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Witches who wait for children in the forest, men who turn into caimans to observe young bathing girls or one-legged beauties who seduce men to devour their hearts afterward. You can note that the legends and myths of Colombia are not to be surpassed in dramatics. The mystic tales in different places are shaped by the various cultural influences as well as by its different natural conditions. To give you a small taste of it, we have put together ten well-known examples in a two-part blog post.

 

La Patasola

 

Patasola is described as a woman in the depths of the forests of Colombia who has the ability to change her appearance depending on the situation. An essential feature that might by true in all stories is that she has only one leg.

She is often described as a beautiful young woman who seduces men with her lascivious looks and lures them into the depths of the woods where men driven by lust lose all orientation in the thicket. Then she shows her true face: the eyes of a wild animal, claws like a cat, long pointed nails, matted hair and thirst for fresh blood.

She falls over the (unfaithful) men and not in such a way as the gentlemen probably would have imagined and wished.

 

A Patasola statue in a theme park in the area of Villavicencio (colombia.com)

 

Her appearance is feared mainly in the rural areas by hunters, gatherers, farmers and miners. Some claim they hear her screaming in the night, a scream reminiscent of a desperate young woman in distress - her lure call?

 

It is likely that La Patasola existed as a warning to men to avoid being seduced by beautiful women.

 

El Mohan

 

El Mohan, a magician who lives in rivers, a creature of a human form with sunburnt face, long hair and piercing eyes. The Mohan appears at various rivers and streams and smokes a thick tobacco to drive the insects away. It is said that Mohan lived in the dangerous depths of some rivers and streams, where he lived in underground caves that only he knew and considered his own.

He enchants the women who go to these streams and rivers to wash their clothes, steal them and enjoy the sight of their natural beauty. When he liked them extraordinarily, he kidnapped them and nobody never saw them again.

Those who have heard the legend of Mohan do not walk quietly along the banks of rivers, especially at night, because many fishermen claim to have seen the creature navigating the streams or sitting on the rocks.

 

Mohan as he is often illustrated: smoking tobacco and sitting on rocks (mitos-cortos.com)

 

On full moon nights Mohan plays melodies with his guitar. Thanks to the rays of the moonlight you can see his huge hair, elongated nails and his with moss covered back.

As it is well known that the magician is a lover of tobacco, believing fishermen put down a bag with the plant before entering the river, because in this way will be a good catch of fish.

 

La Llorona

 

The legend of the Llorona reaches from Mexico to Argentina and knows therefore also different executions.

La Llorona is the spirit of a woman who is said to have lost (or killed) her children. She wanders through the lagoons, rivers, valleys and mountains looking for them.

It is said that La Llorona is dressed in a black robe her hair is long and black. She is said to carry crickets, fireflies, butterflies and other insects. Those who have seen her say that she carries a dead baby in her arms.

 

La Llorona carrying her baby (unpocodemitosyverdades.com)

 

Originally it is the story of a beautiful young indigenous woman who is said to have fallen in love with a Spaniard. They kept the relationship secret, but still fathered three children together. Some time later, the Spaniard marries a rich woman from Europe. The contemptuous native kills her three children. She repents it immediately and throws herself into the river. In front of the gate of heaven she is rejected and sent back to earth. Since then her spirit has been wandering around, lamenting with this painful and familiar cry: "Aaaaaaaaaay, my children!

 

La Madremonte

 

The farmers and loggers who have seen her say that she is a corpulent, elegant lady, dressed in fresh leaves and green moss, with a hat covered with leaves and green feathers. Her face is not visible because the hat is covering it.

There are many people who know her screams or howls in dark nights causing dangerous storms. She lives in entangled places, with green trees, away from the noise of civilization and in warm forests, with dangerous animals.

The farmers say that when the Madremonte bathes in the source areas of the rivers, the sky becomes cloudy and the rivers overflow, leading to floods, strong storms and terrible damage.

She punishes those who enter her territory without permission and especially perverts, unfaithful spouses and vagabonds. She curses the cattle of unfaithful farmers with plagues and she punishes these ones who seize the land of other people or cut off the fences of neighbouring territories.

It is said that to get rid of the Madremont attacks, it is comfortable to smoke tobacco or a liana tied to the waist.

 

El Hombre Caiman

 

The Hombre Caiman is a Colombian legend in a city of Magdalena, on the Caribbean coast. There are different versions of this story.

A well-known one tells the story of a fisherman who spied on the women of the village while they were bathing in the river Magdalena. Because of the intense fear he felt of being discovered, he asked a magician for help, who gave him a red and a white potion. As a result he could become an alligator with the red to spy on the girls at close range and with the white he would regain normality.

With the help of an acquaintance who applied the white potion to him, the man spied on the women without a problem until one day his friend could not accompany him and took another person who was so frightened at the sight of the alligator that he dropped the potion so that its contents were diluted until he dropped a few drops on the head of the animal so that he was half human and half alligator converted.

 

El hombre caiman; partly human - partly reptile (unmitocorto.com)

 

It is said that the alligator man became a phenomenon that caused terror and could never spy on the women in the river again, because because of his monstrous appearance never went swimming in this place again.

Because of his ugliness, he only received visits from his mother. When her mother died, he was carried away by the river until he disappeared, so he was never seen again.


A characteristic by talking about myths and legends: the core is approximately in all narratives the same, however, the decorations and individual details can differ from the narrator, the circumstances or between places and countries.

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