Thursday, January 31, 2008

Deliriously in love: where steak costs as much as chicken.

Day 29: I am currently drunk in Buenos Aires. I am in love. This city is so effing fantastic!!! That is all I can say, really.

I arrived here last night and bunked with Eden in her 4* Hotel Colon. Oh, how nice it felt to sleep in a room with complementary towels and soaps and fluffy pillows. Sigh. I am just a spoiled kid at heart.

Anyhoo, I am seriously madly in love with this city. I am almost regretting leaving this charming place come the 2nd (heading to Puerto Madryn, Argentina). Ah, but I will be back. No doubt about it. (Gabe, you love the steaks. Well, let me tell you, these fuckin steaks man--they are ridic. That is all I have to say about that.) I am quite seriously considering buying an apartment here. Yes, it was love at first sight.



Guess how much that steak cost! It was the size of our heads. Our lunch consisted of one huge-o steak, two delicious bottles of wine, many side dishes.... how much do you suppose it was??

Man, I am so deliriously happy (wine happy). I am sad Eden has finally left for good. Boohoo. Regardless, we had an excellent run. Loves ya, E!

On Saturday, I head to Puerto Madryn. The weather forecasts inform me that it´s lovely there. We shall see. Regardless, Buenos Aires. Oh sighhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. Well, I will be back... very soon. HEEEEEEEEEEEEEHEE.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

¨On the road again¨

Day 27: Still in Salta and heading by night bus to Buenos Aires in an hour. The weather is driving me away from this city, and likely also away from Buenos Aires when I get there. Weather updates of Puerto Madryn in the south inform me that it´s nice and mostly sunny there. Most importantly, however, no rain in the forecast! No rain, sea lions, penguins, and possible whale sightings? I am so there, even if it means pretty much half a week of my life spent in busses.

Anyway, I arrive in Buenos Aires tomorrow (21hr bus ride) and will hopefully be able to meet up with Eden one last time before her flight back to Chicago. Steaks you can cut with a spoon & bottles of malbec are on the menu!

This blogging thing gets tiring so you will have to do with a paltry update, in photo form.


I love desert scenery. Photo taken outside of San Pedro de Atacama, Chile.


Up high in the mountains outside of San Pedro de Atacama, there are gorgeous lakes with crystal clear waters. It reminded me of Banff, Canada but sans evergreens and plus desert grasses.


Strangest sandwich ever; Salta. Feeling like a fatty, I ordered a sandwich of lettuce, tomato, onions, eggs, peppers, and rocquefort cheese off the ¨light¨ section of the menu. I was expecting something along the lines of an egg salad sandwich with some extra veggies. This is what I got. I mean it was fine, but like... whoop dee doo. I ate it and looked longingly at my neighbours enjoying their delicious, warm sammiches with gooey quesos and steaks.

It has now dawned on my why I´m spending so much. I quite honestly stop every chance I get at some cute little bistro, restaurant, cafe, panderia (bakery), etc. to chow. I love food-travelling. I especially love it when I´m actually losing weight. This is thanks to trekking and endless walking to the next food-destination!

So far I have learned empanadas in Argentina are baked in a wood fired ovens. Wonderful! The ones in SPdA were fried. Very unhealthy but very, very delicious. I love empanadas!


A little glimpse at Salta´s architecture. I am really bad with shots of the city so like yah. There aren´t many. :(


Anyway, this Argentinian culture takes some getting used to. Every non-lunch meal I´ve had since arriving I´ve had pretty much alone--as in, alone in the restaurant. Last night I had dinner at 830pm all by my lonesome in a huge restaurant. People here eat crazy late; I just can´t get used to it! How do they eat so late and not get fat!?

And fat, they definitely are not. The only size pants I can find are like 23. Maybe, if you´re lucky, you can get into the plus sized section with some size 25s. Hoping BA has more selection for fatty North Americans like myself.

Finally, I wanted to add, I´m a Canuck! People hate Americans! Haha. Since travelling, I´ve suddenly become crazy about stating that I am Canadian and thus completely neglecting to mention my home in Chicago. It seems people are hesitant to talk to you if you mention you´re from the States whereas if you´re from Canada (or some other non-US, western country), immediately comes the Bush-bashing and immediate comraderie. Just my limited experience, so far.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Not down with siesta

Ok. I did not realize siesta time was taken so literally in Argentina. There is nothing open. Sometimes from the hours of 10am to 5pm. I am not down with this. I need jeans. And an adaptor. And an empanada.


Other realizations while travelling:

My next job needs to pay at least as well as my last. This means I probably have to work in finance (moan) again. Travelling poor-girl style is ok but boy do I want a big ol´ bathroom with 5 different sized towels and an entire range of self-cleaning products. Eden is living it up in her giant suite in Buenos Aires and I´m being harassed by fellow dorm mates in Salta. Not cool. Definitely treating myself one of these days.

