May 29, 2008

In March:

  • Will and I continued our discovery of Quito by visiting Parque Alameda, which had been under restoration ever since we arrived and before and had finally opened again. On another day, later that month, we went back to the park at lunchtime for a romantic boat ride … ;-)
  • We visited the Mitad del Mundo or the Middle of the Earth, a moderately interesting, very touristy museum site on the equator. But it’s hard to justify living in Quito for 7 months and then not know what other people are talking about. People go there to stand with one foot in the southern and the other in the northern hemisphere, but the site is actually misplaced - at about 240 meters south of the true equator - and should rather be promoted as a museum site commemorating the scientific expeditions (an interesting exhibition on that topic can be visited on the site as well) that took place to locate the equator than anything else ...
  • Will and I went to (the end of) a demonstration, the Marcha por la Paz (a peace march). The funny thing is that people with very differing viewpoints took part in the march:
    • some to say that they´re ready to go to war with Colombia,
    • others wanting a diplomatic solution to the conflict,
    • some against the FARC,
    • some pro,
    • a delegation that was protesting foreign military bases or any other foreign involvement and
    • others (the majority I think) just for peace ...

Funny was that we met the owner of the hostal we were staying at in Canoa again, a Dutch guy who is also a reporter for the Dutch International Radio.

  • March is also the month when one exceptionally clear morning - after an extremely chilly night - we were treated to a spectacular view of snow covered (something my Spanish teacher’s old grandmother had never witnessed in her entire life) volcanoes surrounding Quito and a view of the volcanoes that were more than 30 kms away from the city ... amazing!

May 26, 2008

Raging rivers in southern Ecuador: an extended weekend in Loja and Vilcabamba

Somewhere the beginning of February, Will suddenly realised that his weekends in Ecuador were numbered … Hereupon, we made our wish list of places-to-visit (see Google map), I asked two days off from work and we booked a flight to the South (which saved us a crazy bus ride of at least 14 hours).

We left Wednesday afternoon, the 20th of February, and a couple of hours later we were already exploring the town of Loja. Both of us liked it immediately: a pleasant buzz, friendly people, nice streets, a cool city gate and - for Will - computer stores that sell the good stuff … ;-)

Thursday

On Thursday, we continued our discovery of town and around. We walked up one of the hills to visit two enigmatic towers and found out that Loja - with no particularly high hills, at least not according to Ecuadorian standards - is planning to install a télépherique here?!

In the afternoon, we took the bus to Vilcabamba, a town an hour to the South of Loja known as the Valley of Eternal Youth and for its peace and quiet which is - isn't it ironic - usually full of tourists. We checked in into one of the local hostals, which - at a time of abundant precipitation - had only muddy water available for a shower since the rains had washed away the pipes leading to the water treatment station. We booked ourselves a guide for a two day trek in the nearby Podocarpus National Park, met two nice American people on their extended six-month honeymoon through South America and exchanged stories with them over dinner.

Friday

Next day, we took off with Jose as our guide and a horse to carry our bags and to ... ... ... (a not so clear explanation, but we’d find out soon enough!) The weather was beautiful, the landscape as well: high mountains deeply cut by rivers and overgrown with cloudforest.

After three hours of walking, we found out why the horse had to come ... The trail we were following was cut by some rivers. Normally, these can easily be crossed on foot, jumping from stone to stone, but because of the unrelenting rainfall of the previous weeks, the small streams had grown into raging rivers. We had to cross the river on the back of the horse (scary as hell!). Check out the video we took of Jose crossing ... Luckily - thanks to the horse that didn't like the crossing and tried to take off - Will found a tree that had fallen across the river and crossed it that way. At the second river, we declared defeat and took an alternative route.

In the afternoon, we arrived in the mountain hut, where we prepared a delicious lunch and had some great horchata, a typical herbal thee. Will and I then took off and went down to the river, where we discovered a huge, normally non-existent waterfall. When we came back Jose had marinated the pork that we would have for dinner and was just starting a fire to grill it. We had a hot shower (how decadent!), a beautiful sunset, enjoyed our meal and at night - for the first time - had a great view of the stars.

Saturday

The next day, Will ran to the top of the mountain while I went with Jose to have a look at a 400 (?!) year old podocarpus, the eponym three of the park and only native Ecuadorian pine tree. After that, we started our walk back to civilisation, taking a different route to avoid the rivers. Back on more horizontal soil, I had my first real horseride! Back in Vilcabamba, we took a (full!) bus back to Loja, right in time before another rainstorm burst loose.

Sunday

A truly lazy Sunday! We spent the morning on the squares of Loja, bought some fruit on the market (mango season at the coast was over, but had just started in the southern lower sierra), were treated to a fanfare and the raising of the flags (one or other regional holiday), ran into the American couple again and took the bus to the not-so-interesting-but-ice cream-selling town of Catamayo to get to the airport and then back to Quito.


More pictures ...

May 22, 2008

February …

… month that I
  • started dancing classes
  • took a subscription to the fitness annex swimming pool annex jacuzzi annex saunas at the Hilton Colon (sounds fancy, doesn’t it … well, it is!)
  • discovered the possibilities of web 2.0
  • ate my first real brown coconut (as opposed to the green coco that I had in Canoa during our New Year’s holiday)

Will and I continued our exploration of Quito by walking one Saturday to Guapulo on the eastern outskirts of Quito (great view over the valley behind Quito and beautiful church) and taking part in the Cyclopaseo through Quito.

The Cyclopaseo is a two-weekly event when a 30 km stretch of Quito - including Amazonas - is made car free and flooded by cyclists. A nice way to get to know the city better!

On the 17th of February, together with Piet, Lieve and some other Belgians, we went to climb the Illinizas Norte volcano. Piet and Lieve picked us up at 4.30 h in the morning, which was extremely painful due to Karla’s birthday party that had ended just few hours earlier …

Leaving Quito in the dark, we arrived at the parking at the break of day. We had a great view over the beautiful landscape, but - unfortunately - the surrounding volcanoes were clouded again …

After climbing a couple of hours, first through a high altitude forest and then through lower bushes, the slope became very steep and the higher we came, the more snow started to come down. Arrived at the mountain hut, we had a short break and then tried to go on. Snow, however, made the mountain rather dangerous and instead of going to the top, we decided to go and visit the lake between the two volcanoes. Pretty from far (the lake), but not a place where I would swim!

Excursus: The Illinizas is a twin volcano, the Southern one has a permanent snow cover, but Northern one - normally - no snow whatsoever … Yet another sign of climate gone astray! More proof of this we would get in the middle of March when on a glorious morning, mist had cleared up, thus granting us a view of at least 40 km into the distance, and all the mountains and volcanoes surrounding Quito were covered in snow!

Similar to our experience when climbing the Pichincha volcano, I felt nauseous climbing up and Will when going back down … we might just not be suitable for high altitude sports … :-(

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Carnival in subtropical Puerto Quito: some pics



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