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Home   /   South America | 2016-2017



South America | 2016-2017

Three years after returning from our circumnavigation of Asia we have departed on another year-long adventure.  This time to South America!

Update!  We've changed our route (compare to map from March below, now counter-clockwise)

 
Our plan as of March 2016

Chapter 1: Colombia

Audrey writes:
All of our past trips had begun in Germany, and we always felt a certain familiarity with that country for various reasons. We had visited there in 1996 on a six-week bicycle trip, and three year-long trips started from here in 2002 around Europe, 2007 to Africa (when we spent four months living in Schwaig) and 2012 to Asia. Having a sister and her family living there made it a great base to begin our journeys. So, flying to Bogota and being immediately immersed in Latin America was the definition of culture shock. It would have been a good idea to learn some of the language, yes, but we had gotten by in many other countries by knowing only the basics (hello, thank-you, goodbye, and ice-cream). A year ahead of us of mostly interacting with Spanish speakers (Portuguese in Brazil) seemed a little daunting, though. After landing at Bogota El Dorado Airport on the evening of July 8th, 2016, we muddled our way through customs, paying the $76.00 reciprocity fee for entering the country, and ignored requests from private taxi drivers to take us downtown, instead going to the taxi line-up. Ekke had done some research, and discovered that private taxis were not necessarily safe. He also found an iPhone App, Tappsi, which we used for trips in Bogota, summoning a taxi by entering our location, getting a licence plate number and cab driver name, and within minutes the cab showed up. Easy.

Leaving our home in Redwood Meadows

 


The bikes on the weigh scale at Air Canada Cargo.  Each bike goes into a container like this.

 
Booking a hotel ahead of time was a great idea, and the Estelar Windsor House would be our home for a week. The first day, Saturday, July 9th, we agreed would be a recovery day due to utter exhaustion from weeks of preparations and worry about forgetting something for the trip. So, we just got to know the neighbourhood, finding Rosario, our new hair stylist, and both got long overdue haircuts. Another client, Denis from Montreal, started up a conversation with us, and he was in Bogota working for Agriteam, based out of Calgary. Small world. The neighbourhood, Chico, was quite far north of the centre, in a more affluent area, which made it a pleasure to walk around in. Diner restaurant on Parque De La 93, where we tried eggs with rice, provided for some great people watching. Every second person seemed to be walking a dog, and right next door there was a pet emporium, with dogs reappearing after a visit inside, professionally coifed. I glimpsed a fashionable couple, two-up on a motorcycle, riding around the square, dressed in matching bright, lime-green outfits. Upon closer inspection, we realized that it was actually a couple of motorcycle police officers, patrolling the streets. We saw them everywhere after that. Nearby Parque Chico was a lively place, just packed with families picnicking on the grass. A live band belted out Tu Vo Fa Americano, a song from that movie with Matt Damon, set in Italy, and we even knew some of the words. A small market was doing brusque business, giving out free samples of fettucine, helado (ice-cream) and carne (barbecued meat) to entice customers. We just soaked up the atmosphere, a perfect way to recoup our energy.

Picnic in Chico Park

 


Yummy sausages at the picnic

 
Audrey enjoys lunch at the Diner on Parque De La 93

 
After a buffet breakfast which included fish soup, empanadas, fresh exotic fruits, (what is guanabana, anyway?), yogurts, a variety of pastries and delicious coffee, we took a Tappsi taxi to La Candelaria, the old town. More than 120 kilometres of roads in Bogota are closed from 7:00 AM to 2:00 PM on Sundays to allow safe passage for recreational cyclists. What a great idea and well used. The taxi driver wove in and out of traffic, changing lanes and nearly swiping other vehicles, braking and accelerating with gusto. I expected to see a guy with a chequered flag as we crossed the finish line with a screeching halt, into the old town square. The ride cost about 18 000 COP, or Colombian Pesos, or $9.00. The centre square was very lively, with a book market, sidewalk painters, and police recruits doing training activities.
 
Lively La Candelaria district
Our Lonely Planet guidebook had warned us that going to the Museo del Oro on a Sunday was not a great idea, as it was free that day, and therefore packed with locals. They were not kidding. We were hard pressed to find an area that was not jam-packed with people and it took some finagling to see some of the exhibits and read descriptions (which were in Spanish and English) and get some photos without having someone's head in the shot. The museum did not disappoint, however, as we were just stunned by the 55 000 pre-Hispanic gold artefacts. One floor was devoted to the mining and metallurgy of the gold, which was quite an advanced process for the time period, or so we read. Another floor displayed figurines and jewellery from different regions, some with animal themes like jaguars and anacondas. The third floor displayed statues that were used in offerings, or gold pieces that had been thrown into a lake or volcano. How much gold had been sacrificed to satisfy the deities, I wondered? And, did it work?

A small selection of the thousands of gold artefacts at Museo del Oro in Bogota

 





 


 

Walking around La Candelaria was quite a different experience from the tidy and well-kept Zona Rosa, Parque 93 and Chico area where our hotel was located. The level of poverty was quite evident as displayed by the number of beggars and street people in general. This was the real Bogota, with crumbling buildings, huge holes in sidewalks and street food, and I loved the atmosphere. Some of the 300 year-old Spanish Colonial brick and plaster buildings were converted into quaint hostels, restaurants and shops, and others resembled the 'As Is' section in IKEA. Armed guards staffed the entrances to museums, including the 400 year old Santa Clara cathedral, looking in our bags and giving the bottoms of them an extra little tap, possibly to check for firearms. A lady from San Francisco heard us speaking English and gave us an impromptu history of the church, explaining that 'they' were kept 'down there' and not let out. I have yet to find out who 'they' were, and why they weren't let out. The altar area of the church was spectacular, covered in gold, with little alcoves holding 148 statues and paintings of saints.

Simon Bolivar in Plaza de Bolivar

 
Inside Santa Clara Cathedral

 
Guards at the Presidential Palace

 
Walking up a cobblestoned street, we found a little lunch spot, the Preisz, and learned some Spanish food vocabulary by comparing the English menu to the Spanish one. I can now confidently order lettuce. Our upstairs seats overlooked colourful buildings with terracotta-tiled rooftops, cathedral towers in the distance. The Banco de la Republica hosted several museums in one complex in the middle of town, all with free admission, including the Botero Museum. Artworks of all things chubby awaited us, beginning with Fernando Botero's chubby Mona Lisa, chubby La Familia and chubby statues. There were a few Picassos, Dalis and Monets thrown in for good measure. Our taxi ride home was even more exciting, the driver cutting off dozens of others, passing on blind corners and clipping perfect apexes. Malfunctioning seatbelts just added to the excitement.

The colonial streets of Bogota

 


The Fernando Botero Museum

 




Taking a break from all the walking and museuming

 
We got a Tappsi taxi to the Lyn Cargo office at 9:30 AM the next morning, July 11th. The office girls did not speak English (or, rather, we did not speak Spanish) but we used Google Translate on their computer to communicate. We paid $296.00 US, feeling thankful that Ekke had brought some US cash with him. We then took a taxi to DIAN or Customs at the airport and Libardo of Lyn Cargo rode his motorcycle there to meet us. He got us security badges and walked us to GHI Air Cargo. After a long wait, we went back to Customs, which closed for lunch until 2:00 PM. So we invited Libardo to join us for lunch at Subway where I ordered avocado with my tuna sub, almost causing an international incident because the servers thought it was a crazy combination. They seemed baffled that I would pay extra for avocado. After waiting for Libardo at Customs again, we went back to Trans Aero cargo handlers. We decided to have coffee while waiting and walked down many hallways to Oma's for cappuccinos. We were finally in the cargo bay at 4:00 PM and waited for the bike crates to be brought in. Eventually we saw my bike being wheeled out. It was an exciting moment. Ekke's soon followed. Libardo took photos of the chassis numbers to show to the officials and the customs agent had me open my bags and take the seat off. She also opened Ekke's tent bag for inspection. Ekke rolled my bike on the scale and it was 226 kilograms or 4 kg less than in Calgary. Ekke's was 287, or 1 kilogram less. Better than being heavier than what they started at, I guess. A crowd formed and our audience watched the proceedings. I was eager to just ride away, as it got dark at 6:00 PM, and I needed the advantage of daylight to ride back to the hotel safely considering how exciting the taxi rides had been. But after that it was back to Customs, and after many forms and much waiting around, we followed Libardo back towards GHI Cargo for photocopying. When that was done Libardo said we could go home while he ran the photocopies to Customs.  It was 11:00 PM by the time we got back to the hotel and collapsed into bed.

All we saw of the bikes on Day #1 (for the Customs inspection)

 
A crowd of "fixers" gathers around the last three Customs clerks at 9:30 PM

 
Back at the airport for Day #2, we first retrieved cash from the bancomat, obtained security tags and then went to meet Libardo at the GHI Air Cargo office. After waiting in line for the final final paperwork, we went to the cargo bay, where they wheeled out the bikes again. The next problem was how to get them out of the cargo terminal. The loading bays were for trucks, which meant they were two metre drop-offs. Libardo suggested riding them down the steps and we just balked, "Yeah, right." Ekke saw a ramp at another cargo bay but it was not connected to our bay. We waited a long time because they finally decided they could take the bikes back through the secure area and out through the parking lot out back. We took various photos with some staff and vice versa, and one girl sat on my bike. It was taking way too long for anyone to take action with the bikes, so, we took the saddlebags off my bike, and attempted to wheel it through a door into the foyer, and through some glass doors. It really had to tilt sideways to get through, but it worked. Then Ekke walked it down some steps while I caught it all on film, just in case something really exciting was about to happen. His bike went through the same procedure, and he did well by wiggling the enormous BMW R1200GS Adventure through the narrow doors, and then down the stairs. No problem. After a carne or meat empanada while we waited for Libardo to finish the final final final paperwork, we rode out, parked, returned the security badges and followed him to the segura or insurance office. It cost us 110 000 pesos ($55.00) each for three months, minimum, insurance. We also got a free gift of a micro fleece towel and hand wash, which made the long wait so worthwhile. Total time to retrieve the bikes; 16 hours.

Finally, the bikes are out!

 
But how do we get them out of the warehouse?

 


 


 
After saying goodbye to Libardo, Ekke used the GPS to get us to the hotel. It was an exhilarating experience, weaving in and out of traffic, especially after the long ordeal of retrieving the bikes from the cargo terminal. There were only a few uh-oh moments for me - once when I lost Ekke due to cars cutting me off and then having to slip quickly in behind a bus and in front of a car to change to a middle lane surrounded by barriers, and again when I was squeezed toward the curb and braked hard to avoid getting swiped. Bikes split lanes here, riding in between vehicles and it really gets them ahead of traffic. I tried it once, to catch up to Ekke, and my saddlebags were so close to other vehicles on both sides, but thankfully I did not hit anyone. In any case, I felt in control on the bike, able to avoid the crazy drivers who constantly changed lanes to try to get ahead. And now I was one of them. How quickly we adapt. Back at the hotel, we rode to the underground parking lot, down a steep ramp, up another steep ramp, and into some small motorcycle spaces. An attendant moved a scooter so that we could fit our big bikes in. We were exhausted and just decided to go to Fuddruckers (!), a block or so away, for a burger. Ekke decided to ride to the BMW dealership later on to see if they could install his ignition switch, which they did, immediately. No charge. That Alberta licence plate sure opens doors. He then decided to buy a GS Adventure (hat) for 80 000 pesos ($40.00), which was a nice gesture after getting free service. I walked to the drugstore and bought some sunscreen, and walked around the area a bit. It really is a nice part of the city, and I felt quite safe on my own.

Donning our tourist caps for a day was just what we needed after a couple of stressful days of waiting around at the airport cargo terminal. A Catholic service was in progress at the San Francisco Cathedral, in the old town, and the singing was beautiful. The front of the church was a wall of gold, with a wooden ceiling that resembled the bottom of a ship. We sampled a local treat, Sanafreña, or bread with cheese, a biscuit and chocolate soup. Delicious. Nearby was the Casa De Moneda Museum, which had dioramas showing how gold was mined, weighed on a balance scale, and eventually minted into coins. In the same complex was the Museum of Contemporary Art, which had some paintings from the 1960s. Dinner at Crepes and Waffles was exquisite as everything is so well done in the restaurants here, with servers and chefs dressed in white, and everything sparkling and professional. We sat in the library of the hotel doing journals and Internet, sipping white wine, a Chilean Sauvignon Blanc, and agua con gas, or sparkling water.

Wandering the streets of Bogota

 


Museum of Contemporary Art
The next few days were filled with errands, hanging out at Starbucks (grande cappuccinos are a proven cure for culture shock), visiting swanky shopping malls and reading. I tucked into a novel, Delirium by Laura Restrepo, that I just couldn't put down, with a great story set in Bogota during the Escobar years. We were finally ready to hit the road on July 16th. Carrying my heavy bags down to the bike, I decided that I had way too much stuff, as usual. But it is so hard to know, beforehand, what to bring, especially in the way of clothes, with such diverse climates, urban and rural areas, and different activities awaiting us. So, a package will be mailed home very soon. The ride out of Bogota was a long process. Soon after leaving the affluent area, we saw the real, work-a-day, sprawling city. Police officers in their lime green outfits, ramshackle huts, fresh meat hanging under canopies, and stray dogs were everywhere. A bit of rain made one corner slippery, and Ekke warned me via our Sena communication system before I did anything sudden such as hit the brakes, and I gingerly eased around the greasy corner. Phew.

Leaving Hotel Estelar Windsor House

 
Through the "real" Bogota

 
It was very busy outside of Bogota, with a lot of traffic on the highway, but it felt so great to be on the road. A light mist in the lush, green rainforest was magical. The mist turned into a not-so-magical rain, and we should have followed the lead of the locals, who put their rain gear on. But, one always thinks, or hopes, that the rain will soon stop. We did, a while later, put our rain gear on and it felt much better. It was difficult to make good time in the populated hills, but eventually we came down to the dry valleys, where it warmed up considerably. All in all, drivers were fairly predictable but we had a few close calls with people passing when they shouldn't or coming up behind us very quickly. A motorcycle gang followed us and were very friendly, waving and smiling, as we approached the town of Neiva, just as it was getting dark. Navigating through town was extra challenging, as it started to rain, making it slippery, and then it got really dark. Our first rule of riding, not to ride in the dark, was broken on Day #1. Rookies. It was hot, about 27 C, but the hotel we had booked on Expedia, the Dorada, had air conditioning. Parking was a block down the street, in an empty, rocky lot, but it was fenced and we made sure we locked the saddle bags, put a lock on the wheels, put the bike covers on, and set the alarms. A friendly hole-in-the-wall pizza joint provided supper, and the owner's little boy tried to speak English to us, which a lot of students in Colombia are learning in school. Hanging around an air conditioned grocery store provided some respite from the heat and humidity. This was so different from Bogota, which had usually been a pleasant 20 C.


The ride toward San Agustin on July 17th was slow going on a double lane highway, with little villages and big towns every few kilometres. In the mountains, things moved a bit more quickly. We easily passed trucks, cars and other motorcycles, and the paved road was generally in good condition. Huge speed bumps greeted us at every town. Usually they were painted yellow and Ekke learned very quickly that for some of them, motorcyclists could skirt around on the shoulder to avoid them. Small towns usually had a few shacks with chairs set up to indicate a restaurant, with chickens walking around and lots of people going about their daily business. Actually, the main business on Sunday seemed to be drinking. I saw a small bar with people sitting there, several beer bottles in front of them, and it was only 10:00 AM. In one town, we parked near the square and bought some agua con gas and dulce leche, a creamy, thick spread about the consistency of Nutella and twice as sweet. It came with a spoon. A park bench in the square afforded a view of a small bar across the street where an argument had broken out. It ended with someone throwing a chair and someone else yelling and screeching off on a motorcycle. A crowd had formed to watch the excitement and us gringos on a couple of big bikes could not compete with that kind of entertainment.


There were quite a few military checkpoints along the roads, guys dressed in camouflage, carrying guns, and giving us the thumbs up, presumably to indicate that we needn't stop. Later, Ekke read that there was a general truckers' strike throughout most of the country, including the district we rode through. In fact, we had passed a convoy of trucks, with traffic controlled by the military, and wondered what was going on. The strike had been going on for 37 days. Hopefully it was behind us now as we moved into a new district. We couldn't see anything that appealed to us for a lunch stop, so we stopped at a little convenience store and bought some toasted buns to eat with our dulce leche. Delicioso. Tall, fair-haired, blue-eyed Ekke was a big hit, and the clerk wanted photos of her little daughters with him. The ride through the hills was delightful, with some fun, curvy roads. Another motorcyclist whizzed past us and rode the curves so quickly, seeming to know the road quite well. The hills had a lot of crops growing on them, with palm trees lining some of the fields. A beautiful waterfall dropped from a sheer cliff in the distance, surrounded by greenery.


A grotto by the side of a cliff and a picture of Che Guevera marked the entrance into San Agustin. The roads were mostly paved, except the last part to Hotel Internacional. The groundskeeper opened the gate, and we rode up to a steep parking lot. Individual cabins were themed, and we stayed in the Indigina, which had wooden beams, a loft, and interesting paintings on the walls. Other cabins included the Swiss chalet, a Chinese pagoda, and Spanish hacienda. Fun. A walk to downtown took us 5 minutes and there was a parade going on with a local princess dressed in a long red gown, standing in the back of a pick-up truck, throwing candy to the kids. A band was playing in another truck that followed. And that was the whole parade, but it seemed to have brought the entire town out to watch. Lonely Planet led us to El Fogon restaurant where Ekke took a chance and ordered the mystery special, which turned out to be pork. I ordered the caballo, and, wondering what caballo was, looked it up on Google Translate. The English translation said…"Horse." It was not too late to change my order, thank goodness. Someday I will work up the courage to try it, and now, whenever we see a horse in a field, we both chime in with, "Lunchtime." Back at the hotel, we found some comfy chairs upstairs and the owner brought us a couple glasses of water. We had to discretely pour it into the plant, however, as we weren't sure if it was safe to drink unbottled water in Colombia (who did the prep for this trip anyway?).

The grounds of the Hotel Internacional in San Agustin (we're in the round building)

 
Ekke checks out the loft.  Turns out it's a perfect place to dry things (see below).

 
The parade wasn't very big, just the princess in a pickup truck and the band in a dump truck

 
The bikes were parked in a very safe and gated courtyard so we didn't put the bike covers on. After it rained all night, we were quite disappointed to discover that our new custom waterproof liner bags were not waterproof. What a mistake not testing them before we left, but, as usual, we ran out of time. Rookies. A lot of stuff was quite wet, and we spread it out inside the hotel room. The computer was soaked. After shaking water out of it, Ekke let it dry out for a bit, and, magically, it fired right up and seems to be working fine. Way to go, Sony Vaio.


We donned our raingear over our walking clothes and scootered over to San Agustin Archeological Park, about 2.5 km out of town. After paying admission, about $10.00 each, we received a passport that was stamped in different parts of the park, starting with the museum. There was some information about the people that carved the statues out of volcanic tufa, but they had no written language. They lived here 5000 years ago and were gone before the Spanish arrived. The statues were carved as funerary monuments, over 500 of them. Some of them were recognizable animals, such as toads and monkeys, some were human figures, and some a combination, all of them unique. The hike took us to three different areas where we saw statues in situ. The Fuente de Lavapatas, my favourite area, had carvings of human faces, iguanas and other creatures, right in the creek bed as the huge rocks there were very flat, and small canals were carved so the water could meander right over the carvings. The oldest, Alto Lavapatas was a steep climb up slippery, rocky stairs and pathways, but the views were beautiful, with houses and farms dotting the hillsides in the distance. Some tombs had been excavated further down, and we nicknamed one statue Michael Jackson because it was holding a baby upside down. Our other favourites were Peek-A-Boo guy and The Bird. I haggled for a little Michael Jackson souvenir statuette as the seller wanted 20 000 pesos and I got him down to 15 000 or $7.00, which was still paying way too much. Dinner was at a small place in town, and they seemed surprised to have gringos there as it was not a place that was listed in Lonely Planet. The server ran to another bar to get my Club Colombia cerveza, and our hamburgers and drinks came to 20 000 pesos, or $10.00, which, again, was still paying way too much. We stopped at an Olympic supermarket for garbage bags to pack our stuff in, in case it rained again. Rookies.

Pulling up to the archeological park in San Agustin

 





 





 



Ekke writes:


We packed up our still slightly damp stuff and checked out of the the Hotel Internacional on Tuesday, July 19.  While the distance to Popayan wasn't huge we knew that it had the potential of being fairly rough and the San Martin hotel in Popayan said that check in time was between 3:00 PM and 5:00 PM (surely an error?) so we wanted to be on time.  We descended from San Agustin and crossed the Rio Magdalena (thinking of my Mom!) and then enjoyed wonderfully twisty pavement climbing out of the valley for about 40 kilometres.  Abruptly the pavement changed to hard packed gravel.  Fortunately it wasn't deep gravel, just rough.  Not too bad really but it slowed progress considerably as we tried to pick our way amongst the potholes, and sometimes it seemed that there was more pothole than road.  Near a small village we came upon a military checkpoint, the first one that actually asked us to stop.  We showed our papers and had a short, stilted conversation (our Spanish being non-existent and their English being marginal) before we were waved onward.  We climbed to over 3,000 metres with a temperature to match of 10 degrees and rode into the clouds.  A light rain started to fall and the gravel road was still very rough but now wet and the potholes were filled with water.  Thankfully it wasn't muddy and slippery.  A short section of pavement brought us to a small town where a number of restaurants beckoned us in for lunch and an opportunity to dry our rain gear.  Slowly we were learning the Spanish names for food, so sopa (soup) followed by pollo (chicken) and arroz (rice) seemed a safe bet.  A fellow on a BMW F800R pulled up from the other direction and his bike was remarkably clean so we had high hopes that the gravel and mud was finished as the rain had let off.  But as soon as we left town the pounding began again.  It was short lived though as around the next corner four or five people had strung a wire across the road with a flag attached to the middle portion and started waving it madly as we approached.  A road block.  It's hard to say if our lack of Spanish or our simple smile and nod approach did the trick but they eventually lowered the wire and let us through.  Soon after the road changed to that wonderful pavement again and it almost seemed like we were riding in Switzerland with green pastures and cows lining the snaking road.  One more patch of especially rough gravel where we wanted to ride slowly so that the bikes and our fillings weren't shaken to bits and then it was clear sailing to Popayan.  We turned south onto the Pan Americana and after a few kilometres of busy city traffic pulled up in front of the San Martin at 4:00 PM.  Perfect, right in the middle of the check in window.  The front desk staff were very friendly but it was quite a process to get checked in and it was getting on 5:00 PM by the time we got into our sparkling clean room.  Still enough time to freshen up and walk into the old town of the "White City" before sunset.  The walk there went through some industrial, pedestrian unfriendly areas so after dinner at a small, hole-in-the-wall pita restaurant, we took a cab back to the hotel for the grand total of 4,000 COP ($2).
 

Waterfalls as we descend from San Agustin to the Rio Magdalena


 
Climbing the road to Popayan we enter the clouds

 


Some of the vegetation at 3,000 metres is very similar to Mount Kilimanjaro

 


 

Ekke checks in at the San Martin in Popayan

 
Wandering around Popayan in the evening

 


Since the hotel was so nice and Popayan was so pretty we decided to stay another night.  Audrey's F650 had a bent shock bolt that we had discovered when we put the Hyperpro shocks on a couple of weeks prior.  We had ordered a strengthened bolt from Best Rest products but it didn't arrive in the mail until a couple of days before departure so we had just brought it along.  With the nice clean underground parking garage this was a good opportunity to install it in peace and quiet.  While I did that, Audrey started writing for the website.  In the afternoon we walked over to the Natural History Museum where a plethora of stuffed animals of mostly birds, but ranging from a zebra to a snake to a moose and even a polar bear, were showcased in their morbid glory in glass display cases.  As July 20 is Colombia's Independence Day we walked down to the main square and enjoyed the festivities along with everyone else.


Ekke installs the new, stronger shock bolt

 
Yep, that's bent alright.  Perhaps this happened in Mongolia and the enormous pothole?

 
Checking out the Natural History Museum

 


 


 
Wandering around the "White City" of Popayan on Independence Day

 





 

Check out was almost as inefficient as check in since we were third in line behind someone else checking out and someone checking in (didn't they know you can only check in between 3:00 and 5:00?).   We pulled out of the parkade at 9:30 and headed south, down the Pan Americana towards Pasto.  From now on we would just keep heading south, all the way to Ushuaia.  Navigation should be easy from now on then.  The road steadily dropped in elevation and the temperature increased commensurately, topping out at 36 degrees at 400 metres elevation.  Perhaps because of the truckers' strike in Colombia, we ran across a couple of convoys with police escorts.  Mostly quite a bit of fun to blast past on the motorbikes but at a small town two opposing convoys caused a traffic jam with no way to ride around the mess.  Conveniently we were stuck right beside a cafe.  So we pulled over and they were serving a local delicacy called kumis.  Well, we were told it was kumis but kumis is a sour drink and this was sweet and it was thick like yoghurt, eaten with a spoon.  In any case, it was delicious.  Washed down with an agua con gas (see, we are learning Spanish food names) it made for a refreshing break from the heat and by then the traffic had cleared up.  What was especially curious was that the population of the town and surrounding areas was African American rather than the Hispanic population that seems to make up the majority of the Colombian population.  I wonder what the history of that is?  After the traffic had cleared up we continued south and started climbing again reaching Pasto in the late afternoon.  The hotel was either brand new (and unfinished) or being renovated.  In either case, our room was modern and clean.  Secure parking for the motorbikes was in the hotel owner's own home, half a block away.  In their living room.  On a marble floor.  Shame about that muddy road from San Agustin.  Anyway, after freshening up we walked to the old town centre and had dinner at Salon Guadalquiver, where they had fabulous local specialities such as quimbilitos, envueltas de chocolo and empanadas de anoje.  The owner of the restaurant came over and chatted with us in excellent English (learned in Dublin) and told us how his mother had started the restaurant 50 years ago and he had been running it for many years now.  The food was absolutely delicious so we made a mental note (we know how reliable those are) to come back here on our way back north next year.  Even though the sun had just set we felt safe enough to walk the couple of kilometres back to the hotel where they had put a couple of mints on the bed, stuffed a hot water bottle (nice since it was quite cool at this elevation) into the bed and cleaned up our luggage.  A knock on the door a little while later and room service delivered a nice hot, super-sweet, herbal tea along with a piece of cheese for the night snack.


OK, head south on the Pan Americana.  Won't need the GPS anymore...

 


The road south climbed mountains and descended into valleys

 
Colombia Transportation:  Safety is job 1.  Well, maybe job 2 or 3...

 


The hotel owner, William on the left, insists we park the bikes in their living room

 
If you're ever in Pasto, Colombia you have to try this restaurant: Salon Guadalquiver

 
Yummy

 

After retrieving the bikes from the hotel owner's living room we got an early start at 8:30 (well, early for us anyway) so that we could get to the border at a reasonable time.  The 90 kilometres took about two hours on the winding Pan Americana.  While it took only a few minutes to cancel the motorcycle temporary import permits but the lineup for passport control took about an hour so we didn't leave Colombia until 11:45 to get in line for the Ecuador entry process.
 

At the border of Colombia and Ecuador

 

What a great introduction to South America Colombia had been.  Wonderful scenery and, like pretty much every country we have visited, wonderful, friendly people.  We are looking forward to spending more time in Colombia on our ride home next year.
 

Our route through Colombia  

 

Chapter 2: Ecuador and Galapagos

Ekke Writes:


It was about noon, on Friday, July 22, as we left the Colombian side of the border and started the process for entering Ecuador.  It was the exact opposite of the Colombian crossing in that the immigration was quick and easy while temporary import permits for the bikes took a long time.  Soon enough we were on our way in our seventy-second country.  The roads were wide, with nice shoulders and the drivers weren’t as aggressive as their Colombian counterparts.  We were still quite high so it was cool riding but what was surprising was the amount of agriculture at this elevation.  Orderly patches of green fields clung to the sides of mountains as a light mist condensed out of the low clouds.  We stopped for lunch at a roadside restaurant and had our first opportunity to use the Ecuadorian currency.  Fortunately it was pretty easy to adapt since Ecuador uses the U.S. dollar.  A meal of rice, eggs, pork and fried plantains fortified us against the chill in the air as we continued south on the Pan Americana.  As we rode south we came to a construction zone where the double solid line veered off to the right to a small road.  The GPS indicated we should continue on the main road but the construction sign seemed to indicate that traffic could not get from where we were to Ibarra.  Since there were vehicles coming out of the construction zone we thought we would try it and hope for the best.  The road wound down into a deep valley and we kept our fingers crossed that the bridge at the bottom wasn’t closed.  Fortunately it wasn’t, otherwise it would have been a long way around.  It was quite warm at the bottom of the valley at 29 degrees despite still being at an elevation of 1,600 metres.  Soon enough we started to climb back out of the valley and into cooler air and shortly came to the town of Cotacachi where the Land of the Sun Hotel was just off the main square.  The check-in clerk gave us directions around the block to secure parking.  He met us at the entrance and swung open heavy steel doors to reveal the rear courtyard of the cathedral that dominated the square.  The bikes would be safe here for a couple of days.

Only minutes into Ecuador and the wildlife is already evident


Four-lane highway under construction

 
Arriving at the Land of the Sun

 
Lovely view from our balcony with Imbabura volcano towering over Cotacachi

 
The bikes should be secure here at the rear of the cathedral

 
The front of the cathedral

 


The next day we took a taxi to nearby Otavalo for its famous Saturday market.  Stalls filled the market square and overflowed into the adjacent streets for several blocks.  While it was still a local market in that people came from villages all around Otavalo to purchase everyday items it was also a tourist destination.  So there were lots of stalls selling everything from vibrant, colourful paintings to silver jewelry intermixed with stalls selling bolts of cloth and wooden spoons.  It was the first time since landing in South America that we saw a lot of tourists.  Back at Cotacachi we were talking with the American owner of the hotel and he told us of his trip to the Otavalo market the day before.  They had gone into town with the visiting sister-in-law and her family.  While he was parking the car he thought that everyone was out and started to back up.  It turned out that the sister-in-law was still reaching into the car for a bottle of water and he “drug her about five feet.”  By way of explanation he said that she was quite short and “what are you going to do?”  We found out that Cotacachi is a very popular spot with Americans as a retirement haven.  And why not?  Great climate and reasonable prices made for a lovely place to live.  Across the street at Jeanine’s bar it was all American expats and whenever someone new walked in it seemed that everyone knew everyone else.  Kind of like the sitcom “Cheers”.  We half expected everyone to shout “Norm!” the next time someone walked in.

Bright, colourful paintings at the Otovalo Market for the tourists

 
Bolts of cloth for the locals

 




Waiting for the bus after the shopping is done

 
Imbabura volcano watches over the dusty, empty animal market

 
A special mass at the cathedral in Cotacachi ends with dancing and a parade

 


On the 24th of July we relaxed in the central courtyard of the Land of the Sun hotel before packing for the short ride to Quito.  We had arranged for an apartment in the northern part of Quito but check-in wasn’t until 3:00.  It was an easy ride, except for missing a turn in the midst of a construction zone just as we entered the city so we were still early when we pulled into the street where the BlueZone Apartments office was located.  A KFC had motorcycle parking out front where we could keep an eye on the bikes and all of our luggage while we had fried chicken for lunch.  We met Jorge at 3:00 and he guided us to the apartment on Finlandia Street where we parked the bikes in the underground parkade and then made ourselves at home.  One of the main draws for us was that the apartment had a washing machine but unfortunately it wasn’t hooked up.  Still it had a wash board and a balcony with a drying rack so doing some much needed laundry was easy.  As a bonus Jorge said that we could have housekeeping do one load of laundry per week for free.  After dinner at a Crepes & Waffles (just like Bogota) we realised that we had crossed the equator without even knowing it.   Neither of us recalled seeing a sign along the Pan Americana or anything else.  Apparently there is a park with a monument northwest of Quito but not along the Pan Americana.  Oh well, we’ll have to get a photo on the way back up next year.

Idyllic courtyard of the Land of the Sun hotel

 
Riding to Quito

 

The next couple of days we worked on the website (it always takes a while to remember how to organise the photos, build the website, create the map with the GPS tracks and so on) and we made a big decision about our trip.  The original plan was to move fairly quickly through Colombia, Ecuador and Peru so that we could go down the Amazon to Manaus and then Suriname, Guyana and French Guiana during the dry season.  While this was a good plan it did have the risk that when we came back north in 2017 we might be pushed for time and not be able to do some of the things we really wanted to do such as visiting Galapagos or hiking the Inca trail in Peru.  So we made the decision to continue down the west side of South America and then come up the east side on the way home.  Then if we were pressed for time we might miss the northeast side of the continent but we would have done the things we were more interested in doing.  So with the decision made we booked a cruise around the Galapagos starting August 4 and decided to fly out a few days early to visit Santa Cruz island on our own.  We arranged the apartment for two more days and asked if we could park the bikes in the parkade while we were in the Galapagos.  No problem, said Jorge.  So on the 28th we visited the old town of Quito and just wandered around, absorbing the atmosphere.  There was the Spanish colonial architecture of course such as the Iglesia de San Francisco but also surprises like the extra-baroque Iglasia de la Compania de Jesus and one of the best museums anywhere, the Museo Casa del Alabado.  This modern renovation of a 17th century Spanish colonial house displayed pre-Colombian artefacts in a gorgeous setting, treating the objects more like art than the results of an archaeological dig.  We jumped in a taxi back to the apartment to pack everything that we weren’t taking to the Galapagos on the bikes and move the bikes to the parkade for safe storage.  Since the morning flight to the Galapagos departed at 6:45 we needed to be at the airport at 5:45.  Our landlady arranged for their regular driver to pick us up at 5:00 AM (what an ungodly hour!) in order to drive the 36 kilometres to the airport, so we tucked into bed early to prepare for the trip of a lifetime.

Parque Plaza Grande is the heart of Quito

 
The park is framed by the Catedral Metropolitana de Quito (shown here), the presidential palace and city hall

 
Iglesia do San Francisco

 
A tame parakeet in the courtyard of the museum adjacent to the church is a pleasant surprise

 
Iglesia de la Compana de Jesus is baroque on the outside by way over-the-top baroque inside (no photos allowed)

 
Whoa, a chocolate lab?  Watch chocolates being made and enjoy samples.  Heaven.

 
The Museo Casa del Alabado displayed pre-Colombian treasures as art

 




Wandering the streets of old town Quito

 
Spanish colonial

 

Audrey writes:
Visiting the Galapagos had always been high on our ‘To Do’ list, so when our plans changed from riding east in South America to riding south, this was our big opportunity to go there. We had an inkling that Galapagos cruises were very expensive, so after looking at our options we settled on a four-day cruise and then three days on Santa Cruz Island doing a self-guided tour. The bikes were left in Quito in underground parking at Blue Zone Apartments (we highly recommend this place), locked up and alarms set.

The apartment owner’s driver took us to the airport at 5:00 AM on July 29th, and we were supposed to meet a representative from our tour company so we could get our cruise package of information. A rep from another company phoned our rep for us, and it turned out that our rep had slept in. So, we were able to get our own park passes for $20 US each and some boarding passes, with the help of the rep from the other company. In a couple of hours we were flying over the brilliantly blue sea, and the volcanic Galápagos Islands appeared in the distance. Beautiful. We landed at the airport on Baltra Island, near Santa Cruz Island. Usually a tour operator would have paid for our entry tax, but since we had booked the trip at the last minute and had no documentation because our rep had slept in, we were required to pay $100 cash, each, right at customs. We didn’t have $200 cash. A customs agent said we must pay it to go through, and I asked if there was a bank machine at the airport so that one of us could pay the fee, get the money and come back and pay the remainder. She said, "No." After much discussion, the customs agent said we were allowed to go but only if one of us left a passport there. We would then, we assumed, buy the pass in town, which was across the island, return to the airport, pay the fee and they would return the passport. Ekke reluctantly handed over his passport which, technically, you are supposed to carry with you anywhere in Ecuador. But then, when walking through the airport lobby, we spied a bank machine. We took out some cash, and Ekke went back through security and paid the customs agent, who happily returned his passport. Sheesh.

The airport on Baltras Island, just north of the larger island of Santa Cruz

 
A taxi took us across Santa Cruz Island, which went from very dry and arid, to lush and green in the highlands. La Casa De Judy hotel in Puerto Ayora overlooked the ocean, and Judy was the friendliest hotelier ever. The town was very touristy on the main street, with shops advertising boat tours or souvenirs. Big pelicans hovered around the fish-cleaning table, and a lone sea lion was stretched out on the warm concrete. Ekke saw some movement as we walked by the dock – little marine iguanas were scurrying around. Bright red and yellow Sally Lightfoot crabs sat on the black volcanic rock. So unusual. And all this wildlife was just in town.  Lunch at Il Giardino was fantastic, with views out to sea, and fresh fish on the menu.

La Casa De Judy, our home for three days on Santa Cruz

 
A fish seller on main street Puerto Ayora has to deal with pelicans and a sea lion

 


The lovely harbour at Puerto Ayora

One advantage of spending a few days on our own was that we could visit the Charles Darwin Research Station, which was not on our cruise itinerary. Walking the kilometre from the hotel beside a mangrove swamp was pleasant, and we were greeted by a park naturalist who explained what we could visit. Displays about the origins of the volcanic islands and conservation were excellent, and a huge whale skeleton was quite something to behold. The station also had a tortoise captive breeding program, and seeing our first of the giant beasts was awesome. We were a bit disappointed that the baby-tortoise incubator house was closed to the public, but we did see some land iguanas in their enclosures. Star-gazing from the hotel's rooftop terrace capped off a wonderful day, and we identified the Southern Cross constellation in the Southern Hemisphere sky.

The voyage of the Beagle in 1836 with Charles Darwin aboard

 
Part of the tortoise breeding program at the Charles Darwin Research Station

 
Judy helped us get a taxi to the Lava Tunnels the next day, up in the highlands. The volcanic tunnels were formed when the outside skin of a molten-lava flow hardened and emptied out. Ekke was very excited (not) to learn that we could walk for a kilometre underground. In past tunnels we had encountered, he inevitably ended up hitting his head due to his height. But as we climbed a steep path down into the dark opening, we realized that this tunnel was at least ten metres in height. It was fairly eerie walking through pitch-black tunnels, with only a flashlight and ourselves for company, and it reminded me of a road tunnel, but a bit more rocky. Seeing the proverbial light at the end of the tunnel was a welcome sight.

Enormous lava tunnel was a kilometre long

 
It was mostly easy walking in the tube but some scrambling was required

 
The light at the end of the tunnel

 
The taxi driver then took us to Rancho Primicius, where the big draw was Giant Galapagos tortoises. The beauty of this place was that one could wander among the free-ranging tortoises - they were not in enclosures and wandered around the island. The driver gave us an impromptu tour with his limited English and our limited Spanish. There was a lot of hand-waving and mimicking of tortoise behaviour. Somehow he explained that males had a rounded shell and females a flatter shell, which made the mating procedure easier. It was very special just hanging out with these glorious beasts, watching their necks telescope out to delicately pick up guava fruit to munch on. Their heavy bodies were supported by flippers, which had evolved into strong legs as they were now land animals. Our driver encouraged us to climb into a couple of tortoise shells for a photo op, and neither of us could lift the heavy shells, but we had a new respect for the weight tortoises carried on their backs. And for the mating procedure. We felt very privileged to spend this up-close-and-personal quality time with these majestic beasts.

A mural painting project at a school on Santa Cruz

 
Close to the ranch we spot a stray Giant Tortoise

 
We could barely budge the heavy shells, no wonder the turtles moved so slowly

 
The tortoises roamed wild and free while we were able to simply walk among them

 


Snack time of guava

 
To see the turtles so close up was simply magical

 
Tortuga Bay Beach was a 2.5 kilometre walk from town, so after fortifying ourselves with pizza, we headed up the rocky pathway. It was a very hot walk through a cactus forest, with the sun beating down, but the view of the blue sea and white stretch of sand that awaited us was worth it. Giant waves broke close to the beach to the delight of the surfers and we walked barefoot one kilometre down the soft, talcum powder stretch of sand. A jet-black volcanic rock was an interesting contrast to the white sand it was lying on, but then... the rock moved! It was not a rock after all, but a big black marine iguana, lying in the sun. Then, to our delight, it walked across the beach, stepped into the ocean and started swimming around. Several other marine iguanas crawled out of the mangroves to go for a swim as well. Some snorkelers got to swim with them and it must have been quite an experience.

The hike to Tortuga Bay Beach was hot...

 
... but so worth it

 
A marine iguana sunning itself on Tortuga Bay Beach

 
And then the marine iguanas head to the water to cool off

 
Swimming with the iguanas

 
The marine iguanas are well adapted to their surroundings.  How many are in this picture?

 
Our third day on Santa Cruz Island was spent sitting beside the pool at the hotel, catching up on CBC news via the internet, and planning the next part of our tour. In the afternoon we craved some much-needed exercise and took a water taxi to another bay to go on a hike. What luck to dock beside a beautiful restaurant, Angermayer Point, where we watched sea turtles swim by. The hike could wait. I tried the ceviche, which was three types of seafood in various sauces, complemented by plantain chips, and Ekke's octopus arrived on a hot lava stone. We finally got hiking, and a pathway of loose volcanic rock led us on a climb up to Las Grietas. This was a huge crack in the cliff, filled with sea water, like a fjord. Families were diving in and swimming up the inlet, enjoying the cool water on the hot day. Our walk took us by German Beach, also very popular with locals and tourists on this lovely Sunday, and we just sat and soaked it all in.

To roam the roads of lands remote, to travel is to live.  We knew we found our restaurant

 
Ekke tucks into his octopus

 
A warm walk through the cactus forest

 
Swimmers in Las Grietas

 
On August 1st, we began the second leg of our Galapagos journey, the cruise. A taxi took us to the airport in the morning, and we asked the driver to stop at Las Gemelos on the way. Here we walked beside two large sinkholes that had collapsed after the magma that formed the island had cooled. They looked like small canyons, and lots of birds called them home. At the airport, Ekke saw someone wearing a Galapagos Legend t-shirt, carrying a clipboard. It was a tour guide and we were quite relieved to see that he had our names on the list for the cruise, as we didn’t have any documentation. Our fellow passengers had just come by plane from the mainland, and a bus took us all to the dock where we saw the ship in the bay, the Galapagos Legend. Seas had the potential to be rough at this time of year, so we wanted to be on a bigger boat to lessen our chances of seasickness, which we had both experienced in the Mediterranean. This one had a capacity of 100 guests, but there were only 42 of us on board, which made it very roomy. Many other smaller boats also cruise the islands, and we spoke with people who had fantastic experiences on those as well. One worry was that a big boat would feel less personal, but we were divided into three groups, the Albatross (us), the Boobies (stop snickering) and the Cormorants, and we developed a camaraderie with our group members. Our cabin was lovely, with big windows, a couple of twin beds and a bathroom.

Las Gemelos sink holes

 
Our first view of the Galapagos Legend, our home for the next three nights

 
After a buffet lunch, the Albatross were called to the embarkation area where we donned life vests and took a dinghy to Mosquera Islet. A couple of playful sea lions greeted us, swimming around the dinghy. This was a wet landing, where we stepped out of the boat into the water and walked to the white-sand beach. Our naturalist guide, Marcella, a local from Puerto Ayora, told us about the group of sea lions at this beach, and we watched for the alpha male, the big one with a bump on its forehead. The remainder were females, and there were several babies as well. Some volcanic rocks formed a calm pool of water, a perfect nursery so the little ones could be safe from sharks. A few little marine iguanas climbed up the black volcanic rock, and lava gulls and frigate birds soared through the sky, hunting for fish.

A sea lion pup at Mosquera Islet as the "Albatrosses" arrive

 
Don't trip over the sea lion when disembarking

 


 



Sally Lightfoot Crab

 
Perfect white sandy islet

 
Nap time

 
A frigate bird

 
At meal times we shared a table with Sateesh and Meera, a couple from Rochester, New York, and we got to know them quite well. They regaled us with tales about their travels to all corners of the world, which was a lot of fun, and kindly asked us about our trips. They were also in our Albatross group, so we did our excursions together. Ekke and I joked with them that we had practised singing the theme song from Gilligan’s Island to prepare for karaoke night on the ship. After that their nicknames were ‘The Professor and Maryann’ as Sateesh was a university professor and Meera was a perfect Maryann. We even had a ‘Ginger,’ a lovely lady, Connie, from Tucson, whom we had met on the bus. So, that made Ekke ‘The Skipper’ and I must be ‘Gilligan’. We're pretty sure the 'Millionaire and his wife' were on the ship, as well. The opportunity for us to sing karaoke, however, did not, sadly, come up.


The boat cruised to North and South Plaza Islands sometime early in the morning, and we were relieved that it was smooth sailing. Ekke had heard the anchor lift and engine start and I had slept through it. A dry landing, where we could step out of the dinghy onto a concrete jetty, was great because we could just wear our hiking shoes. Slippery, smooth rock had been polished by basking sea lions, and we walked carefully toward a stand of Opuntia cacti. There, as if on cue, we saw our first land iguana. It looked like something from prehistoric times, its grey, white and yellow body covered in spiky armour. It was surreal to see such a beast, endemic to these islands. And it didn’t run away from us, having evolved without predators. The area around these few cacti was its own turf, and we saw his mates, two females, nearby. Further along we observed other iguanas eating a piece of cactus that had fallen to the ground, its main food source in the dry season. Back on the ship, we cruised to Santa Fe Island while enjoying an outdoor barbeque on the deck. There was no barbecued iguana on the menu, however, just pork, beef and shrimp.

