Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Homeward bound! Part 1 of 2(Bogota again)






So back to Bogota and decided to leave our big bags holidaying across the town and we stayed in the city centre. We went to see a few collections of art including a wonderful Botero exhibition. We also had a fun day out in a huge mall in the suburbs where we shopped for clothes that fitted us, ate noodles, went to the cinema AND played ten pin bowling ( yes Sue came home the champ!).

We collected our bags and packed them for the journey. Old clothes out and new ones in. Lovely to get rid of some of them. Even better to have nice new colours to wear...its the simple things you miss. SO after a bit of squeezing and a taxi to the airport we got on our first plane east. Well actually it was south, to Lima, a second flight taking us on to Sao Paulo which was at least in the right direction.

Taganga & more beaches!

We took a bus from Cartegena on North to Barnaquilla and then down the coast slightly, to Santa Marta. It being late in the evening, we took a taxi the short distance over the hills to Taganga. With no bookings we asked the driver to take us to a hostal and we checked in not realising that Brid & James, having also travelled north were our next door neighbours. Taganga is a small town which although it has a strong tourist population it doesn't have a bank machine. The main strip is along the sea front and is dotted with restaurants (some of which are Israeli, complete with Hebrew only menus) , dive centres and juice bars. We did not however come to see Taganga. We wanted to travel to the nearby national park, spend some time diving and swinging on hammocks and 'chilling to the max' before our return to Dublin. By the coast and away from the built up surroundings of Santa Marta, the temperature was much more comfortable, but the shade was still the only place to be between 12 and 2. The drinking of beer seems to be a big theme in Taganga and as we walked the strip in the morning 'en route' for a juice and a tinto ( extra sweet and scalding hot, very strong coffee, which seems to keep the whole of Colombia going in the heat) the locals would already be out chatting and swigging a cold beer or two. By following the coast line north out of town it was possible to walk over the hills and visit numerous big and small beaches. As a holiday spot, most of the beaches had people on them, splashing in the water, lounging in the sun(foreigners only) and being served by many ice cream, nougat, tinto and soft drinks sellers.
Joe & I had signed up to 3 days of diving in the national park. We travelled by boat for about an hour to a small beach where we slept in hammocks and spent our days diving in the surrounding bay. We also returned to this beach by oursleves where we rented a small house for a few days. No diving this time but morning fruit salads followed by a swim and a hammock swing. Joe chased fish while snorkelling and I got lost in a Ruth Rendall 'whodunnit' novel. Further down the beach there were a few people with the dive centre and another unoccupied small house. Pelicans and vultures visited the beach and we were entertained most evenings by wonderful lightening storms, striking in the mountains nearby to Santa Marta. Altogether a very pleasant way to spend a week. When the time came we left the wilderness of the beach and headed back to Bogota, through Santa Marta once again by bus. The Colombians really need to do their homework when it comes to buses. Unlike Peru, we got no blankets, pillows or snacks, the bus temperature was unbearable, due to excessive air conditioning,rather than altitude and although I do prefer Salsa to Peruvian wailing accompanied by pan pipes, the volume was enough to make our eardrums over flex! I know Columbians like to party but at 4am when your swinging around corners on an all too narrow main road and and the tunes are pumping out I a'int in the mood to party!

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Cartagena

Next on the cards was a long bus journey from Bogota to Cartagena, 20 hours roughly. I am curious to total up the amount of nights we have spent on buses since we left Ireland, or even the amount of kilometers travelled in them! In South America alone we have travelled by bus well more than 62 degrees of latitude, this figure obviously takes no account of any east/west travel.

Anyway we arrived in Cartagena tired and with sore bums! The first thing that we noticed was the heat! Even though Ecuador is on the equator we experienced nothing different from a hot Irish summers day but Cartagena is different. Within seconds of stepping off the bus I was dripping with sweat! Its like Malaysia all over!

