Most travelers leave Medellín without ever seeing the towns that shaped Antioquian culture from the ground up. This tour changes that.
In one day, you'll move through four villages that have nothing in common except excellence, El Retiro's century-old woodworking workshops, La Ceja's flower-filled highland plazas, San Antonio de Pereira's legendary homestyle cooking, and El Carmen de Viboral's hand-painted ceramics, a living craft tradition recognized far beyond Colombia's borders. Add a waterfall stop in the Antioquian mountains and you have a day that covers more cultural ground than most visitors manage in an entire trip.
This isn't a highlights reel. It's a genuine immersion into the creative, culinary, and natural soul of a region that has been building its identity for centuries, guided by someone who knows it intimately.
El Retiro has been shaping wood for over a century, and it shows in every storefront. This colonial town is Antioquia's undisputed capital of fine woodworking — a place where family-run workshops produce handcrafted furniture, decorative pieces, and home goods of remarkable quality. Walking through its artisan district feels less like shopping and more like touring a live workshop, where the smell of sawdust and varnish mingles with the quiet pride of craftspeople who learned their trade from their grandparents.
El Retiro, Antioquia Tucked into the green hillsides just outside El Retiro, the Salto del Tequendamita is a natural pause in the middle of a culturally rich day. The waterfall cascades through native vegetation into a rocky pool below, and the short walk to reach it offers some of the most peaceful scenery of the entire tour. It's the kind of place that reminds you how close Antioquia's natural world is to its towns and villages.
La Ceja sits at over 2,000 meters above sea level, and the altitude gives it a freshness and clarity that sets it apart from the valley towns below. Its parks and plazas are genuinely well-kept and full of flowers year-round, earning the town a quiet reputation as one of the most livable corners of eastern Antioquia. A walk through its center is equal parts scenic and social — locals move at an unhurried pace that's hard not to adopt yourself.
San Antonio de Pereira is a small village with a devoted following among Antioquians who make the trip specifically for its food. The traditional lunch served here — hearty, generous, and made with local ingredients — is one of the most authentically regional meals you'll find anywhere near Medellín. Save room for the postres: the town's homemade sweets have a flavor and texture that no bakery in the city has managed to replicate.
El Carmen de Viboral has been painting ceramics by hand since the early 20th century, and the tradition shows no signs of slowing down. The town's distinctive floral patterns — bold, colorful, and immediately recognizable — have earned it a reputation that reaches well beyond Colombia. In the working studios open to visitors, you can watch artisans paint intricate designs freehand with a precision that comes only from years of practice. It's one of the few places in the country where a craft remains this alive, this local, and this extraordinary.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
Your guide to the flawless travel experience