On our way to the Plaza Islands

 
The spectacular land iguana

 

Also evolved to match its surroundings

 
Two female land iguanas

 
The tenders arrive to take us back to the Galapagos Legend

 
Barbeque lunch

 
Our choice to rent wetsuits for $10 each turned out to be a good one as the water was freezing. Ekke acquired the longest wetsuit they had, and it was still an ordeal for him to slither his 193 centimetre frame into it. Dinghies took us to a rocky area beside the island for deep water snorkelling, where we just rolled out of the dinghy into the ocean. It took a minute to catch my breath when I hit the cold water, but the wetsuit really did insulate well. Sea lions immediately came out to play and swam around us. Marcella had warned us that this was the only place in Galapagos where it was important for snorkelers to stay in groups of two or more. “Why?” we asked. “Because of sharks," she said. I stuck very close to Ekke while we snorkelled. A myriad of colourful fish greeted us, and the waterproof cameras that we carried on the motorcycles came in very handy. We were amazed by the variety of sea life and I began to feel more comfortable, enjoying the gentle waves, bobbing along with the current. Just as I was feeling very comfortable, we floated over a couple of really big fish, and I thought, those look an awful lot like…sharks! Cue the 'Jaws' soundtrack. Ekke and I nudged each other, our eyes bulging out in surprise, and quickly took some photos of them. A young snorkeler, travelling with his family from California confirmed it, saying, “Do you know that you just swam over sharks?” Anyway, the sharks just sat at the bottom of the ocean, minding their own business, but I think I would have freaked out if they had moved.

Looking trim in our snug wetsuits

 
Swimming with the fishes

 
Clear blue water

 
Sharks!

 
After climbing the ladder back up into the dinghy, we motored back to the ship, where we had just 30 minutes to struggle out of the wetsuits, shower, and head back to Santa Fe Island for a hike. The schedule is tight on these boat trips, something Ekke and I weren't used to. Sea lions lazed around on the sand and we headed up into the hills to search for the Santa Fe iguana. These iguanas weren’t quite as colourful as others we had seen, their grey colouring camouflaging them very well. But they were the biggest in the Galapagos. The cacti were also very interesting as they were so old that their trunks weren’t prickly anymore and were the size of a big tree.

Sea lions basking on the beach on Santa Fe Island

 
A well camouflaged lizard

 
A harmless snake

 
The largest Galapagos iguana lives on Santa Fe

 
Almost as if the cacti were planted specifically as a photo frame

 
The "Albatrosses" head back to the ship while sea lion pups look on with curiosity

 
San Cristobal Island was our destination the next morning. At Point Pitt we landed on an olivine beach, green in colour because of the minerals in the sand. After that we hiked on volcanic tuff, which Marcella explained was volcanic ash that had mixed with water and hardened. The whole hike was on tuff, and it was super steep and rocky, and we were warned that it would break away if we got too close to the edge of the cliff. It was the perfect habitat for boobies. Sitting in a nest, which was really just a flat spot on the ground, we saw a pair of baby blue-footed boobies but there was no adult to be seen. I was really getting worried that we would not see one. And then, there it was – a female blue-footed booby standing by its nest, a baby chick close by. It was so cool to see it in real life after only seeing it in pictures. Its feet were extremely blue. Marcella explained that the bluer the feet, the healthier the bird, meaning it had taken in some important nutrients. Further along, we spied some red-footed boobies, which live in the bushes, and watched a teenage booby take its first wobbly flight. Very special.

A colony of birds at Point Pitt

 
Climbing up to Point Pitt

 
Young boobies

 
Yes, the blue-footed booby!

 
Yep, those are really blue feet

 
The red-footed booby nests in trees, rather than on the ground

 
A booby poses with the Galapagos Legend

 
Yes, you can get this close

 
A youngster takes its first tentative, wobbly flight

 
A lava lizard

 
After hiking back to the beach, I jumped into my wetsuit, with Ekke's help, as Marcella was urging me to go quickly as the dinghy for deep water snorkelling was leaving. Ekke had been feeling a bit whoozie after the last snorkel trip, so he decided to snorkel in the calmer water by the beach. I didn't have time to think about what snorkelling by myself, without Ekke, in deep water, would be like, but I just took deep breaths and rolled off the dinghy into the water beside Bird Islet. The current gently took me beside the volcanic rocks and once again I was amazed at the diversity of fish. I even spied a stingray swimming along the bottom. I kept looking up to make sure other snorkelers were within sight, and in no time, the whistle blew and I climbed the ladder into the dinghy. Ekke had a different experience back on the beach, spending twenty minutes trying to climb into his two-sizes-too-small wetsuit. He eventually waddled over to Billy, a naturalist guide, to enlist his help. He finally made it into the water and snorkelled near the volcanic rocks, seeing many colourful fish. Some others were snorkelling with a baby sea lion near the beach, so he joined them and he got some great underwater photos of the playful pup.

Audrey goes deep water diving

 
And spots a stingray

 
While Ekke stays closer to shore and plays with a sea lion pup

 
A snack always awaited us as we climbed off the dinghy onto the Legend ship, such as little cakes, cheese or fruit dipped in chocolate. The hot shower in our room felt unbelievably good after a dip in the ocean, and there was a plastic basket under the bed to contain the wetsuits. Lunch included make-your-own tortillas that we could assemble ourselves, and we watched and learned how the family from Mexico City expertly wrapped up the ground beef, cheese, tomato and sour cream without making a mess. Talented.


Our next landing was at Cerro Brujo, or Witch's Beach, named after the shape of a cliff that resembled a witch in profile. While walking through a narrow beach pathway, Ekke accidentally stubbed his toe, much to the chagrin of a nearby sleeping sea lion, who turned and growled at the intruder. Ekke jumped up onto a sand dune to avoid an encounter of the unwanted kind with the sea lion. The guide, Billy, informed him that he couldn't walk on the dunes so as to not erode them. So, Ekke gingerly tiptoed beside the grumpy sea lion, who continued to eye Ekke with suspicion. The stretch of beach was crescent-shaped and as soft as powdered sugar. I wanted to try snorkelling again but another fellow said that the rough sea was stirring up a lot of sand and it was very turbid, so the fish could not be seen. So, we just enjoyed the beach, and I played in the big waves for a while. While I was swimming, I saw Ekke calling to me, pointing, wondering what he had seen. There was a dark shape swimming a bit further out. Cue the 'Jaws' soundtrack, again. But alas, it turned out to be a big sea turtle, and I breathed a sigh of relief that it was not a shark. That evening, we enjoyed a farewell cocktail, and the winners of the photo contest were announced - Ekke won a prize, a Galápagos Legend barbecue apron, for his fantastic photo of a blue-footed booby.

Sure they look peaceful, just don't make any sudden moves

 
Ekke looking out toward Kicker Rock while keeping an eye open for sea turtles

 
The award winning photo

 
In the morning, the ship cruised to Puerto Baquerizo Moreno, where we disembarked one last time. A lovely air-conditioned bus waited in town for us and whisked us to the San Cristobal giant tortoise breeding centre. It was our third tortoise experience, but one can never get enough of spending time with the giant beasts. It was great to get information about them from our naturalist guide versus the Spanish-speaking taxi driver back on Santa Cruz. She told us all about how they tried breeding tortoises here, but it was too humid to be successful. So, they tried incubating young turtles and then carefully monitored them for a few years before reintroducing them into the wild. This will ensure the continuation of this once nearly extinct species. The best part of this trip was that we finally got to see the baby tortoises, so cute in their little enclosures. Each one had a number painted on its back so they could be easily identified for future studies.

Disembarking for the last time

 
A dolphin accompanies us toward our final destination

 
The harbour at Puerto Baquerizo Moreno

 
Young tortoises are raised at the San Cristobal breeding centre

 
And released back into the wild

 
Back in town, we had some time to eat lunch and shop for souvenirs, but chose, instead, to go up to Cerro Las Tijeretas, an information centre that we had read about in Lonely Planet. Not being on our official cruise itinerary, we felt a bit deviant going there, but Marcella said that a taxi would only take a few minutes and we could be back in time to get the bus to the airport. Sateesh and Meera decided to join us. The centre was beautiful, with boardwalks and bridges, and we looked at informative displays of the human impact and conservation efforts on the islands.

The Cerro Las Tijeretas information centre had a great view of the harbour

 
We did make it back in time for the bus to the airport, boarded the flight to Quito, and reflected on what an amazing Galápagos trip we had, a dream come true. As we flew toward Quito, we saw Cotopaxi Volcano, and wondered what new adventures awaited us.

Cotopaxi as our flight back to Quito passed through The Avenue of Volcanoes

 


Map of our ride from Colombia to Quito  

 


 

Chapter 3: Central Ecuador

Ekke Writes:


After our amazing Galapagos adventures we arrived back in Quito on Thursday, August 4.  Leaving the baggage claim area of the airport we saw a person holding up a sign that read “Ekke Kok”; our driver from BlueZone apartments was waiting for us.  On the hour-long journey to the apartment he gave us some great suggestions for our trip, including the idea that we could ride to the Amazon basin and then take the back way to Baños, something we hadn’t thought of before.  We made ourselves comfortable in our new apartment and checked that the bikes were safe and sound in the underground parkade.  The next couple of days saw us getting caught up on chores such as laundry and a haircut as well as exploring the area in northern Quito where the new apartment was located (just a couple of blocks from the old apartment).  The best discovery was undoubtedly that there was a Dutch bakery/restaurant on Holanda street.  Yummy krentenboletjes!  As the Museo Nacional and the Museo Astronomico were both closed on Monday we took a taxi to the central museum on Sunday.  It seemed odd that the cab driver didn’t know the Museo Nacional but when we explained it was in the same area as the Casa de la Cultura we were on our way.  He still seemed a little puzzled as to why we would want to go there but dropped us off at the park next to the museum.  As we approached the centre we saw that there was construction fencing around the whole thing.  There was no way in and there were no signs indicating if the museum had relocated during renovations or if there was another entry.  Nothing.  We headed across the street to a lively park where a Sunday market was set up and then strolled down to the Museo Astronomico which was supposed to have an interesting collection of astronomical observation instruments.  Again we walked around the perimeter and found the gates locked shut.  A sign next to the gate indicated that the museum was open on Sundays and closed on Mondays so we got the attention of a security guard and asked him (in our nonexistent Spanish) what was going on.  He just handed us a piece of paper with the museum’s website on it but couldn’t give any explanation as to why the museum was closed.  Well this museum day was quickly turning into a bust.  After regrouping at an air conditioned McDonald’s for a delicious sundae we decided to take a taxi to La Capilla del Hombre, a museum dedicated to the famed Ecuadorian painter Oswaldo Guayasamin and located in his hillside hacienda in the Bellavista neighbourhood.  True to the name, the views were fabulous.  We arrived just as a guided tour in English of Guayasamin’s home started.  The home itself was simply beautiful (no photos allowed inside) and Guayasamin had amassed a nice collection of artwork as well.  The artist’s studio at the back of the hacienda was still set up with his painting palettes and easels and a short video showed Guayasamin doing a portrait painting of Paco de Lucia, a Spanish flamenco guitarist.  I am not an artist so am always in awe of someone who can, with a few strokes of a brush, capture the essence of a person on canvas.  After the tour we were free to wander through the art gallery on the ground floor and then go out to La Capilla del Hombre, an art museum dedicated to the people of Latin America.  Guayasamin had designed the purpose-built building to house artwork related to human suffering and violence in Latin America.  The artwork and its presentation were quite moving and I sat in the rotunda, absorbed in my thoughts, while Audrey checked out all the other paintings and sculptures.

Parque Carolina near our apartment


The park is enormous with everything from paddleboats to soccer pitches


Even a botanical garden in the park


And of course excercise equipment


Artwork by Oswaldo Guayasamin


And his obvious inspiration of Quito from Bellavista



On August 8 we had a great breakfast at Jürgen’s, the Dutch restaurant and bakery down the street.  Jürgen had been in Quito for 18 years but had opened up this restaurant on Holanda Street only three years ago.  The krentenboletjes (raisin buns) were delicious and we made sure to take a few home.  The day was more about doing a few chores such as picking up chain lube for Audrey’s bike, getting some sewing done and mailing a package home (hopefully it makes it before my parents’ birthdays!).  What really made the day unforgettable didn’t happen until the day was almost over.  We were already in bed, sleeping, at 11:23 PM when we both woke up.  I thought Audrey was jumping on the bed.  She thought I was jumping on the bed.  Earthquake!  The quake started with a vertical movement, like someone was jumping on the bed and then added a horizontal component as the building started to sway (we were on the tenth floor).  This went on for what seemed an eternity but couldn’t have been more than a few seconds.  We looked at each other in shock and wondered what to do.  Do we run downstairs and stand in the street?  Do we hide under the bed?  Should we put on pants?  Before any of those questions could be answered it was over.  We looked out of the window, listening to the car alarms going off across the city, but didn’t see anyone else running out into the street (with or without pants) so decided we should probably stay put.  If the building hadn’t fallen down yet, it probably wouldn’t do so in the next few minutes.  We waited for aftershocks and put on pants.  Just in case.  When nothing happened after half an hour we went back to bed but it was difficult going to sleep with the memory of the shaking apartment building still fresh in our minds.

The next morning we checked the news and e-mail.  Our landlord for the apartment had sent us an e-mail within 15 minutes of the quake, asking if we were OK.  There were a few news stories on the local channels and it seemed that aside from small pieces of debris falling down closer to the epicentre north of the city and a power outage there was no damage and, more importantly, no injuries or fatalities.  See news article here. (just click the "back" button on your browser to come back here)  We popped down to Jürgen’s for breakfast and as can be imagined, the earthquake was in everyone’s conversation.  Jürgen said that he hadn’t felt anything that strong in the 18 years he had lived here, not even this Spring’s devastating earthquake on the coast was felt as strongly in Quito.  When Jorge came over to check us out of the apartment he thought that the Spring earthquake felt worse because even though it wasn’t as strong, it lasted for minutes rather than seconds.  In the parking garage our bikes were OK, perhaps because they were on the bottom level there hadn’t been as much horizontal movement.  We packed them up and rode south out of Quito, using a bypass road to avoid the city traffic to get to the Pan Americana.  It was a short riding day of only 87 kilometres to get to Hacienda de Cienega since we didn’t know the condition of the Quilotoa loop road the next day and wanted to make that ride fairly short just in case it was slow going.  The Hacienda was built 400 years ago with metre-thick walls and it was so cool to be in something with so much history.  The traditional Ecuadorian soup made with potato, avocado and cheese was simply delicious.  I have been regretting that I didn’t give Audrey a taste ever since because none of the other soups have been nearly as good.  That evening it got quite chilly.  So cold in fact that we had to pull the down-filled jackets out of the luggage and had a couple of space heaters going in the large room.

Leaving Quito by the bypass road was easy


Arriving at Hacienda de Cienega


The beautiful central courtyard at the hacienda



The GPS “decided” to take us on a shortcut to join the Quilotoa loop road.  The first few sections were nicely paved but as we started to climb out of Saquisili the road turned rough with gravel patches and soon enough was simply all gravel.  We weren’t sure if we were on the Quilotoa loop road or not so rode on.  Fortunately it wasn’t loose, deep gravel but it was a bit of a challenge anyway.  What was absolutely wonderful though was that we were riding through truly rural countryside, where farmers working the fields (by hand) would look up, startled at the sight of the two BMW motorcycles, and smile and wave.  We were questioning our decision as the “road” became smaller and rougher when I saw on the GPS that we were to turn right on a highway in ten kilometres.  Sure enough after bouncing along the steep, rough gravel tracks we did a sharp turn onto E30, a perfectly paved two-lane highway with cars and trucks zooming along at 100 kilometres per hour.  This was the real Quilotoa road.  The road continued climbing, higher and higher, until it topped out at 4,000 metres on a cold and windy pass.  We dropped into a warmer valley but soon started to climb again, through the village of Tigua, famous for its bright, colourful paintings and reached the rim of the Quilotoa Crater at about 1:30.  Even though it took a while to get lunch after we checked into our hotel (billed as a triple room it had one small double bed barely large enough for both of us and a small single bed that groaned under the weight of our luggage) we decided we had enough time to make the hike down to the lake in the crater that afternoon and return before dark.  Off we went, down, down the dusty trail as exhausted hikers and donkeys with fresh-looking tourists came up.  The 300 metre elevation drop (from 3,800 metres at the rim to 3,500 at the lake) only took a bit more than a half hour but we knew it would take at least twice or even three times as long to get back up.  We didn’t dally at the pretty lakeside, taking a couple of pictures and then turned down offers of donkey rides as we headed back up.  We wondered how many times the donkey handlers did this route every day.  They certainly were in good shape as a few of the women who weren’t accompanying donkeys virtually ran by us up the hill.  In high heels.  We managed to summit the rim, exhausted, before dark.  After dinner at the hotel (included in the rate) I stepped outside and looked over the rim in the dark.  It was eerie having the vast empty space below and black, starlit sky above.

Leaving Hacienda de Cienega


We start to think that maybe we're not on the main Quilotoa Loop road

The road gets rougher and rougher

The local welcoming committee isn't that friendly

Ekke wonders where the road is taking us


Back on pavement but still need to pay attention

Purchasing a lovely painting in Tigua


Paying the entrance fee to enter Quilotoa


The Hostal Chukiwara is a little less luxurious than last night's Hacienda de Cienega


The Lago Quilotoa inside the caldera is 300 metres below the rim


Still looking fresh after the hike down to the lake


One of the donkey wranglers (love the heels)


Audrey trudges back up


The wind came up during the night, the thin air howling around our hotel, piercing every small crevice in the walls.  There were enough thick blankets to keep us warm but at 5:00 AM I was awakened by a strange sound.  The sound of a motorcycle alarm going off.  I slipped on a pair of pants and crept out of our room to a window overlooking the road and parking area.  The cover had blown off my bike and was nowhere to be seen while Audrey’s bike cover was flapping furiously.  The wind must have shaken the bikes so much that it triggered the alarm.  There wasn’t too much to be done at this early hour so I snuck back into bed and waited for daylight.  At 7:00 AM we went out to turn off the alarms and go on a search for the missing bike cover.  Being a bright blue it should have been easy to spot.  But it wasn’t.  We searched high and low going several hundred metres in every direction, even looking down into the crater.  When we returned empty handed to the hotel we packed Audrey’s cover away and just as we finished stuffing it into its sack one of the hotel staff came out carrying my bike cover.  He indicated he had found it around the corner and put it away for safe keeping.  Hurrah!  In hindsight, the bike covers are one of those useful items that you just take for granted.  It’s great not only for keeping the bikes protected overnight but invaluable when parking somewhere and storing our motorcycle gear on the bike so that it is kept from prying eyes.  After breakfast and an ice-cold dribble of a shower we decided that even though we had planned on staying two nights, now that the hike to the crater had been completed and the night wasn’t terribly pleasant, we would ride the other half of the Quilotoa loop back down to the valley.  Hosteria Papagayo looked very appealing and it was only about 100 kilometres away, in the direction of The Secret Garden, where we had a reservation the next day.  The road to Chucchilan was freshly paved and beautiful with fantastic curves, sometimes looking at the backside of the crater rim.  You could really see how the top of the Quilotoa volcano cone had blown off 800 years ago, producing pyroclastic flows all the way to the Pacific Ocean.  After Chucchilan work was being done to pave the section of road to Sigchos.  This turned out to be quite a taxing ride, dodging enormous dump trucks that produced thick dust clouds obscuring the road (and its drop-offs) as well as sections of feshfesh (dust like talcum powder) that hid large rocks, waiting to bite a motorcycle tire.  This short section took quite a while so we took a well-deserved rest in the main square at Sigchos.  A panaderia had delicious baked treats to reward ourselves with.  Since the construction was the main source of the morning’s difficulties we anticipated that an extremely rough road would be our challenge for the afternoon but it wasn’t to be.  The pavement left Sigchos and kept right on going.  Twisting and curving as if in a motorcyclist’s dream.  After about 40 kilometres we reached the valley (very close to Hacienda de Cienega) and I was very tempted to turn around and ride the road again.  One of the most fun roads in Ecuador!  Back on the Pan Americana we did something odd, we turned north, riding a short distance to Hosteria Papagayo.  It was a lovely place, and we were given a beautiful room with a large bathroom with a steaming hot shower.  The grounds were like a petting zoo with a llama, cows, chickens and a couple of friendly dogs, one of which had just had a litter of the world’s cutest puppies.  How can we carry one on the bike?  We met Jürg, Myriam and Gilbert, a Swiss family from Zurich. They were surprised when Audrey showed them the book that her cousin had written with the history of a district in Zurich as they lived very nearby, in a car-free, pedestrian-only zone.

Wow, farmer's fields at 3,800 metres.  Not what we thought of when we thought of the Andes.


Choking dust in construction zone between Chucchilan and Sigchos


Time for a break in the central plaza of Sigchos


The most amazing ride coming down from Sigchos.  Let's do that again!


Hosteria Papagayo was warm and inviting after a chilly night on Quilotoa


Puppies!



We said goodbye to our new Swiss friends in the morning and almost managed to smuggle a puppy into a tankbag as we headed off to the Secret Garden hostel.  We had heard of the hostel from our friends Sandra and Jordan who had had an amazing time there a few years ago on their ride to Ushuaia.  They had warned us about the 17 kilometres of rough cobblestone road leading to the hostel so we thought we were prepared.  Shortly out of Machachi the cobblestones started but on the first uphill curve an entire section of cobblestones had come adrift and now there was a huge hole, surrounded by large, loose stones.  I managed to bounce my way through but Audrey stalled out just before the hole and it was almost impossible to get started again.  I parked the Adventure and walked back to give her a hand.  It was much easier for me to ride the F650 since I could easily touch the ground, duck-walking if I had to.  While I was doing all that a car stopped in the middle of the road.  The driver got out and started talking to Audrey.  I could hear half the conversation through the intercom and it had something to do with chocolate.  Once I parked Audrey’s bike behind mine I walked back to see what was going on.  In the meantime the passenger had also gotten out of the car and they were trying to sell Audrey homemade chocolates.  This seemed like a rather bizarre sales tactic and surely not a terribly good business model (break up the road to make motorcycle tourists stop and buy your chocolates) so we ended up sampling a chocolate each and then buying four of the chocolates.  It should be noted that Ecuador produces some amazingly good chocolates but sadly these weren’t them.  In any case, fortified by a chocolate we were ready to tackle the remaining 16 kilometres of cobblestones.  The cobblestones themselves weren’t terribly difficult riding (aside from the horrible vibration), it was the missing sections where there were holes surrounded by loose cobblestones that made it challenging.  We made it to where the GPS indicated we should turn up a gravel road in about a half hour, taking breaks to stabilise our vision.  The rough gravel track wasn’t much easier than the cobblestones and after two kilometres we arrived at a farm house.  The GPS showed that the hostel was only 200 metres further but there didn’t seem to be a road.  We asked a farmhand for directions but he only pointed at the main house.  We rode over there and the owner came out to chat with us.  With a bit of miming we were able to convey that we were looking for the connecting road behind his house to get to the Secret Garden.  Apparently there was no such road and we had to return the two kilometres on the rough gravel track back to the cobblestone road and continue 200 metres to the proper turnoff for the hostel.  Sure enough there was a small sign at the correct turn off but that road didn’t show up on the GPS.  Two more kilometres of rough gravel track and we finally made it to the Secret Garden.  We were greeted by one of the managers and invited to have lunch (all meals and snacks are included in the rate).  He also mentioned that someone on a bike similar to mine had broken his shoulder on the ride on that gravel road and ended up staying at the Secret Garden for quite some time.  That certainly didn’t bolster our confidence for the ride out in four days’ time.  After lunch we joined a two hour hike to a nearby waterfall.  Apparently part of the hike went through the stream so they provided everyone with rubber boots.  When I was asked for my boot size I replied with, “47!”  That could be a problem, I was told, since their boots didn’t go that large.  So I ran up to our cabin and grabbed my waterproof motorcycle boots.  We hiked up the hill behind the hostel and soon enough started scrambling through the stream and along the cliff walls.  It was a lovely set of falls set in a forest and well worth the hike.  We even managed to spot a hummingbird on the way back, this species being found at a higher altitude than any other hummingbird in the world.  Our guide said we were quite lucky to see Mount Cotopaxi in the afternoon as it is usually shrouded in cloud.  We made it back just in time for the 5:00 PM snack time of fried cheese and chicken wings.  Every day at 5:00 they get everyone to sign up for the next day’s activities.  Audrey signed up for horseback riding and I opted for mountain biking.  What a lively atmosphere of mostly young people out travelling.  Around the dinner table (lasagna) we met people from all over the world.  We met more people in one afternoon at The Secret Garden than we had in the previous month and a half of travelling, living in hotels.

Myriam, Gilbert and Jürg from Zurich posing with a llama at Hosteria Papagayo


The cobblestone road on the way to The Secret Garden hostel was mostly OK


Though the cobblestones at "Chocolate Corner" were very challenging to get through without dropping the bike


The access road up to The Secret Garden was one car wide.  Millimetres to spare.


Our cabin at The Secret Garden


Right away go for a hike (no rubber boots in size 47 so Ekke wears his motorcycle boots)


There were a couple of challenging sections on the hike up to the falls




We spotted a hummingbird in the woods.  The highest flying hummingbird species in the world.


The view of Cotopaxi from our cabin



On Saturday morning a van came to pick up the mountain bikers at 8:15 and the horse riders at 8:30.  As we were picking out our mountain bikes (rather well abused) the horse truck swung by and Audrey waved.  The horses were waiting at the park entrance and we waved as we went by to head up Mount Cotopaxi.  The van took us to about 4,500 metres and then we hiked up to an elevation of 4,885 metres where a refuge sheltered us from the wind.  Despite being a kilometre higher than the hike at Quilotoa and about the same elevation gain, this seemed easier, perhaps being fresher in the morning and taking it extra slowly (polé polé as they say in Swahili) made the difference.  After a snack at the refuge we walked/skidded down the steep slope back to the parking lot.  The van drove down the road, until it wasn’t very steep anymore and then we hopped on our bikes.  It was an easy five kilometre cruise downhill on a gravel road back to the park entrance with fantastic views of Cotopaxi behind us.  Not really what I would call mountain biking but it was a pleasant excursion.  By all accounts, the horse riding was a lot of fun too as they rode around the base of Cotopaxi, also enjoying the views.  After lunch back at the hostel we had some free time (laundry calls) before snack time at 5:00.

With the superzoom camera you can make out the road and trail to the refuge on Cotopaxi for the mountain bikers



The mountain bikers head up


The refuge seems so close...




A snack break at the refuge


The mountain bikers and Cotopaxi


Audrey on her horse, "Let's ride!"


Spectacular views from horseback


Audrey nicknames her horse "Thirsty" as it stops at even the smallest water source


Snack time


Petting the horses after a great ride


These guys hard at work repairing the cobblestone road make us optimistic about the ride out


Cotopaxi by night


I had signed up to hike Pasochoa on Sunday and Audrey decided to chill at the hostel and write up the Galapagos chapter of the website.  The hike to the top of the mountain at 4,220 metres was quite strenuous and I decided that I didn’t mind being the slowpoke at the back of a group of 20-somethings.  Polé polé.  Kate (from Quebec) was having a bit of trouble with the altitude so she kept me company.  We climbed through diverse climatic zones, including a patch of cloud forest clinging to the side of a cliff, looking back every now and again to enjoy the views of Cotopaxi and Antisana as well as lesser peaks like Sinchohahua and Corazon.  It took about four hours to reach the top from which we could look over to the other side and see Quito in the distance.  A delicious sandwich made for a well-deserved snack.  Our guide was leaving The Secret Garden in a few days and this was his last trip up to the mountain, having completed the climb 51 times.  I like to think that we spent some extra time on the mountain so that he could enjoy some quiet time rather than giving me an opportunity to catch my breath.  We took a slightly different way down the peak that led us to a very steep descent.  It wasn’t technically difficult but we were so high up and exposed that my fear of heights kicked in and I had to work hard to keep from freezing up.  I was quite relieved at the end of the steep section and from then on it was a two hour slog back to the hostel.  Audrey had staked out a prime “office” spot with a majestic view of Cotopaxi while she worked on the website, a great place for writing.  I took a nap.

Starting the hike up Pasochoa


A few hours climbing through various climatic zones


At the 4,220 metre summit of Pasochoa



 
This little dachshund accompanies the hikers up to Pasochoa every single time



On Monday we packed up the bikes, said goodbye to some of our new friends and cautiously tackled the gravel road out, keeping in mind that someone had broken their shoulder doing this.  It actually wasn’t too bad and then we tackled the cobblestone road.  We had seen construction workers repairing some of the holes in the cobblestone road when we went on the mountain biking/horse riding excursions and sure enough the road was much better.  Even “chocolate corner” had been smoothed over and we had no trouble going down to Machachi where we again turned north for a short bit before heading east, in the direction of the Quito airport where the roads were beautiful and new.  I must have been mesmerized by the lovely road since I took the wrong exit at a roundabout and we ended up just outside the airport.  A ten kilometre long U-turn and soon enough we were headed properly east again.  The road climbed and climbed, just as a light drizzle made us think of stopping to put on the rain gear.  Conveniently there was a roadside restaurant near the 4,000 metre summit where we could pull in and have lunch.  Trout (trucha) is a speciality of this mountainous region and with a little pointing at pictures and miming we were able to order lunch.  The fish was absolutely delicious.  Along numerous sections of the road we observed rock falls and mud slides and wondered if these may have been a result of the recent earthquake we had experienced in Quito.  Soon we turned up the road to Terma Papallacta, a hot springs resort. We checked into our cabin and took the short walk up the hill to the public pools.  There were about a dozen pools, ranging from scalding hot to freezing cold.  Naturally most people gravitated to the medium temperature pools with short dips into the extremes.  While the pools weren’t crowded we were surprised by the number of people here on a weekday.  The highlight of the resort though was that each cluster of cabins also had their own set of pools (warm, medium and cold) in the central garden.  We were still at over 3,000 metres elevation and with the light drizzle it was quite chilly so it was especially luxurious to be able to take 11 steps (yes, we counted) from the front door to the nearest pool. We needed to stay another night, this was so nice. So we did.  The next day was a relaxing day, splashing in the pools, working on the website and going for a short hike into the hills.

Packing up at The Secret Garden


The ride down the access road


Leaving the hostel


Audrey is happy to have made it!


A roadside restaurant appears just as we think about putting on the raingear


The most delicious trout for lunch


Arriving at Termas de Papallacta


Hotpools right outside our cabin



We woke up to a cold, light drizzle and hoped that today’s ride would end up somewhere warm.  The ride down the Rio Papallacta canyon was simply amazing as we descended from over 3,000 metres.  The road was twisty as it followed the canyon walls, with the river raging far below and the vegetation changed, becoming more and more lush.  After gassing up at Baeza we continued north with spotty rain showers though it had warmed up quite a bit as we continued descending.  After passing a dam under construction on the Rio Coca we turned off at the Cascada San Rafael.  At the entrance to the waterfalls we peeled our jackets off in the hot sun and wrapped our motorcycle gear in the PacSafe.  After registering with at the park office it was a kilometre or so of hiking through lush rainforest to the largest falls in Ecuador.  The walk itself was simply magical as sun streamed through the canopy and strange and wondrous insects buzzed around us.  The falls were spectacular though there are fears that when the dam comes fully on stream the flow of water will be reduced and the falls will turn into a trickle.  Back on the highway we stopped for lunch at Hosteria Reventador, a short way down from the falls.  It looked like some kind of theme park with waterslides and pools and lots of rooms.  From all appearances we were the only people there, though there were enough tables set up in the restaurant for several tour groups.  After lunch the road continued to descend through the mountains, at times we rode along a ridge and we could see the Amazon basin in the hazy distance to our right.  By late afternoon we had dropped more than three kilometres in elevation and crossed the equator back into the northern hemisphere.  We entered Nueva Loja (also known as Lago Agrio) in a warm rain.  There were a couple of slick, muddy roads on the way to the Platinum Class Hotel in the suburbs of town.  It was easy enough to pick the hotel out as it was a modern four storey edifice set amongst low houses and shacks.  Quite odd.  But at least the room was sparkling clean and, most importantly with the heat and humidity, air conditioned.  We took a stroll, in the hopes of finding a restaurant for dinner but dusk was approaching and the hotel’s neighbourhood didn’t seem like the kind of place where tourists should be wandering around after dark so we headed back and the desk clerk ordered us a pizza for delivery.

Riding along the Rio Papallacta, dropping in elevation


Quite a few landslides (perhaps aided by the recent earthquake?)


Many waterfalls along the Rio Papallacta as we descend to the rainforest


A new dam on the Rio Coca threatens the Cascada San Rafael


Lots of interesting wildlife on the walk down to the falls


We thought we had discovered a new species of insect
{C}

Cascada San Rafael on the Rio Coca are the largest falls in Ecuador


The Platinum Class Hotel sticks out like a sore thumb in Lago Agrio



The owner of the Platinum Class Hotel suggested that we go to Jackeline for desayuno.  Sure enough it was a reasonable breakfast and we thought they had made a mistake when it only cost $6.50 for both of us.  Packing up the bikes worked up a sweat as the heat and humidity wasn’t something we were used to after spending so much time at altitudes above 3,000 metres and now being at 300 metres in the Amazon basin.  Then it was time for a photo session with the family and they gave us a gift of a lovely ceramic mug.  We managed to stuff it into a saddlebag but it wasn’t an especially practical souvenir to carry on the motorbike.  We headed south once again (that feels more natural as we head for the southern tip of South America) crossing the equator shortly after leaving Rio Agrio with a lovely ride of about 80 kilometres to Coca where we checked into the Hotel El Auca.  The Hotel El Auca (literally meaning “the savages” in the local Quechua dialect) was an ex-Texaco work camp having been converted into a hotel about forty years ago.  It was built around a central garden and the motorcycles were parked inside the secure compound.  The staff indicated that it would be fine to store the bikes here while we went on our Napo River cruise so we booked another night for when we return from the cruise and then checked into our room.  From our third floor room overlooking the garden we spied some movement in the tree canopy.  Monkeys!  They were leaping from branch to branch with amazing grace.  Later in the evening when we were packing the bikes for storage we noticed some more movement but in the garden.  This time there were a few creatures that looked like small capybaras.  We weren’t even on the cruise yet and already we had spotted lots of interesting wildlife.

Riding south in the rainforest of the Amazon Basin towards Coca


The courtyard of the Hotel El Auca


Already we're seeing wildlife before we even depart on our river cruise


Map of our ride through Ecuador  


 

Chapter 4: Ecuadorian Rainforest and Beyond

Audrey writes:
A boat trip through the Ecuadorian rainforest awaited us, and we sat on the dock in anticipation at La Mission Hotel in Coca. An hour and a half later, several other guests arrived from Quito on a delayed flight, which included two couples from New Zealand (one couple had a daughter who had just bicycled in the Olympics), an Ecuadorian mother and son (on vacation), and Roberto (a former ship captain would be teaching the staff safety procedures). Our luggage was loaded onto a motorized canoe and removable wooden seat backs were slotted in as we boarded. The 2 hour ride on the Napo River, a tributary of the Amazon, to meet with our boat, The Manatee, went quickly. There was evidence of oil companies along the banks with big trucks, equipment and staff housing, but this seemed to lessen as we moved further downriver. After disembarking, Gian Carlo, the manager, and his staff greeted us with hot towels and hors d'oeuvres. We enjoyed a lunch of ceviche or fish in sauce with salty plantain chips, and every meal included something traditionally Ecuadorian. A self-guided tour of the boat's three decks was next, and there were a few guest cabins, a dining room and deck chairs. Our journey downriver was very pleasant, cruising by indigenous dwellings consisting of a small shacks made of logs and ferns. Friendly locals waved to us as they travelled in motorized canoes and we did see a few paddling around in dugout canoes as well. Our guide, Raoul, pointed out several bird species, including some osprey, which can migrate from Canada. A flock of parrots flew by and he told us that they were going home to roost as the sun was going down. They looked like dots in the sky to us, so we would have to take his word for it that they were parrots. Later, he gave us an informative talk in the lounge regarding the wildlife we might see and what to wear and bring on our excursions. That night the boat docked beside the tree-lined shore, and we all donned rubber boots. Unfortunately for Ekke, they did not have size 13, so he just wore his hiking shoes, tucked his pants into his socks, and applied plenty of bug repellant to his ankles. Our motorized canoe took us to a beach where we disembarked for a night hike. All the creepy crawlers were out at this time, and we wandered through the rainforest in search of them. Raoul knew where to look for huge spiders, millipedes, grasshoppers and stick insects. Ekke's shoes were caked with mud, but after setting them outside the door of our cabin, they were cleaned and returned by the next morning.
Motorized canoe ready to take us downstream to the Manatee


Our first view of our home for the next four days: The Manatee


The Rio Napo is a working river as it is used to get things to the impenetrable jungle


Laundry day


A Kichwa village along the Napo


Our first night hike to find creepy-crawlies nets our first big spider


Yes, there is an insect hiding in this photo


What the heck is that?

 
Riding in the canoe on the shoreline of a small, slow-moving tributary of the Napo made spotting wildlife easier than being in the forest itself because it was so open. Chugging along quietly with thick, lush rainforest on both sides felt like the Jungle Cruise at Disneyland - magical. The tarp that covered the canoe was pulled back, and we basked in the bright sunshine, listening to the continuous sounds of wildlife of the rainforest. Enormous blue and yellow butterflies fluttered by, and we caught a glimpse of several bird species. On the underside of a branch sticking out of the water there was something unusual - several small bumps. Raoul said they were bats, curled up and asleep during the day, camouflaged by the log. A turtle dove out of sight as the boat approached, and Raoul spotted macaws high in a tree. Vines hung down over the slow-moving river and we floated by colourful flowering trees and bushes. It was quite surreal.
Weaver nests


It was much more difficult taking photos of birds in the jungle than in the Galapagos


Raoul had the ability to identify a speck in the distance as a specific bird


We could almost be on the Jungle Cruise at Disneyland


Look closely, see the bats under the log on the right?


A closeup of the bats
At the end of a lagoon, Pinachoa or Piraña Lake, we disembarked at the Amazon Dolphin Lodge. We were greeted by a line of hundreds of leaf cutter ants walking on the ground, in formation, with their booty. Up in the tree we watched as they chewed off tiny leaf and blossom parts and carried them back down the tree to take to their underground nest. In our rubber boots (Ekke in hiking shoes with socks tucked in) we then trudged through the damp rainforest, our guide pointing out various tree and plant species, and lots of insects. Birds were almost impossible to spot here, in the thick rainforest, but we heard plenty of bird calls. Back at the lodge, Raoul invited us to go swimming in the lagoon, where people often came to fish for piraña. Swimming with piraña had never been on my 'To Do' list, but, what the heck. We were here. The evening before, he had shown us a photo from the Hollywood movie, Piraña, saying that it was a misconception that the toothed fish attacked people. They used their sharp little teeth to nosh on fruit that fell from overhanging trees. So, therefore, we could swim in Piraña Lake, if we felt brave enough. After watching Raoul swim around a bit, and not get attacked by pirañas, Ekke and I felt more comfortable about taking a dip as well. The water was really warm on top, and cool down below, and it felt great on the hot day. It was very murky with silt, so we did not see anything swimming around, which was a good thing. Raoul warned us not to touch the bottom, which was two metres below, because there might be anacondas lurking below and Ekke, being 193 centimetres tall, did his best to stay afloat. Roberto, who was always entertaining us in some way, posed on the dock, then dove off the edge. In the spirit of the Rio Olympics, Ekke gave him an '8' from the Canadian judge.
Entering Lago Pinachoa


Leaf cutter ants hard at work






A jungle hike


Raoul spots a tiny little frog


While this frog is much bigger it was just as difficult to spot


Raoul was an amazing guide




Ekke thinks about bringing his own rubber boots as his ankles get eaten by the local flora and fauna


Audrey takes a refreshing dip in Piraña Lake while Roberto waits to show off his Olympic diving skills


Ekke keeps his feet well off the lake bottom where anacondas might be lurking while not attracting the attention of the Pirañas
After lunch in the lodge, the motorized canoe took us back up the creek and Raoul instructed the driver to stop. There was loud howling in the trees, and we looked up high. Monkeys! A troop of Howler monkeys were swinging through the trees, probably about 20 metres away, and we just sat and enjoyed the lively scene as they made their way across the high canopy. Further along, the wind started coming up and within minutes torrential rain was upon us. We helped reattach the tarp, and then donned rain ponchos. Leaves and branches were falling from the trees and splashing in the water, and we ducked for cover as the boat scraped along one big fallen tree in an attempt to squeeze past it. The torrential rain ended about a half-hour later. Roberto needed a bush bathroom break, so we docked at an open area on the bank to let him out of the boat. While he was gone, Raoul regaled us with a tale about how he had taken a group of hikers on this very path, and had come across an anaconda, its belly full, digesting some sort of prey. He said that the huge snakes were often found at the bottom of slow moving rivers, and lagoons, just like the one we swam in. We pondered that we had swam in the same water as anaconda, the second largest snake in the world by mass. Roberto made it back safely, and the canoe chugged down the river, back to the Manatee.
Lunch at the Dolphin Lodge


Ah, that's why it's called a "Rain Forest"


Glorious sunset on the Napo River
Raoul was talented at spotting wildlife in the distance, from the canoe. He would watch for a bit of movement and next thing you know he was pointing out a troop of spider monkeys or tamarinds climbing and leaping from branch to branch. Birds were spotted when they were flying, but it was difficult to get photos of them when they moved so quickly. So, unlike the Galápagos, where you were pretty much tripping over animals at every turn, animals in the Amazon were very difficult to spot. But it was also very satisfying when you did see something or get a photo. One possibility of seeing birds up close came the next day. A 6:00 AM wake-up call on August 21st was a bit of a shocker, and we piled into the motorized canoe before breakfast to go see a clay lick. Some parrot and parakeet species need clay in their diet to combat the toxicity of plants or to get their salt fix, so, they lick clay. And yes, they have tongues. The lick was basically an older landslide on the steep bank of the river, exposing the clay underneath. It was a bit disappointing to see no birds there when we arrived. Some park wardens came by in their own canoe to check our permits, and chatted with Raoul. They said that the birds had moved licks and could be spotted upriver. And sure enough, on another piece of exposed clay, to our delight, we could see some movement. I looked through Rahul's binoculars and there they were - several small, green parakeets gathered together on the side of the cliff. A couple of big, green and red parrots came to join them, and there was a bit of a skirmish for the prime clay real estate, with a lot of squawking and pecking. We sat in the boat and enjoyed the lively scene for about 15 minutes, when suddenly the birds made a big ruckus, flapped their wings and flew off. A tiny hawk (that's the name of the species) had tried to grab one of the birds and scared them all away. We felt badly for all the other tourists from surrounding lodges that came immediately after us and missed the birds at the clay lick. The birds did not come back.
Parakeets on the clay lick


And then the parrots came


Parrots and few brave parakeets enjoying the clay lick before a tiny hawk chased them all off


We watched a troop of monkeys progress through the forest canopy


A sandstorm in the rain forest?  Yes, the wind whipped up the sandbars in the river.


Woo hoo!
Breakfast always included huevos (eggs), and there was kiwi fruit for the New Zealanders and pancakes with maple syrup for us Canadians. We took the canoe to visit a Kichwa tribe, indigenous to the Lower Napo River region. Elena, one of the locals, greeted us with a cup of Chicha, or yuca plant mashed up and fermented. Women chewed the yuca to release the juices, boiled it and tribe members drank it several times a day and for ceremonial purposes. Elena showed us the local school, a brick building with three classrooms housing grades 1-8. The current government used money from oil revenues to build schools for the indigenous people, and children learned in both Spanish and Kichwa. On a hike through the lush rainforest, she showed us some plants and their uses, such as palm fronds for roofing houses or weaving mats. Us ladies got to try a bit of the weaving, and she handed the men a loaded blow gun. She put a bit of cotton fluff on a dart made of a small reed, stuffed it in the end of the hollow pole, and showed us how to puff into it to make it fly. I did not want to pass up this rare opportunity as well, not knowing when I would ever have the chance to shoot a blow gun. I was surprised at the way the dart flew quite far with very little blowing.  (Nice that Audrey didn’t mention my feeble blow dart which landed a few metres beyond the end of the barrel – Ekke) Back at the shelter, some catfish and hearts of palm were being cooked in banana leaves over the fire, and we got to sample them. Well, except for one treat, some skewered larvae. Roberto had picked up the skewer off the fire and proceeded to put all the larvae in his mouth, as a joke. So, no larvae for us. But, I was not too disappointed.
 
Audrey tries the welcome drink of Chicha (mashed, fermented yuca plant)


Local handicrafts for sale


Elena shows us how the Kichwa use everything in the forest


A local Kichwa school




Audrey rings the teacher bell and thinks about becoming a teacher here


And then sees the teacher housing where the teachers live for the school year


Toucans near the village


Raoul shows us how to make the poison dart tip


Elena demonstrates the proper use of a blow gun


Audrey has a magnificent shot (let's not show Ekke's pathetic attempt)


Hey, I'm just going to pop outside for a snack...