We established ourselves in a hostel with a ceiling fan over the bed and set out to explore the city which is amazing. Cartagena is an old walled port city, which has a wonderfully coloured history full of pirates, sackings, slaves and rum! Walking the walls in the midday sun would be just the ticket we thought. The street sellers, hiding in shady nooks and crannies, kept us alive with iced cold plastic bags of mineral water which they produced from their cooler boxes. By the time three o'clock came we were fit for bed. We agreed that the next day we would get up early and siesta during the midday heat!

We spent a few days wandering round old Cartagena visiting the sites. There is a wonderful old fort called Castillo San Filipede Barajas. In case of attack, this castle had its own underground
reservoir and a labyrinth of unlit underground passages which steeply fall or rise from the depths of the earth. Often they are half full of water and I began to wonder if we'd ever find our way out! The passages provide emergency escape routes out, as well as a means to move troops from one area of the castle to another. The passages are riddled with nooks and crannies in which we half expected to find old Black Beard himself, jumping out with muskets blazing! The castle has only fallen once and this was before it was fully built. A French pirate called Baron de Pontis gathered together an army of 10,000 buccaneers who he cheated out of their cut of the immense loot. He sailed back to Paris with the loot as quickly as he could while the pirates, understandable annoyed, killed, raped and pillaged the remains of Cartagena. Since then the finished castle held out for 56 days with 27,000 angry men outside, its defense was led by a one eyed, one armed, one legged hero called Bals de Lezo who is commemorated with a statue at the entrance to the fort.

The stories of pirates go on and on in Cartagena's history. The walls and castles bristle with cannons, there are so many cannons in town they use them as street bollards, turned nuzzle down and set in the concrete. In fact any descent Caribbean pirate worth his shivering timbers seemed to have spent time either defending or attacking this city.

We frequented a local cafe/restaurant every day for a set lunch. A communal seating policy leaves one elbowing for space amongst the street sellers around a small table. There's half a dozen large fans that spin lazily suspended from the ceiling, the walls are decorated with mounted stuffed fish and turtles as well as box of chocolate style pictures of alpine lakes, pine trees and scenes from more temperate climes. The set lunch is a filling bowl of soup with barley grain, potatoes and a chunk of gristle. This is followed by fish or meat (both unspecified) and a double serving of carbohydrates; spuds and rice. Its all washed down with what they call a refresco, a sweet warm cordial. After this heavy meal and a morning in the sun all we are fit for is a siesta under a squeaky fan.

In the evening there is a street bar in which we enjoy a few beers, they belt out the salsa, rumba and mambo at full volume. This goes down great with the Colombians who need no excuse to dance, especially when on holiday. There is a lottery ticket man who has a little street side stall just by the bar, people que to buy their tickets, but in the middle of filling out the forms the bar plays his favorite tune. He slaps down his open palm on the table and upsets the neatly stacked piles of coins he has ready for change, the queue of people wait patiently while he dances up and down the street, punching the air for joy. This seems to be normal behaviour and who are we to come between a man and his music.

We spend a couple of indulgent days scuba diving, near to the local Islas del Rosario. It is beautiful with all sorts of wonderful fish, sunken wrecks and lobsters for lunch!

Sunday, August 31, 2008

A lovely day out in Bogota




We travelled by bus from Puerto Lopez, in Ecuador, to Bogota, in Colombia. It was long, but with the assistance of some loud Colombian music, we made it. Puerto Lopez to Quito, then on to Tulcans, where we crossed the border into Colombia at Ipiales and straight to Bogota from there. We settled in a nice colonial house in the embassy district of town. The first picture is taken in Quito. The angel adorns the hill over looking the city.



