Santa María de Ostuma

{{distinguish|text=Santa María Ostuma, the El Salvador municipality}}

Santa María de Ostuma was a Mountain Hotel built by Leo Salazar in 1936. It was located in the province of Matagalpa, Nicaragua and attended personally by its owners. The resort's fame spread, and many local and international tourists visited it for vacationing and ecotourism. It was confiscated by the Sandinista government and closed in 1983.

History

Leopoldo Salazar Amador acquired the Santa María de Ostuma property in the 1920s, growing coffee there even as Augusto César Sandino's guerrilla bands raided through the area.{{cite book |last=Christian |first=Shirley |title=Revolution in the Family |orig-year=1985 |date=June 1986 |publisher=Vintage Books |location=Random House |isbn=0-394-74457-8 |oclc=11622596 |pages=10–11 }} In 1933, the Potter family opened the Mountain Hotel of Aranjuez nearby. (It was converted into a sanitarium in 1950.) Leo Salazar built his own Mountain Hotel ({{lang|es|Hotel de Montaña}}) in 1936. "Jolly, round-faced"{{cite book |title=The Road to Panama |url=https://archive.org/details/roadtopanama00rodm |url-access=registration |last=Rodman |first=Selden|year=1966 |publisher=Hawthorn Books |location=New York |oclc=484631 |page=[https://archive.org/details/roadtopanama00rodm/page/170 170] }} Leo and his wife, Esmeralda "Meyaya" Argüello, personally attended to guests.

The "cloud-capped" resort was regarded as "one of the most picturesque areas of the country."{{cite news |first=George |last=Volsky |title=What's Doing in NICARAGUA |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/11/06/archives/whats-doing-in-nicaragua.html |format=fee |work=The New York Times |page=XX7 |date=November 6, 1977 |access-date=2008-02-03 }} Different attractions drew a diversity of guests. "This may be the only place on our continent where, in one day, you can shoot a wild boar, land a 20-pound lake trout, unearth a priceless pre-Christian ceramic and watch the brilliantly plumed quetzals mate," one observer wrote.{{cite news |title=In the Clouds in Nicaragua |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1968/04/07/archives/in-the-clouds-in-nicaragua.html |format=fee |work=The New York Times|page=XX31 |date=April 7, 1968 |access-date=2008-02-03 }}

Some visitors were naturalists, interested in the flora and fauna of the region. Ornithologists came to study birds in the region's habitat,{{cite journal |last=Howell |first=Thomas R.|year=1964 |title=Birds Collected in Nicaragua by Bernardo Ponsol |journal=The Condor |volume=66 |issue=2 |pages=151–158 |url=http://sora.unm.edu/sites/default/files/journals/condor/v066n02/p0151-p0158.pdf |doi=10.2307/1365392 |jstor=1365392}}{{cite journal |last=Hardy |first=John William|year=1976 |title=Comparative breeding behavior and ecology of the Bushy-crested and Nelson San Blas jays |journal=The Wilson Bulletin |volume=88 |issue=1 |pages=96–120 |url=http://sora.unm.edu/sites/default/files/journals/wilson/v088n01/p0096-p0120.pdf}} others came to observe rodents{{cite journal |last=Jones Jr. |first=J. Knox |author2=Mark D. Engstrom |date=1986 |title=The Black-Eared Rice Rat, Oryzomys melanotis, in Nicaragua |journal=The Southwestern Naturalist |volume=31 |issue=1 |pages=137 |doi=10.2307/3670984 |jstor=3670984}}{{cite journal|last=Hooper |first=Emmet T. |title=A Synopsis of the Rodent Genus Scotinomys |journal=Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology |volume= 665 |publisher=University of Michigan |year=1972 |url=http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/57101/1/OP665.pdf |access-date=2002-02-04 }} or catalog orchids.{{cite web |url=http://www.selvanegra.com/download/Orchids.doc |title=Werner's Guide to Nicaraguan Orchids: Selva Negra |access-date=2008-02-02 |last=Werner |first=Pat |format=DOC }}