A sampler of indigenous foods (minus the much-anticipated skewered larvae which Roberto ate)
The Manatee chugged back upriver in the afternoon, and after a lunch of shrimp tamales and cheesy potato cakes, we took the canoe to Yasuni National Park. The muddy, slippery hike in was very interesting, but again, we heard more wildlife than we saw. From a more open area we watched spider monkeys swinging through the trees wrapping their tails around branches for support. Life-like animal statues representing the wildlife on the Napo River were displayed at the centre, and Raoul explained that anaconda, to the Kichwa, was their 'mother' because it represented water and therefore, life. Night had fallen on our return hike, so we saw many more interesting creatures including several well-camouflaged frogs and a tarantula. I was very glad to be wearing rubber boots (and Ekke was envious as he kept scratching his ankles).
A parakeet peeks out from a tree


A group photo after the hike through Yasuni Park


The return hike was in the dark with an opportunity for more creepy-crawly observation





 
Without a super zoom lens there wouldn't be a lot of pictures from the boat tour
The motorized canoe took us back to Coca on August 22nd, and we said goodbye to our shipmates at the dock. Our room at the Auca Hotel awaited us, and Ekke Skyped his mother for her birthday. She had received our package from Ecuador containing a silver necklace with traditional designs, and Ekke's dad had received his llama wool sweater. We showed them the lovely hotel courtyard garden with the iPad. Technology is so amazing. At breakfast the next day, Ekke pointed something out as I returned from the buffet – a monkey was sitting on the window ledge and he had just shooed it off his chair. It was trying to steal his toast.
Hey, get away from my toast!


A less aggressive breakfast visitor

 
With the sun shining brightly, we set off to ride the 170 kilometres to Tena. Although it was very hot, 30 C, the airflow cooled us down when we rode at 100 kilometres per hour. At a gas station, there was a welcome sight – a car wash. And people there ready to wash our bikes. For $3.00 each, they sprayed them down, soaped, rinsed and dried them, the mud from Colombia finally going down the drain. Their young children brought us chairs, and we felt a little guilty, watching others work, but contributing to the local economy is always appreciated. The town of Tena was back down in the river valley, so it was, again, very hot as we walked around in search of batidos, or fruit milkshakes, to cool us down - the mango treats tasted delicious. The town featured a huge mirador, a viewing platform where we could look over the town and rainforest canopy and into Parque Amazonas. The wildlife park was closed because they were building a chocolate museum on the site, which was disappointing, but it would give us a good reason to return. So, we spent the afternoon cooling off at the hotel swimming pool. The owner was very excited to see our motorcycles and he showed off his own BMW R1200 GS. Later, he gave us a ride into town in his van where we enjoyed dinner at Café Tortuga, featuring fried yuca, a sort of tuber-like vegetable. Delicious.
The bikes hadn't been washed since Canada


Audrey considers it $3 well spent


Great roads through the rain forest


A roadside restaurant.  We just asked for the same thing as truck drivers were having (chicken and rice).


Observation tower in Tena

 
Leaving the hot, humid Amazon basin and riding into the cool hills was a welcome respite. Waterfalls or cascadas in Spanish, tumbled down from volcanic cliffs above on both sides of the highway. The road was a motorcyclist’s playground, twisting and turning on good pavement with gorgeous scenery all around, with a few rock-hewn tunnels thrown in to add interest. The town of Baños was located at the foot of a live volcano, Tungurahua, which last erupted earlier this year. But our Lonely Planet guidebook assured us that volcanic activity was closely monitored and that ample warning would be provided if an evacuation was imminent. From the hotel balcony we could see plumes of smoke rising up from surrounding hills and the rushing white water of the Pastaza River winding its way through the deep valley below. The walk into town was welcome exercise, and having arrived early in the afternoon allowed us time to peruse the shopping area and lovely central square. It was tourist central, with hostels, adventure tours, hot springs pools and cane-sugar taffy shops everywhere. We chose Café Hood owned by an expat American for some familiar food, which a long-term traveller needs every now and again, and the apple pie did not disappoint.
Passing the slow moving trucks is always fun


Our room in Baños had a wonderful view of the river




Hot springs, waterfalls and rivers like the Pastaza river give Baños de Auga Santa (Baths of Sacred Waters) its name


The nicest Datsun pickup truck in the world?

 
A twisty road up and out of the valley the next morning, August 25th, afforded great views of the volcano. We dodged small piles of rocks on the road, mini-landslides which sometimes were so recent that the dust had not yet settled. Another good reason to wear a helmet. We weren’t sure if the rockslides happened all the time or if they were a result of the recent earthquake near Quito, but there were a lot of them. Our route took us past the Chimborazo volcano, famous for being the highest point on earth due to the earth’s bulge at the equator. The mountain peak is technically farther from the centre of the earth and closer to the sun than Everest. Neat. The 160 kilometres to Alausi went very quickly, a quaint town with plenty of locals in traditional dress. It is also known as the beginning of the Nariz del Diablo train journey through the Andes. On the ride to Cuenca the next day Ekke spotted the train tracks on the side of a cliff where the train switches back on another track, all very interesting. More enjoyable riding awaited us as we rode up and down hillsides on the curvy highways but we felt chilly as the temperature dropped to 11 C as the road climbed higher.
Volcan Tungurahua overlooking Baños in the valley


Chimborazo hiding in the clouds is the highest point on earth as measured from the centre of the earth


Safety maybe not a top priority?


Ekke has some fun when we arrive in Alausi


Alausi is a stop on the Nariz del Diablo


The train ride sounds like it would be pretty neat


Street vendor making fresh plantain chips


Yummy

In a small town we rode around the square and spotted a tiny café. There was no menu so we used the Spanish words in our repertoire to order queso jamon tostado or cheese and ham on toast. Our table was on a sidewalk overlooking a square, and Ekke excitedly pointed something out to me on the street. It was a small air-cooled motorcycle with French licence plates. This was an exciting moment as it was the first motorcycle world travellers we had seen on the trip. They parked and we waved them over, and they generously spoke English when they realized that we could not speak French or Spanish. It turns out they had flown to Bogota on July 7th, a day before we had arrived in Colombia. They said they were on their way to the Ingapirca Inca ruins, a ten kilometre detour off the highway. This archaeological site had not really been on our radar as we knew we would be seeing the big Inca ruins in Peru, but we decided to ride up with them. The site was lovely, and we toured a museum which featured artefacts like jewellery and religious statues found at the site. Our guide showed us dwellings and storehouses as this had been an important supply stop on the Inca highway. The Sun Temple was fairly intact, the impressive stone cut so precisely that it did not need mortar to stick together, and it was designed to reflect the sunlight off golden symbols on the wall during the solstices. It was getting late, so we said goodbye to our new French friends, Baptiste and Elsa, and continued our ride south.
Ekke prepares to leave the Europa Hotel in Alausi


But didn't get far as the hotel wanted us to pose for an Ecuador promo photo first


A switchback on the Devil's Train


What looks like valley fog is actually clouds with the valley hundreds of metres below


Pulling into Tambo for lunch


We met Baptiste and Elsa at the Coffee Shop just as we ordered sandwiches


And they asked if we were going to visit the nearby Inca ruins


A great little museum adjacent to the site had this happy little urn on display


Display of indigenous people in traditional dress in the museum


Recreation of an Inca home


Wow, how could those stones be made to fit so perfectly?


And they used only stone tools


Saying goodbye to Baptiste and Elsa


Sure it's possible to ride around South America two-up on an old 400 cc Honda


Getting passed by a local rider on an R1200RT on the way to Cuenca

 
Cuenca was somewhat busy to ride into at rush hour, but it did not have the big city feel of Quito. This was a smaller, quainter city with a well-preserved old town, where our hotel was located. Ekke found Hotel Santa Lucia, a historic Spanish colonial brick structure and we parked on the street in front. A valet escorted us to a secure parking area a block up the street. A posh courtyard awaited us in the hotel, with palm trees, white table cloths and wrought iron railings. This was no Super 8. It was a splurge, but we really wanted to be downtown and we really wanted to have a nice base from which to explore Cuenca. We had booked their cheapest room at $100 a night, with a simple double bed and very little decoration. At the front desk, to our delight, the desk clerk said that he wanted to upgrade our room for the same price since we were staying for four days and he wanted us to be comfortable. Okay, bring it on. We opened the door to our junior suite and were blown away with the extravagant digs, all dark wood, golden draperies and richly upholstered furniture. We felt very fortunate. A pizza place across the street provided a delicious dinner, and coincidentally, they also served delicious gelato.
Ekke checks out some graffiti on the way into Cuenca


The courtyard of the Hotel Santa Lucia


The upgraded Junior Suite was spectacular


A chocolate left after the beds were turned down
Breakfast of Huevos Benedictos (eggs Benedict) and other delights was provided in the cute hotel cafe, on August 27th. Walking around the historical area was fantastic, and right on the Parque Calderon we visited Catedral de la Inmaculada Concepcione. A tour of the crypt was in Spanish and I did often wonder what the "Oohs" and "Ahs" were about when a certain tomb was pointed out to our fellow tourists. The reason for taking the tour was so we could get escorted up to the rooftop balcony for a view of Cuenca. A spiral staircase wound up the stone structure and views across the top of the cathedral and surrounding old town were spectacular. The square was a real people place, and families were out perusing the market stalls and listening to a traditional military brass band. Another cathedral on the square, El Sagrario, built in 1557, had been converted to a museum and had a real Spanish adobe look to it. The frescoes or wall murals displaying religious scenes had been discovered during the renovation process, hidden under a few coats of old paint. A river pathway along Rio Tomebamba was very pleasant to walk along in the bright sunshine, and it took us to some remnants of an old Inca settlement. On our walk back we discovered Goza Restaurant and enjoyed some nachos on their patio, while watching a wedding party assemble for their service in the church on the square. Small children in their wedding attire were too cute.
Iglesia de San Alfonso just down the street from the hotel


Catedral de la Inmaculada Concepción off the main plaza


Catedral de la Inmaculada Concepción


The nicest crypt we've ever toured (we had to in order to get to the rooftop viewing platform)


The view of Cuenca from the top of Catedral de la Inmaculada Concepción is spectacular




Church displays tend to be a bit more graphic in Latin America


Coming back from the flower market

 
That evening we Skyped in to the Horizons Unlimited motorcycle world travellers' meeting in Nakusp, from our hotel. We had done something similar from Lake Baikal in Russia on our 2013 trip. The internet connection kept cutting out this time, so it was a bit frustrating, but we did get to share some of our stories with the group of 300 motorcycle world travel enthusiasts, many of whom had travelled to South America or were planning to do so.  Here is the link to the 2017 event, hope to see you there!  www.horizonsunlimited.com

It was great to have a relaxing breakfast the next day, and take the time to catch up on errands. I found a shopping centre, Monay Mall, a $2.00 taxi ride away. Ekke worked on the bikes in the secure parking lot, such as lubing the F650 chain, checking tire pressures and stabilizing his horn which had come loose from bumpy roads. When he went to open the gate to leave, it was locked. He couldn't leave. The valet from the hotel had let him in, but there was no way of opening the door to let himself out. He tried his phone, but the iRoam card didn't work. So he went to the security camera and started waving and jumping up and down. No one came. So he started punching in random numbers into the security keypad. In a couple of minutes the valet came and opened the door. Phew.

We found a little museum the next day, the Cuenca Museo de las Culturas Aborigenes, and we thought we'd drop by for a quick look. It was chock-a-block with 5000 artefacts, and Ekke and I took turns reading information aloud about the displays from an English brochure which explained what was in each room. It was very interesting to see artefacts from areas that we had visited such as the Amazon or the high Andes, including chimes, mortar and pestles, star weapons, love sculptures, and pottery from the indigenous people of the Napo. It was a lovely evening, so we had a walk around the softly lit old town to the central square, which was very busy with people just strolling, enjoying each other's company and people-watching. With so many locals around, it felt very safe, even though it got dark at 6:00 PM, and it looked like people enjoyed this strolling thing regularly, a great alternative to staying home and watching TV. It reminded me of Europe.
So cool to see people in traditional dress


Ekke reads from the self-guided tour of Cuenca Museo de las Culturas Aborigenes


That doesn't look like it would have been fun to get put in


Painting from the time of the Spanish


Ekke is always a big fan of pottery


What a lovely city Cuenca was to wander around

As we had not seen the national archaeological museum in Quito because it was closed for renovations, I really wanted to visit the one in Cuenca, the Museo Pumapungo, which, unfortunately, was closed on Monday. So on the morning of our departure, Tuesday, August 30th, we walked the 20 minutes in the brisk morning air to the free museum and spent an hour perusing the dioramas that displayed scenes of daily life of the indigenous tribes of Ecuador. The blowgun and darts that we had tried with the Napo people was there, and we recognized their distinctive wooden and palm-frond topped huts. Spiritual artefacts were also on display, and one highlight was the shrunken heads. I thought they were replicas, but the information panels said they were the real thing. Shura people of the Amazon used the practice to harness the spirit of the enemy. They were slightly macabre, yet fascinating at the same time.
Museo Pumapungo had some great dioramas of indigenous peoples throughout Ecuador




A photo of a headhunter


This is a real shrunken head, not a replica

 
Leaving such a beautiful city and hotel was a bit difficult, but we got on the road around 11:00 AM to ride the 170 kilometres to Machala. The road took us south at first, on a paved road and when it turned west it deteriorated to rough pavement, gravel and dust. Potholes were difficult to avoid, and we stood up on the foot pegs to stabilize the bikes. The terrain was very desert-like, dry, rugged hills with no vegetation, and little evidence of human habitation. We turned a corner, and terrain became very lush and green with a lot of little towns. Closer to Machala, we rode by kilometres of banana plantations, the bananas covered with plastic bags to keep the humidity in and protect them from insects and pesticides. At the Grand Hotel Americano, I waited with the bikes while Ekke checked in. Across the street a young woman was set up with a loudspeaker in front of a drug store, announcing a big sale or something. She spoke a stream of quick Spanish for at least ten minutes, with barely a pause, played some loud music for a minute, and then went back to her spiel. I was entertained to say the least. A fellow came from nowhere and took the luggage from the bikes, and I really hoped he was an employee of the hotel. I was quite relieved when he actually carried the bags into the hotel. Ekke came out with a desk clerk, who needed to show us where parking was, so we sat her on the back of his bike and rode to the fenced lot. Machala had a nice town square, but not much else to recommend it except for the upcoming banana festival, which we would just miss. But, it was real life, and not touristy Ecuador, which made it interesting in a different way.
The ride to the coast from Cuenca went through a few different climates, including this desert


And then a rain forest




Banana plantations surround the city of Machala


The main plaza in Machala, as in most Latin American cities we've seen, is a real people place


Map of our ride from Coca to Machala in Ecuador (dotted line is boat tour)  

Chapter 5: Disaster in Peru

Ekke Writes:

Thanks to Sandra and Jordan’s write-up on their blog (Destination End of World) we were able to make the border crossing from Ecuador into Peru much easier.  The border was set up so that all entry and exit formalities were conducted at just one station, so one got stamped out of Ecuador and into Peru at the same station.  As such the border control stations were laid out in a one-way format and on the Ecuadorian side there were no visible entrances to border control station when southbound.  But, the bikes needed to be stamped out of Ecuador on the Ecuadorian side so it was a good thing Sandra and Jordan had written about how they had proceeded to the Peruvian side and were told to go back to Ecuador border control to get stamped out.  Through the magic of Google Street View while we were still at the Grand Hotel Americano in Machala on, August 31, I could see right away that we would need to do a U-turn to access the Ecuador border.  Sure enough, when we arrived at the border there was a big, blank wall hiding the border control station with a sign saying C.E.B.A.F.  and a small, poorly marked slip road with a U-turn to get to it.  We did the U-turn and found the aduana to get the temporary import permits for the bikes cancelled hidden in a small, unsigned office at the back of the main building.  With bikes cleared we then U-turned again back southbound and rode four kilometres to the Peru border control station.  It took about a half hour to get the temporary import permits for the bikes to enter Peru and then we proceeded to migracion where there were two lines.  One to get stamped out of Ecuador and then another to get stamped into Peru.  This took about two hours.  As it was well past lunch time after all that we decided to have a quick lunch at a small diner at the border control station and save time not having to hunt for a restaurant further down the road.  Riding south to the first sizeable town of Tumbes we were struck right away that Peru seemed grittier (and not just because we were in the desert) than Ecuador, with more garbage strewn about and the drivers a bit more aggressive.  The chaotic jumble of tuk-tuks in Tumbes was a real surprise; we hadn’t seen these three-wheeled motorbikes since Southeast Asia.  We manoeuvred our way through the mess and then continued south along a relatively straight road, paralleling the Pacific Ocean on our right.  After about 80 kilometres we entered Mancora and stopped to pick up some Peruvian soles at a bank machine before turning off on a side road.  The road was freshly paved and fronted by hotels.  After about four kilometres we crossed a rickety wooden bridge, looking for our hotel, the Mancora Beaches.  We had no luck as we rode up and then back a few hundred metres.  When we stopped to confer a couple of guys behind a high gate asked if they could help.  When we told them we were looking for the Mancora Beaches hotel they said we had found it!  There weren’t any signs on the building or fence so we were a bit suspicious (we had been approached by touts selling hotels in town) but inside we found Rudy at the desk and he had us listed in the reservation book.  The hotel looked terrific, with a pool next to the beautiful beach and our room was large and comfortable.  At $126 per night it certainly wasn’t as good a value as we had come to expect in Ecuador but then this was a popular beach resort so we would have to wait and see if the prices in the rest of Peru were any better.  Dinner was excellent, living up to Peru’s reputation as a culinary highlight.

Heading South - need to stop on the Ecuador side to get the bikes stamped out


Filling out the exit paperwork to leave Ecuador


Entering Peru


Heading south along the coast of Peru


Arriving in Mancora


Stopping off at a bank machine in Mancora


Oh, this is nice...  Mancora Beaches hotel



We spent Thursday, the first day of September, relaxing at the beach resort.  After a long walk up the beach we were almost back at the hotel when we suddenly spotted a big splash just off shore.  A pod of whales was cruising slowly south, a couple of hundred metres offshore.  We had never seen whales so playful, breaching and splashing with their fins, so we were riveted to the beach watching them swim parallel to the shore until they disappeared.  Wow, we felt so fortunate to witness such magnificent creatures close up.  

Checking out the beach






Whoa, check out the whale!




Just before dinner we were in our room when we heard one of the motorcycle alarms go off.  Still in my flip-flops I walked around the side of the building to investigate but found nothing out of the ordinary.  Just as I turned around to go back to the room I stepped on a wet sidewalk block and my left foot slipped out from under me.  Trying to catch myself, my right leg was at an awkward angle when all my weight came down on it and I collapsed to the ground.  I saw that my right knee cap was not in its proper place, having moved up the thigh a few centimetres.  While it was painful at the time of the fall it didn’t hurt a lot afterwards.  I called for Audrey and she came out to find me sitting on the sidewalk holding my leg.  This looked awfully similar to the time I ruptured my patella tendon in Germany, nine years ago.  Rudy, the hotel manager tried to call an ambulance to take me to the medical clinic in town but the ambulance couldn’t be located.  A second ambulance was concerned about how they were going to get paid and didn’t want to come out.  Finally Rudy called a friend in the police who came over with a police pickup truck and after having spent an hour sitting on the sidewalk where I fell, I was unceremoniously loaded onto a backboard and then carried out to the pickup truck.  We waited for another few minutes as Audrey called our travel insurance company and let them know of the accident and then we drove back to town on the four kilometres of new pavement, Audrey sat up front while a couple of cops rode in the back making sure I didn’t slip out the back.  I suspect that overnight someone had installed a bunch of new speed bumps; I certainly didn’t remember that there were so many the day before.  In town we went to a clinic where a doctor had a quick look at the leg and straightened it out (no pain).  He declared that an X-ray was necessary but unfortunately there were no X-ray facilities in Mancora so an ambulance was called to transport me 80 kilometres south to Talara.  With me on a stretcher and Audrey sitting in a chair in back, the hour-long ride in the ambulance left us both feeling a bit car sick.  We arrived at the trauma centre but they didn’t want to deal with us so sent us next door to the “hospital”.  A doctor on the night shift called the X-Ray technician in and soon I had some good news, no bone damage.  The doctor said that a specialist would look at the knee in the morning and arranged for a room with two beds to be readied for us to spend the night.

Check out the knee cap on the right leg


A police pickup truck serves as an impromptu ambulance



It was a quiet night as I seemed to be the only patient in the place and we both managed to get a bit of sleep.  At about 7:30, Friday morning, the specialist dropped by (along with the night doctor) and he said that the swelling on the knee needed to be reduced so I was to be taken to the trauma centre.  We waited an hour or so for an ambulance to transport us and then I was loaded in the back.  We pulled out from Clinica Torres (the hospital) and immediately did a U-turn.  We then drove for about a minute and did another U-turn and drove for a few seconds before backing up to be unloaded.  The trauma centre was right next door to the hospital.  Audrey could have wheeled me over in a wheelchair faster and with less drama.  In any case, after a relatively short wait a doctor was able to see me and inspect the knee.  He poked and prodded and then tried draining fluid from the knee without much success.  His diagnosis was that it was a sprained knee and that I should rest for a couple of weeks.  He made a half a cast (just for the back of my leg) while Audrey found the tallest crutches in town (still 30 cm too short) and said we should come back in a week after the swelling had gone down.  We arranged for a taxi to take us the 80 kilometres back to Mancora with me sprawled across the back seat in my cast, arriving back at Mancora Beaches in the afternoon.  An hour or so after we returned I was in the bathroom and reached for a towel to dry my hands.  I inadvertently put a very small amount of weight on my bad leg and without warning I collapsed like a stick figure, screaming in horror and pain.  Audrey came running downstairs to find that I had tumbled into the shower stall with my leg at an odd angle.  I was able to straighten the leg and push the patella back into position but this was obviously much worse than the sprain that the diagnosis had suggested.  Rudy and the night watchman both came to see what was wrong as they had heard my screams.  We assured them that I would be OK and decided to spend the night rather than go back to Talara right away.

The trauma centre: Clinica Tresa.  Clinica Torres is half a block to the left.



On Saturday we packed everything up, as if we weren’t going to return for a while.  Since it was obviously much more serious than a sprain and it looked awfully similar to the ruptured patella tendon that I had in Germany nine years ago we thought that we might have to go to Lima for surgery.  We took all of our personal belongings off the bikes and put them under covers, confirming that it was OK to store the bikes until we returned, hopefully in a few weeks.  We took another cab back to the trauma centre in Talara (way more comfortable than the ambulance) and waited for an emergency room doctor to have another look at the knee.  The young doctor didn’t really do much of an inspection and twice asked why I had come back.  We explained that the way the leg collapsed the injury had to be more severe than a simple sprain.  But all he said was to come back on Friday, after the swelling had gone down.  We had wasted five hours.  We took a cab over to the Rio Verde hotel in Talara to wait out the week.  Unfortunately the room at the hotel was on the second floor and I wasn’t sure I could climb stairs using the too-short crutches.  However, the friendly staff at the hotel had seen me clamber out of the cab and promptly provided a wheelchair.  Over my protests (telling them that I weigh 110 kilos!) they lifted me and the wheelchair up and somehow managed to get me up the stairs to the second floor.  Where I remained for the next five days.  Taking room service for all my meals and sitting by the window watching the tuk-tuks go by.

The staff at the Rio Verde haul Ekke up to the second floor


Five days on the second floor, watching the tuk-tuks go by


Yes, I recall that having ice cream and cake is good therapy



Audrey had found out that the head doctor of the trauma centre would be in the office on Thursday so rather than waiting for Friday’s originally planned visit we decided to see him on that afternoon.  Fearing another wheelchair carry down the stairs we showed the staff that it might be easier for me to hop down the stairs while leaning on their shoulders.  It was still hard work but much easier than with the wheelchair.  A cab took us to the trauma centre and after a reasonable wait in the crowded emergency room Doctor Fallon had a look at the knee and said he suspected a ruptured patella tendon.  Finally, after five doctors and week we had the correct diagnosis but it should be confirmed with an ultrasound.  Audrey had been doing all the communication with our travel insurance company via Skype but wi-fi was only available down the block at the original hospital, Clinica Torres, on the second floor.  The insurance company insisted that they needed a note from the doctor before they could authorise an ultrasound.  So Audrey came back, tracked down the busy trauma doctor and had him write a note.  She then took a photo of the note and e-mailed it to the insurance company, following up with a Skype call.  They then said the note should say why the ultrasound was required (not just that one was required).  So again Audrey interrupted Doctor Fallon’s work and got him to write that he suspected a ruptured patella tendon.  Again a photo and back to Clinica Torres for wi-fi for the e-mail and Skype conversation.  Then they said they needed a nicely typed up report.  All this while having a note that had “URGENT!!” written across the top.  We just threw up our hands and hailed a cab across town to another clinic that did ultrasounds.  We got there just a minute before they closed at 8:00 PM.  They flipped the lights back on and did a quick ultrasound on my knee, finding a 14 mm tear in the tendon.  A cab back to the trauma centre but by this time Doctor Fallon had gone home.  So back to the Rio Verde where we had dinner in the dining room (the first time for me) and then I was helped back up to the second floor.  Friday morning we took the ultrasound to Doctor Fallon and he confirmed the ruptured tendon.  It was obvious that the half cast wasn’t good for the full support that my leg needed so Dr. Fallon put on a full plaster cast.  The Peruvian medical system is a little different from Canada’s and even with Audrey using Google Translate liberally it was always a challenge getting our messages across.  The cast was a great example of just how different the system was.  Dr. Fallon gave Audrey a list of cast supplies and she then went around the corner to the local pharmacy where she bought all the supplies.  Then she brought them back and gave them to Dr. Fallon to make the cast.  Oh, and the ultrasound that we didn’t get approval from the insurance company first?  That was 50 soles or about $20 CDN.

After letting the travel medical insurance company know that the diagnosis was indeed a ruptured patella tendon, as confirmed by the ultrasound, they said that since I was stabilised with the cast I would be flown home for surgery.  We were not given the option of getting the surgery done in Lima as was our preference.  They said that we were free to do that and try to claim the cost of the surgery afterwards but then the travel medical insurance wouldn’t be valid for the rest of the trip.  That sealed it, we’re going home.

Monday, September 12, we boarded a plane in Talara headed for Lima where the insurance company had reserved three seats for me so that I could stretch out my leg.  Then, after a layover it was on to Dallas in Business Class for me and Economy for Audrey and eventually Calgary, arriving on Tuesday afternoon.  A stretch limo was waiting to take us directly to the Foothills Hospital where we were dropped off at Emergency.  I was finally taken to a bed in the Emergency room at a little after Midnight and then the next day a real bed opened up.  Thursday morning I had surgery and Saturday I was released from the hospital.  Now it was time for months of physiotherapy…

Three seats needed for the flight from Talara to Lima


Now that's service.  Being dropped off at Foothills Hospital.


Map of our short ride into Peru  



 

Chapter 6: Return to Peru

Ekke Writes


After the surgery to repair my ruptured patella tendon in Calgary in September my leg was put into a brace, keeping my leg straight.  At first Audrey and I stayed at my folk’s place in Airdrie but eventually we moved into our own little apartment in downtown Calgary.  This was great because it was close to everything (the Co-op was across the street and LRT just a few blocks north) and it had a gym.  This allowed me to do exercises to improve the flexibility of the knee and start building up the muscles again.  Three weeks after the surgery a hinged brace was put on but only allowing 15 degrees of movement (not very much) for another couple of weeks.  By the time my leg was allowed to bend to 60 degrees in the middle of October I could begin physiotherapy and when I was finally able to bend my leg to that 60 degree mark I could actually sit in the front seat of a car.  For those two months it had always been stretched out on the back seat of a car such as when I was being chauffeured around by Audrey.   When the brace was set to allow 105 degrees of movement on November 2 I was finally able to ride a stationary bicycle (barely at first) and eventually able to drive myself.  At that November 2 doctor’s appointment I asked if we could go back to Peru at the end of November as the temporary import permits for the motorcycles were set to expire.  Doctor Martin said it shouldn’t be a problem and Helmut, my physiotherapist, also said it should be possible to have me rehabilitated enough to return.  I might not be able to ride the bike though so we arranged with the hotel in Mancora to find a truck to take my bike to the border.

View from our downtown apartment in downtown Calgary


A walk in Fish Creek Provincial Park


A turbocharged (!) six-cylinder Honda CBX shows up at a Vintage and BMW club get together


A walk to the Peace Bridge


Visiting Redwood Meadows and going for a walk along the berm


Dropping off a poppy at the war memorial along Big Hill Springs Road (Ekke fits in the Miata!)



Finally on November 25 we flew back to Peru, arriving at Mancora Beaches on Saturday afternoon after a ten hour layover in Lima and a taxi ride from Talara to Mancora.  The flight from Toronto to Lima was long enough that I could watch The Martian and Motorcycle Diaries with time left over for a little snooze.   Unfortunately Air Canada had misplaced one piece of luggage in Toronto so we had to make arrangements to have that delivered to us somehow.   In any case, there were our motorbikes.  Covers filthy and in tatters but the bikes themselves were in good shape.  They were just a bit dusty and there was some corrosion on a few of the bolts from the sea air.  On Sunday we checked the bikes more thoroughly, pumping up the tires and giving them a wash.  Most importantly, could I get on the bike?  Yes!  It was a bit awkward to swing my leg over but once on I could reach the pegs and had no trouble balancing the bike.  Great news, so we cancelled the truck and prepared to ride to the border on Monday, November 28, the day before the import permits were set to expire.

The bikes are safe but the covers are filthy and ripped.  Good thing we thought they would be and bought new covers at home.


Prepping the bikes to resume the journey


Audrey pumps up the tires



We took the luggage off the 1200 to make it as light as possible and then got some assistance to get the bikes out of the loose stone covered parking lot, no sense getting hurt again.  Out on the road I found that I could ride without too much pain and the 134 kilometres to the border was relatively uneventful.  At the Peruvian side of the border we expected to get the permit stamped out of Peru but we were told we had to go to the Ecuadorian side for that.  Once we were shown to the correct room (behind the main building, second door, without signage) it didn’t take long for the customs official to cancel our permits and get the bikes out of the computer system.  Then back to the Peru side and we obtained new permits for another 90 days and a month of motorcycle insurance.  Easy peasy!  We stopped off in Tumbes for lunch (way cheaper than in touristy Mancora) and were back at the hotel by 5:00.  We decided to stay an additional day at Mancora Beaches just to relax and booked a hotel in Piura for Wednesday.  The same hotel we had booked (and had to cancel) almost exactly three months before.  Checking Air Miles we found that we had enough points to book the Hilton in Cusco for Christmas.  This seemed appropriate since we had stayed in the Hilton in Khartoum, Sudan, for Christmas 2007 after I broke the other knee.

Leaving Tumbes we're planning to take a couple of weeks to get to Lima, stopping at each town on this sign


An important part of Ekke's rehabilitation program


Yummy breakfasts at Mancora Beaches


Audrey found a seahorse washed up on the shore



November 30 we managed to pack everything on to the motorcycles (always a challenge after a long break) and prepared to take off, continuing our journey south towards Ushuaia.  As we were paying up for our stay I noticed that the bill included the 18% sales tax on the room.  On Expedia our hotel bookings always had a note that an 18% tax would be applied to Peruvians and foreigners who had stayed in the country for more than 60 consecutive days.  I asked the manager about this and he said it was the hotel owner’s policy to charge everyone the 18% rather than checking everyone’s passport and Andean Immigration Card.  I argued that we were not required to pay the tax so he called the accountant who, after much discussion, agreed that we didn’t need to pay the tax if we didn’t want to.  We saved $64 U.S. by not paying the tax but now of course the hotel needed to do a bunch more paperwork.  By Noon we had the bikes out of the stony parking lot, on the road and packed up.  We were off!  This was the fifth time we had traversed the road between Mancora and Talara and definitely the best.  It felt so good to be on the bikes.  In Talara we went to the Rio Verde Express hotel, where we had spent a week three months ago, for lunch.  Everyone remembered us and they were glad that my knee was healing up.  I bet they were especially happy not to have to carry me up the stairs.  We filled up with gas on the way out of town (exactly three months after the last time I fuelled up in Ecuador where premium gas was $2.10 a gallon and in Peru it was $5.41 a gallon) and rode one and a half hours across the desert to Piura.  We went straight to the local airport and were delighted that our missing bag had been forwarded as requested.  We strapped the bag to my bike and then headed off to the Los Portales hotel in the centre of town at the Plaza de Armas.  We dumped the luggage in the foyer and checked in.  The doorman tried to give us directions to the parkade but we gave up and suggested he hop on the back of my bike to direct us.  He seemed absolutely delighted sitting on the back of the enormous bike being paraded around the square like royalty.  Plaza de Armas, the main square in Piura, really came alive in the evening with families, young lovers, old couples, shoe shiners, cotton candy salespeople and children running around.  It was great to be back on the road, seeing new things and exploring the world.  As I wanted to take it easy for the first few weeks while my knee was still recuperating from the surgery we stayed another day in Piura, relaxing by the pool, working out in the gym and strolling around Piura’s downtown of which Plaza de Armas was the highlight.

Leaving Mancora Beaches, just three months later than planned


Our fifth time along the road from Mancora to Talara


Arriving at Talara, home of an air force base


We stop off for lunch at the hotel where we stayed for a week three months ago


Checking in at the Los Portales in Piura, right on the main square


Raphael gets a ride on the bike to show us to the parkade


The town's main cathedral




Saying goodbye to Raphael



On Friday morning I went to the gym again, to start building up some muscle strength.  I found that the elliptical was perfect exercise and my knee felt really good afterwards.  Somehow we managed to get the stuff from the recovered luggage onto the bikes and by 11:00 rode out of town.  We decided not to fill up and risked riding the 200 kilometres across the Desertio de Sechura to Chiclayo, putting Audrey well onto reserve after the 120 kilometres from Talara.  The poor quality fuel (gasohol) and stiff headwinds took their toll and Audrey only had a few kilometres left on the F650’s tank by the time we reached Chiclayo and checked in to the Casa Andina at about 2:00 o’clock.  Once there I popped into the gym and jumped on the elliptical to exercise my knee and then headed down to read by the pool (also good therapy).  There really is something to be said about leaving late and arriving early.  Very relaxing.

Riding through the Desertio de Sechura on the way to Chiclayo









200 kilometres across the desert before getting to a town


The Casa Andina in Chiclayo isn't an historic downtown hotel but it is clean and modern with a gym



Chiclayo is home to one of the best museums in all of Peru, the Museo Tumbas Reales de Sipan.  Well actually the museum is in a small town north of Chiclayo so we had to catch a taxi to Lambayeque.  The exterior of the museum was a replica of the pyramids built by the Moche and one started at the top of the pyramid and worked down in the same order as archeologists uncovered the ruins.  For 30 soles (about $12) we had an English speaking guide give us the full tour of the facility.  The guide brought the exhibits alive and we spent a couple of hours in the museum learning (and retaining?) about the Moche civilisation and the Lord of Sipan.  The civilisation lasted about 600 years in the middle of the first millennium A.D. and the guide said that finding the Lord of Sipan’s tomb was the Peruvian equivalent of finding King Tutankhamun in Egypt whose grave was also missed by grave robbers and so was found with all his burial treasures intact.

Museo Tumbas Reales de Sipan in Lambayeque (no photos allowed inside)


A medicinal sundea back at the Casa Andina



After a workout in the gym, Sunday’s breakfast buffet at the Casa Andina was crowded with other guests, most of them from the wedding party of the night before.  Heading south into the desert we leaned the bikes into the wind and pounded across the desert.  When we stopped at a convenience store for lunch (yummy empanadas) a car driver came over and was excited to see our bikes.  His English-speaking girlfriend explained that he was a motorcycle fan himself and that today was national motorcycle day in Peru.  Sure enough we saw quite a few big bikes, a Goldwing, an R1200GS and a Yamaha Super Tenere along with lots of other bikes on the road towards Trujillo.  Apparently there were events held across the country, such as a motocross race in Chiclayo which a server at the Casa Andina restaurant was attending after her shift in the afternoon.  We entered dusty Trujillo and it seemed like other dusty desert towns we had encountered until we entered downtown proper.  Around Plaza de Armas the buildings were beautifully painted and well maintained.  It was one of the most beautiful squares we had encountered to date so we were delighted that our hotel, the Libertador, was right on the plaza and just as gorgeous as the rest of the buildings.  Once we checked in and dumped the luggage we tried to follow the directions of the bellhop to the parking but ended up going to two incorrect lots before finding ours.  Perhaps I should have offered him a ride on the back of the bike.  After enjoying a welcome drink (Pisco Sour for Audrey and a Limonade for me) by the pool we went for a walk around downtown.  On the other side of the square from the hotel was a McDonald’s (respecting the existing architecture, the Golden Arches didn’t really stand out).  We must be bad travellers since sometimes it’s nice to take the easy way out and not spend a lot of time trying figure out what to order for dinner at a local restaurant and just grab a Big Mac.  Yep, we’re terrible travellers all right.  In any case, the stroll down the pedestrian mall afterwards was very pleasant.

Ekke chats with a curious traffic cop when leaving Chiclayo (foreshadowing)


Checking out Chiclayo's main plaza on the way out of town


Back to riding across the desert.  Stiff headwind and high twenties for temperature.


Hmmm, maybe I'll have goat for dinner tonight


Little shrines dot the sides of the highway in memory of those who lost their lives on the road


Cool, drifting sand.  Sort of like winter back home.

 
This, on the other hand, is nothing like back at home


We must still be quite a ways out from Trujillo, can't see it on the horizon

Audrey writes
Riding into the Plaza de Armas in Trujillo on Sunday, December 4th, 2016 was magical, the entire square lined with colourful colonial style buildings on all sides. When Ekke parked his desert yellow metallic BMW 1200 GS Adventure in front of the matching yellow cathedral, it was a perfect photo op. Across the street, the doorman at the Hotel Libertador was suitably surprised to see our motorcycles pull up in front of the hotel, and he was even more surprised that us two dusty travellers had reservations at the historic hotel. Because of our non-existent Spanish, we ended up in the wrong parking lot, twice, and I had to back the bike out on loose gravel, always a favourite with me. The hotel pool looked so inviting, but it was way colder than I could have imagined and we didn't stay in for very long.
Ekke checks out the cathedral in Trujillo


Checking in to the Libertador


View from our room in the Libertador
The haggling with a couple of taxi drivers parked in front of the hotel the next day, to take us out to some tombs, was interesting. Lonely Planet had said that it would cost 15 nuevo soles, (S) or about $6 to get out to the tombs and the drivers said they would do it for $25 or 70 S which included waiting for us while we were in the museum and then driving us to the archaeological site, and then driving us back to the hotel. It seemed like way too much, and I didn't want to get ripped off, so I was firm at 40 S ($16). After walking away, they didn't come after us to accept our price, so we just flagged down a taxi on the street, who wanted quince or 15 S ($6) to take us there. The car was in rough shape and the seatbelts didn't work, but we made it there intact. The Huaca del Sol or Temple of the Sun appeared in the distance, and it was once the tallest pyramid of its kind in Peru before the effects of El Nino weathered it badly. It has not yet been excavated.

The museum housed artefacts from the Moche people, and we recognized the exquisite painting on their distinctive pottery from 100 to 800 AD, the same as we had seen in Sípan. What I like about their pottery is that they not only paint spiritual scenes, but also everyday items such as corn, shellfish, weapons, and musical instruments like panpipes. What also really makes it unique is that the pottery is shaped like realistic-looking people and animals, or imaginatively, like their gods.
Arriving at the museum of the graves of the Moche (no photos allowed inside)


Interactive displays
While walking the 500 metres to the archaeological site from the museum, in the hot sun, I pondered that it would have been great to have that expensive air-conditioned taxi to drive us. But the Huaca de la Luna, or Temple of the Moon, was worth the hike up. Our guide, Elina, explained that the site used to look like any pile of sand in the desert, but the tombs were discovered in the 1990's when some archaeological students were walking on the sandy hill, sat down for a rest and noticed that some bricks had fallen loose, out of the sand, nearby. They dug a bit and saw the first painted friezes, and I can't imagine how exciting that must have been. The temple was built as an inverted pyramid inside a regular pyramid, with the first tomb at the bottom and layers of bricks and more tombs built over top in wider levels. Spanish conquistadors had robbed the upper tombs but the lower ones were discovered as still intact, with all their golden treasures. The same friezes appeared on each level, always of the Decapitator God. Archaeologists had given him the apt nickname because he was often depicted carrying a human head. Evidence of the rituals that were performed was found such as a pit containing 70 skeletons of warriors who had ceremoniously fought each other, the loser's body thrown into the pit to appease the gods. Down closer to the former city was a whole wall of friezes showing rows of spiders, dancers, and slaves and a beautiful mural chock-a-block with various symbols and paintings of ceremonial rituals. It's amazing that these painted walls have survived been buried in the sand for 1700 years. There were three areas being excavated by archeologists and their students when we were there, and new discoveries were made regularly when the funding was there to support it.
Audrey walking to the archeological site with the Temple of the Sun in the background


Our guide Elina at The Sacrifice Zone


Intact friezes


A tomb, reconstructed after being excavated


Bricks had family markings on them.  Just like Olympic Plaza in Calgary.


Amazing that these painted friezes survived 1700 years


Remnants of the town between the two pyramids


Excavation continues when funding becomes available


A huge wall of friezes below the high altar


Victorious warriors




 
Elina showed us a beautiful cactus plant, the San Pedro, back at the entrance, which was interesting because it was blooming, and she said that it only bloomed two days of the year. The juice of the cactus was used in ceremonies as it has hallucinogenic properties. A Peruvian Hairless Dog trotted over while we sat in the shade, begging for our chips. These dogs were kept as pets by the Moche people in ancient times and are still bred today, and it really had no hair at all. I've never seen anything like it before.
The San Pedro cactus only blooms for a day or two


The Peruvian hairless dog.
Taxis were waiting to take people back to town, but it turned out they were all spoken for by people who had paid to have them wait. So we thought it would be interesting to have the cultural experience of taking a combi back into town. After paying 1 1/2 S each (60 cents) we climbed into the 9-seater van, happy to be the only passengers. But the combi driver stopped every hundred metres and the horn was beeped to indicate that they had room for more passengers. A scooper, as we nicknamed him, would stand in the door of the van and wave people over and try to convince them that this van was going their way. He also collected money. By the end of the journey that van had 19 people in it, young and old, with whole families piling in. A makeshift bench had been installed in front of our seats, so we were quite squished in there. They didn't drop us off as close to the Plaza de Armas as we had hoped so we got out at a busy weekday street market, about a kilometre from the centre. It turned into another interesting cultural experience with stands displaying colourful fruits, veggies, spices and beans. Live birds squawked in their cages, and guinea pigs huddled in theirs, looking quite cute and vulnerable. They were not sold as pets but as food.
Audrey enjoys the live animal market


A walk down the pedestrian mall
Every valley with a river winding through it, down the Peruvian north coast, has some evidence of Pre-Colombian settlements, and Chan Chan near Trujillo was once the biggest. A 10 S ($4) taxi ride to the site seemed reasonable and this time we asked the driver to return at noon to take us back to the city - once was enough for the combi van experience of the previous day. Chan Chan (which means Sun Sun, said twice because the sun god was so important) once had a population of 40 000 people and was an important spiritual centre for the Chimu people. The civilization was ruled by a king, and when he died, a new palace was built so the first son could take over as the new ruler. Our guide Eduardo emphasized that not all of these civilizations were patriarchal as there was evidence of a matriarchal society near what is now Piura. Chan Chan was huge, and only one palace was excavated. Rhomboid-shaped fencing made of adobe bricks and clay represented fishing nets, an industry of huge importance for the Chimu, was everywhere. Sculpted friezes showed animals that were important to the Chimu, like squirrels, which is great because I don't think squirrels get enough credit. Also of importance were fish, which were sculpted pointing in different directions based on the time of year and the tides, kind of like an early calendar. An area of several offices were for the tax collectors, paying taxes being something that was inevitable even in the 10th century and ancient storage bins had contained dried fish and produce, until the Inca came and conquered the Chimu, pilfering all the goods.
Eduardo points out the main square


Squirrel murals


A calendar showing the tides and the months


The tax offices




Reservoir for the palace
 




 
Eduardo showed us the tomb of the king, who was found buried with his main wife, concubines, a few slaves and llamas. When a king died he needed people to accompany him, after all, so being associated with the king was not necessarily a good thing. I asked Eduardo how they were sacrificed. He explained that the members of the household were given a hallucinogenic from the San Pedro cactus, and while they were 'out of it' gently had their throats slit so they could go with the king into the afterlife. Not even praying to the powerful squirrel gods could save them.
The king's tomb


Back at the entrance we waited for our taxi driver to show up, but he never did. It's a good thing there were other taxi drivers waiting, but they wanted 5 more soles than what we paid on the way out. There was nothing for it but to walk back into town, or pay it, so we paid it.