We discovered that a trip on a steam train was available, so we wandered the city trying to get more info. It ran on Sunday....about 8ish....the office opens at 7am.....on Sunday?? So at 6.30am we climbed out of bed and wander through the streets of a Sunday morning Bogota. We arrived at the very run down pillared train station and went in the side door. A ticket counter and many colombians drinking coffee. Being the only true stangers there, we had discovered a wonder of Bogota. So, we bought tickets, had a coffee and TOOOOOOOTT , went our train outside. So we all squeezed out the door and found our carriage
and got comfortable in our seats. TOOT TOOOOTT went the engine and we slowly chugged out of the station. We started to pick up speed and crossed many road junctions. All the shops are closed on Sundays, so Bogatonians are heading to the park, kite ander arm or cycling or walking the dog or enjoying beers by the moring sun. Us, as passangers, were kept quite busy, dutifully waving at all the passers by. We were also entertained by a small jazz ense,ble. This meant they had to turn down the other music that was blaring on the train. All part of the colombian travel experience!






Our destination was Zipaquira a town which is home to a huge salt mine. Beneath the mountian in the salt mine is a huge cathedral. Well a huge labarintyh of passageways and large rooms. It is all lit by coloured lights and rammed with tourists wandering in the dark. We stayed a while and wandered about before getting back on our train.

Train entertainment!

Puerto Lopez

We made our way to Puerto Lopez which is on the Pacific coast of Ecuador, for a couple of reasons. The first being that you can take whale watching tours from here, the second was that there is meant to be some good diving around Machalilla National Park with the possibility of seeing Manta Rays (giant rays that grow up to a 6m wing span). With giant animals on our minds it took us a day of bus journeys to get from Cuenca to Guayaquil.

We spent two days diving and another walking the long beech that fronts the town. The diving was great, fully suited up in thick wetsuits, balaclavas, booties etc I could hardly move but I managed to stay warm in the cooler Pacific! It´s not that cold really, I reckon the Ecuadorians have gone a bit soft under the hot sun! We dived in four different locations but we unfortunately didn´t get to see Mantas! While we were eating our sandwiches on our dive boat the second day, we chatted to a couple of marine biologists who had seen the rays just beneath the boat not 20 minutes previous. I put on a mask and fins and jumped in for a snorkel, but alas none to be found!

We did get to see lots of hump back whales though on the boat trip out to Isla del Plata, I have posted a short video below. Isla del Plata so called because Francis Drake used to stow his silver there, treasure that he nicked off the Spanish who had in turned nicked it off the Bolivians. Legend has it there are chests of treasure still to be found on the island!

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Joe and Sue go treasure hunting under the sea

A Humpback Whale





Cathedral in Cuenca





Just thought I¨d put up a few pictures of one of the fabulous Cathedrals in Cuenca. Also, at the side, there is a line of flowers sellers with a wonderful array of flowers. Can you find the lady snoozing? If you click on the photos it makes them bigger to help the search!

Cajas National Park, Ecuador!




Cajas National Park is situated close to the city of Cuenca, Ecuador. We travelled by bus from Huanchaco, back to Trujillo, to Piura, across the Ecuadorian border to Loja and finally to Cuenca. A beautifull colonial city enclosed by 3 rivers, peppered with wonderful churches and very different from Peru; fine filtered coffee, high speed internet with wide screen monitors and streets full of fashion (victims!) We took an early morning bus to the national park. With hundreds of lakes it is a very popular fishing location for the locals. We had our first encounter with some Ecuadorians who insisted we join them for a gin and coke to welcome us to their lovely country. It was 9am, they had a long drive ahead of them and we were going for a long walk, so why not!

Off we went into the park, back at altitude and recently refreshed. We wandered on through the park for our three day, two night hike, bags on bags with equipment and usual supplies. The terrain was quite similar to home and as the fog closed in and the soft rain fell we could have been in Ireland. In fact, I can offically report that the rain was more like an Irish experience than a New Zealand one. As I retrived my sodden boots from yet another deep squelchy muddy hole I thought, yes, just like connemara on a grand soft day.