Hey Gabe, you said you had coupons for like fancy hotels right??? Heehee.


On language barriers:

My spanish is getting better, no doubt, but I just cannot understand people here! I can read it well enough and ask for the basic things I need, but people speak sooooo fast! It´s impossible to make heads or tails of a word!!! Maybe in another month.

No need to call the authorities--I am safe!

Day 26: Currently in Salta, Argentina. I arrived late last night. One thing to note for travellers: the city appears to be exceedingly safe! In every other city in South America, as soon as you enter a bus terminal, a million sketchy cabs (US euphemism for illegitimate cabs) immediately solicit your business. Here, it´s like any American airport! Good old Argentina. There´s a queue for cabs and everyone proceeds one by one to get on legit cabs. Very impressive! I arrived at my hostel safe and sound without much ado.

So Salta is a lovely city--or at least, it appears like it could be if it weren´t for the damned non-stop torrential down pour. I am currently seeking refuge in this internet cafe (slowest computers evah), completely and utterly drenched. I also did some accounting and I am currently way over budget at about $70/day (not including airfares). I don´t know where the money went but I am definitely not going to last very long on my travels at this rate. One thing is for sure, Salta is infinitely more affordable than San Pedro and we´re back to the 3-$1usd exchange rate which I find much more preferable than $460-$1usd in Chile. (DAMN IT USD! GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER! ANOTHER INTEREST RATE CUT! AHHH! As each day passes, everytime I withdrawl money, it costs more USDs. Ugh).

I was originally planning on spending some time here in Salta but given the rain, I think I´ll get out of here early. I´m going to look into getting a night bus out of here to Buenos Aires tomorrow and in the meantime find indoor activities to do. So sad. No horseback riding yet :(

I will also add that the bus ride from San Pedro to Salta, while incredibly expensive (far more than the quoted $45USD in my guidebook ed. 2008), was gorgeous and also quite comfy. It´s absolutely true that the busses in Argentina are the best in South America. They´re so good in fact that I´m looking forward to a picturesque ride from Salta to BA tomorrow or whenever I leave (17+ hours woohoo!).

Anyway, I was going to post a more substantial update but the slow internet and my laziness is preventing me from doing so. Next time, folks. Maybe. Here are a few photos from the bus ride SPdA to Salta.


Desert.


Salt Lake. (No Salar d´Uyuni, Bolivia but I did get a taste of what it´s like. Gorgeous stuff, huh?)


From desert to mountains. Enter the clouds. Enter the non-stop rain in Salta.


Travel Tips, What to bring--another edition:

- In my attempt to pack light, I heeded the advice of websites to only bring one pair of outdoorsy pants and some tights. Boy do I regret not bringing jeans! They may be heavy, hard to dry, and all in all a pain, but seriously I really want to look somewhat normal for just one day! Sigh. Now I pass every store arching my head trying to get a sense of a jean selection.

- Also in my attempt to pack light, I did not bring flip flops as websites suggested just to get them here and toss them as they get wrecked. Should have brought my Reefs. Not only are they more comfy, they´re quality and hard to wreck. Besides, the flip flops I´ve purchased so far are pretty fugly and not as cheap as you´d think ($6 in Ecuador, $1.50 in Peru=two ugly pairs of flip flops).


Other Things, Postcards:

- I know I said I would send postcards to some of you. Yes, I still have your addresses, but like... where are the post offices? Plus I don´t know the Spanish word for post office. I actually have the physical postcards to send too!!! They´ll come, eventually. No, seriously. If you never sent me your address and want a postcard, email me doods.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Desert town, US prices

Day 24: Currently in San Pedro de Atacama, still. Eden and I separated this morning (byee!! sniffles). Tomorrow I'm heading by bus to Salta, Argentina. Unfortunately, there isn't much choice when it comes to busses to Salta from this town so I'll be arriving late in the night. This means, if you don't get an update from me by Monday, contact the authorities! A fake taxi has kidnapped me!

Ok, I'm to lazy to post a full report at the moment of the last couple of days. Suffice it to say, there has been some amazing scenery around here. That said, I'm glad to be getting out of this expensive town!!!! US prices, no gracias! (Of course, the prix fixe dinners here for about $11USD are a pretty sweet deal).

Here are a couple photos to whet your appetite for my full report:


Vicuñas in the distance. I kept thinking of how nice a vicuña coat would be. Apparently they aren't able to be domesticated and only produce about 100g of hair per year/2 years! This is why your vicuña jacket is crazy pricey.


E & I on the Valle de Luna tour. There are some better photos with cooler scenery but I was loathe to wait for my stupid camera to load up in full on the computer here.


Sunset over the Valle de Luna.


Flamingos!