Since it was Sinterklaas (St Nicholas holiday) on the Dutch calendar, December 6th, we found the Van Gogh Cafe for supper. What a lovely treat as they had the pannakoeke of our dreams, starting with avocado and cheese and finishing with chocolate banana and apple cinnamon. The owner, an expat from The Netherlands, was excited that Ekke could speak Dutch.
Plaza de Armas


Sinterklaas dinner at The Van Gogh Cafe




 
Inside the cathedral that we have so many exterior shots of


The scaffolding is finally down from the book fair in the square
To keep riding days fairly short so as to not irritate Ekke's healing knee, we rode to Chimbote, about 140 kilometres away. As Ekke could not yet stand up on the bike's footpegs, we also avoided off-pavement riding - we would have to go into the Cordilleras on the return trip when the knee was 100%. About 25 kilometres outside of Trujillo, we had our first brush with the law. Barriers were set up on the highway, directing us to ride through a sort of compound with official-looking buildings and Paré or Stop signs everywhere. No one came out or had us stop, so we just rode through and then back out onto the 4-lane divided highway, accelerating as we passed a slow-moving tractor-trailer. A motorcycle police officer stepped out onto the road and waved us over. Oh, that sinking feeling set in. Here we go. He said many things in Spanish. He asked to see out documents. He said more things in Spanish. Even without knowing Spanish we knew that it was some sort of infraction. Since we were playing dumb as per the official motorcycle travellers rules to survive corrupt officials, the officer indicated to Ekke to walk back down the highway with him where he pointed to a sign which read, "No Adelantar". We could no longer play dumb as the sign also included a picture indicating a no-passing zone. Back at the bikes, the officer said something about dollars and nuevo soles so we knew he was asking us to pay a fine. Ekke pointed out several cars to him that had just passed other vehicles in the same no-passing zone, even cheekily waving some of them over himself, and the officer sent another officer after them on his motorbike, probably for our benefit. We argued as best we could, in English and with a lot of hand waving. So, he pulled out a little book that showed how much of a fine we needed to pay - 316 nuevo soles or $126! We started arguing vehemently in English saying we would only pay the soles at a police station in Trujillo, then about getting his badge number, then about how he's just targeting us because we were Canadian tourists - basically just talking to waste his time. And he must have known that we knew it was, obviously, a police trap as the highway was littered with old "No Passing" signs from the old highway. So then...he let us go! We got on the bikes and rode away, the officer smiling and waving happily as we sped by. Dodged that bullet.
Gassing up at the Repsol station the attendant looks a little like Mark Marques, the MotoGP World Champion (sponsored by Repsol)


Ekke happy that we didn't have to pay a roadside traffic fine
As we rode through the fishing town of Chimbote, the smell of fish overpowered us, so we were happy to have chosen the Maresta Hotel that was south and upwind of town. I was very happy to sip a complementary pisco sour that many hotels offered us as a welcome drink, especially after our stressful police encounter earlier in the day. But the room in the hotel wasn't great as the hotel staff had sprayed permethrin laced with cinnamon scent on the bedding, and it was overpowering, making it difficult to sleep. But better than bugs, I guess.
Riding through the desert to Chimbote


We had to look up the definition of "neblina" when we had internet: light fog




 
Plaza Vea, a big grocery store, looked like a good place to find a bank machine the next morning, but the machine rejected Ekke's CIBC card. He also tried it at several other different types of bank machines, with no luck. Good thing we had bank cards from different banks, and my BMO card worked. Ekke even tried calling his bank and they could see no problems with the card, saying it should work. Perhaps if we prayed to the squirrel gods, we would have better luck in Lima.

The ride was very dry and dusty, our bikes leaning over in the strong wind. We had occasional glimpses of the coastline and beautiful blue ocean beyond. I was amazed at the huge sand dunes, among the biggest we've seen but upon closer inspection it turns out they were rocky hills covered in sand, so technically were not dunes. Much of the highway was 4-lane divided, sometimes curving gently into the sandy hills, sometimes straight as an arrow, with the occasional small town or chicken ranch. Huacho was 270 kilometres away, our longest ride so far since our return to Peru, and it was actually quite easy, with very few towns to slow us down. While parked in front of Mary's Cafe in Barranca, a young man, Fidencio, came rushing out of the cafe, excited to see our bikes because he rode a Yamaha R1 sportbike back in San Diego. He was super excited about our trip and gave us his contact information in case we needed some help while in Peru. How nice. Inside the cafe, we were lured by the delicious looking cakes, so a couple of those ended up being our lunch, washed down with frothy cappuccinos. Another 45 kilometres up the road was Hotel Villa Kitzia Ecolodge, which was outside of town and the road shown on the GPS was closed. Another road was under construction, so we did get a bit of off-pavement riding in after all. When pulling up to a big gate, we just honked the horn, it was opened up, we drove in and parked right in front of our own little cabin. I'm not sure what the definition of 'ecolodge' is in Peru, but it seems anyone can just slap that name on anything nowadays, without any obvious reason, to lure in customers. We ordered tilapia for dinner and it was delicious - perhaps it was eco-friendly fish.
Dunes turned to mountains


Easy riding except for the wind


Time to flip the map to next section (why is Ekke carrying a bumper sticker for the Trekcetera Museum?)




 
We came unexpectedly across the Paramonga Fortress (of the Chimu people with their capital at Chan Chan) at the side of the Panamericana Norte


Fidencio gives us his contact information in case we need any help while in Peru


Our bungalow at the Hotel Villa Kitzia Ecolodge
Our hosts encouraged us to try some local fish sausage for breakfast the next morning, which tasted surprisingly delicious. It was very easy to pack up as our bikes were just outside our cabin door, and we got an early start, 9:30 AM. Okay, early for us. Our goal was to get to Lima where we could hole up for a week or so and continue Ekke's physio. I had made the mistake of reading warnings on the internet about parts of Lima that were quite dangerous, so I was slightly anxious about riding there. We put the Pacsafes, a sort of wire mesh security feature, over our duffel bags and attached my keys to the handlebars with a combination lock. Ekke found us a route, Highway 100, that avoided the busy centre of town and skirted around the airport along the waterfront. It took us through the industrial area by the docks, where people were just going about their daily business of earning an honest living. The road wound down to the waterfront, below rocky cliffs, and it was a lovely ride, with palm trees, beach umbrellas, people out enjoying the sunny day, surfing, sailing, cycling, parasailing, and eating ice-cream. Ekke spied a BMW R1200 GS coming up behind us, the rider slowing down to try to decipher our licence plates. He looked like a poster child for Touratech, a German motorcycle accessories company as he had their side cases, top cases, bags, crash bars and other fun stuff. He zoomed past, obviously enjoying the beautiful day, and he had a Peru licence plate, which was great to see as most bikes we've seen here have been Chinese 125 CC's. After some confusing road signage and consequently a couple of u-turns we wound our way up a valley between the cliffs, into the Miraflores district, and the Casa Andina Hotel, our home for the next week. Lima was awesome so far.
Audrey tries out an Inca Kola during a break before entering Lima


And how do you like it?


We avoid going through the middle of Lima and take the coastal road below instead

Map of our ride through Peru  






 

Chapter 7: Southern Peru, Part 1

Audrey writes
Riding into Lima, Peru on Friday, December 9th, 2016, was a bit chaotic at first, but like other cities, one tends to discover patterns in the way traffic moves and what other drivers do. A route that took us around the periphery of the city, along the coast, worked out very well. Lima has a high rate of accidents, but we found that traffic lights were mostly respected, and at uncontrolled intersections whoever nosed into the intersection first would have the 'right of way', and we had to be assertive to get through on the motorbikes. Taxis just tended to hit the gas, even in busy, congested areas, using other vehicles as traffic cones to slalom through, always trying to get ahead of others, and combis or minibuses would stop or pull out without warning or swerve suddenly to go around other vehicles, so a thumb always hovered over the horn of the motorbike. As pedestrians we waited for traffic to stop and then crossed in between vehicles, but drivers usually respected 'walk' lights at intersections. Our hotel was in the Miraflores district, known to be quite touristy, but at the same time, known to be quite safe, and we found ourselves in an area of restaurants, parks, cathedrals and shops.

Job #1 was to take a taxi to Clinica Anglo Americano so that Ekke could see if a doctor could check out his knee, and it was much easier to speak with someone in person with our limited Spanish rather than attempt a phone call. An appointment with a traumatologist that specialized in knee injuries was booked. A short taxi ride away was Tatoo, an outdoor gear store, where Ekke bought a new buff to replace one that had gone missing from his motorcycle jacket that had been in storage in the hotel in Mancora. Thinking ahead to a time when we might be camping we also bought a fuel canister for our little MSR camp stove as well as some bicycle chain lube that would do for my motorcycle chain. I was also on the hunt for a new merino wool lightweight pullover as I had left mine in a hotel somewhere, and was quite excited to see that they had them in stock. But it was unbelievable how pricey they were, S250 (250 nuevo soles) or $100 to replace something I had bought for $30 at Mountain Equipment Co-Op in Calgary. So I didn't buy it. We decided to look around at Larco Mar Mall, a group of shops right on the cliff side, instead, quite a tourist attraction, and took a taxi over to a park above the shops. There was police tape everywhere, however, and we walked up and down the cliff top pathways, not finding a way down to the shops. Another tourist noticed how puzzled we were and told us that there had been a fire in a theatre there in November, and it was not yet reopened (see photo above).

A taxi to the Barranco district the next day was a good option at S10 or $4. Taxis are fairly reasonably priced in Lima, but we soon learned to check the price first with the driver and negotiate down or get a different taxi if the price was unreasonable. And we tried to take the guidebook's advice to look for taxis that had yellow checkers and an identification number on the door, as they were reputable taxi companies, but by the end of our week in Lima, we flagged down any taxi that looked decent and not too banged up. The main square in the Barranco district, Parque Municipal, was crowded on the sunny Sunday afternoon, and it felt strange to see Christmas decorations everywhere at the former seaside resort for the rich and famous. Casonas or mansions lined the streets, many of them converted into restaurants, hotels or art galleries, and we really enjoyed just strolling and people watching. A wooden bridge, Puente de los Suspiros was Lima's own 'Bridge of Sighs' where, unlike the real one in Venice where people sighed because they were going to jail and would miss beautiful Venice, people sighed here because it was a popular place to go on a first date. Looking out from the cliff tops, over the ocean, all we could see on the playas or beaches was a sea of umbrellas, prime beach real estate if you could get a spot.
Barranco is a lovely, historic district south of Miraflores

 
Fun vulture statues in the park

 
Bridge of Sighs is a good place for wedding photos

 


Beautiful architecture in Barranco
 
Ekke thought he could attempt a self-guided walking tour downtown so we had a taxi drop us off, the next day, at the Plaza San Martin, with a statue of José de San Martin, the liberator of Peru, right in the centre. The Gran Hotel Bolivar nearby looked like a good place to find a washroom, so we pretended to be guests of the hotel and just walked right by security to find what we were looking for. Amazing what us gringos can get away with. The historic hotel was beautiful inside, with a stained glass ceiling and crystal chandeliers. A walk up the cobblestone pedestrian mall took us to the Plaza de Armas, surrounded by historic buildings such as the Palacio de Gobierno, where the changing of the guard was taking place, the soldiers goose-stepping in time to a brass band playing El Condor Pasa (you may know it as Simon and Garfunkel's 'If I Could'). A line of serious looking cars pulled up, and one of the tour guides declared, "Oh, that's our president of Peru," as a gentleman stepped out and waved to the crowd, taking advantage of the photo op. Good timing for us. After a delicious lunch of shrimp and potato-stuffed avocado at El Cordano Cafe, a rustic old place reputedly frequented by presidents of Peru past and present, we wandered the hot, busy streets, full of vendors. The Museo Banco Central Reserve provided some respite from the heat and crowds, and Ekke eyed the carved wooden walking sticks, looking for one for himself, but they were made for people much shorter than he is. I really wanted to see the archaeological rooms where artefacts such as pottery and gold from the Chimu (Chan Chan) and Mochi (Temple de la Luna) cultures were displayed. These were very interesting to us because we had visited those archaeological sites on our ride south and could now gape at the wondrous items found buried in the tombs.
Gran Hotel Bolivar

 
Plaza San Martin had a nice Nativity Scene set up

 
As did the adjacent church

 
Plaza de Armas
 

Changing of the guard at the Presidential Palace while the brass band plays El Condor Pasa

The president of Peru, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, arrives just as his guards are changing

 
Hey, I could use a walking stick...

 
Chimu and Mochi artefacts on display from Chan Chan and Temple de la Luna in northern Peru

 


Beautiful art work in the bank building converted to a museum

 
Those enclosed balconies seem vaguely Arabian

 
Ekke had his doctor's appointment on December 14th and after taking some x-rays the doctor treated the swelling and gave him some anti-inflammatory drugs, sending him away with instructions to keep icing the knee. Ekke emailed the x-rays to his doctor in Calgary, who responded right away and said that it all looked fine. Having a week in Lima was a great opportunity to work out every day in the exercise room (good physio for Ekke's knee), write the website, run some errands, find a bank machine that worked with the CIBC card (success - thank you squirrel gods), do laundry, work on the bikes and relax. I tucked into a novel that was based in Peru, Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter, and it was fun to visit the areas that were featured in Mario Vargas Llosa's novel.

Lima is all about foody culture, a gastronomic tourist destination, and is known for ceviche or marinated raw seafood in citrusy or piquante sauces. The scallops and cheese in shells and lomo saltado or sautéed beef and vegetables were delectable and we found crusty bread sandwiches filled with juicy pork and chicken. Chifa or Chinese food is very popular, as well as Mexican food like fish tacos with mint. One evening we found ourselves at an Indian restaurant where we watched videos of Aishwarya Rai singing and dancing Bollywood style and ate chicken tikka masala and mutton korma with naan. The gelato was always thick and rich, our favourite was at Blu's, and the dulce leche chocolate pudding was (almost) too rich to finish. We did not try the skewered beef hearts sold from street vendors.

What I love about visiting capital cities are the museums, and we were awed by the MATE or Museo Mario Testino which housed mural-sized photographs of many famous people including Kate Moss, Princess Diana and yes, even Justin Bieber. The photos often had an interesting twist like a nude walking through a party or liquid makeup spilling down the model's face, and interesting locations like at the Great Wall or Machu Picchu. Stunning photos of indigenous people in traditional costumes were beautifully displayed, and we were in awe of the intricate traditional costumes. Not being totally museumed-out yet, we visited the Museo Pedro Osma, housed in a fancy colonial mansion. The Silver Salon had hundreds of artefacts all made of silver, like teapots, chocolate pots, and religious items, and we admired them all. Other salons had portraits of Spanish royalty and religious statues like the, slightly macabre, head of John the Baptist on a plate (Latin Americans can really make graphic representations of those bible stories). A walk back to our hotel, Ekke's furthest walk yet, took us through one part of Lima I really love, the cliffs high above the ocean and beaches below. It was so pleasant to walk on winding stone pathways through colourful gardens, and then through Miraflores parks with children playing and people walking their dogs.
Museo Mario Testino

 




Some of the most iconic images of Princess Diana were taken by Mario Testino

 
Museo Pedro Osma

 
The Silver Room at Museo Pedro Osma

 


Religious art tends to be a bit more graphic in Latin America


Fog rolls in over the cliffs of Lima

 
Lots of safe places to run to in case of an earthquake

 
What the heck is that dog wearing?  A diaper?

 
It was hard to leave Lima on December 16th, as we had become very comfortable there, but our mission of taking care of Ekke's knee injury was accomplished. The ride out of the city was uneventful, just the usual dodging of vehicles with drivers who wanted your lane, and soon we were riding south on the Panamericana. Along the coast we saw lots of sandy beaches where Limenos go in summer, and they were not busy yet but soon would be as high season began in January. Ekke chatted with two friendly cops when we stopped for a break at a convenience store, and told them about our trip. I showed them the map of our world travels pasted to the saddlebag on my bike and one of the cops used Google Translate on his phone to ask us where we were from and where we were going. Our destination, El Carmen, was ten kilometres off the highway and since it was low season we could afford to stay at the Casa Hacienda San José. What a find. The hacienda complex was built in the 1600s but, unfortunately, built with slave labour. Slaves were brought from Africa, according to the brochure, because they were bigger and stronger than the indigenous people and could pick more cotton and sugar cane, and we saw underground tunnels, now catacombs, that were used to smuggle slaves in so government tax would not have to be paid. There were also secret doors to escape routes in the tunnels inside bedrooms and in the tabernacle in the chapel because pirates would come to plunder whatever they could plunder from the haciendas. Slavery was abolished in 1854, but a lot of the descendants, Afro Peruvians, lived in the area making it a vibrant cultural area, famous for their singing and dancing troupes. While I swam in the beautiful pool, Ekke enjoyed some time in the library. He had finished reading a book by Isaac Asimov, The Ends of the Earth, stories about polar regions, and then donated it to the Hacienda library so he wouldn't have to carry it on his motorcycle anymore. Dinner in the open air courtyard was lovely, with chicken cordon bleu and chicha morada porridge or purple corn and prune pudding, for dessert. It tasted way better than it sounds.
Making sure the GoPro is going before leaving Lima

 
Stop for gas at a Repsol on the way south.  Marc Marques has won five world championships, three in MotoGP.

 
Desert along the ocean

 
Arriving at Casa Hacienda San José

 
Cool, the original Spanish pool table is still set up

 
A hard cover book isn't the most convenient to carry on a motorbike so it gets donated to the library

 
Beautiful grounds of the hacienda

 
A refreshing dip in the pool

 
The GPS picked a shortcut route from the Hacienda out to the Panamericana, which we hoped would be paved. It turned out not to be paved, but the dirt road seemed fairly hard-packed so we continued on. How long could it be, anyway? The road got narrower, surrounded by sugar cane fields, and the dirt got a little softer until it was really just sand with the odd puddle thrown in to make it muddy. Ekke tried his first stand-up riding to stabilize his bike, and his knee took the pressure very well, thank goodness. The Heidenau on-road/off-road tires worked brilliantly and there were only a couple of sharp intakes of breath, mine, as the bike went into a wobble. But some words in my head saved me: Ekke's sage advice, "When in doubt, hit the gas," came in handy and the momentum stabilized the bike again. It felt like ages later but soon the highway came into view and I could breathe a sigh of relief. After stopping in Ica for lunch we rode a few kilometres to an interesting town, Huacachina, literally an oasis in the desert. An underground spring fed a lagoon which supported a lot of palm trees and other plants, and also a small population of locals and a huge population of backpackers. Jumping right into the hotel swimming pool after relieving ourselves of our heavy riding gear was a no-brainer, and it felt so good in the 32 C hot desert air. Feeling refreshed we hiked up a sand dune above the little town and were met with astonishing views - a sea of golden sand dunes far off into the distance, dotted by dune buggies roaring up and down the steep slopes, emanating screeches of delight from the passengers. On another slope some flags were set up, kind of like a slalom course that one would see on the ski slopes of the Rockies in the winter, but instead of snowboarders we saw 'sandboarders' launching themselves down the hill, racing through the flags to be the first one to the bottom. We saw several wipe-outs, and that sand must have hurt (I'm having flashbacks of skiing in shorts in springtime at Sunshine Village) but we also saw some talented 'boarders ride it to the bottom. Fantastic. No, we did not try it.
The shortcut out of the hacienda takes us through farmer's fields

 
Riding into Huacachina

 
Climbing the dunes out of the oasis is especially challenging with a bum knee

 
Endless dunes west of Huacachina

 
A 5/8ths scale Harley Davidson in Huacachina

 
Lonely Planet said there were some sort of lines drawn in the desert near Nazca, the 'Nazca Lines' - you may have heard of them. Okay, who hasn't heard of them. So of course we had to stop by the area, which was located about 400 kilometres south of Lima. I remember seeing the 'documentary' Chariots of the Gods as a child, and was struck by the idea that these designs could only be deciphered from the air. Our first view of the lines were not actually of the lines made by the Nazca people at all, however, but much earlier, in 400 BC - the Palpa lines, made by the Paracas civilization. After paying S2 (40 cents) to climb a mirador on the side of the Panamericana, a metal, tilted, shaky tower, we could make out some interesting drawings or geoglyphs on a hillside. There were several imaginary and human figures and one group of them, nicknamed 'The Royal Family' was really cute, looking like a whole family getting together for the Christmas photo, the little girls looking uncomfortable in their pigtails. Closer to Nazca we stopped at another roadside S2 mirador, not so shaky, which overlooked some Nazca geoglyphs, and we could just make out three designs that one couldn't make out from the ground: A couple of hands, a tree with roots and branches and a lizard that had its tail cut in half by the Panamerican highway. On the mirador an Italian traveller, after noticing our bikes, asked me where we were travelling to. He and his Colombian girlfriend had bought a van in Arizona and shipped it to Cartagena, and were wild camping their way down South America. He told me that they used the iOverlander app a lot, and we have since downloaded it, finding it so useful for getting information about road conditions and safe places to overnight at, all from other overland travellers. Further up the road was a natural lookout, a sacred hill where one could see more Nazca lines, straight as arrows shooting out into the desert, aligned with the summer and winter solstices. Dust devils swirled around, naturally cleaning sand out the Nazca lines so they could still be seen 1500 years later.
Heading south from Huacachina in the direction of Nazca

 
A mirador to view the Palpa Lines

 
The Royal Family

 


 
Another mirador set up beside the Panamericana allows a partial view of some of the Nazca Lines

 
The Panamericana Highway cuts right through the Nazca Lines

 
A small hill can be climbed (for free) for another view of the Nazca Lines

 
View from the hill showing how the lines are cut by the Panamericana

 


Dust devils help clean out the lines

 
There are so many theories as to why the Nazca people decorated the desert with these lines, such as that they linked sacred burial sites, that they were a big astronomical calendar used to determine when to plant crops, that they were giant running tracks or that they were made by aliens. One theory that makes sense to me is that the Pre-Colombian tribes wanted rain for their crops so they appealed to the gods above by drawing them some nice designs in the desert. A theory as to how this was accomplished is that, using a hand drawn sketch, they were, first, surveyed out with wooden stakes and second, built by turning the red rocks over to reveal the white-coloured gypsum bedrock underneath. I decided I wanted to see them the way the gods were supposed to see them so I had our hotel operator call up a reputable tour company, Aero Paracas, and within minutes I was in a van on the way to the airport. I had downed a couple of Gravols (motion sickness pills) but I still felt a touch nervous flying in a small plane. I paid the $135 Canadian dollars for the thirty minute flight and the S25 for the airport tax. The little Cesna held ten people but there were only five passengers and two pilots. A girl behind me was freaking out after take-off, turning red and sweating and fanning her face rapidly with her map, and I felt sorry for her as she never did get comfortable with the flight. I felt a touch queasy but kept my eyes on the horizon, and that helped. The first geoglpyh or drawing I saw was of the whale, and the plane flew over it, first banking to the right, and then to the left so that people on both sides of the plane could see the geoglyph. I was so surprised how clear it was after reading about how it could be hit or miss as to whether you could see the lines or not. After that the plane flew for about 5 minutes and the navigator pointed out some trapezoidal shapes and then we flew by the so-called 'astronaut', and it looked like an astronaut because the head was really big, and he was waving. The curly tail of the monkey was very obvious, and we flew by the spider. I was amazed by the hummingbird, which was on a flat plateau, and then the condor, pelican and parrot. We flew over the mirador tower and I could see, way better, the shapes we had seen from there the day before, including the tree, the hands and the lizard, where the Panamericana Highway cuts through its tail. I took a photo of the sacred hill, and later Ekke and I noticed that it was his motorcycle parked there, and him walking down the hill, in the photo. He had ridden out there to go and do his SPOT tracker. He also got a photo of my airplane. What an exciting adventure, and my curiosity about the Nazca Lines was satisfied.
Getting ready to board the flight over the Nazca Lines

 
The Whale

 
Trapazoidal Nazca Lines show perspective

 
The Astronaut

 
The Hummingbird

 
The Tree and the cutoff tail of the Lizard

 
The mirador on the Panamericana

 
The Hands

 
Sacred Hill with Ekke walking down (small red dot in lower left)

 
Ekke on the Sacred Hill

 
Audrey's Plane

 
Back in Nazca while we sat in a cafe while I recovered from the flight, we decided to ride out to the Chauchilla Cemetery that afternoon. We checked the guidebook to see what time they closed. 2:00 PM. It was 1:05 PM, and the site was 30 kilometres away. After quickly throwing on motorcycle gear, we jumped on the bikes and rode out toward the site. The paved road turned off onto a smaller gravel road. This road turned off onto a sandy road. Off-road riding was not what we wanted to do quite yet because of Ekke's knee, but we soldiered on through the sand. It felt like forever, the bikes squirming uncomfortably, but we made it to the site by 1:55 PM, or five minutes before closing. There was a woman there who happily sold us a couple of tickets, and didn't seem too annoyed that we had arrived just as they were closing. So we quickly wandered over to the adobe brick pits, the tombs of the Ica Chincha culture, some as old as 200 AD. Knowing exactly what to expect, we were still a bit taken aback when we saw the first pit. The mummies in the tombs were sitting in a crouched position, their worldly possessions such as pots and tools nearby, with hair and clothing still intact. Grave robbers had found most of the graves, so many bones and pottery pieces were scattered around and kept revealing themselves, coming up from the sand because of wind erosion. These were gathered up carefully every now and again, by the site's staff, to be reburied. What an interesting look into the history of the Ica Chincha people, and I'm glad we went there. The storyline for the movie Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was loosely based on this archaeological site, but we did not see an Indiana Jones Snack Shop as we had seen in Petra in 2007. The ride out on the sandy road seemed easier as I channelled my inner Indiana Jones and talked my way through it, "Stand up on the footpegs, steer with the feet, don't fight the path of the front wheel, keep up the momentum, and always look ahead, Indy."
Taking a break after the Nazca Lines and discover that the Chauchilla Cemetery closes in less than an hour

 
Chauchilla Cemetery out in the desert

 
Ekke looking into the burial pits

 
Perfectly preserved in the dry climate



Ekke happy to be back on gravel after the loose sand out to the cemetery and back

 
West of Nazca the next day, December 20th, the road wound up and up and up, twisting and curving its way up to the Andes, first in a desert landscape, dry, arid and brown. The climb took us up over 3000 metres in less than fifty kilometres. At 4500 metres the landscape changed to the pampas, with gentle rolling hills and short grasses. I felt the effects of the high elevation with fatigue, malaise, a faster heart rate and some shortness of breath with any exertion such as climbing on and off the motorcycle. It felt surreal riding across the lonely plains when we spotted some movement in the grass - vicuñas! The wild camelids were happily munching on the grass, their brown ears perked, wondering who the intruders walking toward them, (i.e. us) were. Ekke and I just looked at each other with big smiles on our faces - wow. Signs of civilization were few and far between, with just the llama herders around, but we did find a small cafe where we sat and had a mate or coca tea to combat the effects of the altitude. A couple two-up on a Yamaha Tenere rode up and introduced themselves as Solange and Alejandro from Colombia. It was great to chat with other motorcycle enthusiasts, and they told us they were on their way to Buenos Aires. They had left Colombia nine days previously and ridden through Ecuador and now Peru, and we were shocked at how quickly they had made the trip. Our ride from Colombia had taken us six months (okay, including 2 1/2 months in Canada, but still). The road continued to wind up and down through terraced hills and we couldn't help but stop at several viewpoints to take photos of the plunging emerald green valleys. I wanted to take three days to acclimatize before reaching Cusco from the coast, so we stopped at Puquio, at a hotel that was a bit rough around the edges, but clean. This market town was not a tourist place, so it was fun watching the reaction of the locals who did a double take as we rode up on the big bikes and later walked around the town. And after the heat of the desert and coast, I was really glad that I had packed my downfilled sweater for the increasingly colder nights.
Leaving Nazca

 
Ekke approves of the ride east of Nazca, climbing up to the altiplano

 
Audrey spots something

 
Vicuñas!

 




Stopping for lunch on the altiplano

 
Solange and Alejandro from Colombia join us for lunch

 
Ekke spots something

 
Neat stone corrals

 


Solange and Alejandro pass by as we stop to take pictures

 
Arriving in lively Puquio (never did figure out what people were lined up for)

 
Maybe to buy tickets to the fun fair?

 
A dog and a door

 
The ride the next day took us up more Andean peaks with sweeping views, then down again into lush valleys with corn growing on the terraced hills. My right hand had a workout, twisting the throttle hard to climb the steep hills, braking before steep switchbacks, and by early afternoon it was done. The high altitude also contributed to some muscle soreness, so I was very happy to stop at Tampumayu Hotel, a rural resort in the hills overlooking a rushing river. Alpacas and pheasants wandered around the yard as we rode through the gate and right up to our own room at one of the villas, across from a fountain and small chapel. Lunch at the restaurant awaited. It's kind of a 'thing' for overland travellers to leave their own personalized stickers in the places they stay at, and here, on the door to the restaurant we noticed Globebusters (Kevin and Julia Sanders), Edelweiss Motorcycle Tours and plenty of other overlanders who had been here. Neat. Lunch of trucha or fresh trout was delicious, and it was great spending the afternoon recovering from a challenging ride, although we had to fight off some biting flies with our Watkins bug repellant. The rain came down hard that night, something we were not used to after weeks of riding on the dry desert coast for so long, but the next day we woke to lovely sunshine.
Packing up to leave Puquio

 
Llamas as we ride across the altiplano (about 4,000 metres elevation)

 
And vicuñas

 
That's a whole lot of nothing

 
Alpaca herder

 
And her trusty dog

 
Stopped for a break in this remote village at about 4,500 metres

 
Going down

 


Llamas and alpaca dot the landscape

 


Arriving at the Tampumayu Hotel.  The gates were chained shut so we were happy when someone opened up for us.

 
The green hills gave way to snowy peaks in the distance and, fully recovered, we enjoyed the gorgeous ride on the well-maintained highway. What a fun day of riding, my F650 GS accelerating out of the corners with gusto, and just the sheer joy of riding a motorcycle on a twisty road is why I ride. A roadside stop at a rustic little cafe afforded great views, and we tried the Caldo de Gallino or chicken soup. It tasted fine but a few hours later our stomachs felt a bit flippy-floppy, which was too bad as we like to eat at little places, but have to be careful. Riding into Cusco we could see the city of 400 000 people at 3400 metres elevation spread out before us, dwellings clambering up the hillsides and sweeping down into the deep valley below. Ekke used the GPS to try to guide us to our hotel and pointed down, over some buildings saying it was right over there. The road he pointed to was this tiny little lane, rough and steep with missing cobblestones, and heading down into oblivion. I just said no, could we find another route as my clutch hand was killing me. Surely there was a route that the buses used to get downtown. A very circuitous route, but with wider, paved roads took us right through the centre of town. Unfortunately it was rush hour, and it took us ages to wind our way through a market that was just packing up, carts and animals and people everywhere, but we eventually made it through and back up to the Hilton Garden Inn, a treat for Christmas (thanks Air Miles!). The manager suggested we park inside the loading dock area, a fenced and locked zone. Perfect. Inside, an elevator took us, not up to our room but down, as the hotel was situated on a steep hillside, and views of the historic Inca city awaited us from our window.
Riding down the valley from Tampumayu

 
How do you get the groceries when there's no bridge?

 
Open sewer grate (this is foreshadowing)

 
Hard to get into the Christmas spirit when it's plus 30 degrees C

 
The climb out of Abancay was fun

 
Looking back on Abancay (it was absolute chaos for traffic and navigation yet looks so peaceful from here)

 
We stop for lunch at a roadside restaurant

 
Looks like they've got good little helper for making the chicken soup

 
Chicken soup had its revenge a little later

 
Stop in another small town for a break

 
Farmer's fields leading to snowy mountains as get closer to Cusco

 


Have to go through the commercial centre of Cusco as the side streets were a bit steep and rough

 
As a bonus, we could pick up a cake for Christmas

 
Checking into the Hilton Garden Inn for Christmas (thanks Air Miles!)

 
Map of our ride through Southern Peru.  This chapter from Lima to Cusco. Next chapter from Cusco to Bolivian border.  

 
 

Chapter 8: Southern Peru, Part 2

Ekke Writes


The breakfast buffet at the Hilton was terrific, with an excellent selection and we used the time to plan the sights we wanted to see in Cusco today, December 23.  While the distance from the Hilton to the Plaza de Armas wasn’t terribly far, it was quite a descent with 200 steps going down beside a very steep street.  I bet those cobblestones would be fun to ride on when wet.  At the square we found a huge market set up for Christmas and the enormous La Catedral.  We paid our entry fee to tour the church and a guide offered his services but since an audio guide was already included with the price of admission we declined.  The cathedral was amazing and the tonnes of silver on display were overwhelming but the highlight had to be a painting of the Last Supper tucked into a corner beside the altar.  What made the painting special was the local delicacy served up on a platter in front of Jesus: guinea pig.  This brought home a good point though; religious art is designed to send a message so making it more relevant to the local population makes sense.  A short walk from La Catedral was the Machu Picchu museum.  What makes this little museum worthwhile is that it has 366 artefacts found at Machu Picchu by Hiram Bingham and returned to Peru by Yale University, Bingham’s sponsor.  In addition the museum had great videos of the site narrated by local archeologists (with subtitles) as well as a scale model.  While Norton’s Pub might be a good choice for a night out, meeting fellow world travellers (it is apparently a hangout for such people), world travellers weren’t visiting the pub in the middle afternoon for lunch.  After raising the wait staff from their clientless stupor we ordered lunch, though afterwards I thought that ordering chili con carne wasn’t such a good idea.  Just as we were ready to depart, a crowd of twenty-somethings, all in T-shirts from some hostel or other, came in and we had to fight through the crush of people at the bar to pay our bill.  After a stroll through the massive Christmas market (get the image of a Christkindlmarkt out of your head) we were walking back in the general direction of the hotel when we came across a shop selling cheap collapsible walking sticks.  I had been walking better but a walking stick would make the many hills and steps easier on my right leg.

Looking out over Cusco in the valley

 
Descending hundreds of steps down to the city centre

 
Christmas market set up in front of the Templo de la Sagrada Familia on Plaza de Armas

 
Perfect for getting all of your religious statuary

 
Entrance to the grand cathedral is through this side chapel

 
Trying out the new walking stick

 
Starting a new series: dogs and doors


Christmas Eve Day we again spent walking around the historical centre of Cusco, first going through a colourful local market with everything from pendants to pig’s heads.  We ended up at Coricancha (from Quechua for gold enclosure) where a Spanish church had been built on Inca foundations.  The original Inca temple was the most important temple in the Inca Empire.  The few Inca rooms still left displayed incredible stonework, fitting massive stones precisely together; almost as amazing was that some of the rooms were originally plated entirely in solid gold.  Spanish reports tell of it being fabulous beyond belief.  We had a light lunch at Starbucks (!) as we had reservations for the special Christmas dinner at the Hilton that evening.  Back at the hotel we connected to Internet and had a nice group conversation with Helena and Jackie (Audrey’s sisters in Germany and Calgary respectively).  Technology is amazing when it works.  Then we freshened up and put on our fanciest duds (which on a motorcycle trip aren’t that fancy), called my folks in Airdrie and then went to Christmas dinner.  The special multicourse event included salad, turkey medallions and a warm apple pie and was accompanied by a couple who sang Christmas songs.  This was a great way to celebrate Christmas as we often find it a bit challenging getting into the Christmas spirit when travelling.  Over the course of the evening we happened to ask the server what he was doing for Christmas and he mentioned something about the fireworks at midnight.  Really, fireworks on Christmas Eve?  This sounded interesting so we retired to the conservatory which had a commanding view of Cusco, after dinner and had a couple of drinks while we waited for midnight.  Sure enough at midnight the entire city erupted with fireworks.  Nonstop.  For an hour.  And then went sporadically for the rest of the night.  We had never seen fireworks like this for anything before.  It seemed as if every house had a stash of fireworks and used them up.  Amazing.

Heading to the colourful market to get everything from spices to fruits...

 
To fresh meat...

 
To a yummy Christmas pig's head.

 
Ho! Ho! Ho!

 
Outside Coricancha

 
Coricancha and its famed curved Inca stone wall base

 
Entering the coricancha itself: a gold plated room (all the gold has long since been carted off)

 
Inca walls

 
A friendly llama in Cusco


Christmas Eve Fireworks! {C}{C}{C}{C}

{C}{C}{C}{C}


Christmas Day was a quiet day, wandering around Cusco and doing a bit of research regarding Machu Picchu.  We could purchase the train tickets to take us from Ollantaytambo to Aguas Calientes online easily enough but the reservation system for Machu Picchu was very strange without an option to print out the receipt.  Hopefully it would all work out when we got there.

After our AirMiles stay at the Hilton we left Cusco on Boxing Day.  The route out to the highway was way easier than the ride in had been through the commercial centre.  I wondered why the GPS didn’t suggest this route on the way in but the ride through the commercial centre was certainly an interesting experience.  It was a short ride to Chinchero on nice curvy roads climbing into the hills with the only negative being the overly aggressive minibus drivers.  The archeological site wasn’t very well signed but we eventually managed to find our way there and pay two soles for parking the bikes.  A steep climb (at least with my still recovering knee) led us to a beautiful Spanish colonial church and beyond were lovely Inca terraces.  Before hopping back on the bikes we had a choclo con queso (corn on the cob and salty cheese) snack purchased from a young girl with a vending cart near the parking lot.  With our eyes still peeled for those crazy minibus drivers (they seemed worse here than anywhere else) we continued down to Ollantaytambo where we checked into the Samanapaq hotel.  Time was a bit tight to tour the nearby Inca ruins so we hurried across town and had a bit more than hour to explore the archeological site.  The terraces were really amazing with their Inca stonework, though the irrigation network was perhaps even more interesting.  All this clambering around the ruins was a good warmup for Machu Picchu the next day.

Chincherro church

 
Inca terraces

 
Choclo and queso for lunch

 
Don't play chicken with the minibus drivers

 
Cattle truck heading down to Urubamba

 
Gorgeous road down to Urubamba

 
After checking into the hotel we took a quick walk to the Inca ruins on the other side of town

 
Amazing stonework isn't it?

 
The Inca hadn't heard of the arch yet so the solid lintels were for the doorways (the trapeziodal design is good for withstanding earthquakes)

 
Those are some big stones

 
Audrey clambers up to the houses on the hill

 
Ekke discovers the secret to Inca plumbing - plastic water pipes

 
We had made reservations for the train to Machu Picchu (the only way to get there other than hiking the Inca Trail like my Mom and Tante Christel did) only a couple of days before so we weren’t able to get seats next to each other on the fully booked train.  In fact Audrey was in a completely different car as we left Ollantaytambo.  The panorama windows were fantastic for appreciating the stunning mountain views as we rode the rails along the Rio Urubamba.  At Aguas Calientes we got off the train and walked through town to line up to purchase bus tickets (unlike the train and archeological site tickets those couldn’t be bought online beforehand) and then lined up to get on a bus that would take us up a series of switchbacks to the ruins themselves.  At the top there was quite a line for the bathrooms but we thought it wise to go since there weren’t any facilities inside the archeological site.  As the ladies’ line was quite a bit longer than the men’s side I got out and got our tickets to enter Machu Picchu.  The online process to buy the tickets was a bit strange, I had made the reservation online but there was no function to print out the tickets to present at the ticket booth so I took a screenshot of the receipt, copy/pasted that into Word, e-mailed it to myself and then went to the business centre of the Hilton to print it out.  This printout I then took to the ticket booth where I handed it to someone and they went away for about five minutes and returned with actual tickets that the ticket taker could scan.  Audrey still wasn’t back from the baños so I engaged the services of Gilberto to be our official guide for 170 soles (about $50).  Finally at 11:00 we entered the site with Gilberto for a two hour tour.  As usual, a good guide can really bring the past to life.  Though it must be said that there is a lot of guesswork with the actual function of the buildings at Machu Picchu since there aren’t any written records.  The highlight was perhaps the round, astronomical building with incredibly precise stonework.  At the Temple of the Sun Gilberto showed us how two stones fit perfectly together with one stone concave and the other convex.  Another set of stones had a cylindrical stone between them that was used to move the stones and allow work between them.  I don’t believe that we would have seen any of these things without a guide.  Gilberto also explained how the aqueduct system worked for both the farming terraces and the residential terraces; what amazing engineering.  After the tour we were free to wander on our own and we headed up to the Guardian Hut for the classic photo of Machu Picchu.  It sure was a good climb up and I was especially appreciative that Gilberto had given me his wooden walking stick when we came down what seemed like hundreds of steep steps (we had read that walking sticks weren’t allowed in the site so I hadn’t brought my newly purchased stick from Cusco).  The lineup to get on the buses back down to Aguas Calientes stretched for a good two hundred metres down the road and took it 50 minutes until we were able to board a bus.  According to our train ticket we were to board the train at 15:52 but with the extra time at the Guardian Hut and long wait for a bus and then the rush across town to the train station we boarded at 16:10, just a few minutes before departure.  At least on the return journey Audrey and I had seats next to each other.  Back at Ollantaytambo we were walking the 600 metres up to town for dinner but about halfway up a sewer grate across the road was open at the far end.  I didn’t see the hole and my left foot dropped into the open pit while my right knee bent further than any time since the surgery in September.  I can only imagine the horror that Audrey must have felt as she saw me fall to the ground yet again, looking for all the world like my knee had crumpled.  Fortunately my knee cap was still in the right position (I consider myself somewhat of an expert on the topic now) but it was awfully sore and my left shin was scraped up pretty badly by the concrete on the lip of the hole.  We continued up to the restaurant where I applied Band Aids to the scrapes and I put my neoprene knee brace on to try to reduce the swelling.

Catching the train to Machu Picchu

 
Then walk through town to line up for bus tickets and then line up for the bus

 
Finally, at Machu Picchu! Amazing...

 
Farming terraces with intricate aquaducts and specially prepared layers of soil for proper drainage

 
The Astronomer's Building had some of the most amazing stonework

 


Gilberto was a veritable font of information

 


Temple of the Sun (has its work cut out for it today)

 
Convex and concave stones so that they fit together precisely

 
The cylindrical stone was used to move the bigger stones

 


Lots of steps up to the Guardian's Hut

 
Snack time at Machu Picchu

 
The classic photo from the Guardian's Hut

 
Gilberto's walking stick comes in handy for descending the steps

 
50 minute line for the bus going back down to catch the train

 
The train back to Ollantaytambo

 

The next morning we had planned a short ride to Pisac, and reserved the Pisac Inn in the centre of town.  My knee was still very sore from the previous day’s fall and walking was painful, I couldn’t even put any pressure on it to shift my weight while sitting on the bike, so I was quite appreciative that it was less than 60 kilometres from Ollantaytambo to Pisac.  When we got to Pisac we navigated our way towards the main square on very narrow streets that had a drainage gutter running down the middle.  When we got within a block of the square, a couple of tourist minibuses blocked the road.  We couldn’t just park and walk to the hotel since even our motorcycles would have blocked the narrow street and of course I couldn’t walk any distance without significant pain.  We turned right and found our way back to the main road to consider our options.  A hotel a few hundred metres up the road looked like it should have a restaurant so we thought we would have lunch there while we discussed our options.  Technically the restaurant wasn’t open yet but they managed to rustle up some lunch for us anyway.  While having lunch we checked to see the price of a night at the hotel and it was 200 soles ($80) so we decided to stay and try to cancel the Pisac Inn.  It rained steadily all afternoon while I tried as much as possible to stay off my feet.  The Royal Inca Hotel had an onsite massage centre and Audrey asked if the masseuse could spend a half an hour on my right leg.  It was an odd request since most people get a full body massage but she agreed and soon I was lying in a nice warm room with soothing music playing while she tried to loosen up the tense muscles.  Sadly the pain didn’t really go away after the massage but it was worth a try.  We thought it might be a good idea to take a rest day so we booked the next day as well.  That Thursday I stayed at the hotel with my leg up as much as possible while Audrey walked into town to check out the famous market and then later took a taxi up to the Pisac Inca ruins.  She says that they were beautiful; especially the curved terraces which looked almost like an amphitheatre.  

Short ride to Pisac along fields of choclo (corn)

 
With access to the Pisac Inn on the central square blocked we ended up at the Royal Inca Hotel

 
Inca ruins at Pisac as seen from the hotel

 
Audrey goes up to visit the ruins while Ekke takes it easy on his knee


Friday, December 30, my knee was feeling a bit better though it was almost like I had regressed by at least a couple of weeks.  We packed up and headed south in the direction of Arequipa, our destination for New Year’s Eve.  The ride along the Rio Urubamba was just lovely, with very little traffic and gentle curves.  This was still the Sacred Valley so the occasional Inca ruin was spied as we rode along.  When we got to the main road between Cusco and Puno traffic was again with us but it was still pleasant riding.  At about 1:00 PM we stopped in Sicuani to try and find a lunch spot.  Audrey found a very nice looking hotel that just happened to have a great restaurant and one of the most enthusiastic waiters we have encountered.  The fettuccine Alfredo was quite tasty.  After lunch we started to climb west, out of the valley, reaching elevations of 4,000 metres soon enough and because we were no longer on the main road a decided lack of traffic made for enjoyable riding.  The perfect pavement wound around Laguna de Languilayo and we couldn’t help but smile inside our helmets as all around us storm clouds threatened but we remained dry.  About 10 kilometres out of Yuari the pavement turned to hard packed gravel but it was just bumpy riding, not the much reviled loose gravel of our nightmares (did I mention that we’re not really off pavement riders?).  Yuari itself seemed to be having a bit of a construction boom (perhaps due to the large mine down the road?) and several roads that led to the Hotel Fortaleza were blocked.  We eventually made it though and even better, they had a room for us.  The receptionist pointed us to the dirt courtyard, accessed via a marble hallway, to park our motorcycles and we went up to the room.  As we were unpacking Audrey heard the sound of a motorcycle alarm going off.  I went to investigate (cautiously of course, since the last time I went to investigate a motorcycle alarm I had slipped and ruptured a patella ligament) and found that my R1200GS had been moved.  This would have involved removing the cover, pushing the bike up hill on a sandy surface while the alarm was going off and then reinstalling the cover.  I went to the receptionist to ask what was going on but since I speak virtually no Spanish I brought her out to the courtyard to show the bike had been moved.  Just then a gust of wind came up and slammed the door back into the hotel shut.  We were locked out.  She got on her phone and phoned someone to open up for us.  The fellow that came over from the adjacent construction site turned out to be the person who had moved the bike and was the owner/manager of the hotel.  I explained to him that I didn’t like people moving our bikes, especially since mine is particularly heavy and could hurt someone if it fell.  All’s well that ends well though and we were happy he had reinstalled the cover because a massive thunderstorm swept over the town, trapping us in the hotel.  Good thing we had had a big lunch in Sicuani so we could survive on the crackers we happened to have stashed in the tankbag.

