A down and dirty on the place:
Basically, Managua looks very much like Tijuana or Ensenada- a long road running through town with no actual downtown area and many non-descript houses on both sides-not very exotic and not very colonial-- for the latter, I will go and see Granada as soon as I can.
The nature is nice, though- a huge freshwater lake with a nice boardwalk and people strolling around.
The food is the same as in Costa Rica- rice and beans, fried plantain bananas, grilled chicken.
The people look Mayan with some 20-30 % Spanish admixture-- small and paunchy with eagle noses. Very polite and dignified. Still unspoiled by tourism and not trying to rip one off. Many give you small gifts for nothing. I bought dinner for a taxi driver and he took me around town without charging me. Also, there is a feeling of equality here because it's a socialist country and most people are kind of working poor- there's no greed or envy in their eyes.
The women are not too pretty, some are OK looking --the ones with a Spanish admixture-- the Mayan looking ones are not- many fat rears and they are short and pudgy in general. But they are all friendly and nice to talk to.
After years in Asia, it's nice to be treated as an equal and for people to speak to me in Spanish and just talk to me as if I were a citizen. Instead of seeing "cowering" faces of people turning away from you ( because they are afraid to make a mistake in English) here it's just Spanish for everybody. No shocks, no 'Oh Americano!". Just normal treatment that one should give a fellow man.
Nicaragua has a high percentage of descendants of American slaves so you see black people here who look like Americans but they have been since at least the Civil War.
My taxi driver took me around the "Red Light district" which is basically just a long street with clubs. I saw some hookers on the streets- all looked unattractive; also, there were some trannies waiting to be picked up. Hideous creatures of the night.
Nicaragua is pretty safe; not much criminality, but today I saw cops with a dog running past me on some drug bust.
People are easy to talk to but not too curious or surprised to see you. All expect you to speak Spanish.
Prices are on par with the Dominican Republic more or less.
Will keep you posted.