So with our love of hiking high on our minds we passed three fine days in the hills. We saw some lovely flowers and some little scorpians, ate some fine sandwiches and got quizzed by some locals who wondered what the hell we were doing in the rain and mud when we should be down town on a tourist bus, or visiting a cathedral. We were greatly rewarded however and having managed to keep the huge fold out pictures of park birds dry, we identified four beautiful grey breasted toucans flying above our heads and sitting in a nearby tree.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Huanchaco and Chicama Surf

We returned to Trujillo and travelled just out of town to a town called Huanchaco. Huanchcao is on the coast and it was here that we met up with our Irish friends who had arrived out for a bit of surfing. We spent the guts of ten days surfing and eating sea food in the various forms that the Peruvians had come with! (raw with lime juice and onion, grilled, soups, cooked with milk, etc, etc).

Huanchaco has a long history of surfing on the reed boats you can see in the picture, these are used for fishing and can handle really big waves with relative ease. You sit or kneel on the boat, paddle with a split piece of bamboo and put your net and catch of fish in the bath shaped hole at the back.

There is several good waves in Huanchaco which we could easily walk to from the hostel. However half an hour up the road in a place called Chicama there is a world famous wave. This town isn´t nearly as nice, hence we stayed in Huanchaco. Chicama claims longest left hand wave in the world, this means that when you are standing on your surf board with the wave breaking behind you, you can surf the clean or unbroken wave towards your left for distances of up to three kilometers on a good day. We managed to catch Chicama on two "good" days and surfed waves maybe one to two kilometres long which we all pretty delighted about!

Huanchaco was great, the weather pleasant, everything was easy and we could and would have stayed there for much longer however we were keen to try to get north to Equador and Columbia. Our time in South America is now getting noticeable shorter and the list of "oh, we must go and check that out" is getting longer by the day. Sadly we moved on.

Menu del Dia

After lounging in the hot baths near Cajarmarca we were a bit peckish and headed off for some lunch. We found a not too grotty restaurant, with a table of eight happily munching, a good sign. We browsed the menu to find most regular items available.Pollo (chicken) this and pollo that. A bit of res(meat) with salad and beans. No guinea pig. Not that I could bear to watch Joe eat one again. Why the serve them with their heads on and the teeth peering up at you I cant understand! Caldo de Gallina, a broth with bits of veg and pollo into. Mystery bits that is. A red meat version is also available but bits of meat are more mysterious so we usually stick with the chicken(pollo). Most restaurants have a menu of the day. Its the cheapest and you can usually decipher what your eating. It also comes with a fruit cordial to really test your stomach. We decided to splash out a bit and instead of going from the Menu del Dia , Joe had some trout and & I had a well beaten piece of beef. It went down nicely and we settled it with a cold beer. We soon became aware of a constant thumping out side the window. Like someone chopping wood with a blunt axe. It would stop occasionally only to start up again , thump, thump, thump.

We finished our lunch, paid the billl and as we left the restaurant the curious noise was explained. A young lady was outside the restaurant, preparing the meat for the menu del Dia. On the table in front of her was half the head of a llama. In one hand she held the remaining half, the other hand careful scraping out the meat with a sharp knife, before dropping the bits in a bucket. Another head sat on the table, a hatchet firmly stuck in it. Tired of chopping she was having a bit of a break..........

Glad we didnt order the menu del dia

Leymebamba


Hey just wanted to let you all see the band that were waiting to greet us when we had a brief break from the bus on the way to Tingo!

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Tingo, Kuelap, Chachapoyas & Chiclayo



We were sorry to say goodbye to Celendin. Such an attractive small town full of friendly people with very fine hats!!Our next destination was Tingo, 10 hours away on a bus. I was lucky to be entertained most of the way by a box of chickens sitting at my feet. One passenger was complaining that the box was too small for 8 chickens and insisted that the owner open the box so they had more room. This meant that every now and again a chick did try to make a bid for freedom and was soon grabbed and tucked back into the box. All then had to be counted and given out too. The situation was eventually improved as the lady got another box in a town we passed through, transferred some chickens to provide all with more room and let the most troublesome one sit on her lap! Everyone was happy. Well apart from most of the other passengers who were busy filling plastic bags handed out by the bus man!!! A small boy sitting on his mothers lap was the first to start. Once his bag was full his mother started. She was deep green and had passed her now pale son to his father to mind. Sure enough it was daddys turn and the little boy was passed to a stranger on the bus while his parents recovered. When they weren¨t getting sick and holding their heads they were busy eating fruit and biscuits and popcorn and everything else they could buy through the bus window. An endless cycle, but seems to be what one does on a long bus journey. Joe enjoyed the view out the window and I avoided the chickens!! We stopped briefly in Leymebamba where I was greeted by a brass band as I got off the bus to strech my legs. We arrived in Tingo in time for dinner, both delightd to have another long bus journey behind us.