Knee feeling better, we leave the Royal Inca Hotel

 
Lots of portraits of this Incan along the road

 
Beautiful Laguna de Languilayo at about 4,000 metres elevation

 
Surrounded by rain clouds we're lucky and stay dry

 
After a few kilometres of hard packed gravel we end up in Yuari (the storm would hit after we're inside)


When we woke up after a chilly night (almost 4,000 metres and no heat in the room) we were glad the rain had stopped so we could walk to the town centre for breakfast.  Café Esmeralda had a desayuno Americano for only 8 soles ($3.20) but it turned out to be quite extensive with scrambled eggs, delicious fresh buns, juice and coffee/tea.  After paying up at the Hotel Fortaleza (80 soles) we struck out on what should be about 70 kilometres of rough gravel road.  The ride wasn’t too bad except that water trucks were keeping the dust down near villages and at construction sites, making for a muddy ride.  And of course, I still wasn’t able to stand up on the pegs to stabilise the bike.  The altiplano provided a stark beauty that reminded us of the ride up the Dempster Highway to Inuvik.  Though this close to the equator that stark beauty was achieved with altitude.  We spent most of the day above 4,000 metres and had a few sections over 4,700.  When we stopped for a snack, a llama and sheep shepherd came over and tried to engage in conversation.  Even with our extremely limited Spanish we’re usually able to pick up a couple of words but we didn’t understand a thing he said.  Perhaps he wasn’t speaking Spanish.  Back on the gravel for another half hour or so and then the most beautiful paved road stretched out in front of us.  Perfectly smooth, no crack sealer and following the hillside contours so that sweeping curve followed sweeping curve.  The only downside of course being that at 4,700 metres our bikes were down in horsepower by about 45%.  All of a sudden, while we were rounding a small lake, I spotted flamingos out of the corner of my eye.  Wow!  We pulled over and walked through the grass to get to the lake’s edge, as close as we could to the gorgeous pink birds.  What an amazing sight.  After sitting a while, fully appreciating how lucky we are to be able to do a trip like we are doing, we got back on the bikes.  The lovely ride continued until we joined the main road between Arequipa and Juliaca which was not only straight as an arrow but also had way more bus and truck traffic.  Still it was an easy ride, even with a rain storm and some hail until we started to drop down to Arequipa.  There we encountered tight, greasy curves and traffic jammed up behind slow-moving trucks.  When the road finally straightened out and the temperature warmed up we entered the outskirts of Arequipa where it must have been market day.  We couldn’t pass the long queue of traffic on the right because of a concrete ditch so made little hops when possible in the opposing lane.  After a couple of markets the traffic eased up until we entered the centre of the city but even then it wasn’t too bad.  We found the Casa Andina Private Collection hotel easily enough and then arranged for offsite parking.  The “B” team must have been on shift at the parking lot for New Year’s Eve as it took half an hour just to give us a couple of tickets.  This was turning into a bit of a marathon day.  When we entered the hotel though, all that was washed away.  Simply gorgeous, the hotel was a converted mansion from 1794 that had once housed the Peruvian Mint.  We could only afford this extravagance because my parents had given us some Christmas money and this seemed a special way to spend it.  The restaurant was already set up for New Year’s Eve celebrations (we didn’t have reservations and were decidedly underdressed) so we had an appetizer plate in the bar before heading to the room.  We fell asleep well before midnight but were awakened by the fireworks so we could at least wish each other a happy new year.  A new year’s resolution?  Yes, “To travel the roads of lands remote.”

We meet a family on a motorcycle at the gas station leaving Yuari

 
Heading out of town on good gravel road

 
Passing truck convoys of up to ten trucks each was interesting

 
Oh yeah, watch for llamas

 
Beautiful altiplano

 
Altiplano meaning high plain and at over 4,700 metres it sure qualifies as high

 
Llamas


We meet the llama shepherd (llamherd?) and share a cracker snack with him.

 
What are those pink dots in the lake at the side of the road?

 
Flamingos!

 


Stopping to pick up some supplies

 
Had to put the raingear on today

 
Checking into the fancy Casa Andina Private Collection (thanks Mom and Dad!) in Arequipa

 
New Year’s Day everything we wanted to see in Arequipa was understandably closed so we simply wandered around “the White City”, stopping for a cappuccino here and a piece of pie there.  Since we missed New Year’s Eve dinner we treated ourselves to a special New Year’s Day dinner at our hotel instead.  After dinner we turned on the TV to find that the Dakar Rally would be going through La Paz, Bolivia on January 7.  We decided to rearrange our trip a little and sure enough we could make it work, though we would miss Colca Canyon.  Oh well, these are the kinds of compromises that have to be made while travelling.  Stay flexible.  Having made the decision we booked hotels in Puno, Tiahuanacu and La Paz.  January 2 things were open again so we walked around the block to the Convento Santa Catalina, a nunnery even to this day.  The modern day nuns stayed in a separate part of the complex and the remainder was now a museum dedicated to showing the life of the nuns in the past.  We arranged the services of a guide for 20 soles and found once again that the guide’s stories brought the past to life.  The monastery was built in 1579 by a rich widow, Maria de Guzman.  Only women from upper class families were accepted, reinforced by the rather stiff entrance fee (dowry) of 2,400 silver coins.  That works out to about $150,000 U.S. today.  The nun’s cells were really very nice apartments and some nuns even had fine china and silk curtains.  Of the 500 people living at the monastery at its peak only 170 were nuns.  The rest were servants.  After the tour we found our way back to the café and enjoyed a treat in the courtyard. Snacks polished off and washed down with a cappuccino we left the monastery and walked down past Plaza de Armas to Museo Santuarios Andinos.  Here was the story of a mummified girl found on top of a volcano by an American researcher.  The girl had been sacrificed by the Inca hundreds of years ago but the dry, cold climate on top of the volcano kept her very well preserved.  A 20 minute National Geographic film provided good context before the mandatory guided tour of the small museum.  A number of artefacts were on display, found at the sacrifice site and then near the end of the tour was the mummified girl in a display case kept at minus 20 Celsius.  She was so tiny.  To think that she would have travelled from Cusco, a distance of close to 500 kilometres, and then climbed the volcano to an altitude over 6,000 metres knowing all the while that she was going to be sacrificed was as chilling as the room was cold.  Even more chilling was that the Inca sacrificed the best children, who knew from an early age that they would be sacrificed, for anything from earthquake prevention to the king being sick.  As we were immersing ourselves in local culture we decided (and by we, I mean Audrey) that today should be the day we try cuy, guinea pig, for dinner.  We looked up the best cuy restaurant in town and then walked over to Zingaro.  It was still a bit early for dinner so we were the only ones there but they seemed happy to cook up some guinea pig for us.  It was nice that the kitchen was behind a glass wall so that we could see the little pigs being prepared.  Audrey almost had a change of heart when the chef held the cuy up and patted the grease off it, but soon enough she had a deep fried guinea pig spread eagled on a plate in front of her.  I had decided to have boneless filet of cuy so wasn’t too distressed by anything staring up at me from my plate.  The cuy was really chewy and salty and it was a lot of work to extract much in the way sustenance from it but it tasted OK.  After ice cream for dessert we walked back to the Plaza de Armas and visited the cathedral, the only cathedral in Peru to be the full width of the plaza.  It was indeed very large but the interior was surprisingly elegant, not the baroque style of most of the cathedrals we had visited in South America.

Exploring Arequipa on a quiet New Year's Day

 


Plaza de Armas with Basilica Catedral de Arequipa

 
Monesterio de Santa Catalina

 
The monestary was for cloistered nuns, hence the "Silencio"

 


Audrey checks out the nun's pizza oven

 


The nun's "cells" weren't too sparse as these were nuns sent by rich families

 
Water filtration system as the water seeps through the ceramic cone

 


Hmm, I'll have the chubby one on the left

 
Audrey looks a bit hesitant staring down the guinea pig

 
Filet is easier to eat

 
The basilica and Christmas tree were beautifully lit up

 
Surprisingly elegant interior

 
On Tuesday we doubled back the same way we had come in on New Year’s Eve, though the market traffic wasn’t nearly as bad this time.  Once back on the altiplano, dark clouds greeted us and lightning touching down on adjacent hilltops suggested that perhaps we should put on our raingear.  We got the raingear on just in time and then rode through a fairly active lightning storm, emerging on the other side without getting zapped.  After a quick stop for lunch at a small village we continued on to Puno, on the shores of Lake Titicaca.  We skipped the shortcut to Puno on a gravel road, opting instead to go a little further on paved roads through Juliaca. (As I write this we had met a couple of American riders at the border between Bolivia and Peru who had taken the shortcut and one of them had taken a bad tumble on freshly graded gravel so it seems like the right decision)  Juliaca was a really lively town as we passed right by the main square and then out towards Puno.  Puno was a bit of a challenge with narrow, steep one-way roads and the occasional pedestrian-only street but eventually we found our hotel.  We parked the bikes in a secure parkade and then, after freshening up, popped by a tour agency to arrange a tour of the floating reed islands on Lake Titicaca for the next day.  The dinner spot was chosen purely because I liked the name of it: Machu Pizza.  The pizza was OK.

Lightning was flashing on the hillsides all around us

 
So, on with the raingear and hope for the best

 
On Wednesday a Sprinter van picked us up at 7:00 AM and took us to the dock where we met our guide, Percy.  It only took an hour to reach Taquile Island (the normal boats take three hours but we had opted for the speed boat so that we could see more in a day).  It was raining lightly so we put our rain gear on and climbed up a winding pathway to the top of the ridge where we found a community hall.  Inside were a few of the indigenous people of the island.  The men learn to knit at the age of six and girls start spinning wool at the age of ten.  It was interesting watching them doing their knitting and spinning absent mindedly as we might twiddle our thumbs.  When a young man courts a girl he will give her his self-knitted hat.  The girl will inspect the hat for quality, even checking to see if it will hold water, as that’s a sign of how tight the knit is.  Apparently the quality of a man’s knitting is the deciding factor in whether or not he’ll make a good husband.  Outside the hall we had a demonstration of weaving techniques and then dancing which we were invited to join in.  I begged off on account of my knee but Audrey jumped in and found that dancing at close to 4,000 metres can be quite tiring.  After the dance and an opportunity to buy handicrafts we walked back to the boat and went to a peninsula of the mainland where a lunch was being prepared for us.  Rocks were heated up in a fire and then lined a pit.  The food was then layered in the pit separated by the hot rocks; bananas on top followed by fava beans, trout, potatoes and finally chicken at the bottom.  When we arrived and were welcomed, the pit was disassembled and the food placed on big trays.  It seemed like an endless supply of food was coming from the pit, certainly enough to feed the entire town.  Soon we were brought into a hall and were served a feast, everything being absolutely delicious, the sweet potato and banana being real highlights but the trout and chicken were also very tasty.  Then we took the boat to a floating reed island where five families lived, or about 25 people.  The island was roughly circular and maybe 50 metres in diameter.  In other words, fairly crowded.  The reed island people are descendants of people who moved up from the Amazon and then, when they were being attacked by the Inca, hid amongst the reeds, eventually building small rafts for sleeping.  The leader of the island demonstrated how a floating reed island is constructed.  Just then a couple of small boats arrived with the children of the island returning from school in Puno.  I can see how island life must be awfully limiting once you’ve seen the outside world and sure enough they are having trouble keeping the young people.  Audrey took the opportunity to go for a ride on an authentic reed boat while I stayed on the island since my knee was bugging me a little.  As soon as everyone had left on the reed boat our boat pilot engaged a couple of the kids in a round of volleyball.  It was great to see people acting a little more naturally rather than just being serious for the tourists.  Back at the hotel we found that the insurance documents we had arranged for Bolivia, Chile, Argentina and Brazil had arrived by e-mail so we popped out to a photocopying place and had them printed in colour.  Dinner downtown at The Hosteria and we were ready to head for bed since the wind, sun and altitude had wiped us out.

Boat ride on the highest navigable lake in the world: Lake Titicaca

 
Hiking up Isla Taquile

 
Traditional greeting is to exchange coca leaves from one pouch to the other

 
Women start spinning wool at age ten

 
Men start knitting at age six.  An eligible bachelor is tested by the quality of his knitted hat.

 
Audrey looks into how to spin wool

 
Weaving demonstration, how do they make such intricate designs?

 
A traditional dance

 
Which Audrey joins in

 


Sandals are made from used car tires.  When the sandals are worn out they become gate hinges.

 


Breaking rocks the old fashioned way, with a hammer

 
Back to the mainland

 
A traditional feast is prepared for us with layers of food separated by layers of hot rocks

 
Working the fields

 


Then we're back in the boat out to a floating reed island

 


A demonstration of how a floating reed island is constructed

 


The kids come home from school on the "school boat"


The interior of one of the reed houses

 
Solar powered of course

 
Audrey takes a ride on a reed boat

 


With the tourists gone on the boat the kids can play

 
On Thursday, January 5, we left Puno and headed for Bolivia.  It seemed like the drivers in southern Peru weren’t as aggressive as in the north or perhaps we had adapted.  In any case it was a pleasant ride along the west shore of Lake Titicaca.  The combination of low speeds and high altitude were certainly making for fantastic fuel economy.  At one point the range remaining on the Adventure was 800 kilometres with 130 kilometres already behind us.  We had heard stories of gas being difficult to purchase in Bolivia (only some stations are allowed to sell to tourists) so we thought we would fill the F650 in Peru at the border town of Desaguadero with the hope that we could make it to La Paz and back out over Copacabana without needing to refuel.  Alas, the only gas station in town had 84 octane swill for sale so we decided to keep an old water bottle handy in case we needed to transfer from the Adventure to the F650 sometime in Bolivia and then headed for the border crossing.  It was only twenty minutes at the migracion to get our passports stamped out of Peru but we arrived at aduana to cancel our temporary vehicle import papers just as the customs officer went on her lunch break.  At least we were inside, sitting down waiting rather than the people just behind us who were forced to wait outside the gate for 45 minutes.  After lunch it took a few minutes for the officer to stamp the bikes out of Peru but only after she made sure the licence plates matched the documents.  Then we crossed the bridge to Bolivia…

Riding along Lake Titicaca

 
As the lake levels recede, fertile plains are left behind

 
Using a polarizing filter at this altitude sure makes the sky a dark blue

 
Fish farms on Lake Titicaca

 
Waiting in line at migracion for the passport stamp to exit Peru

 
Map of our route through Southern Peru (Parts 1 and 2)  

 


 

Chapter 9: Bolivia and Southern Peru

Ekke Writes


We crossed the bridge over the Rio Desaguadero, an outlet of Lake Titicaca, and entered Bolivia amid a buzz of bicycle carts ferrying cargo back and forth across the border on Thursday, January 5.  A police officer indicated we should go to aduana to get the bike papers sorted first and then go to migracion for our own passports.  This seemed contrary to how it has been at most border crossings so far, so Audrey lined up at passport control while I went over to aduana.  Sure enough, passports first.  The line was long and moved slowly so that it took about an hour to get the passports stamped.  We then took the passports, vehicle registration and our new migracion paper to a photocopy shop to make copies for the customs official.  Unfortunately, Audrey received two copies of her registration paper, rather than one copy of each document so it took a while to get it all sorted out without having to pay for another copy.  A bit over an hour and half after crossing the bridge we rode away into Bolivia.  A new country is always exciting since we just never know what to expect.  This was no different and within a few hundred metres of the border a pile of dirt blocked the road with no detour signage leaving us to wonder how to get out of town.  Accompanied by a pack of dogs (the welcoming committee?) we eventually found our way to the highway and were on our way.  The road was in fair repair and the few other drivers we encountered seemed to be driving less aggressively than their counterparts in Peru.  All in all, combined with the sunlight streaming over our shoulders, lighting up Lake Titicaca to our left, it was a magical ride to Tiahuanacu.  The Akapana Hotel was basic but clean and boasted a fantastic view of the Akapana ruins of the Tiwanaku civilization.  The third floor dining room had the best view and I took the opportunity to try llama for dinner.  It wasn’t nearly as tender as the alpaca I had tried in Peru.  Thomas, an American amateur archeologist living in Munich, struck up a conversation from a couple of tables over.  He had been in Bolivia for four months and was doing some archeological work at the Tiwanaku ruins.  Of special interest to him was that some of the stones had up to 150 perfect 3 millimetre diameter holes.  His theory was that there was no way that this civilization could have created these holes with the tools that everyone thought they had at the time.  They must have had something to drill those holes so perfectly, some kind of drill.

Audrey is pretty happy after an hour and a half to complete the entry into Bolivia

 
Beautiful riding with Lake Titicaca to the left as the sun breaks through

 
The view from the dining room of the Kalasasaya pyramid of the Tiahuanacu civilisation

 
Since it was less than 70 kilometres to our hotel in La Paz we spent Friday morning exploring the ruins of Tiahuanacu.  The tickets for 100 bolivianos ($20 CDN) allowed us entry to two sets of ruins and two museums.  We started our visit at the ceramics museum and then walked across the street to the Kalasasaya pyramid, which had been partially reconstructed.  Truth be told, these ruins required more imagination than most to get anything out of them, there just wasn’t very much there.  What I found really interesting was the quality of the stonework.  It was similar to the Inca in how it fit together very precisely without the use of mortar but predated the Inca by about a thousand years.  We saw our dinner companion working away at the top of the pyramid, doing some measurements, but we never did see his mysterious three millimetre holes.  After we finished exploring the Akapana site we had a quick tour of the second museum, which had a diorama of the site and a number of artefacts.  The highlight was a three metre tall statue that had been on display outside in La Paz for many years but was returned to the site for protection from the elements.  We walked back to the hotel, checked out and then rode over to the Pumapunku site where the ruins were, if anything, in a more ruinous state than the Akapana site.  Still, imagining the site as it must have been with Lake Titicaca lapping at its shore and filling its canals provided a powerful image.  The ride to La Paz was punctuated by a sudden cloudburst as a veritable wall of water swept down from the hills and across the high plains.  Fortunately we had stopped at a gas station (only 84 octane available) when the deluge hit and were able to don the raingear under the awning just as we were about to enter El Alto, the new city perched on the top of the valley that holds La Paz.  The city riding wasn’t terribly difficult and were able to adapt to the drivers’ behaviour easily enough.  Some mapping programs (Google Maps and Maps with Me) had suggested we go straight down into La Paz from El Alto, but a quick look at the suggested route looked like it would involve a lot of narrow, steep streets so we opted to take the expressway the long way around instead.  While it added about ten kilometres to the journey it was easy riding, until we were just a few hundred metres from the hotel that is.  Traffic came to a grinding halt and when we got to an intersection, a police officer was directing traffic to a side street.  The side streets were naturally all jammed up with redirected traffic so it was a bit of a struggle with the one-way, congested streets to get going in the direction of the hotel.  The GPS was super handy for this, as every time we took an alternate road in the convoluted network it recalculated the route so that we could at least keep moving in the right general direction.  After an hour to travel two kilometres we did make it to the Casa Prado but the adventures weren’t quite finished.  There was no parking on site so we had to go to a public parkade which was quite close as the condor flies but riding the bikes was a complex exercise in navigating one-way streets.  The hotel staff tried to explain the directions without a lot of success (I really must learn Spanish) so I showed him the GPS and had him point out the parkade on the device.  It was 1.5 kilometres around Parque Urbano Central to get there but only a couple of hundred metres to walk back to the hotel after we parked the bikes.  After freshening up we went for a walk and found the reason for the massive traffic jam.  The main road had been closed to set up the stage for the Dakar rally contestants; they would be coming down the same expressway we had just come down.  Plaza San Francisco, where the stage was located, was already jammed with people.  What would it be like tomorrow?

At the Kalasasaya pyramid

 
The Andean Cross

 


Thomas, the amatuer archeologist, at work at Tiahuanacu

 
Note the stonework, predating the Inca by a thousand years

 


Recovered artefacts protected and on display in the museum

 
Riding to La Paz from Tiwanacu the storm clouds look quite threatening

 
Looking down on La Paz from El Alto

 
Wandering the streets of La Paz

 
The staging area for the Dakar Rally at Plaza San Francisco is already crowded the day before

 
Public, interactive art on the streets of La Paz

 
Dakar coverage was everywhere, and on television (not just the sports channels but local TV as well) we found out that the stage for today, January 7, was cancelled due to the rain.  Apparently the bivouac was a mud bath and vehicles were having difficulty getting in and out.  The Casa Prada hotel was also home to an NBC Sports crew (Michael, the camera man, was from Ontario!) and they also had a message that the stage would be cancelled from their contact at the bivouac.  So we went to the platform set up at Plaza San Francisco to see what was going on and it was already crowded with spectators at 10:30.  If the race wouldn’t have been cancelled, the leaders would arrive after about 4:00 PM and most of the rest would be arriving well after dark.  With only 250 kilometres to ride, the first competitors were now expected at 1:00 so we joined the throngs of people and tried to find a good spot with a view.  The atmosphere was electrifying, we had never been in a city or country so immersed in a motorsports event (for example, the F1 in Budapest was pretty much invisible).  People lined the route coming into and going out of La Paz for kilometres in either direction and from the big screen TV it was obvious that in other towns and cities along the route people had also come out to cheer on the competitors.  A few support vehicles started trickling into the plaza (each to much fanfare) and while that was happening, parades of people in costumes kept the crowd entertained.  The costumes were absolutely incredible and may or may not have had some indigenous influence.  There was a bit of a lull after the parades, with support vehicles continuing to arrive, but by 1:30 some of the motorcycle competitors came down the expressway into Plaza San Francisco riding on a wave of cheering and applause.  These were the real heroes of the Dakar.  I can’t imagine doing even one day of the twelve day event.  Before the cancellation, today’s ride was supposed to be 786 kilometres long with 527 kilometres of that being off-road racing.  I already find a 786 kilometre day to be pretty long on good highways.  In any case, the crowds lining the streets seemed to appreciate the superhuman effort that the riders were putting in.  After watching a number of riders come in over the course of an hour we decided to change vantage points and walk around a bit.  The crowds were thick and it was difficult working our way around the plaza, getting pushed around a bit, but we held our own as we were wearing our motorcycle jackets for a bit of street cred.  Soon the quads joined the bikes coming in and then the cars and trucks with a continuous stream of vehicles coming for the entire afternoon.  Of course it is better watching the race on TV but to be surrounded by such ardent fans made the event incredibly memorable for us.  You can find some of the video shot by our new friends at NBC here:  http://www.nbcsports.com/video/event/2017-dakar-rally. Dinner at Joe Bananas was a fun way to wind up the day.  It seems that copyright laws are not rigorously enforced in Bolivia as at Joe Bananas, just like other places we had seen, there were plenty of Disney-themed items.

Streets are closed off for the Dakar Rally

 
Three beauty queens and one aspiring beauty queen

 
Parades before the arrival of the competitors

 


I love these guys!

 





 




Best. Spurs.  Ever.

 
They're really little cymbals

 
The support vehicles start arriving first

 
Dutch truck driver De Rooy's support vehicles

 
The bikes start to come in to huge applause

 





 




A couple of the bike competitors waiting to take the stage

 
The stage where the competitors were greeted by the beauty queens and film crews

 
The cars after the bikes and quads

 
Time for a snack?

 
One of the more ardent fans at the event

 
The competition trucks start to arrive later in the day

 
Not strictly Dakar related but you can buy outfits for your dog here

 
A fun dinner at Joe Bananas

 
Sunday morning was a rest day for the Dakar teams but the NBC crew was off to do some filming and interviews.  Over breakfast Mike came over and gave us each an official Dakar T-Shirt.  After they had departed we chatted with one of the Paraguayan support teams also staying at the hotel.  Their father and son team had done very well in the extremely difficult navigation stage so everyone was very proud of the young navigator who was now a hero in Paraguay.  After breakfast we wandered up (pretty much any direction was up) into a quaint neighbourhood where the four Calle Jaén museums were located, showcasing everything from art to gold.  Unfortunately all four museums were closed after the Christmas break.  After taking stock of the situation over a cappuccino we walked the quiet streets down to the plaza which had the presidential palace and cathedral.  Sunday in La Paz, like other South American countries we had visited, was quiet with most of the shops closed.  Walking one of these quiet streets we bumped into Thomas, the amateur archeologist we had met at Tiahuanacu.  It’s amazing how small the world seems some days.  The national art museum on a corner of the Plaza Pedro D Murillo was really interesting as it combined historical artefacts with modern and classical art.  Too bad photos weren’t allowed inside as the Venus sculpture in onyx blanco by former La Paz native Marina Núñez del Prado was simply amazing, seeming to glow from within.  After lunch at one of the few open restaurants we walked across the valley, passing by Plaza San Francisco where the Dakar paraphernalia was being disassembled, to the Mercado Negro.  Again things were fairly quiet but at least there were some “witches” supplies available, including llama fetuses.  Burger King seemed the safest option for Sunday dinner.

Walking up Calle Jaén

 
You can see La Paz climbing up the valley sides in the distance

 
Entrance to Museo de Etnografia y Folklore, just closing for lunch

 
The Presidential Palace

 
Sunday's paper celebrating the marvelous welcome for the Dakar

 
Love the Jesus art on some of the buses

 
Mercado Negro you can buy your witch's supplies, like llama fetuses

 
Audrey Writes
A small crowd had formed as we loaded up our bikes outside the Casa Prado hotel on January 9th. A lady looked at me, looked at my bike, and looked at me again, and said, "Dakar?" I said, "No, from Canada." I still got an approving nod and thumbs up from her, and another lady came and shook my hand. Imagine being a rider in the Dakar and what that must feel like. Later that day, I got to feel like a rider in the Dakar. Leaving La Paz was, at first, super easy as there were no roads closed due to the Dakar and most of those vehicles had left town, and we wound our way up a wide, paved road, quite different from the cobblestone alleys that we had ridden in on. Thomas had warned us of construction in the El Alto area, so we prepared ourselves for some rough roads, but what we were faced with was exacerbated by the recent heavy rains. The road out just ended, with no detour signs in sight so we just wound our way through some small residential streets in the direction of a bridge that would get us to the highway. The bridge that we sought could be seen in the distance and as we got closer we could see that it was also under construction, and impassable. Ekke asked a couple of locals for the way out, and they pointed us toward a road that seemed more mud than anything. Puddles in the lower areas resembled small lakes, but there was nothing for it but to ride through, sometimes sinking into bigger holes, sometimes hitting hidden rocks, the bikes fishtailing through the slippery mud. So it was kind of like riding in the Dakar except there was no one there to cheer us on and it was all over in an hour. Another one of those 'I could kiss the pavement' moments. The road to Copacabana was lovely, winding through green hills and we stopped at a convenience store for a lunch of Pringles chips and cookies. Ekke spotted a tiny Red Bull can in the shop, but on closer inspection of the label it said, 'Red Bill' and did not feel like a liquid. It was gum. Stunning views of dark blue Lake Titicaca greeted us as we wound our way down to the lakeshore.
Departing Casa Prado

 
Climbing up out of La Paz

 
Construction detour isn't very well marked

 
and rather challenging

 
Ekke enjoys a "Red Bill".  Bolivia doesn't seem to enforce copyright laws.

 
Approaching the ferry connecting the east and west side of Lake Titicaca

 
Looks nice enough
 
Having experienced the Peru side of the lake with the visit to an authentic floating reed island, we wanted to see Lake Titicaca on the Bolivian side. To cross over to the peninsula we rode down to the water's edge and saw about 20 ferries, though I use the term loosely, lined up ready to take passengers over the channel. The flat boats were quite rickety-looking with nothing but two planks for the vehicle's wheels to sit on, but they were loading a big truck on, so when someone waved us over to get onto their ferry, we just rode up the ramp and balanced on the one metre-wide plank. Ekke had to pull his bike forward to make room for a car, and the staff moved some rebar that was balanced on a truck ahead of it, aside, and it had to rest against his bike. Easy on, but not so easy off. As we pulled away from the dock we noticed that the front of the boat was not meant for loading and unloading - we would have to back off the narrow plank to get off the ferry. Also, between the planks was a big drop off, so there was no chance of doing a U-turn on the boat. The plank was too narrow to just roll the bike back when we got to the other side so Ekke got on my bike and duck-walked it backwards while I pulled it back. His bike is much bigger and heavier than mine so we took the saddlebags off, and I could tell the ferry staff were getting annoyed with the time it was taking. So they started helping but pushed it too far, almost off the ramp, until I yelled, "Pare!" a word I had learned on a horse ride in Ecuador, meaning "Stop." Just in time. So, with no bikes ending up in Lake Titicaca, we rode away, in the direction of Copacabana. At the edge of town there was a chain stretched across the road and we couldn't pass unless we paid 20 bolivianos ($4) - the town wanted their cut of the tourist dollars. And a tacky tourist town it was. After riding down a steep gravel pathway and checking into the Torres Hotel, we walked along the beach into town, with jet skiers, swan peddle boaters and trampolinists to the left and fish snack shops, tour operator shacks and souvenir stands to the right. This was not the tranquil Lake Titicaca that I had envisioned. The temperature dropped quite dramatically as the sun went down and downfilled jackets replaced shorts and tank tops. The herb-stuffed trucha or trout at La Orilla Restaurant renewed my spirits.
Well this shouldn't be too bad.  What do you mean, "You have to back off the ferry?"

 
Yep, everyone has to back off the ferry at the opposite shore

 
Approaching Copacabana

 
Le Torres hotel

 
Another "Jesus Bus"

 
Inca statues compete for space with paddle boats at the Copacabana beach shore
 
Early on January 10th, we walked down to the docks and caught a boat to Isla del Sol or Island of the Sun, in a flotilla with six other boats. Our boat held about 30 people, and many of them clambered to the roof where they could sit outside and enjoy the lovely views. The boat trip was scheduled to last for two hours, and we were wondering why it would take so long as the island was not that far away. When we saw how slowly it went, with a small outboard motor to power it, we realized why, and settled in for the long trip. The sun was out when we started, but further along, the skies darkened, and within minutes there was torrential rain. The boat came to a halt so that people from upstairs, already soaking wet, could climb down the ladder and sit inside. Later, when the hail started, the boat stopped again so that the rest of the people could come inside, and it was standing room only inside the boat. Dockside poncho sellers in Cha'llapampa were doing a brisk business in the pouring rain, which was soaking people from the side with the horizontal winds and since I had not brought my rainpants, I paid the 10 bolivianos ($2) for the plastic poncho. It was also a good time for second breakfast and a steaming cup of coffee in a little rustic cafe adjacent to the docks.

Isla del Sol was very sacred to the Incas as they believed it was where the sun god was born and the first Inca people were created. A tiny museum housed a few artefacts like gold statues, goblets and puma statues, and we found a display of photos documenting the discovery of an underwater Inca temple nearby very interesting. The rain let up and we walked along a sandy beach and then up an Incan stone pathway, the crystal clear blue ocean below. Within minutes I was shedding the rain poncho as the sun beat down and we climbed higher, the views becoming ever more spectacular. Our goal was the Chincana Inca ruins where a sacred ceremonial stone, the Piedra Sagrada, sat looking big and flat like a dinner table. A labyrinth of rooms, the Palacio del Inca, covered a hillside with steep steps, narrow passageways and extra short doorways that Ekke really enjoyed. As going downhill was still time-consuming for him, he started the trek down before me, and I explored the palace some more, marvelling at the Incan stone architecture. Our ferry was scheduled to leave at 1:30 PM and we made it there at 1:39, but the boat waited for other tardy passengers and left at 2:00.
Museum at Isla del Sol

 
Lovely artefacts

 
The weather clears up nicely as we walk up from Challapampa towards Chincana

 
Palacia del Inca at Chincana

 
Mesa Ceremonica thought to have been the site of human and animal sacrifices

 
Ekke starts back down to the ferry
 
The boat chugged slowly beside Isla del Sol, the outboard motor dying every now and again and was eventually restarted with a lot of effort by the driver. Isla de la Luna was off in the distance, where the moon was commanded to be formed by the Incan god, Viracocha. We docked at Yumani near the Escalera del Inca or Inca Stairs, which showcased more exquisite Inca design. The stairs led to other sites, but due to time we had to miss them and enjoyed lunch on a balcony overlooking the lake instead. A day was not enough on Isla del Sol and we knew we would have to come back someday to do the island justice. Our 4:00 PM ferry was the slowest one yet, and, unexpectedly, it stopped on the other side of the island to pick up more passengers. We were on the milk run. While we were docked, a few passengers got off, and when we inquired, it turned out that the boat docked for twenty minutes, just enough time to disembark and explore Pilko Kaina, another Inca palace sitting on terraced slopes. Bonus. Back in Copacabana, we couldn't face eating dinner as we had such a late lunch so settled on banana chocolate crepes on a patio overlooking Lake Titicaca. The temperature dropped dramatically so we turned up the heater back in our hotel room and watched the Dakar Rally highlights on t.v.
The reconstructed Inca Stairs near Yumani

 
A lovely reed boat on Lake Titicaca

 
Snow capped peaks behind Isla de la Luna

 
Pilko Kaina ruins at the southern tip of Isla del Sol

 
Relaxing back at Copacabana

 
Drat, we missed the blessing of the vehicles ceremony
 
Checkout took a long time on Wednesday, January 11th as the hotel did not accept credit cards so they said that we could pay with Paypal. After waiting for ages, it didn't work so we used some bolivianos and American cash to pay up. So much for getting an early start on this, a border crossing day. The border was about eight kilometres away and the proceedings went quite quickly on the Bolivian side, with some English-speaking Argentinians pointing us in the right direction for getting the bikes' paperwork and inspection completed. Getting into Peru was not so quick and easy as we stood in a long lineup at migracion for forty-five minutes. With long waits at borders, one tends to run into other travellers, and we chatted with a German rider on a Tenere who owned a small bakery near Leipzig. I also chatted with a Brazilian who had a huge bag precariously perched on his Harley. He and his buddy were trying to ride all the South American countries in three months, so were on a schedule, riding long distances. He told me that the road to Tacna was rough, high on the altiplano, freezing cold and snowy, and they had arrived in La Paz late at night. At aduana or customs we met a father and son from Seattle who had ridden the shortcut route to Puno that we had avoided, and the father had crashed his bike on the dirt road. They were not impressed with the drivers in Peru, especially buses that passed on blind corners, but perhaps we were used to the erratic driving as it didn't seem that bad to us. The wait at customs seemed to be taking forever, and when it was our turn, we realized why, as every time the customs agent typed something into the computer, he would have to wait and wait, as the internet was extremely slow. Finally, he handed our completed temporary import papers for the bikes to another fellow who was not wearing a uniform, who invited Ekke into a back room. The gentleman spoke Spanish and Ekke clearly understood the word 'propina' very well, which means 'tip' - he was asking for a bribe before he would give Ekke the papers. Ekke stood his ground and just said, "No" in a very firm voice. He wasn't going to pay any propina to anyone. After a bit of back and forth, the fellow relented, went and talked to the customs agent who said to just give us our papers back and waved us on our way. After a check of our insurance papers by a police officer as we were riding away, papers which thankfully Ekke had procured through the internet, we finally entered back into Peru.
We'll miss Bolivia and the women in traditional dress

 
You can go around the world on any kind of bike (this guy was from the Czech Republic)

 
Just exited Bolivia and entering Peru we meet lots of fellow travellers, from Argentina, Germany and the U.S.
 
As we had not bought gas in Bolivia because most stations could not sell it to tourists, my bike was on reserve and only had a few kilometres of fuel left. So, I settled for some 84 octane gasohol in the next small town and hoped it would be good enough. As we were so late we decided not to have lunch and just stopped for a roadside snack in front of a convenience store and ate crackers and yogurt while standing by the bikes. The terrain along the road heading west was quite flat at first, with the occasional small village, but then we climbed higher into the isolated altiplano. The scenery was quite dramatic, with snow-covered peaks in the distance, and we rode for hours and hours, the temperature falling to 1 degree Celsius as we climbed to 4800 metres. We felt a few drops of rain and donned our rain gear, but I felt surprisingly warm and cozy with my electric vest cranked to high. A stop on the top of the pass was interesting as we saw herds of llamas and some pink birds off in the distance, which, with the help of the superzoom camera, turned out to be flamingoes standing in a chilly pond. The pavement turned to a gravel road, laced with mud, so it was slow-going for a while, with big trucks passing us as we carefully found a non-slippery way through. Snow lined the highway but disappeared as we descended on a lovely, paved, curvy road with sweeping views which was very fun until a deep fog or neblina set in. Our face shields fogged up, so there was nothing for it but to keep them open so we could see, wiping them constantly with our gloves. Visibility got very poor, with Ekke often disappearing into the fog even though he had his hazard lights on and was only a few metres ahead. As we approached civilization, a huge Christos Redeemer statue appeared through the mist and the clouds parted, affording us views of vineyards in the valley. Down, down we rode, and as we passed a line of vehicles we were both in shock at the powerful performance of the bikes at this elevation, 1500 metres. We had been riding at high elevations for weeks, the bikes had been sluggish, and now we felt the freedom of twisting the throttle and zooming away. The 84 octane fuel in the tanks seemed to work just fine. We pulled into Moquegua just as the sun was going down and dusk settling in, the temperature a pleasant 20 degrees Celsius. As we had not been sure of reaching the city because of our time-consuming border crossing, we had not booked a hotel, but thank goodness the Moquegua Hotel had a room available.
Back in Peru

 
Goodbye to Lake Titicaca

 
We wondered how they transported llamas...

 
Stopping to pick up snacks before heading across the bleak altiplano

 


Stray dogs in the middle of nowhere

 
Audrey finds a nice spot to put on her rain booties

 
Cold and damp




Stopping to have a snack

 
Chocolate covered almonds! Yum.

 


Yep, those are flamingos all right!

 
Hmm, that looks suspiciously like snow

 
Yikes!

 
Time to get to a lower elevation

 
Where we are enveloped in a deep fog

 
Happy to be out of the fog as we drop down to Moquegua, Ekke praises the Cristos Redeemer statue
 
The ride past green Pisco grape vineyards along the river was very pleasant the next day but as soon as we left the lush valley, we were faced with a hot, sandy desert that seemed to go on forever. This was the beginning of the Atacama Desert, which would be our constant companion for the next few thousand kilometres. But the 160 kilometre ride to Tacna, on perfect pavement, went very quickly, and the city lay spread out before us in a deep valley, surrounded by sand dunes. It was lovely to arrive at the Casa Andina hotel, and we enjoyed a bit of relaxation time by the pool, recovering from the tough ride the day before. Ekke offered to wash the bikes the next day and took them one by one to a nearby bike wash, where they had a thorough cleaning for 7 soles ($2.40) each. After running a few errands, we had lunch at Da Vinci Cafe, but a few hours later my stomach started flipping and flopping, and all I could do was lay in bed for a couple of days. So we put off leaving but I finally felt well enough to ride on January 15th, in the direction of Chile, our 75th country.
Back in the coastal desert of Peru

 
See a few more bigger bikes, like this BMW S1000XR, as we get closer to Chile

 


Nice to be back with the palm trees after our time at high elevations

 
Rooftop pool has a great view of the dunes surrounding Tacna

 
Get the bikes washed before heading to Chile

 
Map of our route  
 

 

Chapter 10: Chile

Audrey Writes
Chile! What an exciting event to be crossing the border into this, our 75th country, on January 15th, 2017. What would it be like in Chile? The border crossing was organized and predictable for the most part, but there was also a first for us: The customs agent had us carry all of our luggage into a small room and then run it through a scanner. They were looking for fruits, vegetables, meat or dairy products that could be snuck across the border, and they even had a dog sniff the bikes. Minutes earlier I had dumped some coca leaves into the garbage that I had been carrying in a souvenir Peruvian coca bag since Lake Titicaca, so we were good. Riding in Chile immediately had a different feel to it than Peru, the road signs and highway quality improving somewhat, both of which seemed to resemble those in Europe. Also, the houses were finished, which was very different than those in Peru where houses were often a work in progress to avoid paying taxes. Arica was our destination, just a few kilometres up the road, and the Casa Beltran Hotel, which was a bit tricky to get to because of plenty of one-way streets. Our time in Arica was spent wandering around the quaint, beachfront town, which had a great pedestrian mall with live entertainment, a jazz band blaring out tunes from morning till night, playing for tips. From a perch at an outdoor cafe, in the bright sunshine we listened to the band while we ate a huge pizza that was so cheesy that not even we could finish it. The cathedral nearby, which was designed by Gustave Eiffel (yes, that Eiffel) had been shipped from Paris and was made of wrought iron, was being renovated, but still interesting to look at from the outside. Tourists dressed in beach wear were everywhere, which was also a change because in Peru, most people were fairly modestly dressed.
 
Iron cathedral designed by Gustave Eiffel, transported from France and assembled in Arica

 
The aduana (customs) building was also made of iron and designed by Eiffel

 
Samsung TV demo made us miss home a little bit (this is Moraine Lake, just a couple of hours from our house)
 
A self-service gas station was a bit of a shocker as we were leaving town, as we had not seen one yet in South America, and it wouldn't accept our credit cards so we had to drum up some cash. Outside of town some interesting statues appeared in the desert, perhaps put there to break the monotony of the rarely changing landscape. But they made for an interesting photo op. Our ride to Iquique was long and hot, often with no vegetation or wildlife in sight for hundreds of kilometres. Occasionally we would ride through a valley with some greenery, where a small stream came through, but then it was the same desert landscape again up top. Making good time on the highways was definitely a bonus, and before we knew it we arrived at Humberstone Ghost Town, a former nitrate mine and UNESCO World Heritage Site, 265 kilometres away. It was perfect timing as the temperature was just cooling down from scorching to bearable, and we wandered around the historic town for an hour. It reminded me of Heritage Park in Calgary, with the grand old theatre, schoolhouse, church and train, and buildings were from about the same time period, the late 1800s. Much of it had been restored but we could even get into some unrestored buildings, which felt like they could come tumbling down at any moment. Another 50 kilometres took us into Iquique, where we arrived with just 10 kilometres left on my gas gauge. Phew. The city looked stunning from the hills up above with sweeping views up the coast, and a giant sand dune as a centrepiece. Nitrate mining, used for fertilizer, had paid for a lot of the mansions that lined the wooden boardwalk pedestrian mall, and the historic architecture had a crumbling elegance to it. Our hotel at one end of the pedestrian mall, Casa Baquedano was fairly pricey for what we got compared to something similar in Peru. Also, we had a few small appetizers at a cafe down the street, a pop and a tiny beer, which came to $26, way more expensive than Peru. Chile was not cheap, which meant we would have to adjust from the lifestyle to which we were accustomed. Also, restaurants did not open for dinner until 8:00 PM, and many shops were closed all afternoon, another similarity to Europe.
 
Just outside of Arica we came across these statues in the desert

 
Our first real taste of the Atacama Desert

 
Only little valleys like this had any green in them

 
Humberstone Ghost Town, a relic from the nitrate mining days

 
Beautiful theatre

 
Audrey tries out the classroom
 
Iquique had long stretches of beautiful golden beaches and a malecon or big waterfront sidewalk, which made for great walking possibilities, but the best part of walking the streets in Chile is that vehicles actually stopped for pedestrians. This was a new phenomenon, not yet seen in our recent travels, and it took us a long time to get used to. But we would just walk up to a street corner, the cars would stop and even turn on their hazard lights to alert drivers behind them, and let us pass. Amazing. The streets were full of collectivos, or shared taxis, that had a sign indicating what their destination was, and they were way less expensive than taxis. So, instead of donning our riding gear in the hot sunshine, we flagged down a collectivo and headed to the Zona Franca, a duty-free shopping area with a central shopping mall. It was a treat to get a real cappuccino, enjoy the air conditioning and peruse the shops. Sometimes I don't mind the western luxuries in life. Since the place was jam packed with people, we figured it must be the major draw for tourists to Iquique, but for us it was more of a cultural experience than shopping trip as we didn't really buy anything. In the surrounding dock areas there were car dealerships and warehouses stuffed with goods, all selling at presumably lower prices. Back downtown we took our computers to another hotel that had a cafe by their sparkling swimming pool and just sat and wrote for a couple of hours, the waves crashing on the rocks down below. At Tercer Ojito Restaurant, the Pad Thai and chicken satay in peanut sauce for dinner were memorable. Temperatures in the evening were just right for sitting on a bench and watching the world go by on the pedestrian mall, and we were intrigued when a group of hip-hop dancers practised their moves to the music from a tiny smartphone set up nearby. A more organized group of about twenty locals set up a ghetto blaster and practised some traditional folk dances. Tourists just joined in.
 
