Asunción is beautiful, but why is garbage burning and its smell normalized throughout the city?
Hey everyone! I’m Colombian and I’ve been seriously considering moving my tax residency to Paraguay.
I’m from Bogotá, and one of the first things that struck me about Asunción is how green it is. I’ve seen a lot of posts saying the city isn’t actually as green as people claim and that other parts of Paraguay are much greener, but honestly, coming from Bogotá (and even compared to Medellín), Asunción feels incredibly lush and beautiful to me.
You also hear a lot about how warm Paraguayans are, but I genuinely think words don’t fully capture it until you experience it yourself. People here are unbelievably kind and welcoming. I’d honestly say they’re some of the nicest people I’ve met anywhere in the world.
The food is amazing too and honestly, I enjoy it even more than Colombian food. And while I don’t think any city in the world is ever 100% safe, there really is a noticeable sense of security in neighborhoods like Manorá, Villa Morra, Las Lomas, etc. It’s something I personally never felt in supposedly similar upscale areas like Chicó or Zona T back in Bogotá.
That said, there’s one thing that has really surprised me: the smell of burning garbage some nights in Asunción. It’s not constant or every day, but it happens often enough to notice. What surprises me even more is how normalized it seems to be. I barely find anyone talking about it online, whether locals or expats. Nobody really seems to complain about it.
I understand that waste collection is a major issue and probably not an easy one to solve. But honestly, it takes away from an otherwise beautiful place and a genuinely pleasant quality of life. It feels sad to see something like that in such a green and charming city.
What confuses me the most is the silence around it because it’s not just about the smell, it’s also about public health. And yes, I already know some Paraguay critics will jump in saying the country has bigger issues with healthcare, infrastructure, etc. But as someone coming from abroad and not being used to this kind of pollution, I genuinely wonder: why does nobody talk about it? Am I the only one noticing it, or do people here just see it as normal?