"Ecuador, so
tiny on the map of the world, has always
possessed the grandeur of a great country to
those who know her well."
- Albert B. Franklin, Ecuador: Portrait
of a People
Sitting on
the equator between Colombia and Peru,
Ecuador is the smallest of the Andean
nations, covering an area no bigger than
Nevada. For all its diminutive size,
however, the country is packed with the most
startling contrasts of scenery, taking in
steaming tropical rainforests, windswept
highlands, ice-capped volcanoes and
palm-fringed beaches, all within easy reach
of the capital, Quito. It's a land of bold
contours and heightened colours, where you
can find yourself beneath a canopy of
dripping vegetation amongst clouds of neon-coloured
butterflies one day, and in a highland
market, mixing with scarlet-ponchoed
indígenas the next. It's also a country
of astounding biodiversity, boasting 1600
species of bird (more per area than any
other South American country), 4500 species
of butterfly and over 3500 species of
orchid, to cite just a few examples. Add to
this the country's stunning colonial
architecture and diverse indigenous groups,
and it becomes clear why Ecuador is regarded
by many as a sort of South America in
miniature, offering a pocket-sized microcosm
of almost everything travellers hope to find
on this bewitching continent. As if more
were called for, its attractions are
triumphantly capped off by the Galápagos
Islands, whose extraordinary wildlife has
gone down in history for its pivotal role in
shaping Charles Darwin's theories on
evolution.
Geographically, Ecuador's mainland divides
neatly into three distinct regions running
the length of the country in parallel
strips. In the middle is the sierra ,
formed by the eastern and western chains of
the Andes that surge abruptly into the
clouds from the lowlands either side.
Punctuated by over thirty volcanoes, the two
chains are joined by a series of high
plateaux at around 2800m above sea level,
separated by gentle transverse ridges, or
nudos ("knots" of hills). This is the
agricultural and indigenous heartland of
Ecuador, a region of patchwork fields
crawling up the mountainsides, of stately
haciendas and dozens of remote communities.
The sierra is also home to many of the
country's oldest and most important cities,
including Quito. East of the sierra is the
Oriente , a large, sparsely populated
area extending into the upper Amazon basin,
much of it covered by dense tropical
rainforest - an exhilarating, exotic region,
though under increasing threat from
oil-production and colonization. West of the
sierra, the coastal region is formed
by a fertile alluvial plain, used for
growing tropical crops such as bananas,
sugar, coffee and cacao, and bordered on its
Pacific seaboard by a string of beaches,
mangrove swamps, shrimp farms and ports.
Almost a thousand kilometres of ocean
separate the coastline from the Galápagos
archipelago, annexed by Ecuador in 1832.
All this
provides a home to some fourteen million
people, the majority of whom live on the
coast and in the sierra. They are
descendants, for the most part, of the
various indigenous populations that
first inhabited Ecuador's territory, of the
Incas who colonized these lands in
the late fifteenth century, of the
Spaniards who conquered the Inca empire
in the 1530s and of the African slaves
brought by the Spanish colonists. Although
the mixing of blood over many centuries has
resulted in a largely mestizo (mixed)
population, the indigenous component remains
very strong, particularly among the
Quichua-speaking communities of the rural
sierra, and the various ethnic groups of the
Oriente such as the Shuar, the Achuar, the
Huaorani and Secoya, while on the north
coast there's a significant black
population. As in many parts of Latin
America, social and economic divisions
between indígenas , blacks,
mestizos and an elite class of whites
remain deeply entrenched, exacerbated here
by a slew of recent economic and political
crises. And yet, even as poverty and
unemployment increase, as their national
currency is lost to the US dollar and their
political leaders continually fail to tackle
the country's problems, the overwhelming
majority of Ecuadorians remain resilient,
remarkably cheerful, and extremely courteous
and welcoming towards visitors.