Lovely pedestrian mall in Iquique - cars stop for pedestrians in Chile!  (This will undoubtedly get us into trouble in the next country)

 
Working on the website

 
The malecon in Iquique was lovely for strolling at sunset
 
The ride along the South Pacific ocean on January 19th was beautiful, the good highway winding its way along sandy stretches of coastline or rocky volcanic headlands, the temperature a pleasant 28 C. Groups of informal campers in vans, motorhomes or tents were often sighted - it looked like people just camped where they wanted to camp on the long stretch of coastline. Other areas had vacation huts with some infrastructure such as roads and washrooms, but mostly it looked like a camping free-for-all. There were some 'golf courses' set up in the sand, where 'greens' were marked out by rocks with not a piece of grass in sight. When nothing grows and you want to golf, I guess you just adapt. It was high season, as January and February in the Southern Hemisphere were like July and August for us northerners, kids were out of school and summer was in full swing. Near the Tropic of Capricorn we saw a natural arch in the ocean, the Monumento Natural La Portada, and it made for a nice place to take a break from riding. It was quite an impressive geological feature with its volcanic base and marine sediments on top that had eroded away to form an arch. Twenty-five kilometres on we reached Antofagasta, which was a bit of a relief to ride into as it was a notably non-touristy place, where real-life Chileans went about their daily business. Staying for two nights meant that we could get some of our errands done, such as trip planning. The maps came out and we spread them across a big table in a garden area of the hotel after breakfast the next day, highlighting places we wanted to visit, mindful that we would want to get to Ushuaia by mid February to hopefully catch an Antarctic cruise. Also, we found a post office and sent a parcel of Peruvian souvenirs home, which lightened our motorcycle load considerably. Antofagasta had a modest waterfront which was pleasant for walking around in, and the usual central square, which had a replica of Big Ben in the centre, evidence that the British were here. The Germans must have been here as well as we found Don Karl's Restaurant for dinner and ate spaetzle and wiener schnitzel. I don't think we have any idea what authentic Chilean food is, really, with all the international fare on offer.
 
Leaving Iquique (watch for pedestrians who have the right of way!)

 
Back in the Atacama Desert along the South Pacific

 




This arch outside Antofagasta is a natural monument on the Tropic of Capricorn

 
5/8ths scale copy of Big Ben in Antofagasta

 
Remnants of the loading docks when Antofagasta was a port for nitrate production

 
Chile must be the Lone Star country,  who knew?
 
The Mano del Desierto sculpture was on our route the next day, about 75 kilometres south of Antofagasta. It was quite a momentous occasion as we had seen photos of this hand sculpture in every South American slideshow presentation at the Nakusp Horizons Unlimited meetings for years, and now we were here. The hand had always looked so isolated in the photos, in the middle of the Atacama desert, with no signs of civilization nearby. In reality, it was 500 metres off the paved Panamericano Highway, with, I believe, every tourist going by stopping in to see it. But, it was an impressive concrete sculpture, with lots of details in the fingernails and palm. It was also fun to meet another motorcycle traveller there, Eduardo from Brazil, on a BMW 1200 Adventure, who was on his way to Santiago. Our route along the coast took us past colourful rock formations, some of them with black seams of volcanic rock slicing through them, which made for interesting views. We stayed in Caldera, a beach resort with a small stretch of sand and an enormous amount of sunbathers. A floating wooden raft out on the water had so many people trying to climb on that it teetered precariously and eventually sank and we could only hope that all the heads that went under eventually bobbed back up again.
 
Mano del Desierto in the middle of the Atacama Desert

 
Remember the days in Ecuador when it took a whole day to cover 200 km?

 
Veins of black (coal?) in the rock add interest on the ride through the desert

 
Bahia Inglesa, named for pirates that may have buried treasure nearby, was a few kilometres down the road so we stopped by the next day, January 22nd, to take in the white, sandy beach and sparkling blue sea. This was a lovely spot, and I wish we could have had more time here, but now we were on a mission to get riding south to Ushuaia. Riding hundreds of kilometres per day on mostly straight roads was not a difficult task, and I just set the throttle lock to 110 kph, sat back and sang show tunes in my head to pass the time. Ekke was very thankful, especially considering that we had headsets, that I did not sing them out loud. Gas stations were few and far between, but near enough that we did not have to carry any extra fuel, and often they were the only places to get something to eat, usually in the form of chicken sandwiches, and they were lively places with lots of families on holidays. The city of La Serena was our next stop, with a lovely centre of historic buildings, cobblestone streets and lots of greenery. One highlight was a beautiful Japanese garden, and we were transported back to Kyoto with the beautiful plants, waterfalls, lakes and pagodas when we took a long stroll there the next day. What a cool respite from the hot sun beating down on the city streets. Since we were right on the coast, I was wanting to try fish for dinner, any fish, so we found a place above a market and tried to read the Spanish menu. After trying very hard, we couldn't decipher much, so the server took us over to the kitchen and asked the cook to show us some fresh fish. When he pulled out a huge, black, slimy fresh eel with beady eyes staring out, I just gulped, and said, "No, gracias," and ordered the crab instead. It turns out that the eels were not so fresh after all as from our table I watched as the cook kept going to a deep freeze, pulling out frozen eels, and pouring boiling water into the freezer to separate them from other frozen fish. 'Health and Safety' alarm bells were going off.
 
Typical restaurant near a gas station (Audrey still has her helmet on because of a sudden dust storm)

 
La Serena had some really beautiful buildings

 
And also some interesting artwork/graffiti

 
A nice Japanese garden in La Serena reminded us of Kyoto

 
Our route on January 24th took us up into some really dry hills with scrubby vegetation but later into some lusher surroundings, and we even passed a few vineyards. Parts of Chile were on fire, as they were having a particularly dry year and forests were ablaze in record numbers with international aid coming in to help. As we rode into Valparaiso we could see a smokey haze hanging over the city from the fires which we didn't think were that close to this area, but the winds carried the smoke all this way. The main fires were hundreds of kilometres south.
 
Chile has lots of solar and wind power

 
Arriving in a hazy Valparaiso

 
The smoke is really evident at sunset
 
The charming city of Valparaiso was made charming because it was built on several hills that seemed to just climb out of the Pacific Ocean and go ever higher. So, when planning, we had originally thought of booking a historic hotel on one of the hilltops. But we changed our minds after envisioning riding small, cobblestone streets up impossibly steep slopes to get to the place. We thought a hotel on the flatter part of town would serve us best, so ibis Hotel to the rescue. It had secure parking that only required making a big u-turn several blocks in length around a town square or riding one-hundred metres on the sidewalk, which we opted for, waving apologies to the pedestrians that we used as pylons. ibis Hotel quality is predictable and consistent which is okay every now and again for us long-term travellers, as sometimes one just gets tired of trying to figure out which tap the hot water is going to come out of or whether the bed will be long enough. And we had the ocean and busy port right at our doorstep. A walk up the hill on cobblestone streets at dusk was good for some cardio, and then more cardio as we ascended a huge set of stone stairs, and even more as we climbed up to a restaurant, Pasta e Vino, and afterwards, up to a lookout point. Just a few blocks from the hotel and we were so high up, at Paseo Gervasoni at the top of an old circa 1883 steam-powered ascensore or train that climbs up a hill at a steep angle, like a funicular. The ascensore would have been perfect for saving us the long climb up but, alas, it was closed for repairs. The name of the square, 'Gervasoni' sounded familiar to Ekke, and it turns out that Hotel Gervasoni was the one that we had been considering staying at, and there it was, at the end of an impossibly steep cobblestone road.
 
Exploring Valparaiso

 


Amazing artwork and murals

 
Our guidebook recommended a scenic bus route that had amazing views, so the next day we waited for bus 'O' at Sotomayor Square for the bus that would get us to Cerro or Hill Bellavista. Forty minutes later, with no bus 'O' in sight, we cut our losses and hopped onto an old Swiss electric trolley that seemed to be heading in the direction we wanted to go to, along the valley floor. Even though our 'Maps with Me' APP worked wonderfully and we knew where the closest place to Cerro Bellavista to get off was, we still faced a lot more elevation gain to get there. But we had a plan. On the map we found an ascensore which would take us up the steep hills. Excellent. Sadly, the Ascensore Espíritu Santo was closed for repairs, so we climbed the endless stone stairs into oblivion on the hot summer day. The stairs wound through little neighbourhoods with quaint stone buildings painted with murals or graffiti to keep us entertained, and we finally reached our destination, a former home of Pablo Neruda. La Sebastiano was situated high on a cliff, in a cool, shaded garden, surrounded by other houses, with views out to sea. After watching a video about the poet's life we learned that he was a diplomat and politician, had won a Nobel for literature in 1971, was nearly jailed for his Communist leanings, and brought 2200 Spanish refugees to Valparaiso in 1939, rescued from the Spanish civil war, on a boat named The Winnipeg. The four-story house contained an eclectic antique collection with a lot of sea memorabilia from around the world, and we could just picture Neruda, with his constant entourage of friends, watching the fireworks every year on New Year's Eve.
 
Catching the electric trolley bus


The view from Pablo Neruda's house (no pictures allowed inside the eclectically furnished house)
 
Walking downhill in Valparaiso was much easier, and it was so enjoyable ducking into unkempt alleyways, past colourful buildings and taking in extraordinary views of rooftops and the sea. Museo a Cielo Abierto, a series of outdoor murals of landscapes and people painted by students in the 1960s, was an interesting, artistic area - the whole city had a Bohemian feel to it. Planning a route was moot as stairways that we thought we could access were closed with wrought iron gates, or sidewalks just came to halt for no reason and we would have to retreat. But this labyrinth of pathways just added to the quaintness of the place, named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2003 for its unique city layout and corrugated iron architecture. Neruda described Valparaiso perfectly, writing, "Valparaiso, how absurd you are. You haven't combed your hair, you've never had time to get dressed, life has always surprised you." That's exactly what it felt like here. A sidewalk cafe always seemed to be available just when we needed it, and we happily sipped milkshakes as we watched the hustle and bustle of the everyday life. We eventually made our way over to the Ascensore Reina Victoria in hopes that it was actually working, and, thank goodness, it was. After paying 500 pesos ($1) and going through a turnstile, we climbed into a little box on rails that held about 10 people and a cable pulled it up the steep hill. More beautiful views awaited us on this new hill, and we walked through the Concepcion neighbourhood, lined with craft shops and cafes, the colourful steeple of the cathedral in the distance. Valparaiso was definitely one of those special places that we would have to come back to someday.
 
One district in Valparaiso is actually a museum of murals

 




Another in the series: "Dogs and Doors"

 
The funiculars made life a lot easier when they were working
 

Ekke Writes


On Thursday, January 26, we had a late checkout from the ibis since it was a relatively short ride on expressways to Santiago.  As we rode inland, away from the ocean the temperature started to rise and the smoke from the forest fires became even thicker.  At one point we looked left and on a mountain we could see a small fire in progress, adding smoke to the thick, hazy atmosphere.  Just before entering Santiago we stopped for lunch at a roadside restaurant that looked like it had been lifted straight from the German autobahn.  Too bad the instructions weren’t in German as we first jumped a queue assuming the checkout was for people ordering food, not the convenience store items.  After a bit of a scolding we retreated to assess the situation and thought we could just go to the counter and order.  Nope.  Finally an English-speaking man came to our rescue and explained how the system worked and there was a third, hidden, cashier to pay for the buffet if you just wanted to do that.  By this point we just wanted whatever was easiest, not having the heart to lineup for the cashier and figure out what to order, so the buffet it was.  Too bad there was no currywurst, my favourite autobahn cuisine, to complete the autobahn illusion.  Then, back onto the highway into Santiago where it was remarkably easy to get into the heart of the city.  Part of the reason it was so easy was because we were on expressways that seemed to require radio toll tags.  Judging from the cameras perhaps we’ll have some nice souvenirs of Chile when we return home.  In any case, we didn’t get pulled over and found the address of the apartment/hotel we had reserved.  Only there was no hotel to speak of.  Just apartments.  We parked on the sidewalk and I went in search of some kind of front desk.  Nothing of the sort, only a security booth.  There they had nothing indicating our arrival so they went searching for someone who could help me.  A while later (standing around sweating in the motorcycle clothes is always fun) someone who looked like a cleaning lady was brought over.  I explained we had booked W&L apartment on Expedia and she just gave a bit of an exasperated sigh before telling me to wait.  After she had disappeared I went out to let Audrey know that this wasn’t a simple hotel check in.  Ten minutes later she returned and motioned for me to follow her.  We went up to the second floor of the tower and found someone cleaning apartments.  From her we nabbed the keys to an apartment on the seventh floor and headed up.  The apartment was OK (though it could have used a good cleaning) and then I asked about parking the motorbikes.  The cleaner/apartment manager said it would be 10,000 pesos for six days.  This was odd since we were only staying for five nights and the price on Expedia for parking was $10 U.S. (10,000 pesos = $15 U.S.).  I tried to explain why it should only be five days but gave up (must learn Spanish) and gave her 10,000 pesos deposit saying she could have the rest tomorrow.  Finally, I was able to return to Audrey who had been patiently waiting in the broiling sun the whole time on the street, keeping an eye on the bikes.  After parking the bikes in the parkade we went for a walk around the neighbourhood that would be our home for a few days.  We stopped off at Art Café for quesadillas and apple pie before retreating to the comfort of our apartment. Except there was no air conditioning, or even a fan, and the 30 plus degree heat made sleeping impossible, especially with the windows open and the cacophony of the city.

A fire near the top of the mountain on the left adds more smoke to the everpresent haze

 
Friday morning the landlady showed up at 7:30 (“I have a lot of work to do so I came early”) looking for the remainder of the parking fee which had now changed to a total of 40,000, not 60,000 pesos.  As an aside she also mentioned that despite the Expedia ad, she would not be able to take a credit card as payment on Monday, only cash.  At least we were up early and made it to the BMW dealer on the outskirts of town in good time.  The BMW centre was a combined facility of cars and motorbikes and was truly impressive.  I’m always curious how expensive bikes are compared to back home and this was a real case of sticker shock.  A standard R1200GS was the equivalent of $28,000 CDN which starts at $20,000 back home.  Oswaldo, in charge of the service department, spoke great English and really tried to get our service done in one day but in the end couldn’t squeeze us in, we would have to come back on Monday afternoon.  They called a cab to take us back to our downtown apartment and we got another case of sticker shock, 13,000 pesos or about $26 (compared to the $4 rides in the rest of South America).  After grabbing lunch from a grocery store we then took a short cab ride to Clinica Santa Maria to have my knee checked out.  Doctor Alemparte confirmed the swelling and said he could drain the fluid out and inject cortisone if we bought the cortisone at the pharmacy.  We popped downstairs to the drug store and returned upstairs in a few minutes for the draining and injection.  I waited for an eternity (about an hour) in a room with four or five curtained off beds, finally telling the nurse that this was ridiculous and she should go and get the doctor.  It took a few tries to convince her but eventually she tried contacting him with no luck, so one of the nurses used her personal cell phone to phone the doctor.  Apparently he had left the clinic an hour ago and forgotten about me.  He was now at the other clinic and I could come there and he would perform the procedure right away.  Where was the other clinic?  Just down the block from the BMW dealer.  Drat.  A $24 cab ride later we were at the shopping centre that had the clinic and the doctor apologised profusely while draining the knee.  After dinner at the mall we decided that we did not want to spend $75 on cabs in one day so we found a bus that would take us to the metro station.  Unfortunately the buses (or maybe just the express buses) didn’t take cash for fare payment, only a chip card that must be pre-purchased.  Thankfully the bus driver just waved us on without paying.  We did have to buy a ticket to use the subway (the same price as if we had paid for the bus and metro) so at least we didn’t short change the system.

Dropping the bikes off for a 10,000 km service (that's how far it was from Bogota)

 
On Saturday morning we started exploring Santiago, strolling through a crowded street market and visiting an old train station/art gallery (kind of like the Musée d’Orsay in Paris but on a smaller scale).  Just as we were about to enter a restaurant for lunch we both got splashed with a vile smelling liquid.  There was no-one around that could have been doing a distract theft, it could only have come from above like a large bird (it was a lot of goo) or perhaps something mechanical like an air conditioner.  Ugh.  We cleaned ourselves up in the restaurant bathroom, had lunch and then went back to the apartment to change.  Cleaned up we then headed out again and dropped in at the Chilean Museum of Pre-Colombian Art.  This was a great museum for a couple of reasons.  First, it was really well done, almost like a European museum with English descriptions (hooray!).  Second it put together artefacts from pre-Colombian civilizations all down the west coast of South America, that is, where we had just come down from Colombia through Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Chile.  Saturday evening we discovered that a subtitled version of Star Wars: Rogue One was playing in town (versus a dubbed version that would undoubtedly have improved our Spanish skills).  We took the metro to the mall where the movie was playing and really enjoyed the show.  When we went to leave the mall at a little after 11:00 PM we went to the exit nearest the metro, where we had come in, but found the doors locked.  We turned around and followed others to another exit, at the far end of the mall, and then walked back along the street to the station.  There we found gates half blocking the entrance and when we asked a security guard we were told that trains were only running in the outbound direction as the system was shut down for the night.  They suggested we take a bus.  OK, we went back to the street that ran parallel to the tracks and waited for a bus.  Again no cash fare payment and again the bus driver just motioned us onto the bus.  Taking a bus into downtown on a Saturday evening at midnight was an interesting way of meeting the locals.  A fellow passenger tried to strike up a conversation but it was mostly one-sided with him speaking rapidly in Spanish and us nodding.  It must have gone well because he gave us each a lucky penny.  When all the other passengers started streaming off the bus we jumped off too and found ourselves downtown, a few blocks from the apartment.  It was so lively that we didn’t feel unsafe at any time on the walk back to our hot little apartment, arriving at 1:00 AM.
 

Exploring Santiago, here on the Plaza de Armas

 
Plaza de Armas

 
A crowded street market on Saturday (Ekke's shoulder bag looks ripe for the picking)

 
Everybody loves a fish market on a warm day

 
Vile substance splattered on us from above on a quiet pedestrian mall

 
Museum of Pre-Colombian Art was great for seeing artefacts from civilisations we had seen coming down South America

 


Check out the bulging cheeks from chewing coca leaves

 
Sunday was a nice quiet day with most of the shops in Santiago closed.  Chile really feels a lot like Europe in everything from the shop hours to the road signs.  We also took the opportunity to use the washing machines (located on the top floor of the apartment building) to wash our clothes from the previous day’s hosing.  When I started to refill my MEC bag (Audrey tells me it is not a “purse”) I noticed that one side had a slit in it.  Either it had been torn open in the washing machine or, more likely, it had been cut open in the crowded street market yesterday.  Luckily nothing was stolen from the bag.  So, harnessing my Grade 9 Home Economics skills, I sewed the bag up.  In the afternoon we walked around Santiago a bit more, including the Bellavista neighbourhood where another of Pablo Neruda’s houses was located.  Audrey visited the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes while I went back to the apartment to ice my knee (it was nice having a refrigerator).

Sewing up my MEC bag after getting it slashed (probably in the street market the day before)

 
Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes

 


 
On Monday the landlady came by even earlier, at 7:00 AM and I’m not sure how I even heard her knock on the door since I was wearing ear plugs to block the city noise with the windows open.  After we handed over 240,000 pesos for the five days in the apartment and the landlady left we did a little trip planning.  We figured that it was about 3,400 kilometres to Ushuaia from Santiago, so about three weeks of riding.  With three weeks until we needed to be in Ushuaia for the Antarctic cruise that worked out perfectly.  In the afternoon we took the metro as far as we could in the direction of the BMW dealer and then hailed a cab to take us the rest of the way.  That saved us a bundle in taxi fare.  At the shop they needed authorisation before doing a few additional things (new brake pads for both bikes and a new front brake disc for the F650) so while they completed that work we walked over to the mall where doctor Amenaparte’s second office was and had him check out Audrey’s elbow.  It turned out to be a combination of tennis elbow and golfer’s elbow which Audrey has christened “motorcyclist elbow.”  He gave her some exercises to do as well as suggesting ice and an anti-inflammatory.  After we picked up the bikes we stopped by an outdoor-themed mall just because we had never seen a standing-wave surf at a mall before.  Neat!

An outdoor themed shopping mall (e.g. Trek bicycle and Garmin shops) had a standing-wave you could play on

 
Tuesday we left our apartment and moved to a nice, air conditioned ibis hotel just a few kilometres away.  Ah, nice and cool.  In the afternoon we took the metro to Plaza de Armas and visited the National Museum.  It was a great museum though we probably should have opted for the English audio guide since everything was in Spanish.  Still, we got the gist of it and some of the history of Chile.  After we returned to the ibis I checked my e-mail and I had a notification from Correos Chile that the parcel I was expecting had been delivered to the BMW dealer.  Earlier in the trip my Sena communicator was no longer holding a charge until it would only last half an hour whereas Audrey could even skip a charge and use it for two consecutive days.  After a couple of simple checks suggested by Sena customer service they offered a warranty replacement (considering I didn’t have the receipts with me I thought that was great customer service).  The only problem was that I would have to send my unit back to them before they would send out the new unit.  And they wouldn’t send it to South America.  With a little work I convinced them to send it to my parents before I returned the defective unit.  My parents had sent the unit to the BMW dealer via Express Post since at the time it was the only place we knew we were going to be for sure in Santiago.  It was amazing that this whole process worked and I received a new Sena communicator.  Kudos to Sena for great customer service!
 

National museum with history of Chile

 




Seriously, this is the entire transportation section of the National Museum?

 
Audrey climbs the Cerro Santa Lucia, a lovely park in the middle of the city

 
Great views of Santiago

 


On Wednesday we headed south out of Santiago and at the city limits a long queue of traffic slowed us down.  We rode on the shoulder (like another motorcyclist had done) and bypassed several kilometres of stopped traffic until we got past a collision in a construction zone that had caused the mess.  After that it was easy riding on the four lane divided highway and then we came to what has to be the nicest gas station in all of South America: a big, clean station with several restaurants, spotless washrooms and even showers.  It was nice having lunch and using the wi-fi.  As we continued further south the smoke from the forest fires seemed to abate a little, even though we were now closer to the fires as the prevailing winds were blowing the smoke north.  We turned off the highway onto a small road, heading into wine country and rode for about half an hour to a lovely B&B in the country.  What a peaceful setting after the hustle and bustle of Santiago.  The only noise seemed to be from the varied collection of animals inhabiting the grounds, from sheep to ducks.  We sat on the deck, enjoying a fruit plate made up of all locally grown fruits (three kinds of peaches alone) and had a relaxing afternoon.

Vineyards for making Chile's famous wines (the 2017 batch is going to have a smokey flavour)

 
Starting up a vineyard

 
Warm welcome at the Shambala B&B

 
Nice room but air conditioning would have been nice (at least there was a fan)

 
On Ground Hog Day we woke up in a B&B that didn’t have hot water for the shower.  Those of you familiar with the movie will recognise the irony of this.  It was a sunny day so I imagine a Chilean ground hog would have seen its shadow and we’ll get six more weeks of summer.  Hooray!  Our B&B hosts were really excited by our trip and insisted on taking lots of photos of us and the bikes so we had a terrific send off, again riding on lovely quiet roads through wine country back to the main highway, Ruta 5.  The highway was, if anything, even easier riding than the day before.  Soon we arrived in Los Angeles (!) and since we were in an American sounding town decided to go for lunch at an American restaurant (McDonalds).  Using the wi-fi at the McDonalds we checked Expedia to see if there was room available at the American hotel next door (The Sheraton).  There was, so I walked over and asked at the front desk for a room.  They said, “No problem” but when I asked for the rate it was significantly higher than I had seen on Expedia a few minutes earlier.  I asked if they could match the Expedia rate and they said, “No.”  “OK, what’s your wi-fi code?” said I.  So, standing at the front desk I booked the hotel on Expedia on my iPhone saving $20.  While the e-mail was winging its way from Expedia to the Sheraton I went back to fetch Audrey and we parked the bikes.  By the time we returned, the front desk had e-mail confirmation of our booking and we were able to check in.  Naturally that evening we watched “Ground Hog Day” on the laptop.

Rural Chile

 
Lots of people flying the flag as the country comes together to battle the devestating wild fires

 
Interesting that a lot of the forests we saw were planted

 
400 kilometres of divided highway in perfect weather conditions on February 3 brought us to Osorno where we checked out Moto Aventura, a nice motorcycle shop and rental agency.  We had been having a bit of difficulty ascertaining the road conditions to Ushuaia and they were able to confirm that going down Ruta 3 instead of Ruta 40 would result in the least amount of gravel road, just 30 kilometres on Tierra del Fuego.  I still wanted to minimise the risk of re-injuring my knee so we had decided to forego some of the more challenging sections of the route, including an 80 kilometre stretch of Ruta 40 and the Carretera Austral so confirming that Ruta 3 was paved made our trip planning easier.  It also meant that we had enough time to visit the island of Chiloé , famous for its pastoral scenes and wooden churches.

Moto Aventura in Osorno was a great motorcycle shop and tour operator

 
On Saturday morning we rode south and west and then took the ferry across to Isla Grande de Chiloé after passing by Puerto Montt.  The ferry was 7,900 pesos each, or $32 for both bikes.  Once on the island we went to Ancud for fuel since we hadn’t passed by a gas station for quite some time and then popped into a restaurant for lunch before taking a wander around the lovely town.  A museum in town had scale models of each of the 16 UNESCO listed wooden churches.  The museum itself was in an old wooden church and the woodwork of the construction of the church was truly impressive.  The wooden churches of Chiloé were constructed in the 18th and 19th centuries, while the Chiloé archipelago was still under the Spanish Crown.  However, the construction of these churches is unique in that they are made entirely of native timber to resist the humid oceanic climate, fusing Jesuit and local natives’ skill and traditions.  While the roads on the island were quite busy with summer holiday traffic, it was lovely riding over hill and dale with the occasional view of the sun glittering on the ocean.  It was 70 kilometres to Dalcahue where a mix-up at the hotel meant we didn’t have a room with a private bathroom so they upgraded us to a huge triple room with a balcony and a lovely view of the strait.  It seemed like a reasonable trade.

Approaching the ferry to Chiloé

 
The wooden church in Ancud was also a museum about the UNESCO listed churches on Chiloé

 
Here are all the UNESCO listed churches, though there are others that are not listed

 
The interior of the church/museum was unfinished so that one could see the amazing woodwork

 


Arriving in Dalcahue where our hotel was located we found our second wooden church

 
Yes, more "Dogs and Doors"

 


After doing a few chores at the hotel, such as renewing my APEGA membership, we took a short ferry ride to Isla Quinchao.  The island was home to a number of the UNESCO listed churches, visiting Achao, where the church had a sign saying that it was too popular so entry was no longer allowed, and Curaco de Vélez.  A burnt out ruin across the street from the church in Castro, back on Isla Grande, was a reminder that the previous two churches on the site had indeed burned down.  It was probably just a coincidence that fire crews were in front of the church doing drills.  From Castro we rode back past Dalcahue and on another 60 kilometres to Tenuan for our favourite church.  The bright blue of the church complemented the brilliant blue sky and azure waters of the Pacific.

Short ferry boat ride to Isla Quinchao

 
Idyllic motorcycle riding on the island

 
The church in Achao was too popular and so was closed to visitors

 


Church in Curaco de Vélez

 
The interior of each church was completely different

 
Back to the ferry and the main island

 
The church in Castro had burnt down twice before.  Check out the burned down building to the right and the fire crews in front.

 


Iglesia de Nercon just south of Castro, our most southerly point on the trip so far

 
The famous stilt houses in Castro are technically illegal

 


Our favourite church on Chiloé was this one in the village of Tenuan

 


We left Chiloé on February 6, riding back to Osorno on the mainland.  At the hotel we took a bit of time to figure out the reciprocity fee for Argentina.  Canadians (as well as Americans and Australians) must pay a reciprocity fee to enter the country and it seemed that the fee wasn’t payable at the border.  So it took a bit of figuring out on the Argentinean website to see how to pay the fee.  Once figured out, the form itself was very simple and after paying with a credit card we were e-mailed a PDF document showing that we had paid.  The receipt showed that it was valid until our passports expired in 2026.  I guess we’ll just have to visit Argentina a number of times to spread the cost out over ten years.  After the front desk printed out the receipt we were in theory ready to enter Argentina the next day.  While we had reliable internet we also filled in all the forms necessary for our Antarctic cruise, including everything from insurance declarations to rubber boot sizes.

We left Osorno at about 10:00 AM and rode east to the border between Chile and Argentina.  After a quick stop for gas our next stop was the Chilean border control post.  It was a beautiful ride on curving roads to the frontier with glimpses of lakes and mountains.  Almost like southern B.C., except for a perfectly conical volcano in the distance.  It was a quick and easy check out of Chile, getting the passports stamped and the temporary vehicle import permits cancelled, half an hour tops.  From there it was about 40 kilometres to the Argentinean border post and we took it easy, enjoying the beautiful mountain scenery, and stopping at the actual border at the top of Paso Internacional Cardenal Antonio Samore.  A father and daughter on a BMW Adventure from Chile said that the Argentinean border control wouldn’t be as quick and easy because a lot of Argentineans go shopping in Chile and consequently they are thoroughly checked.  Chile had been an amazing destination on our ride around South America.  Even with the same Spanish influence as the other countries we had visited it still felt completely different, much more European in character, almost Germanic.  We really enjoyed our time in Chile, from the deserts in the north to fascinating Valparaiso in the middle and Chiloé in the south.  At least this was only a temporary goodbye as we would re-enter Chile further south on the way to Ushuaia.  Hasta luego Chile!

Riding east, towards Argentina and up into the Andes from Osorno

 


The border between Chile and Argentina is at this pass

 
Audrey stands exactly on the border

 
The father and daughter from Santiago head down from the border towards the Argentine border control post

 
Map of our route through Chile  

Chapter 11: Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego

Audrey Writes
 
Argentina, the eighth largest country in the world, awaited and on February 7th, 2017 Ekke and I crossed into our 76th country. The border process took about 1 1/2 hours because they were a bit short on aduana (customs) staff and the queue was long. Us Canadians need to show we've paid a $75 US reciprocity fee (Canada charges Argentina so Argentina charges Canada) which we had purchased on the internet a few days before, printing out the paperwork at the hotel. The agent did not ask us to produce proof that we had paid it, but we had heard that some border agents didn't really know that Canadians had to pay it. As we rode away we noticed a queue of vehicles that was kilometres long of people trying to leave Argentina and knew they would be waiting for hours.

Coming down from the pass and Chile into Argentina
 
Patagonia! This region encompasses the bottom one-third of Argentina and Chile, south of Rio Colorado. Ruta 40, a highway that spanned the length of Argentina north to south took us into the Siete Lagos (Seven Lakes) region. With views of glacier-topped volcanoes and rocky cliffs in the distance, we enjoyed riding the twisty, paved road and the forests and lakes reminded us of British Columbia back home. Signs with information about wildlife, plant life, geology and history were placed at the ten lookout points, so we learned a bit about the area at each of our stops. Our hotel in St. Martin de Los Andes, the Hosteria el Arbol Duendeas, was like an alpine chalet, all wood and charm and the town itself was full of such structures and packed with holiday goers walking the lakeside pathways or paddling around the lake in canoes. When perusing menus posted outside potential restaurants for dinner, we noticed that Argentinian prices were way higher than Chilean, which we had been shocked at after coming from Peru. So we settled on a sandwich cafe for dinner that also sold tartes or broccoli and cheese pies with salad.

One of the seven lakes along Ruta de los Siete Lagos

 
Is Argentina going to have lots of cool cars like this Fiat 800 Spyder?

 


What a great ride

 
The beach at San Martin de los Andes
 
With all the summer travellers we noticed that the gas stations in town all had huge lineups of cars and motorhomes the next morning, so we took a chance that we would find a gas station on our 198 kilometre-long route. The sweeping curves on the highway were fun as we rode past more sparkling blue lakes and mountain peaks, and we stopped in Villa la Angostura for lunch. Again, there were big lineups, right out onto the street at the gas stations, so we didn't gas up there. Cuckoo clocks adorned the walls of the restaurant, and we were beginning to realize that this was probably not typical in all parts of Argentina, and that we were in a very special area. And they served waffles. Really.

Ruta 40 along the Seven Lakes route in Argentina looks a lot like Highway 40 in Kananaskis Country in Alberta

 
Yummy waffle.  You don't want to be here at the top of the hour with all the cuckoo clocks.
Our destination, Bariloche, was situated on Lago Nahuel Huapi, surrounded by mountains, and I made it without running out of gas. As we rode into town I saw some sort of liquid on my tank and a sweet smell. I thought someone had thrown a Coke at my bike. When I stopped I noticed radiator fluid was spewing out of a hose, like a little fountain. We wiped it up and started the bike again, watching for the leak. It soon stopped spewing, and Ekke assumed that it had been overfilled during the service in Santiago. But it was a little disconcerting, considering we were riding into the isolated part of Patagonia soon, but it, thankfully, never gave us any more trouble after that. Bariloche was very hilly and to get to the hotel we needed to ride down a road that resembled Lombard Street in San Francisco, that really curvy, steep one with flower boxes on the inside curves. Looking down from above, I lost my courage, and we ended up going around several blocks, twice, with our only option to ride the steep street. I just took a deep breath, held on, and managed to complete the super tight, steep turn that got us into the hotel parking lot. I didn't have to dodge flower boxes, however.

San Carlos de Bariloche across Lago Nahuel Huapi
 
It was a pleasure to stroll around the alpine town, down the pedestrian mall, past chocolate shop after chocolate shop. Quaint is an understatement to describe this place, with the Alpine-style honey coloured wood and stone chalets, a lakeside promenade and pedestrian friendly streets. There was even a St. Bernard dog in the town square posing for photos with tourists. Tourists were buying chocolate by the kilo, but we decided to purchase just a sample, which was delicious. The town was settled in the late 1800s by European immigrants who brought their alpine lifestyle and chocolate recipes. Later it was known as a haven for Nazi war criminals whose descendants still live in the region.

The main square in Bariloche looks very Alpine

 
And of course nothing says Bariloche like a St. Bernard dog.  Really?

 
Mmmm, chocolate fondue
 
Visiting the local museum was a highlight the next day. Grace was our tour guide and she took us through each area, including a display of animals like pumas and condors. I was surprised to see green parrots and parakeets in the Patagonia display, but Grace said they were the most southerly species in the world. Artefacts of the Tehuelche, the main indigenous peoples, were displayed and they had learned how to live on the barren steppes for thousands of years until the Europeans came. During winter they lived by the sea and ate seafood and in summer hunted rheas or ostrich and guanacos, a type of camelid, for food and clothing. Their domed hide tents reminded me of First Nations dwellings of North America, and they had bows and arrows and spear throwers as well. These people eventually died of diseases that they had no immunity to.

Survey equipment used by Francisco "Perito" Moreno to lay out the national park

 
Ah, that's why it is so windy in Patagonia

 
Lago Nahuel Huapi

 
Wow, a church that isn't Spanish Colonial

 
Yep, Argentina is going to have interesting cars
 
Bariloche is a popular ski resort, but in the summer the mountains make for some lovely motorcycling. The road south the next day wound its way along some small lakes and streams, past thick woods and open meadows, the snowy mountains making an appearance every now and again. The 10 degrees Celsius temperature did not feel bad with the sun beating down, and we were reminded of cool mountain mornings in Banff, an hour from our home in Canada.

Leaving Bariloche

 
Heading south on Ruta 40
 
The British automobile show, Top Gear, had done an episode in Argentina, so we watched it via the internet in our hotel. Jeremy, Richard and James had many adventures while they drove their V8s down Patagonia, and one thing that I thought was interesting is that they stopped in at Butch Cassidy's cabin. We looked to see if it was close to our route, and it was about a 30 kilometre detour, just north of the town of Cholilla. I had also read the story of Butch Cassidy, The Sundance Kid and Etta Place in Bruce Chatwin's book, 'In Patagonia' about how they had come to Argentina on a steamer from New York and settled at the foot of the Andes in the west for a few years, ranching sheep and cattle. I had also read that the road into the site would be rough, but we thought we could give it a try and turn around if necessary. A GPS point on the iOverlander APP pointed us in the right direction, and, happily, a paved highway took us right to a gate and a sign, Butch Cassidy's Cabin. The cabin was on private land, but there was no one around to ask permission so we just ducked through the gate and walked half a kilometre in the hot sun. The three-room wooden cabin and barns, made with typical American log cabin construction techniques, was empty, so we used our imaginations to picture what life must have been like here while treading carefully on those creaking hardwood floors. It was situated in a picturesque little spot, right on a babbling brook, the peaks of the Andes in the distance and would have been a lovely place to live off the spoils of all those train robberies (cue the 'Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head' soundtrack). But the story goes that the trio got restless and took up their life of crime again. Etta moved back to the States, and Butch and Sundance's story ended in a shootout in Bolivia.
 
Cool, Butch Cassidy's cabin

 
Lock up the bikes and walk a few hundred metres in to the cabin

 


Where Butch Cassidy, The Sundance Kid and Etta Place lived for a few years
 
Patagonia is known for its wind, and when we started heading east, it got windy. The highway headed straight for the most part, and occasionally wound through a small valley where we saw signs of sheep estancias or ranches, and perhaps a few small trees planted by the owners. The town of Esquel had some tourist infrastructure because it had a nearby ski resort and also some hiking trails. For overlanders, this was also the beginning of the scenic Carretera Austral, a rough dirt road just over the border in Chile. But we were now on a schedule to get down to Antarctica for the cruise, and we didn't want anyone getting injured on a dirt road, so we decided to take the paved Ruta 3 down the east coast to Ushuaia, perhaps doing the Carretera on the return trip.
 
Heading south on Ruta 40
 
The ride east on Saturday, February 11th was easy as we had a tail wind for most of the way. Traffic was fairly decent for the most part but Argentinian drivers do come up at high speeds from behind and pass you with centimetres to spare. Something to get used to, but scary. I needed gas in the next town so our only choice was to join the queue, which went out onto the street, taking about 15 minutes, which was not bad - we had heard of other riders waiting 3 hours.
 
Queued up for gasoline
 
A recent post from another rider on our iOverlander APP had indicated that there was a 14 kilometre stretch of construction further ahead. When paving or fixing highways in Patagonia they just plow a detour 'road' out in the adjacent field and throw a pile of gravel on top, which makes for unpredictable riding conditions. Standing up on the footpegs and keeping the momentum up helped a lot when we rode that section, especially when the gravel became loose and deep but I was very happy when that 10 kilometres of gravel was over. But later, we came to a second gravel section. I wanted to slow down for a break before facing the deep gravel. I was up on the pegs, but before I knew it I was plowing through the deep, loose stuff, going too slowly to keep up the momentum. So, I hit the gas to save the bike from falling over, my earlier hesitation causing instability. The bike started fish tailing and I tried to get it back under control, but the fish tails got wider, the bike sliding from one side of the road to the other. It felt like I was on a bucking bronco, out of control, and I remember crying, "Ekke, Ekke, Ekke," before the bike high-sided, pitching me over the top, landing on me before spinning a 180 on the gravel, finally coming to an abrupt stop.

This doesn't look good
 

Ekke Writes



After my ruptured patella tendon in Peru we had been a little leery of taking Highway 40 (Ruta Cuarenta in Spanish) all the way south to Ushuaia.  The gravel sections were reputed to be quite challenging especially combined with the infamous Patagonian wind and as my knee still wasn’t up to full strength we wanted to minimize the risk of a RUD (Rapid Unplanned Dismount).  So leaving Esquel we planned to ride south on Ruta 40 and then cut east to Ruta 3 on Ruta 25, putting in almost 600 kilometres to Comodoro Rivadavia, all but a short construction zone being paved.  Almost 300 kilometres into the day we came to the construction zone and the first ten kilometres was indeed challenging with loose and at times deep gravel.  It was back to pavement for a short bit and then we came to another detour consisting of the same loose gravel.  Not being accomplished off pavement riders (though we’ve done thousands of kilometres off pavement all around the world) we find it can be hard work focusing on the task at hand and trying not to tense up on the handlebars.  A few kilometres into the detour I suggested we stop for a breather.  I slowed to a stop on a slightly firmer part of the road after a loose, deep section and just then I heard Audrey shouting, “Ekke, Ekke, Ekke!” over the intercom.  I looked in the mirror and to my horror saw Audrey fishtailing from one side of the road over to the other side and back again.  Before I knew it the bike slammed her to the ground and she disappeared in a cloud of dust.  Imagining the worst, I flipped out the sidestand and jumped off my bike just as Audrey said over the intercom, “I’m OK, I’m OK.”  That was a relief so I walked back to the crash to help her pick up the bike but Audrey wasn’t getting up, her right foot trapped underneath the bike.  A pickup truck stopped and after we took the obligatory crash photos (thanks Grant Johnson) they helped us get Audrey and the bike upright.  The Good Samaritans made sure we were alright, gave us a bottle of water and were on their way, leaving us to assess the damage and our options.  We had a look over the bike and there was surprisingly little damage, mostly confined to the right side saddlebag which seemed to have taken the brunt of the high-side impact.  Audrey’s right foot on the other hand was getting more painful as the adrenalin wore off.  Audrey thought she was capable of riding, but not on gravel where she would have to stand up.  So I rode the bikes over a few piles of gravel and onto the almost finished road.  It was rock hard with a dried coating of oil, ready for paving.  Fortunately the hard surface continued to the end of the detour and after we got the bikes over another pile of gravel we had pavement.  Audrey was able to ride though her foot was getting more and more painful.  We knew that if we took the boot off it would probably not go back on due to the swelling so we decided not to stop at any of the small settlements along the way.  We did stop in Sarmiento at a gas station and found out the right saddlebag had been bent (or its mount) so that the gas cap couldn’t be opened.  Good thing there was a Patagonian tail wind to take us all the way to Comodoro Rivadavia and didn’t need to top up.  We arrived in the late afternoon, Audrey having ridden about 300 kilometres with her painful foot.  After checking in at the WAM hotel (where we had a reservation) we took Audrey’s boot off to find that her foot was indeed quite swollen and bruised.  The hotel staff said they had a doctor on call and could arrange for the doctor to come to our room in 15 minutes.  Sure enough we had a knock on the door a short while later and Audrey told the doctor what happened.  A physical exam suggested that the foot was fractured so the doctor said we should go to the regional hospital to get an X-ray done.  We called a cab to take us to the hospital and after waiting about an hour an X-ray was completed.  Sure enough it was broken.  They put on a temporary cast that she wasn’t supposed to walk on until we could get a walker boot on Monday.

Good Samaritans stop to give us a hand

 
Audrey insists that Ekke take pictures

 
Audrey and the bike upright, we're left on our own

 
Audrey points to the location of the crash for future reference

 
Fractured foot

 
Temporary cast

 
Since Audrey wasn’t able to walk on the temporary cast, we spent all of Sunday in the hotel.  We borrowed a rolling chair from the front desk and I pushed her around and down to the restaurant.  Gee whiz, the restaurant sure was expensive.  Was Comodoro Rivadavia expensive?  Was it Argentina or just Patagonia?  Monday we took a taxi to the orthopaedic supply shop where they didn’t have a medium size walker boot but they pointed us to another shop that did and called a cab for us.  Once we had the right size boot we took another taxi back to the hospital to remove the temporary cast and get the walker boot properly fitted.  We arranged with the doctor to see him in four or five weeks after we returned from the Antarctic cruise.  By the way, Argentina has public health care so there was no charge for anything at the regional hospital, we only paid to purchase the walker boot.  Tuesday we got the maps out and spent the day figuring out how to get to Ushuaia by February 22, in time for the cruise.  We mulled over a few options, including going two-up on the Adventure (a bit risky maybe) and me riding down while Audrey flew.  In the end we decided that renting a car was the best option since we would be together and might even be able to squeeze in a bit of sightseeing that we probably would not have done on the bikes.  So we rented a car online and arranged the first few days’ worth of hotels.  Then I went down to the parking lot, tucked the bikes into a corner and put the covers on, the second time on this trip we’ve had to park them for an extended period of time.

Well, that could have gone better.  I took a cab down to the Avis rental office at 9:30 and started filling in the necessary forms.  While doing that I mentioned that we would be taking the car through Chile on the way to Ushuaia.  Well that changed things a bit as the car didn’t have the proper paperwork to leave Argentina.  Fortunately a South African woman, currently living in Rio de Janeiro, happened to be there returning a car and had experience trying to cross into Chile with an unauthorized car. I was sure glad that she was able to translate with the agent what needed to be done as I had no desire to repeat her horror story.  We would need a different car but that car was at the airport so the agent asked if I would be willing to wait while they retrieved the car.  I thought it shouldn’t be too much of a problem if it was later in the morning even though we had planned to drive to Rio Gallegos, almost 800 kilometres away.  By 11:30 the agent came to see me and said that the paperwork for the car that was authorized to enter Chile wasn’t in order (it hadn’t been properly checked out of Chile the last time it was rented).  So it would take a few hours to get it straightened out, could I come back late in the afternoon?  Since we had a reservation at Rio Gallegos we knew it was going to be tight but we didn’t have much in the way of options.  Back at the hotel it wasn’t until 5:00 that the car was ready for pickup.  That was too late in the day to do 800 kilometres on unfamiliar roads so we decided to stay an additional night at the WAM and drive 1,000 kilometres the next day, all the way to El Calafate.  And what did we have for a new expedition vehicle?  A VW up! (Volkswagen’s exclamation mark, not mine).

