Las Isletas de Granada are one of the most charming corners of Lake Nicaragua, and their origin is intimately tied to the volcano that dominates them: Mombacho. According to the most widespread geological interpretation, this archipelago of about 365 islets formed thousands of years ago when a great collapse or lateral eruption of Mombacho volcano threw an enormous avalanche of rocks and debris into the lake.
Those blocks of rock, on falling into the waters of Cocibolca in front of what is today Granada, remained as a constellation of small islands. As time passed, the tropical vegetation gradually covered the islets with trees, palms and shrubs, transforming that field of volcanic debris into the green, peaceful maze we know today.
The figure of '365 little islands' —as many as the year has days— is more an evocative popular tradition than an exact count, but it gives an idea of the number of islets that dot this area of the lake. The result is a unique landscape: hundreds of islands right on the water, at the foot of a volcano, in front of one of the most beautiful colonial cities in the Americas.
Long before the arrival of the Spanish, the shores and islands of the great Lake Cocibolca were inhabited by Indigenous peoples of Chorotega and Nahua origin, for whom the lake was an axis of life: a source of fishing, a route of transport in their boats and a setting for their culture and mythology.
The lake region is rich in testimonies of these cultures: on nearby islands like Zapatera and in the Granada area itself, petroglyphs and a remarkable stone statuary have been found, which rank among the most important of Nicaragua's archaeological heritage. These peoples navigated the waters of Cocibolca and knew its islands and islets, surely including the future Isletas.
When the Spanish arrived in the area in the 16th century, they found a densely populated and organized region. The founding of Granada in 1524, on the lakeshore, took place in this Indigenous territory, and the encounter —and the clash— between the two worlds would mark the beginning of a new stage for the lake and its islands, which would become integrated into the life of the colonial city.
In 1524, the conquistador Francisco Hernández de Córdoba founded the city of Granada on the shore of Lake Cocibolca, in one of the first Spanish foundations on the mainland of the American continent. Its location beside the lake was no accident: Cocibolca, connected to the Caribbean Sea through the San Juan River, offered Granada a river outlet to the Atlantic that would make it an important commercial port.
Thanks to that connection, Granada prospered during the colonial era as one of the most important mercantile centers of Central America: through the lake and the San Juan River circulated goods and riches toward the Caribbean and Europe. Las Isletas, in front of the city, thus became integrated into the everyday and strategic surroundings of Granada, forming part of the landscape of its port life.
Granada's wealth, however, also made it vulnerable. Its prosperity and its outlet to the sea made it a coveted target, and the history of the city and its islands was marked by the threat of pirates who came up the San Juan River to the lake, a danger that would force the area to be defended, including Las Isletas themselves.
Granada's prosperity as a lake port with an outlet to the Caribbean made it a target for pirates and privateers, who on several occasions came up the San Juan River from the sea to Lake Cocibolca to sack the city. This recurring threat forced the colonial authorities to reinforce the area's defense.
Among the defensive measures, on one of the strategic islets of Las Isletas the Fortín de San Pablo was built in the 18th century, a small fortification meant to watch over and protect the access to Granada by the lake. Its walls and cannons, located in an elevated position over the water, served to detect and confront the attackers who approached the city sailing among the islets.
Today, the Fortín de San Pablo is preserved as testimony to that era of trade, wealth and danger. Visiting it during a boat ride through Las Isletas lets you imagine the times when these calm waters were part of a defensive system, and understand the strategic role that Granada and its lake had in the colonial history of Central America.
Over the centuries, Las Isletas stopped being just a field of volcanic debris to become an inhabited and lived-in space. Many of the islets were settled by fishing families, who found in these calm waters a place to live from the lake's artisanal fishing, raising their houses at the water's edge.
Over time, and especially in more recent periods, some islets became the property of wealthy families from Granada and elsewhere, who built on them residences and weekend houses, drawn by the beauty and calm of the archipelago. So Las Isletas today combine the simple life of the fishing communities with elegant private properties, small hotels and restaurants reachable only by boat.
This mix is part of the current charm of Las Isletas: sailing among them is seeing traditional fishing, nature —herons, cormorants, monkeys on some islets— and leisure coexist. Las Isletas have established themselves as one of the great tourist draws of the lake, a classic ride that combines history, nature and the daily life of a unique archipelago in front of Granada.
Today, Las Isletas de Granada are one of the most popular rides on Lake Nicaragua and an essential component of Granada's tourist offer. Touring them by boat or by kayak has become an almost obligatory experience for those who visit the colonial city, drawn by the combination of nature, fresh water and views of Mombacho volcano.
The archipelago also works as a wildlife haven in the very heart of the lake: herons, cormorants, kingfishers and other water birds find in its islets a quiet habitat, and some islets —like the famous 'Monkey Island'— have become classic points of the tour. This natural wealth coexists with the pressure of development and tourism, which poses the challenge of conserving the ecosystem's balance.
Las Isletas are, ultimately, a natural and historical heritage of Cocibolca: born from the fire of Mombacho, witnesses to the colonial history of Granada and the pirate incursions, home to fishermen and a haven for birds. Their serene landscape, at the foot of the volcano and in front of the city, sums up much of the magic of the great lake of Nicaragua.