Most riders would head back to the main highway. Climb out the easy way.
You? You’re going up the back side.
There’s a narrow bridge just outside Cepitá. Cross it, and the road begins to climb. Immediately. Ferociously.
Welcome to the forgotten road to San Andrés, Santander.
This isn’t just remote. It’s primal. Dirt, rocks, switchbacks so tight you’ll need to feather the clutch and pray at the same time. And it climbs forever.
There are no villages. No traffic. No signs. Just a raw, rutted ribbon of road that stitches its way up the canyon wall like a scar.
You’ll ride past cactus fields. Mango trees. Goats on ledges where no living thing should stand.
Your engine screams. Your rear tire fights for grip. Your heart? It’s somewhere in your throat.
But then—you look behind you. And the world opens.
The Canyon Revealed. Stop. Turn off the bike. Let it cool. Take off your helmet. Look in amazement, don’t forget to breathe.
Because behind you lies one of the greatest views you will ever see on two wheels.
The entire Chicamocha Canyon sprawls beneath you. Vast. Violent. Alive.
It’s deeper than the Grand Canyon. Older. Wilder. And you’re standing in the middle of it.
Look closely and you’ll see where you came from—Barichara is out of sight on a distant ridge. Zapatoca hidden in a fold. The road carved into the cliffs. The river glinting like a knife at the bottom.
You don’t just ride this place. You become part of it.