As we had a pretty big day ahead of us we had to (gasp!) set an alarm on February 16 to make sure we were up and at ‘em in time.  With the up! loaded, we shouted, “up! up! and away!” and drove south towards Ushuaia.  The first 400 kilometres was fairly easy driving; nice and sunny with the Atlantic Ocean to our left.  Grey clouds on the horizon were our first clue that the weather was about to change.  It started first as a light mist and then a light rain before turning into on and off showers for the remaining 600 kilometres.  Aside from managing the hydroplaning on sections of badly rutted pavement, the driving was remarkably easy considering it was raining with a gusty wind and the temperature felt (when we got out of the car) like it was less than 10 Celsius.  In other words the motorcyclists we saw looked pretty miserable while we turned up the heat.  When we arrived in El Calafate we followed the GPS’s suggested directions on a muddy, gravel road that led to a goat track down a cliff where we could see the hotel at the bottom.  We turned around and followed our own directions on pavement to find our hotel situated with a wonderful view of Lago Argentino.  Twelve and a half hours to cover 1,060 kilometres.  In the rain.  We couldn’t have done that on the bikes.  Also, driving one economical car (roughly 6L/100km) is less expensive from a fuel perspective when compared to riding two motorcycles (combined fuel use of about 9L/100km).  However, there was no sense of accomplishment.  The journey had taken a back seat to the destination.

up! up! and away!

 
Getting out for a stretch along Ruta 3

 
Guanaco

 
Rhea

 
The weather turns miserable

 
We consider taking the shortcut that would save us 200 kilometres but the mud deters us

 
Our hotel in El Calafate after the GPS suggested this goat track down the hill

 
About 80 kilometres from El Calafate (the name of a berry found in the area by the way) lies the massive Perito Moreno Glacier, one of the few glaciers in the world still advancing.  It is billed as one of the highlights of any visit to Argentina.  We soon found out why.  The vertical face of the glacier was an average of 70 metres high (like a 20 storey building) and because it was advancing at about 2 metres per day it was almost constantly calving.  Loud “booms” would signal that a chunk of ice had fallen from the face of the glacier.  Getting photos or video of a calving was tricky since once you’ve heard the boom the event is over.  We did spot a location that seemed ripe for calving and after about 45 minutes were lucky enough to have the camera turned on and pointed in the right direction to capture a video.  Having spent most of the day at the glacier we thought we would see if there was still time to see Punta Walichu, the site of ancient cave paintings.  We drove back through El Calafate and then tested the mettle of our expedition up! on a dirt track down to Lago Argentino.  The little car made it unscathed and after we parked in the small lot we walked over to a ticket office where we were each given an audio guide on an iPod.  The site was fascinating as it mixed original cave paintings (believed to be about 4,000 years old) and also recreated paintings from other locations using original techniques.

Approaching Perito Moreno Glacier

 
The glacier is huge

 
Love that deep blue in the ice

 
A sense of scale

 


Not just glaciers to see in Los Glaciares National Park

 
Glacier Calving





Wow

 
Our new expedition vehicle gets tested on the way to Punta Walichu

 
The view from the Punta Walichu caves

 
An audio guide gives great information

 
Blackened from camp fires the cave paintings are on the underside of the overhang

 
About 4,000 years old these paintings are

 
You can just make out the image of a hand

 
Audrey Writes
 
Lake Argentino was a lovely glacier blue colour as we drove out of El Calafate. What a gorgeous region this was. Our route took us back to Esperanza, where we headed southwest, past herds of guanacos and rheas. The two species always seemed to be seen together, and I found out why: Rheas depended on the guanacos for a food source as they eat the larvae in their dung. Interesting. The steppe grasslands seemed to go on forever, with an occasional hill formed by glaciers. Ekke noticed a peak in the distance and said, "I think that's the Torres." With the superzoom camera, he was indeed able to identify Torres del Paine, the famous towering peaks, and we got very excited, as we had been looking forward to visiting here for years. The national park was in Chile, so we crossed the border at a tiny little port of entry, the proceedings taking about 15 minutes to leave Argentina and 15 minutes to enter Chile. At the entrance into Puerto Natales we noticed a huge statue right in the middle of the traffic circle that kind of resembled a grizzly bear - we would have to investigate that later. The hotel, the HD Natales was out of town and in a bit of an older building - we'll call it historic, but with friendly hosts who gave us cookies upon our arrival. For lunch, La Bote Cafe in town served excellent chicken, but when Ekke saw guanaco steak on the menu, he couldn't resist. I always admire his willingness to embrace the local cuisine. During a walk around town we came upon the big statue that resembled a bear and noticed that it had a huge tail. It occurred to me that this place had been mentioned in the book I was reading, 'In Patagonia' and the author had talked about a prehistoric creature, the Mylodon or giant sloth whose remains were found in a nearby cave. So, the grizzly bear mystery was solved.
 
Torres del Paine as seen from Ruta 40 in Argentina

 
El Bote for a tasty guanaco lunch

 
We must be back in Chile and Ekke's "Doors and Dogs" series

 
Coscoroba Swans on Golfo Almte Montt

 
Hand sculpture inspired by the same artist as the one near Antofagasta, Chile
 
Our hotel manager had suggested a route into the national park the next day, so we picked up our boxed lunch and headed out. The surrounding hills were green, dotted with guanacos and rheas, and we stopped at a blue, glacial lake with a view of the Torres or mountains that resembled towers, in the distance. After paying 21 000 pesos or $42 each to enter the park we drove along some really loose, deep gravel and I was kind of happy that I was not riding this on a motorcycle. At a viewpoint we met a rider from California, Drew, who agreed that the riding there was quite challenging. He had ridden from Alaska and was on his way down to Ushuaia. Even though the day was sunny the wind whipped through our clothing and I was glad that I had brought my downfilled jacket and toque. After parking near some waterfalls, I thought it was very nice to have a car to sit in to eat lunch, but it would have been more of an adventure if we had been on bikes. At a scenic footbridge leading to a small island on Pehoe Lake we saw four motorcycles with Brazilian plates, including a BMW K1600GT. There was also a support vehicle with them, so they were obviously on a tour. Kudos to the rider of the K1600GT who had ridden that deep gravel section, 2-up.
 
Beautiful paved road heading towards Torres del Paine park

 
Lots of wildlife on the way, like these guanacos

 
A soaring condor

 
Rhea

 
Crested Caracara

 
Patagonian geese

 
Torres del Paine

 


Leading to the park entrance

 
Cuernos del Paine mountains have a unique dark layer

 
Drew from California on the way from Alaska to Ushuaia

 
Stunning scenery

 
Not the ideal gravel road bike but there it is
 
Lago Grey was up another loose gravel road, and when we passed by a stand of trees I saw a couple of green birds flying by. Parakeets! How cool. But they flew away too quickly to get photos. A hike at Lago or Lake Grey took us down a steep hill and across a gravel beach. Our goal was to get to a view across the lake of Grey Glacier, but the beach got rockier, and the wind got stronger and with my foot in the walking cast boot, walking was getting uncomfortable. So, I retreated back up the beach and Ekke climbed up a hill for the glacier view. It was a bit overcast, which was too bad, but we did see a gorgeous blue iceberg that had calved off and floated down the lake.
 
Walking along the gravelly shore of Lago Grey Audrey tries her boot cover


The strong winds have pushed the iceberg all the way down the lake from the glacier

 
Strong winds indeed.  Ready for takeoff!

 


Leaving Torres del Paine park with one last look back
 
The cave in which the giant sloth remains had been found was on our route home, but as it was 7:40 p.m. when we arrived, and I had read that it closed at 7:00 we thought we had missed it. But happily there were cars parked outside and we were sold some tickets, so I guess we'd made it. The cave was very special for Bruce Chatwin because in his book 'In Patagonia' his great uncle had found a piece Mylodon skin that had been preserved in glacial ice and given it to Bruce's grandmother. As a child in England Bruce loved the mystery of the skin so it was like a pilgrimage for him when he visited the cave in the 1970s. The wide mouth of the cave was very impressive, and the cave itself was 200 metres long, and there, standing up on its haunches on a hill was a Mylodon statue, similar to the one in town. The species of giant sloth had gone extinct about 5000 years previously. It took quite some time to walk around the interior of the huge cave, which got very dark in some parts and slippery from water dripping, but it was easy to imagine that giant beast finding shelter from the cold Patagonian winds and snows in here.
 
Mylodon Cave, note the people for scale

 
Lifesize replica of a mylodon
 
The drive to Punta Arenas was about 250 kilometres, the wind very strong whenever we got out of the car, and the trees looked as if they were growing sideways. So it wasn't surprising when we came to an Ode to the Wind statue, very appropriate for this part of the world. A few high-flying condors could be glimpsed in the distance, and we enjoyed spotting the many bird species in and around the ponds, including flamingoes. Our hotel, Jose Nogueiera was right on the main square, a former palace built by wool barons, the Menéndez and Braun families.
 
Route to the end of the world

 
A condor soars on the powerful wind

 
A Chilean gaucho

 
Ode to the Wind

 
Jose Nogueiera hotel in Punta Arenas
 
Since I was trying to find an overboot for my walking cast in preparation for the Antarctic trip, we drove to the Zona Franca, or duty free zone and perused sports stores in the shopping mall, but found no boot covers. Punta Arenas had a lovely old cemetery and after taking a photo of the map at the entrance we wandered for quite some time looking at beautiful tombs and chapels including those of the cemetery's benefactor, Sara Braun and wool baron bigshot José Menéndez. A very popular tomb was that of the Unknown Indian, a memorial to the all the native people that perished after the coming of the Europeans. Dinner of vegetable curry at the hotel was delicious (I still don't know what authentic Chilean cuisine is), but the dessert was kind of curious - quinoa stuffed in a white chocolate tube with chantilly cream. But the quinoa had a tangy taste as if it was fermented, and I don't know if it was supposed to taste like that, but I ate it anyway. I didn't get sick.
 
One of the most spectacular cemeteries in South America is in Punta Arenas

 


Tomb of the Unknown Indian
 
A ferry across the Strait of Magellan the next day, February 21st, left at 9 a.m. We did not have a reservation, but showed up at 8:30 a.m., hoping to get on. After being put on a waiting list, our name was called at 8:55 and we were on our way to Tierra del Fuego, the Land of Fire. This big island was named thus because on Magellan's voyage in 1520 he was struck by the number of native campfires glowing in the fog when he first arrived. The Californian rider, Drew, and the Brazilian motorcyclists were on the boat, and we chatted with the English speaking guide for a while and talked about our trip. Further along on the ferry ride we saw someone get very excited, pointing at the sea. Whales. We just got a glimpse of the back of one and it disappeared, but it was still exciting to see. On the way into port, Ekke spotted dolphins, which was also exciting. The town of Porvenir had a post office so it was a great opportunity to mail some postcards, which took about 4 stamps each. We could barely fit them onto the cards but we were assured it was okay to overlap them. After lunch at the Croatian Club of the most delicious salmon I've ever tasted, we drove along the coast on a rough gravel and dirt road. It had also been freshly graded which makes it soft, making us wonder how the motorcyclists made out.
 
The ferry to Tierra del Fuego

 
Beautiful road but maybe a bit glad to be in a car

 
Guanacos on Tierra del Fuego
 
I had read that there was a penguin colony nearby, but since we were going to see penguins on Antarctica, it wasn't really on our radar. But as we came around the bay, we saw a sign that said the site was only 14 kilometres off the road. It was getting late, and we still had a border crossing ahead of us, but decided to make the detour, and were very glad we did. A small visitor centre was set up, and after paying admission, a guide explained some penguin etiquette, such as staying quiet and not moving too quickly. A wooden wall had been set up to separate tourists from the penguins, and beyond the wall, about 50 metres away was a beautiful colony of king penguins. The yellow, white and black colouring was magnificent, and Ekke and I just looked at each other and smiled. What an amazing sight. This was the same species that we have at the Calgary Zoo. The site was right on the coast, but it was kind of strange to see penguins in this environment, on a grassy pasture, with no ice or snow in sight, and a few sheep wandering around for good measure. But, this was their natural habitat, and the colony was thriving, with several adolescent chicks to be seen that were just starting to explore on their own. We watched a lone penguin wandering further up the beach for quite some time, but then it was time to leave. What an amazing experience.
 
King Penguin Park

 
We stood behind a wooden wall (like a duck blind) so as not to disturb the penguins

 
An adolescent king penguin still hanging out with the adults

 


Strange to see penguins walking around in the tall grass rather than on ice and snow

 
Does the fox snack on penguins?

 




OK, who thought that penguins and flamingos shared an ecosystem?  This pond was only a few kilometres from the penguin park.
 
A construction zone further along lasted for 30 kilometres, and the detour road was basically hard packed dirt, which would have been treacherous if wet. But it was easy in the car, and we could see that the paved, concrete road beside it just needed a few finishing touches and then it would be complete. The border crossing onto the Argentinian side of Tierra del Fuego was quick and easy and again they did not ask for the reciprocity fee papers. The road was paved to Rio Grande, and the Status Hotel was a great respite after a busy day.

The final 200 kilometres to Ushuaia the next day, February 22nd, was quick and easy and we passed by lovely glacier-covered mountain peaks, sparkling-blue lakes and babbling brooks. We were a bit emotional when we saw the sign for Ushuaia - we had made it to the end of the world! Okay, not on our motorbikes but it still felt like a dream come true. The city itself lay spread out before us, up on the mountainous slopes, sweeping down the hillside to the port below. Running errands was the order of the day, submitting a couple of loads of laundry, getting Dramamine for seasickness, looking at parking lots to try to figure out where to park the car for 11 days, and visiting our travel agent, Lorena, that we had been in touch with by email. With my foot in the walking cast boot, I needed a way to keep it warm and dry while walking around on the Antarctic Peninsula. Lorena took us over to a winter gear rental shop, and there I found a snowboard boot that my foot could fit into and remain immobilized, warm and dry.
 
Heading to the end of Ruta 3

 
One final mountain range to be crossed to get to Ushuaia

 
The old road over Paso Garibaldi looks like fun

 
We made it!


Dusty Ushuaia sits on the Beagle Channel, the most southerly city in the world
 
The official Fin del Mundo or End of the World sign was in Tierra del Fuego National Park, and we drove out there the next morning. The park had great facilities and we paid a fee, got some maps, and drove to Lapataia Bay. The parking lot was jam-packed with tour buses and vans, and we had a Brazilian biker take our photo in front of the famous sign. Some boardwalks led to an overlook of the bay, some peat bogs and beaver dams. Beavers were brought here from Canada to breed as their fur was useful for making those European stylish top hats until the mid 1800s. But now they are pests and devastating the natural forests and they can't get rid of them. A visitor centre was located at Lago Roca, and not only did they have great cappuccinos, the museum was very well done. A dugout canoe of the Yahgan native people was used to hunt whales. The whale oil had many uses, one of which was to spread it all over their bodies to keep them warm and dry, thus eliminating the need for clothing. This could definitely reduce the rising costs of Gore-Tex.
 
The final stretch of Ruta 3

 
The Beagle Channel

 
The end of the road

 
Put on our motorcycle jackets for that special photo

 
A patagonian goose welcomes us to the end of the world

 
Who says you need a special expedition vehicle?  Just ask these French travellers.

 
A young crested caracara

 
Centro de Visitantes Alakush had great geological, animal and indigenous peoples information

 
Imported beavers are now a pest, destroying native woodland

 
A replica of a Yaghan peoples boat using the same construction techniques
 
On February 24th, Ekke and I packed up the car, parked it at a big lot near the port, finished some last-minute errands, and boarded the bus to take us to our 11 day Antarctic cruise. We were so excited.
 
Brochure photo of our ship, the Ocean Endeavour

 
Map of our trip through Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego  

 

Chapter 12: Antarctica Part 1

Quark Expeditions Antarctic Explorer

 

Ekke Writes Departure and Crossing the Drake Passage - February 24 to 26


After dropping our checked bags off at 10:00 on February 24 to be transported to the ship we drove over to the parking lot closest to the docks. All the spots were taken. Drat. We pulled over to the side and waited for close to an hour. After nothing opened up Audrey walked over to the tourist information office for their advice. They suggested another lot that was further away but closer to where we had dropped the luggage. As still nothing had opened up we drove over to the other lot and found it was also jam packed with parked cars, some even parked on the grass. Except for one spot! Hurrah! We pulled in, cleaned the car out so that nothing was visible and then locked it up, saying goodbye to our rental VW up! for a week and a half. In town we had cappuccinos in a café with wi-fi where Audrey used Skype to phone the Calgary Board of Education and get the ball rolling on the return to work form. The CBE had sent a paper copy to our house (and forwarded to my parents) and their suggestion was that my parents fax the form to us; Audrey should fill it in and fax it back to my parents who would then print it out and mail it to CBE.  Um, could you simply send Audrey an electronic copy?  They would see if they could do that while we were on the cruise.  After the cappuccino we popped by a couple of pharmacies to get some more sea sickness pills as we didn't have enough Gravol for both of us for the trip.  We ended up with Dramamine and then walked over to the docks to meet the other travellers who had booked through Lorena at Antarctica Travels. We all boarded a bus to take us out on the pier (including Drew, the California motorcyclist we had met at Torres del Paine) where we were welcomed aboard by the crew and shown to our cabin. It was quite large and roomy with a big window.  Boy did we luck out with this last minute deal. We got settled in our cabin and then popped into the Aurora Lounge for welcome refreshments. At 17:15 (might as well start using ship time now) Cheli, the expedition leader, gave a welcome and safety briefing, introducing the ship's officers, the hotel staff and the expedition team. There were 28 members of the expedition team consisting of a glaciologist/geologist, four naturalists, four marine biologists, two ornithologists, the ship's doctor and an assortment of other experts. The guest lecturer on this cruise was Jonathan Shackleton, cousin of the explorer Ernest Shackleton. Cool. A mandatory lifeboat drill was conducted and then we had our first meal on board. The buffet dinner had an amazing selection and everything was simply delicious. Definitely a good start. As we cruised on the Beagle Channel, into the evening, we were called down in groups to pick up our Quark Expeditions parkas and size our rubber boots. Audrey showed the crew her walker boot with a motorcycle rain cover and the snowboard boot we had rented in Ushuaia and they said that both of those should work so she needed but one rubber boot. The doctor handed out sea sickness medication that evening, encouraging anyone susceptible to motion sickness to take the pills an hour or so before we hit the open waters of the Drake Passage at 23:00.

Group photo of Antarctic Cruises travel agency staff and guests before boarding the Ocean Endeavour

 
Welcome tea before being shown to our cabin

 
Audrey can't believe how large the cabin is

 
Obstructed view of Ushuaia before departure

 
Sailing the Beagle Channel

 
Breezy on the upper decks

 
By midnight swells of three to four metres caused the ship to move around a bit more but because of the medication neither of us felt remotely sea sick and we had a fairly good sleep. We woke up on February 25 (Audrey's birthday) to a grey sky with a moderate wind and the swells still at about four metres. A number of seminars were offered by the expedition team during the day on everything from birds to whales to photography. By the afternoon the swells had increased to six to seven metres and as a result the upper decks were closed off and the dinner schedule was moved ahead since it was expected to get even rougher in the evening and overnight. It was a good thing that the crew was there to help people back to their tables after getting their hot food from the buffet. Even so, there were a couple of spills but no one was hurt. Towards the end of the meal the maitre d' and crew came over to our table with a birthday cake and sang Audrey a stirring rendition of Happy Birthday.

Audrey shows off her new parka

 
Sea birds join us on the cruise south across the Drake Passage

 
We had been warned to make sure everything in the room was battened down with the rough seas but at about 2:30 AM the swells became much larger and suddenly everything slid off the desk. As the swells were coming from the side (rather than head on) the ship felt very tippy and we slid in our beds, first sliding to the bottom of the bed and then sliding back so that our heads hit the wall. At one point we even had to ask ourselves, how far can we go over before it capsizes? Thankfully it never came to that but at 8:00 it was announced that there would be no hot breakfast available. It was just too dangerous to have not only the guests but the cooks walking around with hot dishes. For the same reason the normal hot lunch buffet would be replaced with soup and sandwiches. At 9:30 in the morning we had a presentation on seals and while the presentation itself was interesting it was challenging and a little frightening to be in the presentation room with the windows out to sea alternately showing the horizon disappearing and then showing nothing but ocean as we hung on to the tables to avoid falling out of the swiveling chairs. Every now and again an especially large swell would cause the audience to gasp as water cascaded over the deck (and we were on deck 6). In the afternoon it got even rougher (really?) and it was announced that we were experiencing 11 metre swells (the height of a four story building) from the starboard side while we had 50 knot winds gusting to 70 from portside. The relief was palpable when we first spotted Brabant Island rising out of the mist at 4:30 PM with the promise of sheltered waters ahead. By 5:00 the decks were opened up again and everyone rushed outside. The world was nothing but shades of grey and the mountains and glaciers were shrouded in a mystical fog. Soon the first whales and seals were spotted. We had arrived.

The weather started getting rough, the tiny ship was tossed.



One of the great presentations on board (swivel chairs are fun in rough seas)

 
Sheltered Antarctic waters and everyone rushed outside

 
Our first seals

 
Beautiful. Magical.  Antarctica.

 
Before dinner we had a mandatory briefing on the regulations for visiting Antarctica and had a Biosecurity Screening performed on our gear to make sure we weren't bringing any foreign dirt or pollen to the pristine Antarctic environment. Doctor Jo gave us some fantastic news; Audrey could just tape two toes together on her broken foot and that would be stable enough in a rubber boot to hike around Antarctica! Hurray! The plated dinner, rather than a buffet, of venison, veal or vegetarian was made all the more special because of everyone's sense of accomplishment at having made it safely to the Antarctic. What would tomorrow bring?
 
Audrey Writes Day 1:  February 27

A fifteen minute notice call for our group, the Leopard Seals gave us enough time to walk down to the mudroom, an area of several rows of lockers containing our rubber boots and life vests. Dr. Jo had taped my fractured foot the night before and insisted I wear the rubber boots instead of the snowboard boot as they would be fully waterproof for wet landings (stepping out of the Zodiac into water to get to shore) and better for hiking on the slippery ice and rough terrain. I had put a liner sock and thick woollen sock in so that the foot was quite immobilized. After bundling up for the cold, we stood and waited for quite some time, getting ever warmer, but finally a group of ten of us were assembled and we walked down a hallway and down some stairs. Our I.D. cards were in a plastic pocket on the sleeves of our parkas, and a staff member ran a bar code reader over them, our name and photo showing on a computer screen, to indicate that we were leaving the ship. A disinfectant dunking station was set up where we dipped each rubber boot in, as well as the hiking poles that I had borrowed from the front desk, so that nothing that could be contaminated with bio material, like dirt or seeds, was brought into Antarctica. A ramp with some stairs had been lowered, and we were helped onto the Zodiac rubber rafts which had been craned down earlier. Sitting on the edges, our guide, John, a history professor from the U.K., drove the small inflated raft toward Paradise Bay, with mountains reaching 1500 metres tall and glaciers flowing down to the sea.
 
John is our driver and guide around Paradise Bay
 
 
After declaring that this was his favourite place in all of Antarctica, John took us close to the glacier, which was a gorgeous glacial blue colour with a toe as high as a tall building. It was so surreal, cruising around the foggy, ice-strewn bay, silent except for the chug-chugging of the Zodiac engine. One of our fellow cruisers wondered if a piece of ice that looked precariously perched would fall off soon, and John said that it could fall off today or it could fall off three years from today - glacier calving was hard to predict. As we got closer to the glacier, a few big chunks of ice did tumble down. Ekke and I had experienced the calving of the Perito Moreno glacier in the Andes, and usually, but not always, this was a sign that something bigger could calve off. John said that he also felt like something big could happen after those ice chunks fell, so he brought the Zodiac to a halt and we pointed our cameras toward the glacier. Within seconds we heard a loud crack as a building-sized chunk fell off, sliding down and making a big splash, the impact rapidly forming waves in the water. Ekke and I both captured the calving event on video, which was just amazing. (click on the link to the YouTube video at the end of this day to see it) The waves made by the plunging ice chunk soon reached us, causing the Zodiac to wobble, so John took us out, away from the rough waters.
 
Cruising around Paradise Bay

 
Toe of the glacier in Paradise Bay

 
That looks like it is ready for calving
 
 
Looking toward land, I could see a queue of people in yellow parkas climbing up a snowy slope to a lookout point, and I wondered, with my foot injury, if I would be able to make it up there, too. As we approached the shore, some movement caught my eye - penguins! Our first Antarctic penguins! This species, gentoo, was recognizable by their white 'earmuffs', a species that we have at home in the Calgary Zoo. They waddled around, climbing up and down the rocks and snowy hills, unreal because here they were, in the wild. I watched as they waddled down to the water's edge, jumping in to go catch some fish, jumping out and then waddling around on the snow and ice again.
 
Climbing the hill behind Base Brown

 
"Dry landing" at Base Brown

 
Gentoo penguin!

 


Projectile pooing
 
 
I decided to brave the climb to the lookout point, but the steep pathway was icy, and at times it felt like two steps forward, one slide back. Flags had been set up by the staff so that we would stay on the pathway and wouldn't accidentally step into a crevasse, and it was a relief to get to the top. A view of Paradise Bay greeted us, with beautiful glaciers all around, and other Zodiacs far below cruising around the icebergs. The hike down was slightly treacherous as the icy path was so slippery and it was hard to get a grip except by stepping into deeper snow on the sides. My foot held firmly in the boots, and I have never before felt like kissing a pair of hiking poles as I did that day, as I really felt like they stopped me from tumbling down that icy slope. Back down near the shore, a mother penguin was feeding its chick, and it was quite a spectacle. The chick tapped on the mother's beak with its own beak, the mother regurgitated fish and krill, and the chick reached right in with its beak, pulling the food out and swallowing, tapping again for more. Ekke and I were just enthralled, and we kept looking at each other, laughing, with big grins on our faces, declaring that we were so lucky to be able to witness this.
 
Icy climb to the top of the hill

 


Lunch time!

 
Moulting gentoo penguin
 
 
The Zodiac took us back to the ship, where we dipped our boots and hiking poles into the disinfectant bath, had our I.D. tags swiped electronically to show we were back on the ship, left our rubber boots and life jackets in our lockers, and were handed a hot towel to wipe our faces with, which felt very good. As we ate a lovely buffet lunch including, among other things, chicken schnitzel and hot rice pudding, the ship sailed off towards Neko Harbour.

Us Leopard Seals were the second group to be called out to board the Zodiacs in the afternoon, and we landed on the shore of Neko Harbour. A huge, grey Weddell seal, identified by one of the staff, lay basking in the sun, and then waddled down toward the water, slithering in. Hundreds of unbelievably cute gentoo penguins waddled about and it was nearly impossible to stay five metres away from them, as we had been instructed to do, as they would constantly cross our path or sneak up from behind. An impromptu game of tag developed when an adolescent penguin pecked another one, who turned tail and ran after the teasing penguin. Both of them scuttled down the rocky beach, wreaking havoc on adult penguins who just wanted a bit of peace and quiet so they could moult undisturbed. The penguins that were moulting looked quite forlorn, sitting amongst a pile of feathers, staying still so that all their energy could go towards the moulting process of pulling their old feathers out with their beaks. This process happened once a year and could last for weeks, until a new set of feathers grew in, all in preparation for the long, cold winter.
 
Weddell seal on the beach

 
Walking with penguins

 
Neko Harbour

 
 
In a rocky nesting area we watched, fascinated as a chick tapped its mother's beak, rewarded with the regurgitated food. One mother penguin refused to give up the food, and turned and ran, encouraging the chick to run as well as a sort of training exercise to get the chick to work for its food. Another penguin took the short-cut route to the sea, sliding on its belly on the slippery glacial ice. A glacial stream was a draw for several other penguins further along on our walk, who slurped up the fresh water over and over again. I wonder what they drank in the winter? As we walked on the icy surface, my hiking poles were not only useful for balance, they were a big attraction for one of the penguins. I was just walking, minding my own business, when I felt a nudge on my pole and looked down to see a little beak chewing on the metal, with a clicking sound. It was all very funny until the penguin decided that my rainpants would be a funner chew toy, and the little beak latched onto them. The five metre rule of keeping distance between yourself and the penguins does not apply when the wildlife approaches you, and we were told we could just stay still and enjoy the experience if this happened. In this case, however, I decided that I didn't want to sacrifice a pair of rainpants for this particular penguin interaction and walked away from the curious gentoo.
 
Moulting time makes for some interesting hairdos

 
Grippy feet

 
Umm, Audrey aren't you supposed to stay several metres from the wildlife?

 
 
A Zodiac cruise around Neko Harbour allowed for a very special experience for us. The dinghy motored around between icebergs and our guide, Nick, pointed out a big ruckus in the water. A leopard seal was eating a dead crabeater seal in the water. Cue the 'National Geographic' soundtrack. It felt like an African safari as several Zodiacs circled around, the leopard seal tearing at the poor, dead crabeater seal, throwing pieces into the air, with scavenging birds daring to swoop down to grab a morsel. Nick said that he had never witnessed a seal species eating another seal species, and all of the other guides were fascinated as well.

Leopard seal with its freshly killed crabeater seal

 


 

 
Back at the ship, after shedding our parkas and boots, a hot chocolate was put into our hands on the way out of the mudroom, and back in the cabin, a hot shower never felt so good.


 

Antarctica Day 1
 

Ekke Writes Day 2 - February 28



Breakfast was early on the last day of February as we had a special guest come on board from the Port Lockroy station for a presentation at 7:30 AM about the British station. The restored British Antarctic Survey hut of Port Lockroy on Goudier Island had been turned into a museum and gift shop and the staff gave us a brief introduction to the facility before we boarded the Zodiacs. Our Leopard Seal group (the passengers had been divided into four groups) was first out on this excursion so we went straight to the base while the second group (Minke) did a cruise around the cove. We were able to send postcards from Port Lockroy (the southernmost post office in the world) but because the base was closing down for the winter the post cards would not be stamped and sent until the crew arrived for the next summer season in November. On the plus side they would rather sell stuff from the gift shop than pack it so there were some good deals to be had. The museum provided a glimpse into the lives of the British researchers who spent months here. What a challenge it must have been to be so completely isolated and therefore completely self-sufficient. After a short stroll around the base (short because there wasn't far to go) we boarded the Zodiacs and the Minke group made landfall. We then cruised around the area, marvelling at the stunning scenery. There was a complete whale skeleton laying on the shore, a remnant of the whaling operations from a time before they started using the whole animal. Back on board the Ocean Endeavour we watched a PBS film; Penguin Post Office describing the museum. It's a great film and if you get a chance to watch it I would encourage you to do so. We had a special treat of a BBQ put on by Chef Manfred on the open air deck and couldn't imagine a more stunning place to enjoy a burger.

Heading out to Port Lockroy

 


What a stunning, though isolated, location

 
Base is overrun with penguins

 
The Port Lockroy museum brought to life what it must have been like to live here for months at a time

 





 
A whale skeleton is all that's left from an earlier time

 
Back on board and heading to the next destination

 
Chef Manfred at the BBQ

 
Best place in the world to enjoy a burger

 


The afternoon schedule showed that at 14:30 we would have an "Expedition Afternoon" where we would go somewhere fabulous and do something wonderful. This was the reality of going on a voyage such as this. Sometimes wind, weather and ice conditions would determine whether a particular activity in a particular location was possible and the expedition leader needed to make an assessment of the location upon arrival. When we got to Danco Island Cheli must have decided that a cruise around the bay and hike to the top of a hill would be wonderful to do in a fabulous place. She was right. We were last off the ship on this round so we cruised around the bay first. As we were making our way around some smaller icebergs we spotted a few seals so went over to investigate. Two or three of them thought that we would be fun to play with and soon we and our companion Zodiac (always go out with a buddy) were surrounded by a few seals swimming around and under us. They seemed as curious about us as we were about them. Saying goodbye to our playful new friends we tore ourselves away and went ashore for the hike. The climb to the top took quite a while because of the icy conditions but was really worth it for the view. Simply spectacular. Descending was more challenging than going up the icy hill and we were both glad we had borrowed some trekking poles for stability. Still, we were the last people back to shore to catch a Zodiac to the ship, with the expedition team picking up the landing equipment hot on our tails. The wind had really picked up and the water was quite choppy so were covered in spray when we got back to the ship. But the excitement wasn't quite over since we now had to get from the bouncing Zodiac to the wet stairs leading into the hold. Thankfully no one went for a Polar Plunge today. After the buffet dinner there were quite a few people out on deck. Sunsets seem to last forever in the Antarctic summer and we could make out whales aplenty in the slowly fading light.

Going somewhere fabulous

 




The welcoming committee at Danco Island seems to have dozed off

 


Check out the tobogganing seals in the video at the end of the day

 


Who's checking out whom?

 
It must be play time!

 
Hello!

 
The expedition guides go to the island to set up for the walk

 
An icy climb

 
Grippy feet are key to an icy climb

 
No way is this as good as Chef Manfred's BBQ

 
Made it to the top

 





 


Ahhh...

 


It takes a while to get down the icy slope

 
Enjoying the sunset on board after dinner

 
Minke whales and penguins

 


A glorious end to another amazing day

 
Antarctica Day 2 Video featuring playful seals, an icy climb and a rather wet Zodiac ride

Chapter 13: Antarctica Part 2

Audrey Writes Day 3 - March 1
 
Cheli gave the wake up call over the loudspeaker the next morning, March 1st, to inform us that the Ocean Endeavour was travelling through Lemaire Channel, and that if we weren't out on deck right now, then we should be. Ekke went up to the top deck at the front and stood there for ages, watching as the ship broke through the ice. It was cold, so I joined him a bit later, cozy in my yellow parka. The bow of the boat, usually closed to passengers, was opened up and offered more beautiful views with icebergs and glaciers all around. Just as we were going into a narrow part of the channel, people started pointing and getting excited. We looked and saw a wall of snow and ice falling into the sea about 500 metres in front of the ship - avalanche! So the ship slowed down and waited for the waves, caused by the falling ice chunks, to subside, before continuing through the channel. Some minke whales swam by in the distance, a magical sight in picturesque Lemaire Channel.
 
Entering the Lemaire Channel at dawn

 
Avalanche!

 
 
After breakfast the Zodiacs cruised out to an iceberg graveyard, Iceberg Alley, a bay where icebergs would get stuck for years. The shapes and colours were stunning, deep blues and greens when the sun hit them just right. Fellow passengers on kayaks and paddleboards could be seen enjoying the calm waters and bright sunshine while paddling about among the bobbing icebergs. After a wet landing on Peterman Island, the furthest south that we would reach on the cruise, we hiked over to a group of gentoo penguins who again displayed their playful penguin antics such as waddling, pecking and chasing. One of the ornithologists, Jim, pointed out a new species of penguin to us, a lone Adelie penguin, identifiable by the white circles around its eyes. It was great to finally see a different species of penguin after seeing thousands of gentoos. Jonathan Shackleton was also there on the pathway, and he warned us about the fur seals and how they could suddenly turn aggressive, so to give them a wide berth. They were really playful, and we watched as a couple of younger ones wrestled enthusiastically. Jonathan also pointed out Shackleton Mountain, named after the famous explorer, who was also his cousin, so I asked if I could take his photo with the mountain. Further along, another guide, Noah, warned us of a precarious cornice overhang of snow and sent us around it. Ekke stayed and chatted with Noah, watching a drone, brought with prior permission by a couple of passengers, fly around the island, taking videos. I walked up to a viewpoint, and it was so warm that people had shed their parkas and sweaters, with one fellow posing for photos with his shirt off. Global warming?
 
Passing by a penguin colony on the way to Iceberg Alley

 
Zodiac cruising through Iceberg Alley

 
Kayaking was an activity offered on the cruise, doesn't it look wonderful?

 


A gentoo penguin almost finished moulting

 
Sleepy fur seal

 
I'm not sure that the Antarctic is the place to learn standup paddelboarding

 
An Adelie penguin on Peterman Island

 
Jonathan Shackleton (yes, that Shackleton) poses with Shackleton Mountain, named after his cousin Ernest

 
Audrey climbs further as Ekke stands with Noah, warning people not to approach the cornice

 
Wrestling fur seals

 
 
It was our lucky day for the Zodiac cruise that afternoon around Pléneau Island as we had Cheli, the Quark expedition leader, as our guide. Her commentary was always colourful, and combined with her New Zealand accent and great sense of humour, it made for a wonderful 2 1/2 hour cruise. Some crabeater seals were lounging on icebergs and then put on quite a show for us, slithering off the ice and climbing back on again. They bobbed and weaved around the Zodiacs, their heads popping up on one side or the other, looking like they were having fun entertaining us. We cruised into a little bay, weaving our way between icebergs and Cheli pointed out the letter 'F' for 'Francais', the name of a ship, carved into a rock. Further around the little cove we were treated to quite a spectacle when penguin after penguin porpoised through the water. It was unbelievable how high they leapt, and one by one they jumped out and up onto the rocky shore, waddling away. They looked way more elegant and graceful moving through the water than they did on the beach. Cheli gave us a special challenge: Who could spot the lone chinstrap penguin in the group of gentoos? Ekke did, and took some great photos. Cheli said that the gentoos were so numerous that they were like the 'rats' of Antarctica and were adapting to climate change, taking over other, less adaptable species' habitat.
 
Cruising around Pléneau Island

 


A crabeater seal takes a break

 
Closeup of a seal's paw

 


Playtime!

 
Crew from the ship "Francais" were here

 
Lots and lots of penguins

 
The penguins would gracefully glide through the water and then jump up on shore to waddle up the island

 
A lone chinstrap penguin among the thousands of gentoos

 
A raft (!) of penguins porpoising through the water

 
More playtime
 
Dinner that night was a barbeque on the deck with several varieties of meat, corn-on-the-cob, and beautiful glaciers in all directions. My Zinfandel wine kept naturally chilled in the cool Antarctic air as we just sat and took in the beauty all around us. Later, Jonathan Shackleton gave a talk about how he had been interviewed by an IMAX film company regarding the life of his cousin, Ernest Shackleton. A film about those adventures, 'Shackleton's Antarctic Adventure' was the result, which we got to watch, complete with popcorn. What a story: Shackleton's ship, Endurance, got stuck in the ice on a trans-Antarctic expedition in 1914. Through his amazing leadership skills, he managed to keep his crew's morale up when the ship was trapped in the ice for 400 days and was eventually crushed by the sea ice. After floating on an ice floe, he eventually had his crew head out in the lifeboats on open water, finding Elephant Island where the only food sources were penguins and seals. Shackleton reinforced one boat with a roof and 6 of them sailed to South Georgia Island, 800 kilometres away. Because of a huge storm they could only land on the southern shore, and their boat was wrecked in the process. They walked for 3 days over glaciers and mountains to a whaling station, and, eventually, the rest of his crew was rescued. Amazing story.
 
Dinner with the most amazing view

 

Day 3 video has a sunrise cruise through the Lemaire Channel, playful seals and penguins and cruising through Iceberg Alley.
 

Ekke Writes Day 4 - March 2


Even though our Leopard group was up first for boarding the Zodiacs to tour around Cierva Cove we didn't need a wake up call since the cruise started at 9:00. Plenty of time to fill up at the breakfast buffet then. After getting our gear on (I will probably figure out how to put on the life vest on without assistance on the last day) we lined up to board the Zodiac. There were a few special groups on board including a tour group from India and one from Poland. The Polish group was in the Leopard group and we got to share a boat with them this time around. That of course meant extra work for Miko (one of the marine biologists on board) who had to explain things in two languages. It is difficult to describe the incredible natural beauty of the Antarctic and photos (ours anyway) don't do it justice. Cierva Cove was another one of those locations where the bright blue sky played to the advantage of the scenery. Whether it was the blue seemingly to glow from an iceberg or a bright white glacier glistening in the sun, Cierva Cove had it all. We were also treated to minke whales, sleeping humpback whales (they look like logs in the water), chinstrap penguins, a view of the Argentinian Primavera base and something rather a bit more rare. Grass. Miko found a rocky cliff face that had sprouted both of the two types of grass that grow in the Antarctic. With climate change it is expected that grass will become more common and in fact we are already seeing more grass than ever before.  

Enjoying the view of Cierva Cove before heading out in the Zodiacs

 


Out in the Zodiacs we were treated to spectacular whale sightings

 


 

Cute chinstrap penguin

 
A waddle of chinstrap penguins

 
An increasingly less rare sight in the Antarctic; grass

 


Argentinian Primavera Base

 


A humpback whale "logging" or sleeping

 
Back on the ship after our Zodiac cruise it was announced that the Polar Plunge would be happening this afternoon. This is where passengers willingly jump into the frigid Antarctic waters. Umm, voluntarily right? Fortunately for us there was a pool on board that was filled with sea water and heated. That sounded much more palatable if not as adventurous. We changed into swimming costumes, slipped into our robes and had a great dip in the pool. It was actually warmer than the pools we had been in recently. Followed by a few minutes in the sauna I suspect we were rather warmer than the Polar Plunge participants. Watching the plungers made for great fun though, especially the gasps as the jumpers hit the water.

Audrey looks ready for the Polar Plunge

 
The heated pool on board probably doesn't qualify us for the Polar Plunge certificates...

 
Our cabin neighbour and fellow Antarctic Cruises customer takes the Plunge

 
I doubt the Polar Plungers enjoyed the view

 
A raft of penguins swimming by the ship

 
To move faster they porpoise gracefully through the water

 
Thar she blows!

 
In the afternoon we sailed to Spert Island and boarded the Zodiacs once again to explore this amazing geological formation. This time we had Hadleigh (second in command of the expedition) as a guide and shared a boat with a French group who had extensive photo and video equipment. The deep canyons cut into the basalt were fun to explore in the Zodiacs though one had to watch the currents. As we were cutting through the island and around to the other side Hadleigh spotted a couple of leopard seals out of the corner of his eye and we went to investigate. The seals were relaxing on an ice floe and seemed tame enough. Though when a snowy sheathbill bird started walking around on the ice floe, right in front of these large carnivores with their sharp teeth, we didn't think that looked like a very good idea. The snowy sheathbill must have known better though as no harm came to it.

Spert Island seen from the Ocean Endeavour as we approach

 
Cruising the canyons of Spert Island in the Zodiacs

 


Entering the "Washing Machine", fortunately set on delicate cycle


Simply stunning

 


Must be a chinstrap penguin out all by itself

 
Looks like a pretty brave snowy sheathbill walking in front of a leopard seal

 






Ekke looks ready for a hot chocolate

 
The Ocean Endeavour started sailing north after we came back on board. Lots of people were out on deck, including a few of the expedition crew who helped us identify whales and birds. At 21:15 Noah, one of two ornithologists on board, gave an inspirational talk and slideshow on "The World's Biggest Year". He had taken a year off (why does that sound familiar?) to try and set a birdwatching record; the greatest number of species of birds spotted in a single year. He travelled around the world, visiting 41 countries and hooking up with birders, recording every species of bird he saw or heard. He spotted an amazing, world record 6,042 bird species but the stories that went with the world record attempt were the highlight of the show. At least to us non-birders.

Humpback whale off the stern on the port side

 
This snow petrel kept circling the Ocean Endeavour, entertaining us and Jimmy the ornithologist

 
A few penguins on the lower left of the iceberg

 
A rookery of penguins takes over this iceberg

 
Day 4 video has sleeping whales, a chinstrap takes the plunge, we take a plunge, others taking the Polar Plunge and a ride through a washing machine.

 
Audrey Writes Day 5 - March 3
 
The Ocean Endeavour cruised to Deception Island the next morning, March 3rd, the captain navigating through narrow Neptune's Bellows to Whaler's Bay. The island is one big volcanic caldera, filled with sea water with a break in the land wide enough for The Ocean Endeavour to sail through. Our Zodiac cruise took us out the narrow straight and around the outside of the island. As we looked up at Neptune's Window lookout, we spied a lone penguin sitting high on a cliff, moulting - it's amazing how high the penguins can climb. A helicopter flew by and there was a huge ruckus as hundreds of chinstrap penguins scrambled up a hill, alarmed at the noise. As the Zodiac cruised by the beach, we saw a new species of seal that we had not yet seen - elephant seals. The males of the species were absolutely enormous, yellowish-brown in colour, with a number of females all around, their harem. What an interesting-looking bunch, their distinctive long, curved snout resembling a - you guessed it - elephant's trunk.
 
Entering Deception Island through Neptune's Bellows can only be done in good weather

 
Out for a Zodiac cruise around Deception Island

 
Neptune's Window from the Zodiac

 
These poor penguins seemed terrified by a helicopter flying by

 
Elephant seals
 
A walk on the beach was more like a slog as it was covered with thick, black volcanic silt. Staying close to the water's edge gave us a bit more grip, but we had to watch that we didn't step on tiny jellyfish that had washed up onto the beach. We also gave the potentially aggressive fur seals a wide berth as they climbed up out of the water and playfully wrestled their way up the beach, oblivious to us strangers in yellow parkas. A steep hike up to Neptune's Window lookout afforded views of the volcanic caldera with three small volcanoes on one side and the Zodiacs cruising in the bay down below on the other. Remnants of the former 1900s Norwegian whaling station were everywhere, including whale bones which were, back in the day, processed by being crushed, the oil extracted by centrifugal force. Old metal buildings and rusting ship hulls also remained, and Jonathan Shackleton showed us photos of the former whaling station and British survey base that was abandoned when there was a volcanic eruption in 1967.
 
Walking on Deception Island through deep volcanic gravel

 
Interesting animal life washed up on shore

 
A seal relaxes on the remnants of a whaling boat

 
The Ocean Endeavour inside the semicircular Deception Island

 
???