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Eden adds me to her death list

Day 22: Currently in San Pedro de Atacama. We arrived earlier today by bus and are ready to get the hell out of here. This little tourist haven has US-prices (just about). We did manage to book a couple of trips for tomorrow--to the El Tatio Geysers and to the Valley of the Moon. The big news today, however, is that I have had a change in plans. I will not be going to Bolivia at all. Mom, you can breathe easy now. After Eden leaves me on the 26th, I will stay here and visit the local Chilean (and much smaller) salt lake: Salar de Atacama. Then, its off on another long distance bus to Salta, Argentina on the 27th. I´m a little disappointed, but not much. This isn´t the best season to visit the Bolivian Salar d´Uyuni anyway so that--and Bolivia as a whole--will just have to wait for the next time I´m in South America. Details on the new plans and what this bird will do by herself in Argentina to come...

First, a review of Arequipa and Colca Canyon:


Day 17: Eden and I are in Arequipa enjoying delicious, delicious crepes! As I mentioned in an earlier post, the Zig Zag creperie on Santa Catalina is YUMMMMY. In our time in Arequipa, we basically ate there every meal.


Day 17: At the creperie...


Day 17: I also mentioned that while in Arequipa, we visited this convent whose name escapes me. It´s definitely worth the trip even if it´s a little pricier than one would expect. Eden paid for my ticket as a birthday gift. Thanks girl!


Day 1 of Colca Canyon (Day 18): We woke up at 2:30am in order to get our asses downstairs by 2:45am for our 3 day trek through Colca Canyon. From our hotel, we´re taken to the bus terminal and stuffed in a local bus. As you can see, people get all up in your biznezz on the local busses in Peru. Standing is mandatory. The bus ride to Cabanaconde (starting point of the trek) is about 6hours. I sleep most of the way. Eden, apparently, does not. She is pissed.


Day 1 of CC trek: We descend into the Canyon from Cabanaconde. Here, Eden attacks our guide, Roy.


Day 1 of CC trek: Here is Elinor (Elle) our new best Aussie friend and the other member of our CC hike.


Day 1 of CC trek: Our first night is spent in the Llahuar Lodge where two rivers meet. This is the ¨Llahuar Route¨into the Canyon, and we would later learn, Llahuar is also the harder route of the 3d/2n options. This first day was pretty easy as it is all downhill. Thing is, downhill literally kills my knees. I have bad knees. I fall quite a few times coming down b/c the roads are filled with rocks and my knees are weak. All in all though, no serious damage. Eden, however, is definitely ready to kill me for signing her up for yet another few days of hellish trekking. While in the photos Llahuar seems like a quaint little place to spend a night, the accomodations made us think of what it must be like to live in Vietnam as a poor rice paddy farmer. No electricity. Dirt floors. Bamboo shacks. At least there was a flushing toilet.

For dinner we have fresh trucha (trout) caught by Roy from the river. Eden is not amused. Elle and I love the fried trout and gobble ours up, bones and all.


Day 2 of CC trek (Day 19): We begin a 800m climb out of Llahuar at 6:30am and head to the ¨Oasis¨. The 800m up is followed by another 1,000m down. It seems like such a futile climb as the net result is us back where we started (even lower than where we started). Eden is definitely pissed.


Day 2 of CC trek: We are at the top of our 800m climb. Take a right for Llahuar. We go the opposite way.


Day 2 of CC trek: From the top of our little climb, we can see the Oasis down below. See the zig zags in the mountains? Those are the ways in and out.


Day 2 of CC trek: The downhill seems to take forever. We pass a river and finally make it to the Oasis. We take a dip in the cold water and relax in the sun.

Here at the Oasis, we also run into a group doing the traditional CC trek. Their first and second day were both downhill--unlike our second day which included a climb. This other group is kind of weird though. It included: Annoying German Girl, Strange Slovenian Guy, Snooty Belgian Couple. Eden, Elle and I resolve to beat the meek looking Belgians going up the canyon for the following day.


Day 2 of CC trek: Again, accomodations may seem nice in that photo of the pool, but rest assured, it´s another bamboo shack with dirt floors! This bamboo hut was nicer than the one at Llahuar Lodge. Eden sobs on her bed and damns me to hell.


Day 3 of CC trek (Day 20): We begin trekking at 3am! The moon is peeking out over the side of the canyon as we embark on our 1,100m climb out of the canyon.


Day 3 of CC trek: Slowly, light is filtering in!


Day 3 of CC trek: Sunlight! And we made it to the top of the canyon in an amazing 2h 30minutes! And we totally kicked Belgian ass!!! Woohoo.

I am seriously proud of myself because a) I hardly needed to rest. Compare that to Salkantay which was also an 1,100m climb where I needed to rest every 5 steps; b) I carried my pack all the way up (hiring a mule was an option); c) I felt like I could go on for another 1,000m if needed! It´s just amazing how quickly the human body can adapt to harsh conditions.