From Tingo we left very early in the morning to avoid the heat and had a three and a half hour walk up the hill to Kuelap (approx 3000m). Lying along the top of a mountian ridge Kuelap is a huge walled city with spectacular views across numerous valleys. It was built by the Chachapoyas culture in 800AD, occupied until about 1570 and is about 600m long and 110m wide. The outer perimeter walls are 19m and access can only be gained by 3 openings up steep steps. The dwellings inside were all circular and some have a fancy stone pattern on them. High in its jungle setting there are trees growing throughout the site now and many flowers are frequented by hummingbirds. We had a lovely wander about Kuelap and marched down to Tingo to lounge on our balcony and listen to the river.

We headed to Chachapoyas the next day and went to see the small museum on the plaza. Another colonial town all bright and painted up for July 28th , the national holiday. From there we went to Chiclayo where my mission was to see the gold from Sipan. In 1987 a wonderful discovery was made. A pyramid containg the tomb of a king was discoverd in Sipan. Looters had started digging but the authorities managed to stop them and a wonderful collection of gold items was found. They have built a special secure museum for what they found, three floors of gold and silver and wonderful artifacts. We walked around with our mouths open gaping at all the gold. No photos were allowed but I have found a good web site where you can have a look at some of the treasures. http://www.go2peru.com/cix_foto1.htm Look out for the gold spider necklace and earrings with mosaic inlay. We also went to Tucume which is the remains of a vast city. There is a ceremonial centre and 26 pyramids of various sizes. All built in adobe and boasting the largest adobe structure in the world. Another museum displays some wonderful gold pieces which were found at the site.


Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Quiz results answers and more

Well, well, well!! The long awaited and now very late quiz results.

Results first........

Question 1. How many countries in total have Joe and Sue visited since leaving Dublin last October?
Answer 1. 10....... We changed planes in Germany, landed in Singapore, travelled in Malaysia, passing briefly through Brunei. Stayed with our friends in Australia, two weeks in the south island of New Zealand, crossed the Pacific to Chile, climbed and hiked in Argentina, travelled through Bolivia and finally ended up in Peru.

Question 2. How many shoe shops in Bolivia and Peru did Joe get laughed at, before he could find a pair of shoes big enougth to buy?
Answer 2. 12 shoe shops, I was eventually successful in Cuzco, however they only had white plimsoles that fitted!

Question 3. What is the current total weight of Joe and Sue and their rucksacks?
Answer 3. 205 Kilos, Joe and rucksacks weighs in at 113 kilos, while Sue and her bags fetches 92 kilos!

Thanks for all the responses, Barry Long was the only one to correctly get question 1 correct, while the Cillian, Tess and Oliver team were closest on questions 2 and 3. This leaves team Cillian, Tess and Oliver winners and a prize will be posted by the end of the week! (it takes three to four weeks in the post so be patient!)

Also thank you (Paddy, Lesley, Oliver, Tess and Cillian) very much for the quiz you sent us. Please find the answers below.

Q. How many pheasants has Molly caught in the fields around Woodenbridge?

A. We think 3

2. How many fat pancakes did we cook for breakfast?
A. 11

3. Who's going to win Euro 2008?
A. Sorry we´re late here but we thought Germany or Spain, this is based on World Cup performances.

