature, outdoor adventures close to bogota, hiking, sopo, alpina, what to do, colombia

We got to Sopó excited, not knowing what to expect.

Getting to know the small town that we used to know only because of Alpina, a famous Colombian dairy and food company located there, Lala and I looked at the mountains that loom over Sopó looking for a tiny cross. There it was… and that was where we were going.

We took the shortest, steepest route and we couldn’t help but laugh at how ridiculously steep the road was. Only a 4×4 could have gone up it, and on a bike, you would surely fall backwards. (There is an easier way to get to Pionono – see below for directions!)

After walking for about 2 hours, we reached the entrance of Pionono Park and we began the hike within the park. Once inside, we were pretty much already on top of the mountain, so the hike seemed easy and short in comparison to what we had already walked. We passed three beautiful lookouts: Cacique Sopó, Alto de las Aguilas and Valle de Sopó.

Sadly, the path to the cross was closed, and still is, because the path is really sketchy. Hopefully someday it will reopen, but at least every lookout has spectacular views.

Pionono was a great destination for a day trip, but I would have preferred to stay a night. Since it’s an ecological park, you feel like you’re in wild nature even though Sopó is about 600 meters below you.

Hiking down was much easier, although our knees wept (yeah, we took the steep way down again) and we laughed at how steep the path was the entire way down.

I’ll leave you with this thought that summarized the hike for me. At one of the lookouts, I gazed out at the grassy tropical plain and thought, “This savannah that raised me and that I take for granted… sure is beautiful!”

How to get to Pionono Park

*Note: You can find the map to get to Pionono Park at the bottom of this post!

Without a car:

Your adventure will begin at the North Portal (sounds like sci-fi, right?), which is the bus terminal in the north of Bogotá right on the main highway, or autopista. Get on a bus that says “Sopó” and tell the bus driver to stop in front of Sopó’s Hospital, which is right after Alpina. Tell him: “Pare en frente del Hospital de Sopó, después de Alpina” (good luck pronouncing that!)

From here you have three options (they’re on the map!):

  1. Take 6th street, which is the first left turn you can take after the round-about, in front of the Hospital. It turns left into 3rd street and, staying on that main road, you will get to Pionono Park. There are signs everywhere, so it’s hard to get lost. If you do get lost, just ask a local, “Como llego a Pionono?”
  2. The other option is even steeper (the one Lala and I took), but shorter. Instead of taking 6th street take 4th street, which is two blocks further from the round-about. Go up 4th street for about four blocks until you see an archway that says, “Santuario del Señor de la Piedra.”
    1. There, take a left. Follow this road, which curves to the right. A few meters later you have to pick between left (steep) and straight (steeper). Keep going straight, taking the steeper route. Be impressed.
    2. Follow this road for a while. It’s hard to get lost and you will eventually link with the main road, having completed the road less taken. There are signs everywhere, so you’ll arrive at Pionono Park without a problem
  3. Take a cab up to Pionono. These cabs drive down 6th street in front of the hospital (the first left turn you can take after the round-about). It costs $14,500 Colombian Pesos or $5 USD per trip, so if you take it with a group of 4 people, it’s nice and inexpensive.

In a car:

With Waze: look for “Parque Ecológico PIONONO Sopó” and follow the directions.

Without Waze:

  1. Leave Bogotá heading north on the main highway (Autopista) and stay on the main road for about 30 minutes. Pass El Corral on your left, and after 500 more meters (1,500 feet) take a right towards Sopó.
  2. Stay on this road until you get to a round-about and take the second exit.
  3. Right after Alpina’s parking lot, in front of a hospital, take a left on 6th street (it’s the first left turn you can take after the roundabout).
  4. Stay on this road until you get to Pionono. There are signs everywhere, so it’s hard to get lost. If you do get lost just ask a local, “Como llego a Pionono?”

Some things to know:

The park is open Wednesday to Sunday and Holidays from 9:00am to 4:30pm.

There is no parking at Pionono Park during the day, but you can park outside on the road. There are always park officials there during the day watching over the entrance and taking payments. If you’re camping, you can take your car inside all the way to the camping area from 5pm to 9am.

Camping per person per night: $24,600 Colombian Pesos or about $9 USD.

Entrance fee: $4,900 Colombian Pesos or about $2 USD.

Taxi up to Pionono Park: $14,500 Colombian Pesos or about $5 USD

What to do in Pionono Park:

  • Go Paragliding: one kilometer before the Pionono Park entrance is a detour left through which you can get to Parapente Paraiso, one of the most well-known paragliding centers in Colombia. It’s easy to get to, they have comfortable facilities (restaurant, parking, etc.), and the view of the Tominé dam is spectacular.
  • Go Camping: to really feel in the middle of nowhere, you have to camp. The climate is near-alpine, so it’s cold at night, but with a good jacket, I can just imagine the sunrises and sunsets. If you’re lucky, you might even get a beautiful starry night. Plus, Pionono Park’s camping infrastructure is prepared with bathrooms, water, and grill to make food… or a barbeque.
  • Take a lot of Pictures: from every vantage point. The landscape is beautiful all around. If it’s cloudy, there are plants, insect, birds, and flowers that would love to pose for you. If you camp, you should have a camera ready to capture the sunset, sunrise, and stars. Yeah, you’re not gonna sleep much.
  • Reward Yourself at Alpina: especially if you walked all the way to Pionono Park! Sopó is known for being Alpina’s center of operation. At the cabaña de Alpina (Alpina Cabin), which is right next to the Hospital I mentioned in the directions above, you can eat. A LOT. My recommendations are fresas con crema (strawberries and cream), the repollas (cream puffs), and, of course, some chocolate milk. There’s nothing like a yummy prize at the end of an adventure.

We hope this guide is helpful!

To learn about another beautiful place near Bogotá, read our post about the Tatacoita Desert!

Here’s a video to motivate you to go to Pionono Park!

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