Day 3 of CC trek: You might be wondering why we had to wake up at 3am to start the final hike. Well, it´s because that way, you could make it to Cruz del Condor around 8am--the ideal time to spot condors. Alas, there were no condors--only local women peddling their wares. Eden is again, pissed. ¨Fuck the condors,¨ became her mantra.

We head back to Arequipa on another horrible 6hr bus ride and intended to party the night away with Elle. Unfortunately, we were all effing exhausted from having woken up at 230am and from the hike that we all pooped out by 9pm and headed back to our hotel after stuffing ourselves full of crepes. Too many crepes.


Day 21: Elle and the two of us separate. Eden and I catch the 730am bus out of Arequipa to Tacna, the border town with Chile. See ya Arequipa! See ya crappy Arequipeña beer! Day 21 is a wasted day as it is spent entirely on travel. Tacna, Arica, and onwards to San Pedro de Atacama.


Day 22: Another overnight bus takes us deep into the Chilean deserts by morning. People actually live in those huts out there. What the hell do they do out there????


Day 22: TODAY. We are in San Pedro de Atacama, as mentioned earlier. One thing that San Pedro does have is delicious empanadas!!!!!! Off the main Plaza there is a little marketplace. In the middle of the market place is an empanada stand (Empanadium) run by a cute little old man. He makes everything from scratch!

Seen here is my second empanada of the day: Quinoa, queso, chorizo, and mixed veggies. SOOO GOOOD. Eden and I will probably have empanadas again tomorrow.

Now, the new plans: Go directly to Salta. Do not pass Bolivia. Do not collect $200. In Salta, I plan on doing some horseback riding, mountain biking, and all in all relaxing. Then, I will need to figure some way to get to Puerto Madryn along the southern Argentinian coast. There, I plan on scuba diving with the sea lions, orca watching, and waddling with some penguins. Thanks very much Elle for the tips on what to do!!! Then finally, I´ll head back to Buenos Aires by February 10th in order to meet up with my fellow Canadian friend Gabe. Then it´ll be Iguazu Falls, Mendoza wine country, and finally Santiago & Valparaiso before heading back to Chicago.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

First sighting of a Mercedes in South America

Day 21: Currently in Arica, Chile. We have just crossed the border and are now waiting for our bus to San Pedro de Atacama at 10pm. Another whole day of travelling as we left our hotel in Arequipa at 6:40am this morning and won´t arrive in San Pedro until 10am tomorrow. This border crossing was infinitely better than the Peru-Ecuador one... and yes! First sighting of a Benz! Granted, it was a Benz circa 1990, it was still a Benz!

The Colca Canyon hike was... well, looks like we managed to find and book the harder of the routes yet again (Salkantay is, apparently, the hardest of the common routes to MP). Of course, it´s amazing what the human body is capable of. To think that a week ago I was dying with the uphill climbs! This time around, even in altitude, Eden and I both were rocking it on the trek. Suck it, Belgians! We also befriended an awesome Aussie now living in London, Elinor! (Details to come).

Now for some stereotypes. Don´t get offended! Hah!

Germans: crazy, robotic trekkers who are built like hawses; sometimes very annoying. This does not include the Germans on Salkantay!
French and the French-speaking Belgians: Snooty mcSnootersons!!
Swiss: highly friendly, diplomatic people.
Americans/Aussies/Canadians: ie, the three amigas on the CC Trek; loud and obnoxious in restaurants; totally entitled and expecting everyone to speak English; bitches, in general.
Ciaoooo, ciao!

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Happy birthday to me! And shopping advice.

Day 17: Currently in Arequipa, Peru, and it´s my freaking ass birthday! And I celebrated by booking myself on another hike! Woohoo.

Today was a great day. We arrived in Arequipa at 6:30am on the overnight bus from Cusco. We immediately made our way to our original hostal (Hostal Casona Blanca) of choice but found it full, boohoo. No problemo, off down the street to another Hotel (Hotel Arequipa Center) that costs the same. Typing this up in our Hotel lobby with free internet while the receptionist is blasting freaking RAMMSTEIN (!!) on super high volume (wtf???). They seem to like Rammstein down here. Our guide for Salkantay, Julio, also wanted to hear some Rammstein during our campfire night. Anyway, I can´t recommend this place too much as it has no charm, but it is cheap (s/ 35/night), clean, and has cable tv--not that we need it.

After settling in and showering, we hit the streets and find a wonderful creperie that is recommended in both our guidebooks: Zig Zag on Santa Catalina St. Highly, highly recommend going here. It´s so cute and the crepes are sooooo freaking delicious we ended up having dinner there as well.

