Off Ometepe Island on the 6 a.m. ferry. Next stop: Granada.
One of Central America's oldest colonial cities
Granada is one of the top tourist towns in Central America, with plenty of churches and buildings still standing from the Spanish colonial period. The yellow-and-white cathedral sits proudly next to the central park, and a row of horse-drawn carriages (around US$10 and up — negotiable) waits in front. Climbing on for a slow loop around town is a fine way to see the place.
Convento San Francisco
Walking through town you'll come across the Convento San Francisco — a 16th-century convent now turned museum. It displays pre-Columbian pottery and ornaments dug up around Granada and on Zapatera Island in Lake Cocibolca.
Vigorón and Toña
Walk through the streets and you'll see local food everywhere. Granada's signature dish is vigorón — yuca, chicharrón (fried pork rind), and a cabbage salsa, served on a banana leaf. Cheap and filling. The local beer Toña is also cheap, and good.
Soy Nica — worth coming to Nicaragua just for this shop
The best find in Granada was a leather shop called Soy Nica. Wallets, belts, bags — all at prices you'd never see in Japan, and the quality isn't bad. Honestly, I think this one shop alone is reason enough to come to Nicaragua.
Granada is set up for tourists — relatively easy and safe to walk around by Nicaraguan standards. If you like leather goods, this is a town you should not skip.