4. Name 3 of Bob the Builder's friends?
A. Lofty, Roley and Scoop. Oliver might be interested in the following site? http://www.bobthebuilder.com/uk/

5. How many doors (not including cupboards / fridges / cookers etc.) are there in 36 Fitzwilliam Square (not including the stables)?
A. This was difficult......
Top floor....6
Kitchen and Guest Room....3
Return Loo.....2
Dad´s Office and meeting room........4 (we allowed 2 for the sliding dividing doors between the two rooms)
Paddy´s office......2 (double doors)
Ground Floor......4
Tooth hall.....6 (including sink double doors)
Basement flat.......6
Front and back garden........3 (coal holes and play house)
Back basement.......4
This gives a grand total of 40!!!! that is quite a few doors for one house!

And the last question....
Identify who wrote each of the above questions?
Q.1 Paddy, Q.2 Tess, Q.3 Cillian, Q.4 Oliver, Q.5 Lesley.

How many bed mattresses can you fit on a tricycle?

Click on the link below to see how close you are!
http://www.box.net/shared/yppt5rpggo

Monday, July 28, 2008

Cajamarca & Celendin


We left our big bags to holiday in Trujillo while we packed a few things and got on a night bus to Cajamarca. At about 2700m Cajamara is warm and sunny and remembered as the scene of the capture and execution of Antahualpa, an Inca Emperor in 1532. Antahualpa had beaten his brother in battle and before heading to Cusco to take up reign he stopped in Cajamarca to soak his wounds in a hot pool. He had 80,000 soilders with him and they were all down the town eating cake celebrating the victory. Francisco Pizarro had been marching for weeks with a bunch of soilders too (less than 200) and wanting to meet with Antahualpa, they too stopped in Cajamarca. Word was sent to Antahualpa who said goodbye to his rubber ducky and got out of the bath to go to town to meet Pizarro. The Spaniards had arrived in town first and hid themselves to ambush the inca warriors. Some sort of multi-lingual exchange occured which involed the spanish making demands and waving the bible. The Inca king, sorry that he had not got his soilders out of the bakery was captured in a bloody battle that seemed to last less than an hour but saw thousands of soilders killed. They had never seen horses, never mind fought against steel swords. Their top commanders were killed first, which left the soilders disorganised. Antahualpa tried to bargin for his release, and holding his arm aloft in the room where he was kept prisioner he marked the wall. This was to show the height of gold he would give Pizarro, and 2 rooms of silver, in exchange for his release. The Spaniards were delighted with this offer but killed Antahualpa anyway. From this day on the inca empire crumbled. We went to see the ranson room which is still standing and also bathed in the famous hot baths, but not Antahualpas one. (Looks like the water has been changed since but still a bit grotty!!)


This being a bit of a whistle stop tour, we left the next morning to travel to Celendin. Settled in a lovely hostel we wandered down town and through the market. A lovely town with very few cars and well preserved and freshly painted colonial buildings. The plaza, immaculately kept with lovely flowers and a huge catherdal fronting onto it, being enjoyed by the locals , sitting in the sun. We have seen a lot of hats on this trip and Im sorry to not have more photos of them. In this town they had wonderful sambreros. Hand made by the ladies and sold to the hat shop for finishing off. On Sunday morning everyone was in their finery and in town for the market. At 6am the livestock market starts. At 7am the hat market. It continues through the day and by the end of it the streets are full of contented shoppers cluthcing hens, dragging pigs, carrying reeds to make more hats and much more! It is so enjoyable to wander the streets and admire all the lovely fruit and vegetables, neatly arranged in piles. We went to visit more hot springs in a lovely valley nearby. The springs were at the bottom of a wonderful lush valley with the trees heaving with fruit. This time we really got stuck in and baked in the mineral enriched mud for a while before getting in with the locals for a wash! The scolding hot water bubbles up in pools beside a river. So, you can sit in the river and build a wall so that you trap sone of the hot water coming from a pool and mix it with the river water to enjoy a nice hot soak. We were very taken by Celendin. I hope to do a slide show of photos the next time I am at a computer.