After breakfast, we head to this huge convent here in Arequipa. It was completely shut to the outside world for 400 years before finally opening up to the public in 1970. We take a guided tour and it was interesting, informative, and I certainly enjoyed it (pictures later). Definitely take a guide with you-they´re free, you just have to tip them.

Other things accomplished today: we booked our bus tickets for the 23rd heading to Tacna, a border town with Chile. We also booked ourselves another hike--the Colca Canyon hike via the Llauar (sp) route as opposed to the traditional route. We booked with EcoTours which was a little pricier than we anticipated but hopefully their service makes up for it as it does come highly recommended by tons of people and guidebooks.

Of course, the van is coming to pick E and myself up at.... (drum roll, please) 2:45am! That means, the current time of 8:57pm is way (way) past our bedtime. I´ll be heading there soon, trust that. Tomorrow´s hike is 3d/2n deep into Colca Canyon, so once again you will all have to live without my delightful blog entries. In the Canyon, we´ll enjoy some hot springs, condor sightings, and some gruesome hiking. I think I have been bitten by the hiking bug. It´s masochistic but also fantastic.

Anyway, I think Arequipa is now my favourite city in Peru. It´s small, but not too small. There are nice churches and plazas and friendly citizens. There are also great restaurants all within walking distance in the primary ¨tourist¨ area. And best of all, there isn´t someone harrassing you to look at a menu or get a massage every other step you take (as in Cusco).


Now for the SHOPPING TIPS & what you should bring!

- If you want to buy nice alpaca stuffs, buy it in Arequipa. Avoid buying anything in Lima or Cusco. Also, visit a few places and compare prices before settling on anything. E and I could have bought 2x the number of scarves for what we paid in Cusco.

- If you want crappy alpaca stuffs, buy it in the markets in Cusco. It may be a little more pricey than in Arequipa but you get great selection there.

- Bring as many tampons as you think you will need. A 10 pack of crappy Tampax runs $5 here.

- With the exception of top grade hiking gear (shoes, really good waterproof jackets, etc.), you can buy everything else you need for the hike at significantly cheaper prices in Cusco. I got a day-pack there for s/55 and it´s a North Face knock-off (probably just a factory imperfect item... they have NF factories in Peru, no?) that does the job just fine. Also, trekking pants in Cusco run about s/30 ($10) whereas the crappy pants I bought in Chicago were $55, and they don´t even convert into shorts. Psshaw.


That´s it for now folks. Gotta get me to bed.

Friday, January 18, 2008

The road paved with horse(ahem)

Day 16: Currently in Cusco, Peru. Just returned last night from the 5-day Salkantay Trek. I realize now my original post made the trek out to be far easier than it actually is. For one thing, the vertical climb was from 2800m to 4600m (in less than 2 days) with a final climb up to Machu Picchu itself. Hard. More on that later... We will be leaving tonight via night bus (Cruz Del Sur) to Arequipa, Peru to hike Colca Canyon (2x deeper than the Grand Canyon).

But now on to recapping the Salkantay Trek:

Day 1 of trek (Day 11 of trip): We wake up on January 13th at 4am to go to the bus station where we will travel with the rest of our group to the starting point of the Salkantay Trek. The bus ride is slow and uncomfortable with tons of passengers standing and getting all up in your business (public, non-tourist busses are like this). Finally, a few hours later, we are in the town of Mollepata. We finally start our first day of trekking at 9am.

My thoughts while trekking on this day:

¨Everyone only talks about how great these treks are. No one mentioned
they´d make you want to jump off the side of the cliff.¨

¨This must be what it feels like to be on one of those
death marches.¨

¨I hate this. What am I doing here?¨

Five more effin days. Eden and Bill pretty much felt the same way. You see, when you´re not accustomed to altitude, you literally cannot breathe when climbing. You have to stop every few steps to rest while your heart is beating through your chest and your pulse is thumping in your neck. To make matters worse, everyone else on the trek are like freaking superstars.



Allow me to introduce:

The Germans (Christine and Mattias). They recently did a 10 day trek in Nepal.
The Swiss (Alexa and Sascha). They hike all the time in the Alps.
The Americans (Doris and Leslie). They take trips all over the world for the sole purpose of hiking. Next stop for them, Mt. Kilimanjaro and the Everest base camp.
The Other American (Robert). He´s the only one without extreme hiking experience, but he has run a marathon.
The Guide (Julio). He´s a superman guide. Duh.

As you can imagine, Eden, Bill and I rounded up the rear, probably a whole 5 miles behind everyone else.