Hunting and fishing was a draw for some guests. The resort also became known as a honeymoon destination for newlyweds.{{cite news |first=Amparo |last=Aguilera |author2=Wilder Pérez R. |title=El anónimo mundo de los moteles |url=http://www.laprensa.com.ni/cronologico/2005/febrero/14/nacionales/nacionales-20050214-02.html |work=La Prensa |location=Managua |date=February 14, 2005 |access-date=2008-02-04 |language=es |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080104090343/http://www.laprensa.com.ni/cronologico/2005/febrero/14/nacionales/nacionales-20050214-02.html |archive-date = 2008-01-04}}

Bianca Jagger would reminisce that vacations with her mother in the Santa María de Ostuma region were among her "happiest memories."{{cite news |first=Bianca |last=Jagger |title=My Beloved Mother |url=http://www.maximsnews.com/1006biancajaggertributemother.htm |work=MaximNews Network |year=2006 |access-date=2008-02-02}}

In 1975–76, the Selva Negra Mountain Resort opened a few miles away to the east, also servicing tourists attracted to the beauty of the nearby mountains.

In 1978, while the Sandinista rebellion waxed stronger, the Salazars' son Jorge Salazar Argüello moved back to Santa María de Ostuma and set about to revitalize the farm. An altercation with guerrillas camped on the property stoked Leo's fears that the rebels would take revenge for his National Guard service in the 1930s during the time when the US Marines created and commanded the Guard, and he went into exile in February 1979. However, Jorge and his family sympathized with the rebel cause, and fed the guerrillas.Christian, 201.

During the Somoza regime's collapse, Jorge began organizing fellow coffee farmers in the region into a cooperative, which provided him with an initial political base as he increasingly protested against the policies of the new Sandinista government. He was killed in November 1980.

As with many Sandinista-confiscated properties, Santa María de Ostuma was the scene of turmoil in the years after Violeta Chamorro defeated them in 1990 elections. According to Jorge Salazar's daughter Lucía, although the land was officially returned to the family, Sandinista general Joaquín Cuadra, who had misappropriated various farms in the area that had been arbitrarily confiscated by the Sandinistas, turned it over only reluctantly, there were incursions by machete-armed men, and vandalism had ruined the property.{{cite news |first=Roberto |last=Fonseca L. |title=Lucía Salazar de Robelo: "Algún día les llegará la justicia" |url=http://www.laprensa.com.ni/archivo/2001/septiembre/08/nacionales/nacionales-20010908-10.html |work=La Prensa |location=Managua |date=September 8, 2001 |access-date=2008-02-02 |language=es}} The Sandinista Agricultural Workers' Association, on the other hand, complained to the International Labour Organization that four union members had been arrested by the police at the ranch, arrests the government denied had taken place.{{cite web |url=http://www.ilo.org/ilolex/cgi-lex/single.pl?query=0319942941649 |title=Complaint against the Government of Nicaragua presented by the Sandinista Workers' Confederation (CST) and the Agricultural Workers' Association (ATC) Report No. 294, Case(s) No(s). 1649 |access-date=2008-02-02 |author=International Labour Organization|year=1994|format=report |work=Vol. LXXVII, 1994, Series B, No. 2 }} Land disputes created by the confiscation continue into 2007.{{cite news |first=Luis Eduardo |last=Martínez M. |title=Sigue litigio por propiedad |url=http://www.laprensa.com.ni/archivo/2007/enero/13/noticias/regionales/167043.shtml |work=La Prensa |location=Managua |date=January 13, 2007 |access-date=2008-02-03 |language=es }}{{cite news |first=Luis Eduardo |last=Martínez M. |title=Rechazan querella por falta de requisitos |url=http://www.laprensa.com.ni/archivo/2007/enero/31/noticias/regionales/170518.shtml |work=La Prensa |location=Managua|date=January 31, 2007 |access-date=2008-02-02 |language=es }} The hotel has not been rebuilt.

In post-Sandinista governments, Jorge Salazar's son Jorge Salazar Cardenal would be appointed Minister of the Environment and Natural Resources, and his daughter Lucía Salazar de Robelo would serve as Minister of Tourism.

The Hotel Santa María de Ostuma serves as the setting for Jesús Miguel "Chuno" Blandón's novel, La Noche de los Anillos.

References

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