Respuesta :
Answer:
hi there
Explanation:
well all apply.
The Ruta de las Flores is a lovely journey over the Apaneca-Ilamatepeq mountain range between the departments of Ahuachapán and Sonsonate in western El Salvador, pleasant fresh weather, sites impregnated with traditions and history, a peculiar gastronomy and variety of hostels and small hotels that will make your stay a colorful memory of your time in El Salvador.
Municipalities that make up the Route of the Flowers:
Ahuachapan
Its Nahuatl name of origin means "city of the house of the oaks", with an eminently coffee population. Among its tourist attractions are the Church Our Lady of the Assumption, in the historic center of the city; the passage La Concordia, next to the church; the Center for Culture and Arts Alfredo Espino, a young poet who wrote poetry alluding to prints, customs, facts and in essence nature, crops, trees and birds characteristic of the area.
Conception of Ataco
At 1,260 meters above sea level is Concepción de Ataco, whose Nahuatl name means “place of high springs”. This population has worked over the years on lever looms and wood carving. Surrounded by coffee plantations, gourmet cuisine and typical national food options for tourists.
Apaneca
It is the integral city of the Route of the Flowers with greater height on the level of the sea, with 1,470 meters. Its Nahuatl name means "where wind windows / rivers abound." Due to its altitude, the area produces coffee of the highest quality. The hotels and restaurants combined with its two lagoons "Las Ninfas" and "Laguna Verde" attract tourists to this pre-Hispanic city in which are the sculptures known as "Gordinflones" located in coffee farms.
Juayúa
It is a pre-Columbian town whose Nahuatl name means "river of purple orchids". The city is located 1,025 meters above sea level. Its ornamental plant nurseries, its coffee crops and gastronomy are peculiar tourist attributes of this city, where every weekend, since 1997, a gastronomic fair is organized in the center of the city. Additionally, Juayúa has places for ecotourism such as the Monterrey River, Salto de la Lagunilla Azul, Los Chorros de la Calera, El Tequezal, Laguna Seca or Las Ranas, Laguna Verde, Cerro El Águila and El Pilón, real shows that They shouldn't stop knowing each other.
Salcoatitán
Its Nahuatl name means “place between snakes and quetzals and is located 1,045 meters above sea level. Among its main tourist attractions are its typical cuisine, which is marketed in the town square; the craftsmanship and the method used for the elaboration of the mosaic murals; and the regional art galleries where you will find objects to decorate your wicker home, fabrics, blanket dresses dyed with indigo and cochineal, natural dyes and pieces of art and culture.
Nahuizalco
It is a town of pre-Hispanic origin whose name of Nahuatl origin means "Four Izalcos". It was originally inhabited by Pipiles, and in the colonial era the region belonged to the Province of the Izalcos. Nahuizalco has been a city since 1955, with an exceptional arrangement in its central square and its markets, including the night market, exclusive to that municipality. It has a lot of artisanal wealth, which highlights the production of handicrafts made with wicker and tule, in addition to the development of items such as hats, duffels, sausages and furniture and wooden crafts.