On this first day, we climbed from 2800m to 3500m. We hiked from 9am to 5pm with a one hour lunch break. We camped on this first wet, cold night at the base of the Salkantay Pass, another 1100m above. Aside from uncomfortable, extremely difficult climbing, the lodging (crappy tents that Bill, Eden, and I had to share even though we were promised 2 to a tent) and bathroom facilities (beyond nasty hole in the ground with a dirty toilet sans rim) and our soaking wet selves (it rained non-stop in the afternoon whereupon I discovered my waterproof Patagonia jacket is not actually waterproof) left very much to be desired. We are told at dinner that Day 2 will be even harder still (the hardest day, in fact).


Photo from Day 1. I don´t have many photos because I was too busy trying to catch up to everyone else. No time to pull out the old camera.


We are almost about to reach our campsite for Day 1. You can sort of see the snowy peaks of mountains behind the clouds.

Day 2 of trek (Day 12 of trip): We wake up at 5am in order to get an early start hiking up to the Pass. We are expected to have this 1100m climb done in about 3 hours. Julio, fearing Eden, Bill, and I won´t be able to make it, hires a horse to walk at the rear in case we faint while climbing up.

Going up was just one of the most miserable experiences of my life. It was freezing cold, windy with icy rain falling. To make matters worse, you couldn´t even enjoy the view because it was so cloudy.

Eden and Bill seemed to improve significantly on this day and I am literally miles behind everyone else, slowly putting one foot in front of the other as I climb to the Pass. It never seems to end. Once you clear one cliff, there´s another one even higher up. Somewhere along this climb, Julio is waiting for me. He and I continue slowly up together for the final meters. Thank goodness, because I was about to die of loneliness and misery. I make it to the pass in about 3.30 hours, which is far better than I was expecting. Nonetheless, everyone else is already long gone.


Climbing up. Julio waits as I drag myself up there.


At the Pass. I am seriously miserable. And look how nasty and muddy the ground is. Non-stop rain I tells ya! Thank goodness for my poncho. Plus, the clouds and fog made it impossible to see the top of Salkantay Mountain :(

Once we clear the Pass, I find Eden, Bill, and Robert waiting. We are a group again and begin the neverending descent. The lot of us assumed we´d be having lunch just after the Pass. Instead, we hiked non-stop from 7am to 3pm before finally getting a break and lunch. 8 freaking hours. We slogged through disgusting muddy, horse and donkey dung filled roads. Literally every other step was a pile of dung. Our shoes and socks and everything got soaked. Walking with wet feet is just awful. After lunch, it was another 1.5hr hike to our final campsite. The worst was over. We made it, without using a horse!!! HOOORAYYY!

I sleep well but we wake up to a wet tent and damp sleeping bag. Rain from the night had seeped into our tent from the ground. Eden took the brunt of the wetness. We are pissed. But it´s a new day. There are hot springs on Day 3! Maybe a shower!

Day 3 of trek (Day 13 of trip): This day is mostly downhill. Going down is far easier on the lungs and heart. I had no problems with keeping up although that much downhill climbing is really hard on the knees. There are two hot springs (one in the morning and one near our campsite at night). Some of us decide to enjoy the first one while the rest continue on ahead (including Eden and myself). We walk with Julio and learn about the flora and fauna. Now that our altitude is a lot lower, the plantlife is jungle as opposed to barren, snow and ice from the day prior. There are tons of orchids and butterflies and other wildlife. No monkeys though--not low enough.


Group photo! Right after this photo, it started to rain again (as you can see, the clouds are rolling in). Can we have one freaking day without rain????

From L to R: Me, Eden, Bill, Leslie, Doris, Robert, Alexa, Sasha, Christa, Matias


Day 3 also had lots of rickety, dangerous bridges that needed crossing. Looking awful. 3 days no showers and only 1 pair of pants.

The rain meant once again, the roads are muddy and awful. I managed to keep my socks mostly dry for most of the day until we came upon one area of the path where a landslide had wiped out a crossing right over the roaring river. We need to scale a rock wall to get to the other side. Julio gets right into the water with shoes and all trying to figure out a way for the rest of us to pass and to brace our falls should we have fallen. If someone had fallen in and landed in a bad way, it was very possible to have gotten pulled by the river into the rapids. Apparently, this had happened before on one of Julio´s tours.

One by one, we cross. I am fourth in line. Two of the people who had gone ahead of me fell into the water because the rock ledges they were clinging on to were not as secure as expected. Alexa is soaked from her navel down and Matias´s pants are drenched. I manage to get across with only a soaked foot.

I couldn´t take any photos because once we had passed, we were urged to continue on ahead in case another landslide or rockslide hit the area where we were standing.

Thankfully, everyone made it across more or less all right. That night, we arrive outside of Santa Teresa. Some of us go to the hot springs (HUGE pools!) in order to somewhat clean ourselves. The hot springs feel grrrrrrrrrreat. Also, for the first time since departing, our campsite on this night actually has a real bathroom instead of a filthy hole in the ground. There´s no electricity so it´s pitch black, but at least there´s a clean-ish toilet! Finally! Bowel movements! Hah.

We also set up a campfire and sit around drinking beer and trying to sing along to Julio´s guitar playing. He´s great at it, but none of us know the lyrics to anything. We couldn´t even muster a complete ¨Hey Jude¨ or ¨Let it Be¨.

Day 4 of trek (Day 14 of trip): We hike out of Santa Teresa and head for Aguas Calientes--the primary tourist city outside of Machu Picchu. It´s a fairly uneventful (though long) hike. Most of it was along a railroad. One interesting experience was crossing the river on one of these rickety old cable cars.


Uh. Yeah. No mechanics. Just man power.

We make it to Aguas Calientes without falling into the river and all is well. This night, we actually get to stay in a hostel with hot showers and a real bed!!!!! Omg, omg. Awesome.

Day 5 of trek (Day 15 of trip): We wake up at 3:30am in order to start up towards Machu Picchu by 4:30am. It´s a miracle, but we still all have energy to hike up from Aguas Calientes to Machu Picchu. No one wusses out to take the bus. It´s quite a far walk and 500m climb from AG to MP but we made it in great time! Even Julio, who had such little faith before, was proud at our time of 1h20min.

We make it in time to see the sun rise but alas, there is no sun rise because it´s too foggy. That´s what you get in the rainy season. Ah well. We take our tour of the city with a crappy guide and finish around 9am. In MP, there is another mountain available for climbing called Waynapicchu (max 400 ppl per day can climb it) that is supposed to offer specatular views. I am freaking tired so I decide to opt out--not to mention, I lost the rest of the group when I had to leave the tour to use the bathroom (only 1!! and it´s outside of MP!!!). So yeah, no WP for me this time. Next time maybe. But, congrats to Eden & Bill for doing it!

I end up finding the Swiss who also opted out of the WP climb and toured the lost Incan city some more.


That´s a sheer cliff we´re sitting on, by the way.


A classic shot from the guard tower. There´s Waynapicchu in the back.

And there you go. That´s pretty much it. Overall, the trek was definitely awesome--even in the rainy season! It started out miserable and I felt suicidal (and also homicidal) but it was such a great experience. The people in our group are also just fantastic, and hopefully we´ll have made some lasting friendships.

TRAVEL TIPS (for trekking):

- Lots of socks. Lots and lots of socks. We only brought 3 pairs each due to some lack of communication (that´s a whole other story). Thank goodness there was a place to buy socks in Santa Teresa because man, that woulda sucked having to put on wet socks again.

- Bring lots of cash. Lots and lots of cash. Even though everything is supposedly included, you´d be amazed how much you spend. Also, bring soles--not dollars. I don´t know why I only brought dollars. Most people will not take them or exchange them. Mostly you´ll use the cash on the pricey waters along the way. Also, tips for porters and cooks and guides total up to be quite a hefty sum (you can always tip in dollars, at least).

- Waterproof things are usually not actually waterproof. I guess Goretex jackets are the way to go (or a cheapo poncho). Definitely, if you´re going in the rainy season, get truly waterproof shoes. Go to a specialty store for best products. Shoes and jackets are mucho important! Even if it doesn´t seem to rain much in Cusco, it rained a whole damn lot on our trek.

- Unless you definitely want to do the Classic Inca Trail, definitely always book your trek once you are in Cusco. It´s about half the price. Also, shop around. It turns out most of the tour companies just collaborate and end up grouping various people together. Some of the others on the trip paid less than we did, for instance.

OTHER TRAVEL TIPS:

- Highly, highly, highly recommend Hostal Marani in Cusco. The Swiss told us about it. We stayed there last night. For $15 a night, you get such a clean, nice room and great shower. Sooo worth it.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Chewing it; not snorting it

Day 10: Currently in Cusco, Peru. Elevation 3,080m. Starting 5 day trek to Machu Picchu tomorrow. Doing an alternative trek called Salkantay that sounds pretty awesome. Also, it has really good reviews. We booked through our hostel (Hatun Tumi) for $250pp including everything except tip. We will be trekking from our current elevation to a height of over 4,000m. AHH climbing in altitude!!!! Feeling more or less ok but uh... you know.. issues with the bathroom. Eden has had a horrible bout of food poisoning. The rest of us are just hoping for the best. Immodium has become an absolute necessity.

Finally! I have successfully uploaded some photos!


Day 6: On the bus from Cuenca to Huaquillas. Angry & cold & cool scenery. Sums it up.


Day 6: In Tumbes, Peru after crossing the border (ugh) in Huaquillas. On a rickshaw. See Bill in mirror.


Day 6: Eden´s fake Peruvian money acquired in Huaquillas, Ecuador. Which is real? Which is fake?


Day 7: Day 7 blended into Day 8 by being on a 22 hour bus ride. In contrast to our route in Ecuador, northern Peru is just one big desert / or one big beach since it goes to the ocean. The photo is taken from the double decker bus. I sat in the very front which was nice for its panoramic views. However, it was way hotter in the front even with the a/c. For future rides, I think I´ll stick to the back of the bus.


Day 7: Another shot of the giant beach that is northern Peru, in panorama. First time I´ve seen 2 lanes on a cross-country road. Taken from the bus, again.


Day 7: Finally arrive in Lima. Photo taken a couple of blocks from our hostel up on the cliffs of Miraflores.


Day 8: In Lima, Peru at a restaurant in the Barranco area. I had a seafood soup with tons of sea urchin. Expand photo for sea urchin detail. We think this is also the meal that got Eden sick. :( Ceviche is good but comes with risk.


Day 9: Morning of day 10 we leave via plane for Cusco/Cuzco, Peru where we will embark on some serious trekking. View from the plane as it descends to land in the mountains. There are some serious crevaces seen here.


Day 9: Bill and I check out the local Cusco marketplace while Eden recovers in bed. We also pick up some COCA LEAVES!!!


Hah. 1 sole for a small bag of the stuff. Wonder how much cocaine that has... HMM. Anyway, coca leaves up here are a remedy for just about everything. I chew some for altitude sickness and bring it back to Eden for her stomach. Taste like tea leaves or any other herbs, really. Apparently it makes excellent tea.


Day 10: We went to bed really, really early on the 10th to get rest and also for Eden´s sake as she was bed-ridden. As such, we also wake up really, really early. Bill and I took a walk from our hostel to the Plaza de Armas that is still fairly empty at this early hour. We also stop for breakfast at Victor Victoria. Note: great & cheap bfast foods in Cusco! Check it out if you´re here.



Last update before leaving tomorrow morning (4:30am) for 5 days (4 of which will be shower free--ugh).


Day 10, continued: After breakfast we find Eden feeling better back at the hostel. Together, we visit some local shops, have a delicious and strong cappucino, and tour a couple of the cathedrals in the Plaza de Armas. One is a jesuit church and the other a catholic cathedral. No photos were allowed inside, regretfully... but they are both huge and beautiful.


The Catholic cathedral.




Eden and myself... view of the Plaza de Armas and Cusco from the top of the Jesuit church.



Flowers in the marketplace.



Local women with their llamas... and cellphones? After taking this photo, they proceeded to chase after me for moolah.



So... tomorrow morning, off to Machu Picchu. Then after that, we have had a little change of plans. Due to Bolivia´s newly enstated visa requirements for US citizens, Eden will not be able to enter Bolivia with any guarantee. Instead of trying to get in, we´ve decided to reroute our original itinerary as I definitely don´t want to cross the border into Bolivia and stay in La Paz alone--lots of horror stories there. The downside to this, no extreme bike ride down the world´s former most dangerous road in the world. 38miles (or km?) downhill from one of the highest points to the Amazon basin, outside of La Paz, Bolivia (the world´s highest capital city).



New itinerary: Instead of heading from Cusco to Arequipa to Puno and into Bolivia up by Lake Titicaca as originally planned, we will now go from Cusco straight to Arequipa (skipping Lake Titicaca all together b/c it sucks from the Peruvian side, apparently), and then we will head to Chile from Arequipa. From there, we will separate in San Pedro. I will head north into Bolivia (I am Canadian and can enter Bolivia without much ado) with the safety of a tour group to visit the Bolivian salt flats.


Eden will continue south either to Santiago, Chile or straight to Beunos Aires, Argentina. After the salt flats, I´ll be in Uyuni, Bolivia and then head to Tupiza, Bolivia and spend some time pretending to be Butch Cassidy riding horses in the landscape remniscent of Monument Valley, AZ, I am told. Lastly, I will somehow get to Beunos Aires without committing suicide on the multi-day bus ride. Perhaps I´ll just suck it in and take a flight from Salta, Argentina to BA. We shall see...


TRAVEL TIPS:

- ¨Backpacking¨ is kind of a misnomer. Eden, with her rolling backpack-style bag, has been very successful while Bill and I moan under the weights of our extremely heavy backpacks. For the most part, you leave your ¨backpack¨ at the hostel and take a daypack on treks and whatnot. The only time you need your full backpack is when transferring from city to city, hostel to hostel... and the roads are paved.

- San Luis water is preferrable over Cielo water here in Peru. Cielo tastes like Evian, which I hate. San Luis is good ol non-mineral, purified water, a la Dasani (sweet, sweet Dasani). Also, it´s a Coca Cola company.

- Bring a daypack (small backpack). You will need it for your Inca Trek and likely for many other multi-day tours and activities.