 
Fur seals playing off shore

 
The eerie remnants of the whaling operations
 
After lunch, our afternoon excursion to Half Moon Island started with a walk up some rocky slopes, past some beautiful glaciers lit up by the spectacular sunshine. On our guide's walkie-talkie we had heard someone excitedly reporting that 'Kevin' had been spotted further up on the cliffs, and we wondered who Kevin was. It turns out that living among a colony of thousands of chinstrap penguins was a single macaroni penguin, christened with the name, 'Kevin' by the staff. We walked in the direction of a crowd of people that had formed on the hill, past some lazy Weddell seals to where they were gathered, all trying to get a glimpse of the special penguin. Jim, an ornithologist, gave instructions as to how to find Kevin, in his hilarious Irish brogue. He gave me some binoculars and eventually I saw the distinctive yellow tufts of feathers of the crested macaroni penguin sticking up among all the penguin heads. I officially declared it the cutest penguin species of them all. And the superzoom camera came in handy once again.
 
A different carving every day on the buffet

 
Hiking on Half Moon Island

 
Where's Kevin?

 
There he is!  The lone macaroni penguin amidst the chinstraps

 
 
On the hike back to the beach we got to experience another of those 'National Geographic' moments. A group of fellow passengers was looking up and pointing at something interesting going on up the rocky slope, and when we looked in that direction we saw some movement and realized it was a giant skua bird eating something. The word 'eating' is really an understatement as it was literally tearing apart another feathered creature with its beak and claws. There was no mistaking the black and white feathers of the prey, the body partway through the moulting process - it was a small chinstrap penguin. I didn't realize that penguins had such an enemy as the skua. Some baby skuas nearby had a good feast that day.
 
A skua takes down a penguin
 
Our Zodiac cruise with our guide, Franny, took us around Half Moon Island. On the walkie-talkie we heard that a leopard seal had been spotted here earlier, and, right on cue, a leopard seal swam by. The boat cruised by some huge glaciers including one shaped like a turtle's head, that was so precariously perched that it looked like it could calve off at any moment. We waited for a while, but there was no glacial calving to be seen. Further along we watched leopard seals sprawled out on the beach, resembling big slugs. One seal slithered off the beach and swam toward the Zodiac. I wondered how close it would get, so I filmed it, surprised that it got closer and closer, and at the last second it dove under the boat and out the other side. What a fantastic finale to the last Zodiac cruise of our trip, capped off with another amazing sunset that evening.
 
Cruising around Half Moon Island with Franny

 


As we cruise in the Zodiacs the next group tries to spot Kevin




That just looks so ready to fall into the water, but not while we were there

 
A leopard seal comes to investigate us

 
Krissy, wearing the penguin toque, must be worried that the leopard seal could make a mistake...

 
Oh, not another bunch of tourists...

 
Sunsets last forever in the Antarctic

 
Day 5 video has Nepune's Bellows, a walk on Deception Island and a playful seal.

Ekke Writes Return across the Drake Passage


Turning north we crossed the 55th parallel, the zone where the colder Antarctic Circumpolar current mixes with the warmer waters to the north. To most people's relief the seas were much calmer on the return journey with swells of only two metres. This allowed us to at least pay attention to the onboard lectures. Lectures included the biology of whales, the human impacts of environmental change and the fascinating race to the south pole by onboard historian John. A charity auction in support of protecting the Antarctic showed that there were definitely some wealthy people on board. An evening presentation by fellow passenger and adventurer Mandip Singh Soin entitled "Tales of an Explorer: First Ascents in the Himalayas & Resisting the Thaw" was absolutely fascinating.  

Foglights pierce the darkness as we cross the Drake Passage northbound

 
The second day across the Drake Passage was similarly calm and by mid-morning Cape Horn was visible, along with shipping traffic. We didn't feel as isolated any more. There were a few more presentations but undoubtedly the highlight was "Shackleton: A Feckless Irishman Nearly Reaches the South Pole" presented by Ernest Shackleton's cousin Jonathan. To have Jonathan tell the story from a personal, family perspective really brought it to life. We entered the Beagle Channel that evening where we had the farewell dinner, exchanging information with our fellow adventurers, promising to stay in contact. In the morning we would wake up, back in Ushuaia and this most amazing voyage would be over. Certainly this was one of the most fantastic adventures we have ever done.

Land ho!  Cape Horn

 
It feels a little less isolated now that we are in the regular shipping lanes

 
The happy adventurers

 
Everyone is on deck for Cape Horn

 
The sculpture is a negative image of a petrel

 
Back in Ushuaia and our luggage is lined up on the dock

 





 

Chapter 14: Argentina to Buenos Aires

Ekke Writes


On Monday, March 6, we disembarked from the Ocean Endeavour at 8:30 AM, found our VW up! and drove over to the laundromat we had visited before departure.  Since we would be sending our beautiful, complimentary parkas back home and into storage we thought it would be a good idea to have them cleaned first.  We hoped that they could do that quickly since we planned to drive to Rio Grande in the afternoon.  We were a bit disappointed when the proprietor said that they would be ready by 7:30 PM.  After a bit of begging we managed to arrange a 5 PM pick up time, hopefully leaving enough time for the 200-kilometre drive over the mountains to Rio Grande.  Then we hit the Marco Polo Café to get caught up on a couple of weeks' worth of Internet and e-mail since Audrey needed to start looking for a school to apply for a teaching position.  After getting those processes going and doing a bit of planning for the rest of the trip we visited the Museo Maritimo y del Presidio de Ushuaia.  The Prison at the End of the World officially closed in 1947 and had restored prison facilities as well as a maritime museum.  Some of the prison cells had been set up as they were when the facility was still a prison but most of the cells had various displays on the maritime history of the region with an eclectic collection ranging from model boats to a fire suit.  Overall, it was a worthwhile visit just trying to imagine what it must have been like to be incarcerated here at the southern tip of South America.  Back in the centre of town we managed to stretch lunch at the Hard Rock Café until 5:00 o'clock (our lives not being nearly as rough as the prisoners) and then picked up our freshly laundered parkas.  After eight months of riding and driving south we started north.  While it was psychologically difficult going the opposite direction (now we're heading home!) the drive to Rio Grande itself was easy.

Museo Maritimo y del Presidio de Ushuaia


A mock-up of a tiny cell

 
A sharp eyed guard keeps track of all the prisoners

 
Ekke makes good his escape

 
That's it, after 8 months of going south we finally turn north, in the direction of home


 
With a couple of border crossings coming up we got an early start, driving on good pavement back to the Chilean border.  The border crossing was quick and easy and then we had about 30 kilometres of gravel road to the intersection where we had visited the King penguins.  This time we turned north and promptly drove onto a new concrete highway all the way to the ferry to cross the Straights of Magellan and off the island of Tierra del Fuego.  This means that it's possible to ride all the way from Colombia to Ushuaia with only the occasional construction zone to interrupt the pavement.  A few dozen kilometres after disembarking from the smooth, wind-free ferry crossing we came to our second border crossing to get back into Argentina.  The station on the Chilean side only seemed to have a southbound processing facility so we crossed over to Argentina and found that both in and out were in the same building so that we could get our VW properly stamped back into Argentina (important for returning the rental car).  After less than 100 kilometres we arrived at Río Gallegos and checked into the Amérian Rio Gallegos hotel.  We did a little planning that evening and decided that rather than heading straight up Highway 3 back to Comodoro Rivadavia, where our bikes were stored, we wanted to detour west to see the Cueva de las Manos along Ruta 40.  This was along a rather notorious stretch of gravel, known for its brutal cross winds and loose gravel.  Something we probably wouldn't have attempted on the motorbikes.  We found a ranch close to the cave in Gobernador Gregores and booked it online before turning in.

Entering Chile on Tierra del Fuego, just 30 km of construction

 
Brand new concrete highway

 
Taking the ferry off Tierra del Fuego

 
Rio Gallegos tonight and Capital Federal (Buenos Aires) after we pick up the motorbikes

 
As we had both come down with a terrible cold the previous night we had a rather late start under cloudy skies.  Soon the light rain became heavy and the wind picked up so we were rather appreciative of the heater in the car.  We appreciated it even more when we stopped in Esperanza for a stretch and met a group of Americans on rented motorbikes.  They had come from Gobernador Gregores, our destination, but the slick mud meant that each of them had taken a tumble at one time or another on the ride south.  They looked on rather enviously as we climbed back into our warm, dry car and drove north.  We got to Tres Lagos at lunch time but couldn't find a restaurant in town so backtracked to a gas station we had seen a few kilometres back.  While we had a sandwich the heavens opened up and it started lashing down with rain.  After the rain let up a little we got back into the car (still warm and dry) and drove back through Tres Lagos where the streets had turned into muddy brown rivers.  Our little expedition vehicle was really proving its mettle wading through the flash flood but little did we know that it would soon meet its match.  North on Ruta 40 we were pleasantly surprised by the beautiful new pavement.  That lasted about 25 kilometres and then the road turned to loose gravel, which wasn't too bad in the car but a few hundred metres further the gravel turned to slick mud.  A slight incline brought our up! to a wheel-spinning halt.  We tried to keep going but found it impossible and had to turn around, even that being a challenge without sliding off into the ditch.  Back in Tres Lagos at the gas station they had Wi-Fi and we were able to cancel our hotel and we booked a hotel in El Chaltén, 90 kilometres back south and west.  El Chaltén is a resort town famous for great hiking in the nearby mountains.  As we turned off Ruta 40 and drove directly west we were amazed at the beauty of the mountains laid out before us, the most stunning of which was Mount Fitzroy, shrouded in clouds.  We arrived late in the day so didn't have time to do any of the hiking trails but did walk around town.  Over pizza at a nearby restaurant we mulled our options for the next day.  We could take the chance that Ruta 40 had dried out and continue north and maybe have enough time to pop into the Cave of the Hands or we could turn around and head back to Río Gallegos.  We decided to see what the weather looked like in the morning.

Cold, wet and windy.  Nice to be in our little up!

 
Flash flooding in Tres Lagos turns the streets into muddy rivers

 
Our VW up! is stopped by a muddy Ruta 40


 
Driving west towards El Chaltén

 
Mount Fitzroy wearing a crown of clouds

 
We woke up to rain.  Since the rental car had to be back in Comodoro Rivadavia in a couple of days we decided that we couldn't afford to wait and see if Ruta 40 was going to dry out.  The only thing to do was an enormous U-turn, going back 400 kilometres towards Río Gallegos and then north on Ruta 3 along the Atlantic Ocean.  As we left El Chaltén we could see that at elevations only a few hundred metres about the valley floor the rain had turned to snow.  Combined with the incessant Patagonian wind we could imagine how challenging it would have been to be on the motorbikes.  We had true respect for a couple of motorcycle travellers on small bikes with Bolivian licence plates that we passed.  After stopping in Esperanza (the fourth time on this trip!) for yummy empanadas and croissants we continued east on Ruta 5 (the third time on this particular stretch of road) and then turned north on Ruta 3, eventually stopping at Puerto San Julián.  It would have been 272 kilometres straight east from Tres Lagos but because of the gravel road we had gone 776 kilometres all the way around (now that's a detour).  Puerto San Julián was named by Ferdinand Magellan who spent the winter of 1520 in the harbour and so a small display was set up along the waterfront commemorating the landing with a replica of Magellan's ship.  Across from our hotel, the Hotel Costanera, was a plaza celebrating the Heroes de Malvinas with a fighter jet emblazoned with three "kills" and a plaque listing the names of the warriors who died fighting what we know as the Falklands War.

Fueling up the up! as we left El Chaltén

 
Fresh snow only a few hundred metres above the road

 
Must have been chilly for these Bolivian bikers

 
Guanacos enjoying a roadside snack

 
I think Audrey would rather be back in the car

 
Replica of Magellan's ship in Puerto San Julián

 


This fighter jet pilot recorded three "kills" in the Falklands War

 
Friday, March 10, Audrey had an appointment in Comodoro Rivadavia with the doctor who examined her broken foot those many weeks ago.  Since his shift was finished at Noon we had to hustle our little VW along the highway at a pretty good clip.  For a little "city" car it sure performed well on the wide open Patagonian prairie and we made it to the hospital with ten minutes to spare.  The examination didn't take long and when I walked back to the front door after parking the car Audrey was already leaving with good news.  She was cleared to ride!  With that we checked in at the hotel where the bikes were parked and found them to be OK except for the cover of Audrey's F650GS, which was missing.  It had blown off and the front desk had stored it for us.  Since we still had the car we thought we would gather up our souvenirs (and parkas) to mail home.  Unfortunately the customs office was closed on Friday afternoon and we couldn't get the packages inspected until Monday so we had a weekend in Comodoro Rivadavia.  When we returned our faithful VW up! there were three BMW motorcycles from Alberta parked in front of the hotel.  Cool!  Chatting with the riders we found out they were from Edmonton and they had done the ride south in segments.  This particular segment was from Cartagena, Colombia down to Ushuaia.  They had made it from Cartagena in 29 days.  It had taken us about 130 days (after subtracting 3 months spent in Calgary with a broken knee).  That day they had ridden from Bariloche, a distance of 840 kilometres.  To be honest, part of me longed to join them on the ride to Ushuaia, just for that sense of accomplishment of riding to the end of the world, but thinking of riding 800-kilometre days in wind and rain made for a good reality check.  We wished them well.

Driving north along Ruta 3 back to Comodoro Rivadavia

 
On the weekend with the gift of time, Audrey worked on her CBE application to return to work and I spent a bit of time on the motorbikes, making sure they were ready to continue the journey and repair any damage done by the mishap on Ruta 40.  The biggest damage was to the right side saddlebag but fortunately nothing was bent, the saddlebag had just been raised in its mount and that was blocking the opening of the gas cap.  An easy fix.  Late in the afternoon we walked to a nearby restaurant for dinner and found out that they weren't actually serving dinner, just "afternoon tea".  While enjoying our sandwiches and sweet treats I noticed something odd.  I was the only male in the restaurant.  There were thirty or forty women having afternoon tea in parties ranging in size from two to twenty but not a single man was here.  Odd.  Also, there were so many sweets and cakes that we couldn't finish it all.  I announce to Audrey that I'm never having sweets ever again.  On Sunday we went for a short ride around Comodoro Rivadavia and Audrey mentioned that the F650 felt odd, almost like it had a flat tire.  After checking the tires, I took it for a spin and thought it had bad steering head bearings.  We had seen a KTM motorcycle shop near the hospital so made plans to go there on Monday.

Back on the bikes!

 
On Monday we rode to the post office with the two parcels, one packed with souvenirs and the other with parkas, and had them checked out by Aduana.  They passed and we were allowed to send them home.  Though after getting the cost estimate of 5,141 pesos we were pretty much ready to carry them home ourselves.  $500!?!  Seriously?  Yes, seriously.  Of course the post office did not accept credit cards so we had to visit various banks until we found a Citibank that accepted our debit cards.  Lighter of wallet and motorbike we then rode over to the KTM dealer in the hopes that they could replace the steering head bearings on the F650.  Fortunately they had the parts available and were able to do the repair the same day.  I doubled Audrey back to the hotel and we returned at 7:00 to pick the bike up.  At 3,000 pesos it was a lot cheaper than sending the parcels home.

Taking the parcels to the post office (still smiling because we don't know the bill yet)

 
On Pi Day, Tuesday, March 14, we carted all of our stuff downstairs and figured out how to pack motorcycles again.  The month in the car was really convenient and easy travelling so it took a little while to get everything loaded up.  We rode through town for the last time, past the hospital and then north on Ruta 3.  Out on the highway the strong crosswind from the west made for tough riding, made even worse whenever an oncoming bus or truck would almost blow us off the road and then suck us into its wake.  After only half an hour we pulled off the road and removed the peaks from our helmets.  What a difference; it was much easier on the neck muscles with the steady wind and oncoming trucks weren't nearly as vicious.  Audrey had found that a town of Welsh settlers, just a few kilometres off our route, was famous for its afternoon teas.  When we walked into the Ty Gwyn restaurant in Gaiman it was like stepping into a restaurant in Wales.  Soon our table was groaning under the weight of sandwiches and cakes.  Every time our pot of steeped tea looked like it might be running low a fresh pot was brought over.  For someone who swore off sweets just a few days ago I ate like a man possessed.  Still, we barely made it halfway through and seriously contemplated getting a doggy bag.  Back on the bikes we stiffened up the suspension to handle our extra girth, wobbled over to a gas station for fuel and rode back to Ruta 3.  There we passed a gas station with a couple of motorcycle travellers in a line of 50 to 80 cars waiting for fuel.  I contemplated doing a U-turn and letting them know that there was a gas station in Gaiman only 20 kilometres away without a line but there was no safe opportunity to do so.  What's Argentina if you don't experience the occasional gas line up anyway?  In Puerto Madryn we checked into the Dazzler Hotel and because of our VIP+ status with Expedia (yeah, we've booked a lot of hotel rooms) were assigned a top floor room with fantastic ocean and beach views.

Stop half an hour out of Comodoro Rivadavia to remove the peaks from the helmets

 
A flock of rhea along the side of Ruta 3

 
Gas stations are far between in Patagonia, better stop

 
Ty Gwyn Casa de Te (yes, a Welsh tea house in Argentina)

 
Even though it is "pie day" (March 14) we're having cake and sandwiches

 
View from the top floor of the Dazzler Hotel in Puerto Madryn

 
Wednesday we walked on the beach and worked on writing up the Chile chapter of our website.  We also went to a car rental office to make arrangements to pick up a car on Thursday.  We wanted to visit Península Valdés for what we hoped would be some awesome wildlife viewing and we still weren't terribly keen on riding hundreds of kilometres of unknown gravel road to get there.  The rental agent was really helpful and even checked the tide tables to determine what would be the best time to see the famous orcas.  While filling in the paperwork and noticing that we were from Alberta he mentioned that one of his all-time favourite videos was the Travel Alberta video, "Remember to breathe" and promptly played it on his computer.  Wow, we live in a pretty spectacular place!

Low tide in Puerto Madryn

 
Audrey outruns a whale

 
Península Valdés is a UNESCO world heritage site famous for its conservation of marine mammals.  While it has been set aside for conservation of the southern right whale, the southern sea elephant and southern sea lions, we were more interested in seeing how orcas had developed a unique hunting strategy to adapt to local coastal conditions.  At high tide orcas will sometimes ride up onto the beach to capture sea lion pups.  High tide was at 13:40 on March 16 and, after picking up our rental Ford Fiesta, drove for about three hours (on loose gravel, good choice to get a car) to get to Punta Norte at noon.  A small sea lion colony was visible from the viewpoint and some of the pups looked like the might be ripe for snacking.  We sat down and waited.  And waited.  For three hours.  Not a single orca cruised by, never mind one coming up on the beach for a meal.  Oh well, it was a relaxing time, hanging out by the sea watching the sea lions and a couple of scruffy Magellanic penguins.  Looping around the peninsula we stopped at a couple of locations to check out an elephant seal colony and truly unique burrowing Magellanic penguins.  How do they make their burrows?  Leaving the peninsula we spotted some movement in the grass and pulled over to have a closer look.  The creatures almost seemed like a cross between a small deer and a hare.  We had heard of jackalopes before but thought them to be mythical.  We stopped at the visitor centre, hoping to get some information on what we had seen.  Sure enough, it wasn't a figment of our imagination.  It was a mara or Patagonian cavy, a relative of the capybara we hoped to see in Brazil.  They also had some photos of orcas utilizing their unique hunting strategy.

Happy to be in a car again

 
Hmm, a sea lion colony

 
With sea lion pups

 
Oh, wouldn't that make a nice light snack for an orca?

 
The local guanacos aren't too bothered by the orcas

 
An armadillo tries to hide

 


Audrey and the burrowing Magellanic penguins

 
How do they dig their burrows?

 
What the heck?  Jackalopes?

 
Oh, this is one odd creature

 
Fortunately the visitor centre had a poster

 
And this is what an orca snacking on a sea lion pup would have looked like

 
On Saint Patrick's Day we continued riding north along the coast.  When we stopped in Sierra Grande for a bite to eat Audrey ordered something rather interesting.  Queso y dulce.  Yes, a sweet cheese as a kind of jelly.   It certainly had a unique flavour and actually was quite tasty.  In the afternoon the wind had picked up and I wished I had removed the peak from the helmet.  At least heading north it provided some shade and it helped to build nice strong neck muscles should I choose a career in football.  We arrived in Las Grutas early in the afternoon, giving us plenty of time to head down to the resort town's lovely beach.  

North across Patagonia with our invisible nemesis, the wind

 
Yummy Queso y dulce for lunch

 
Nice beach at Las Grutas

 
Leaving Las Grutas we stopped off at a Shell station to top off the gas tanks and found that Audrey's F650 was almost on reserve after only doing 250 kilometres.  Was there a leak in the tank?  No, just brutal cross and head winds.  Fortunately the wind wasn't as bad today and after lunch in Rio Colorado we noticed that the landscape had changed as well.  Gone were the scrub and sheep of Patagonia, replaced by the green grass, cattle and (shock!) trees of the pampas.  Traffic was a bit heavier too as we left that feeling of remoteness that was a common theme in Patagonia.  In Bahia Blanca we circled the plaza downtown, in search of the Hotel Austral, where Audrey was chased by a fierce dachshund.  After checking in we walked back to the plaza at supper time and found that there were many dachshunds leading their owners around the plaza.  Why would Bahia Blanca be a hotbed of dachshund activity?  

The last of the Patagonian countryside slips beneath our wheels

 
We enter the pampas with actual trees!

 
A BMW F800GS was in the parking lot of the hotel as we were packing up and the owner, from New Hampshire, came over to chat.  He had ridden down from the U.S. in about five months and had arranged to ship the bike home from Buenos Aires later in the week.  While he had some challenges with the arrangements through Dakar Motos in hindsight (as I write this at home in Canada) perhaps we should also have shipped from Buenos Aires.  Our new friend headed straight north for BA while we took the coastal route to Mar del Plata.  At our first gas stop we had another indication that we had left Patagonia.  We had heard that the gasoline prices were subsidized in that southern area and sure enough the prices were much higher now at 21.50 pesos per litre (about $1.85) but on the plus side there were no lineups.  We approached the Gran Hotel Provincial in Mar del Plata from a side street, taken aback at its grandeur.  How could we afford such a magnificent hotel?  The next day as we walked down by the beach of this expensive resort we determined that we were here during low season.  All the huts and parasols were empty.  Because Mar del Plata is but a short drive from Buenos Aires it is extremely popular with porteños, even having its own webcams showing the beaches.

Gran Hotel Provincial in Mar del Plata

 
How could we possibly afford this luxury hotel?

 
Off season rates means there is lots of room on the beach too

 


The next morning we rode through the resort town and then turned north towards Buenos Aires.  I was surprised to see that the highway was named for one of the most famous Grand Prix racing drivers of all time, Autopista Juan Manuel Fangio.  The famed Argentinian lent his name to a four lane divided highway that made for an easy ride into the megalopolis of Buenos Aires.

Riding out of Mar del Plata

 
A highway named after a world famous racing car driver?  This should be a quick trip.

 
Entering Buenos Aires

 
Audrey Writes
 
Riding into the city of Buenos Aires on March 21st, 2017, I was struck with the enormity of the place, the heavy traffic, horns honking, and so many pedestrians. But what stood out the most were the grey-stone historic buildings, lining every avenue, some elegantly crumbling, all of them decorated with intricately-carved details. What a thrill to look down one street and catch a glimpse of the iconic Obelisk, a famous Buenos Aires landmark, on our ride to the hotel, and Ekke and I just looked at each other, laughing out loud in delight. We had arrived in one of the world’s great cities. Having pre-booked a hotel on Expedia made life easy, and when we got there we were shown to the underground parking, accessed by a steep ramp with slippery, freshly painted yellow lines, making it an adventure to navigate. No one (ie, me) dropped a bike, however. It was the perfect place to park bikes for the unknown duration of our stay, unknown because we had a few errands to take care of here. Our hotel window afforded a view of of a beautiful city square, its loveliness only marred by the construction of a new underground parking lot below the square. The Obelisk Square, Plaza de la Republica, was within walking distance, and we arrived there right at dusk, crossing 8 of the 16 lanes to get to the huge statue. I'm pretty sure that this was the longest pedestrian crossing we’ve ever done in our world travels. The Obilesco was built in 1936 to commemorate 400 years since the city’s first foundations were built.
 
Plaza del Congreso from our Ibis hotel in Buenos Aires

 
Congreso de la Nacion Argentina

 
Instantly recognizable Obelisco in the middle of the 16-lane Avenida 9 de Julio

 




Avenida 9 de Julio made for some cool car watching
 
 
On our walk to downtown the next day there was a huge ruckus, a bunch of protesters walking down our street, carrying banners that had something to do with education, chanting and sounding air horns. The area of the city we were in was ground zero for protests as the Congreso building, the legislative seat of the government, was at one end of the park. Dodging angry protesting teachers, probably demanding smaller class sizes, we crossed the street through the crowd and we gingerly tiptoed on crumbling sidewalks. How did the stiletto-wearing locals navigate this? Our goal was to see a doctor at the private Hospital Britanico so that Ekke could book an MRI and I could get my foot x-rayed after crashing my bike a month earlier. Even though health care is free to all in Argentina, even tourists, we discovered that we could pay a bit for faster service.
 
We soon came to realize that Plaza del Congreso was the starting or ending point for a lot of marches

 
Audrey thinks about joining the march for public education
 
 
The local Rodi Bar was a great place for lunch, the seafood-stuffed tomato delicious, but it was our first experience with a cubierto or cover charge. The bill came with an extra 60 pesos tacked on, about $6.00, and when we asked the server what it was for, he pointed at the cutlery and napkins. Really? Were we supposed to eat it with our hands? After that we watched for restaurants with the “No Cubierto” signs. Cemeterio Recoleto was within walking distance, so we had a pleasant afternoon meandering around the impressive tombs. We only had to follow the crowds of tourists to find Eva Peron’s final resting place, and it was quite a modest tomb, considering the fame she had attained in her life, working her way up from a small-town waitress to a national icon and snappy dresser as the wife of President Juan Peron.
 
Cemeterio Recoleto

 
That's a familiar name

 
Managed to get a photo of Eva Peron's memorial through the crowds

 
A beautiful cemetary with incredibly ornate tombs
 
 
Museo de Bellas Artes was housed in a gorgeous, sienna coloured historic treasure of a building. What a thrill to gaze at paintings and statues, surprising ourselves by identifying a Van Gogh here or a Rodin there, before reading the info cards. Lovely Monet pastels, Degas’ ballerinas and Gaugin’s Tahitians rounded out the impressionists, and it felt like we were in Paris. A display by a local artist, Xul Solar was a riot of colour in an animation-like style, and we just sighed as we took in the beauty all around us.
 
The always helpful Audrey
 

Museo de Bellas Artes with a fantastic collection of world class art (like this Rembrandt)

 
Rodin

 
Van Gogh

 
 
After a pleasant stroll up Alvear Street with its huge, ornately decorated mansions, past the Teatro Colon, we finally had a chance to check our email at dinner, at the Cafe Metro Bar, to see if the doctor had gotten Ekke an MRI appointment. It turns out that the appointment was for that afternoon, and we had missed it, floored that it would happen so soon, just hours after seeing the doctor. At home, one could wait weeks or even months for non-emergency MRIs. We emailed the doctor to rebook the appointment, and once again he said he’d contact us by email, the next day.
 
Teatro Colon
 
 
So, the next day we stayed close to places with wifi, starting at historic Cafe Negro with its wooden decor and fancy porcelain teacups, and then to Starbucks because we didn’t want to get charged for loitering at the tea place. Fortunately (or unfortunately), Starbucks had the most reliable internet and we could sit there for ages, as long as we kept buying our lattes and chais, so it became our go-to internet spot, especially for catching up on writing the website. For lunch we grabbed a couple of sandwiches and sat in a lovely park, the shady trees a brief respite from the hot, bustling downtown streets. In our third cafe, Havana, Ekke finally got the email to go for the MRI right away. There was some confusion at the clinic as no one there knew who had set up the appointment, but it's amazing what forking over $200 will do and they got him in, no problem. I heard a loud humming sound of the MRI machine while I waited just outside the door, and ten minutes later Ekke was out. For about $20 I did get my x-rays, as well, from a very friendly technician and I was quite taken aback when she kissed me affectionately on the cheek and told me I was a good girl after the procedure. I’m not sure if she was just practising her English or if it was just standard procedure. The broken bone in my foot, however, was healing nicely.


Wandering around the next day, Monday, March 24th, the streets seemed eerily empty and we noticed that stores were closed up tight with garage-type security doors pulled down. Even McDonalds was closed. After finding internet, we realized it was the Truth and Justice national holiday, a day of remembrance of victims of the Dirty War in 1976. Back at Congressional Plaza near our hotel, where we had seen regular protests almost every day, it was astonishing to see it absolutely chock-a-block with even more protesters carrying banners and cardboard cut-outs of missing loved ones.They were marching to Plaza de Mayo so we joined in. As we were walking I saw a man drop his wallet so I picked it up and gave it back to him, expecting him to be very thankful. He just threw it to the ground. I was flabbergasted but quickly realized that he was probably a pickpocket who had just taken out the cash and was throwing the wallet away on purpose. Sheesh. Ekke checked that he still had his wallet, and yes, he did. The march moved through Plaza Republica, along Ave. De Mayo and we wandered amidst groups of people blaring horns, throwing firecrackers, waving banners, singing and shouting. The streets were too crowded to walk on without getting jostled about, and at one point we could not move, like, literally not move in any direction. It was actually a bit scary. Ekke and I had to push our way to a side street, while getting shoved from the opposite direction, and we felt relieved to be out of the crush of protesters. Circumventing the crowd, we made our way to Plaza de Mayo, where there were some speeches in the same square where the Perons had given their speeches from the Casa Rosada building. I could just envision Madonna, as Eva Peron, singing, “Don’t Cry For Me, Argentina” from that pink balcony. Cue the “Evita” soundtrack.
 
Another day and another march on Plaza del Congreso

 
This march was in memory of the 30,000 people missing during the Dirty War of 1974 to 1983

 
Stopping traffic on Avenida 9 de Julio

 
Casa Rosada on Plaza de Mayo
 
 
The Kirchner Cultural Centre was nearby, housed in an old post office building, with a beautiful metallic floating concert hall. It was a relief to wander through at our own pace, away from the hordes of people on the streets below. A gaucho photographic display was so interesting to walk through, with the magnificent horses, cool-looking chaps and big hats reminiscent of our Alberta cowpokes. Modern art featuring Argentinian popular culture was housed in several different galleries, with some very thought-provoking pieces. This was definitely ranked among the most modernist modern art we’ve seen in our travels. Our day ended with a moonlit walk to Calatrava’s Puente de Mujer pedestrian bridge over the canal followed by some amazing empanadas.
 
A floating concert hall and art gallery in the Kirchner Cultural Centre

 
Some very modern art

 
The art gallery had a wonderful gaucho photographic exhibit

 


The Calatrava designed bridge, Puente de Mujer, makes for a nice moonlight stroll
 
 
After seeing her famous balcony the day before, we were curious about Eva Peron’s life, so we took the subway to the Palermo district and found Museo Evita. The converted mansion was once a refuge for homeless women and children, a cause close to Evita’s heart, and through videos, photographs, books and artefacts, the museum told the story of her life as a rising Argentinian heroine. Known for her sense of fashion, it was fun to gaze upon her elegant gowns, hats, shoes and jewellery on display, and ponder it all in the adjacent leafy garden cafe afterwards.
 
Outside Museo Evita

 
No photographs allowed past here
 
 
After a lazy day of just working on the website, we decided to plan the remaining five months of our trip, spreading out our big map on a wooden table at Starbucks. There were so many possibilities, like riding to Belem and boating up the Amazon or riding to Porto Velho and backtracking through Peru and a few other countries or doing a loop of Brazil and then flying the bikes home. One decision we did make was to try to include Paraguay in our plans, so we got the application forms from their consulate, not far from the MRI place. The visas would take a few days, so we did more sightseeing, taking a subway to the Casa Rosada museum. The museum was underground, utilizing the foundations of an old fort, and showcased the history of how the city grew with artefacts of past presidents, city councillor robes, desks, keys to the city, old carriages, and a portrait of Juan Peron and Evita. Cobbled streets took us past a quaint 15 block souvenir and street market. It felt so European here.
 
Changing of the guard at Casa Rosada

 
Inside the Casa Rosada museum

 




Lively street market off Plaza de Mayo

 
 
While still waiting for the visas, we visited La Boca, a neighbourhood with colourful buildings and sidewalk tango dancers. It was super touristy, but it did have historic roots in that the Italian dock workers who lived here were so poor that they used scraps like sheet metal to build their houses, painting them with leftover paint which gave them the patchwork coloured appearance. So, it was very interesting to wander among the colourful buildings and then pay way too much at a tourist shop for our Pope Francis fridge magnets. Bombanero Stadium was also in the area, where the futbol Boca Juniors play, but unfortunately there were no games scheduled in the near future. We'll have to come back sometime for a game. Sitting in the elegant London City Cafe back in San Telmo, we sipped tea and wrote postcards. We were more than a little surprised when the postmaster at a nearby post office told us they would cost $50 to mail. What is it with expensive postage in Argentina? There was nothing for it but to pay (Hope you enjoyed your postcards, you guys).
 
Tango in the Metro


 


Colourful La Boca neighbourhood

 
Writing postcards at the London City Cafe
 
 
After paying $150 US each for our Paraguay visas the next day, we were told to return before 3:00 p.m. to get them, which was perfect as were were planning to leave BA the next day. We wandered to the imaging centre to get Ekke's MRI scans which they’d put on a disk that he could take to the doctor and by the time that process was finished, realized it was 2:59 pm. I ran to the Paraguay visa office, a block away, and was so disappointed to find the door locked. A girl coming out of the building asked what I wanted and very kindly went back in and got Daniel, our visa guy, who said that the documents were not ready due to a consular emergency. I told him that we were leaving BA and going to Uruguay the next day, and I must have looked so disappointed that he said to come back in an hour. The visas were, thankfully, ready when we returned but mine had a letter attached saying the visa number didn’t match the receipt number because of the consular interruption, whatever that means. Hopefully this wouldn’t cause us problems at the Paraguayan border. Ekke took his MRI scan on the disk to Dr. German Garabano who examined him and gave ideas for physiotherapy that he could do himself. Our hotel was very close to the Revolucione Cafe so we went there for our last evening in Buenos Aires. There were photos of revolutionaries like Che and Gandhi and photos of women in white scarves, the mothers of some of the 30,000 missing of the Dirty War.


The ride out of town the next morning, March 30th, was fairly easy, mostly highway, and soon we were riding in the countryside, past stilt houses and parillas or steak shacks, wetlands, on a high bridge over the Rio Paraña, in the direction of Uruguay.
 
Leaving Buenos Aires

 
Lunch time!

 
About to cross the Rio Paraña into Uruguay

 
Map of our route from Ushuaia to Buenos Aires  
 


 

Chapter 15: Uruguay

Audrey Writes
The tiny country of Uruguay, situated between Argentina and Brazil, was a lovely surprise, with its historic and modern architecture, gaucho culture, friendly people, pleasant riding and of course, OXO cubes.

On March 30th, 2017, Ekke and I rode out of Buenos Aires, he on his BMW R1200 GS Adventure and me on my BMW F650 GS Twin. The landscape was quite idyllic and perfect for motorcycles, with brilliant green farmers’ fields and picturesque wetlands. The border crossing into our 78th country was fairly straightforward, exiting Argentina by crossing through the Argentinian border control area, paying a 25 peso ($5) toll to cross the bridge over the Rio Uruguay and getting our passports stamped at a drive-through border-control booth. The final step was completing paperwork for our temporary import vehicle permits for Uruguay (good for 365 days - you never know), and then we just rode away. The Gran Hotel just up the road in Fray Bentos, found on Expedia the night before, was right by the river. After a dinner of lentil stew (me) and cannelloni (Ekke) we wandered along the tree-lined malecon. This looked like the after-dinner thing to do, an activity popular in all the other South American countries we’d been to, and we saw many people out strolling the river-front, enjoying the warm spring evening. Benches were strategically placed, perfect for the locals to sit and pour their hot maté from thermoses into decorative wooden cups, using a bombilla or spoon-like straw to sip the hot, bitter tea.
 
The bridge over the Rio Uruguay

 


Riverside at Fray Bentos
 
 
The Museo de Revolucion Industrial was on our must-see list as it was a UNESCO World Heritage site, so after checking out of the hotel the next morning we rode the few kilometres out of Fray Bentos to have a look, not exactly sure what we'd find there. Parking outside the museum with fully loaded bikes seemed secure enough, and we made sure that the duffel bag was attached with cable locks. A 10:00 AM Spanish guided-tour had just begun and our guide, Nicholas, kindly explained things in English for us. A fellow tourist noticed Ekke’s Canada T-shirt and after explanations on both sides we discovered that she was from Montreal and lived in Montevideo for part of the year with her Uruguayan husband and son. Small world.


 
Loading Docks
 
 
The museum was so interesting. It was a former meat processing plant where 1500 head of cattle, mostly from Uruguay, but sometimes from Argentina or Bolivia, were slaughtered each day. Ships from England used coal or steel for ballast and then exchanged it for meat products like tins of corned beef for the return trip. An electrical room had huge, historic machines with pulleys and crank shafts, complete with marble floors that did not conduct electricity, a safety feature in case of malfunctioning machinery. There was, however, a steel-tiled floor outside the factory, which one would think wouldn’t be that safe in a lightning storm.
 
Information panels set up in the entrance

 
OXO cubes were a staple for the war effort

 



 
A giant vat for cooking the meat products

 
 
(Vegetarians skip to the next paragraph) We learned that, after the slaughter, the fresh beef was sold or canned as corned beef and then every other part of the cow, “except the moo,” was boiled in huge vats, where 32 kilograms was condensed to 1 kilogram of a gelatinous substance. Products like OXO cubes were made from this goo and as it still maintained a lot of nutrients it made for a very useful “food” for British troops in WWII.

A technological university, built to UNESCO standards looked historic on the outside but was modern on the inside and was built next door to the factory, a boon to the locals as their children would not have to leave the region for higher education. The museum showing where the administration of the factory took place featured wooden desks, historic typewriters, period telephones and other cool gadgets. Our guide told us a story of one of the office staff, a two-metre tall man who had worked at a cramped desk for 43 years and with the incessant rubbing of his feet had worn a couple of grooves into the hardwood floor. Ekke was pleasantly surprised when we were taken to an adjacent car museum where we could sit in some fascinating automobiles like a BMW Iseta or a Nazi-era car which was one of only 24 made in the world. Who knows how it ended up here?
 
Auto museum at Fray Bentos

 
Our ride on the highway along the Rio Uruguay by flat, green fields was very pleasant, and we stopped in Mercedes for empanadas and our first gasoline fill-up in Uruguay. It was a bit of a shock at $2.15 per litre. Ekke found a smaller road by looking at a map on the wall and a local confirmed that it was “pavimento” with a few potholes. It was fun riding the charming, hilly road. After stopping in Carmelo to get some Uruguayan Pesos at the Scotiabank - yes, weird to see a Canadian bank here - we had a cold drink in a lively plaza. A man on a nearby bench was selling jewellery and he looked like he could use some customers, so I went and struck up a conversation with him. He had come all the way from Venezuela which as you know, is experiencing hard times. So, I bought a few trinkets from him and he was very thankful. Our destination, Colonia del Sacramento, was a historic town and tourist hotspot and, as all the hotels in town were fully booked-up we accessed our Airmiles and lucked out with the Sheraton Hotel, just outside of town. When we arrived we asked where we could park the bikes and the front desk clerk was very surprised that I had ridden there on my own motorcycle. Why are they never surprised that Ekke rode there? Taking advantage of the lovely pool, we got a bit of exercise doing a few laps, followed by dinner in a fancy restaurant where we got away with being dressed very casually, as motorcycle world travellers do.
 
CIBC card didn't work at the Scotiabank but fortunately the Bank of Montreal card did

 
Audrey buys souvenirs from a Venuzuelan

 
The Sheraton at Colonia del Sacramento
 
It’s the little things that one remembers and having real bacon on the breakfast buffet the next morning (advantages of an American Hotel) was one of those things. It must have been a while since we’d had bacon and it was a treat to enjoy some familiar, North American foods. The weather that day was hot and sunny and the options of taking our motorbikes or complimentary bicycles into town were not that palatable, so we opted for an air-conditioned taxi for the few kilometres into Colonia del Sacramento.


Our trusty Lonely Planet Guidebook (no, we don’t have shares in the company - maybe we should) took us to the highlights of the historic colonial town, some of it built in 1680 by the Portuguese, and later rebuilt by the Spanish, going back and forth between the two powers, depending on who was winning which war. At Plaza San Martin it was pretty cool to look out over the wide Rio de la Plata, really an ocean inlet meeting the river, and see skyscrapers in the distance - Buenos Aires! So close, only 50 kilometres away yet we had ridden 500 kilometres to get here because we had to cross way upriver where it was narrower. Puerto Viejo was an old port brick building with a variety of boats in the harbour. At the wooden Bastion del Carmen statue a young tourist whom we dubbed “Miss Colonia 2017” was getting a friend to take her picture while she tried out various poses, and eventually we got our turn for our own poses. The historic quarter of Colonia is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and we strolled the narrow cobblestone streets, walking under the Porton de Campo, a stone city gate with huge chains, which didn’t budge a centimetre when I pulled on them.
 
Buenos Aires across Rio Plata

 
Colonia del Sacramento

 


Audrey opens the gates to the old town
 
Calle de los Suspiros or Street of Sighs was perfectly picturesque, possibly named after (take your pick) criminals, sailors or prostitutes. A popular tale is that a young woman died there, sighing as she called her lover’s name while she took her last breath. Walking on those rough cobblestones was an adventure in and of itself, causing many sighs as we tried to avoid a twisted ankle, and I couldn’t imagine riding a motorcycle on this street. Purchasing a museum pass made the most economic sense and we then tried to see as many museums as we could in a short time period to make the pass worthwhile. Museo Municipal had ancient tools, weapon points, prehistoric animal fossils and a 3D map of Colonia in historic times. Casa de Nacarella was a small house from the colonial period with antique furniture and a stone kitchen with some really short doors that Ekke always enjoys. But this picturesque town was really meant for strolling, past crumbling stone buildings that had more character because they were not restored, the historic lighthouse ruins, Plaza de Armas with its foundations of old structures and the Cathedral del Sacramento in all its glory. What struck Ekke is that the town seemed to be one big outdoor car museum, as there were so many historic vehicles just parked for anyone to see. If you’re ever in Buenos Aires, I would recommend this historic town as a very worthwhile day trip, a ferry-ride away.
 
Calle de los Suspiros

 


Casa de Nacarella

 



 
Wait, what?  ALF is still popular here?

 
 
On April 2nd we left lovely Colonia and rode to Montevideo, noticing that even on the road there were old cars and a lot of motorcycles enjoying the pleasant Sunday afternoon ride. Choosing a hotel with secure underground parking was a priority in the big city and we found one right along the Rambla, a walkway and social hub on the Rio de la Plata on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean. It was great for an evening stroll and families were out enjoying a walk by the crashing waves, maté cups and skateboards everywhere.
 
Lots of interesting vehicles in Uruguay

 
Entering Montevideo and riding along the Rambla
 
Ekke took the Buquebus ferry to Buenos Aires the next day for his flight to Calgary where he spent time visiting his family and getting his knee checked out. I opted to stay in Montevideo, which was an adventure for me as I would be by myself in a foreign country, for the first time ever. I jumped right into sight-seeing mode, however, and set a goal to see everything in the guidebook. First stop: The Palaeontology museum. It was chock-a-block with school groups and I felt a bit nostalgic for my teaching job for a moment, at least until I observed the harried teachers trying to herd groups of their noisy young charges around the museum. From the top window I could see Ekke’s water bus pull away from the dock, wondering what the next two weeks would be like without him.
 
Ekke takes the ferry to Buenos Aires for his flight home
 
 
I embraced my alone time by visiting museums like Artes Decorativos and Museo Andes, colourful neighbourhoods and parks and got to know the downtown area quite well, with its leafy plazas, neoclassical and Art Deco buildings and network of pedestrian malls. It was all within walking distance from the hotel, and I would choose a different cafe each day, trying local cuisine like beef and bean stew, fusion and international foods, reading or writing to pass the time. I felt quite safe being by myself in Montevideo - okay, once I walked through a lonely historic cemetery which felt a bit strange - but usually I felt quite at ease walking in most of the neighbourhoods.
 
Artes Decorativos

 
Audrey embraces the cafe culture of Montevideo

 
Architecture of Montevideo

 


A lonely cemetary
 
Cathedral Matriz at Constitucion Square is the oldest building, constructed in 1784 and it was beautiful inside, with high, vaulted ceilings and mosaic tiled floors. The city hall building, the Cabildo, had artifacts from Montevideo’s past, including historic maps. Casa Rivera, which housed the National History Museum was in an old colonial mansion and I learned about Uruguay through photographs, documents and artefacts, featuring Jose Artigas and his fight for independence from Brazil in 1825. A huge statue of this Uruguayan hero is the centrepiece of Independence Square.
 
Cathedral Matriz

 
Who doesn't love antique maps?

 
Palacia Salvo

 
A statue of Jose Artigas in Independence Square
 
Practical errands were easily accomplished in the city, even with my lack of Spanish skills, as many people spoke English. I managed to get a SIM card for my iPhone, which we had gotten unlocked before we left Canada and it was way cheaper than paying for roaming charges. I also decided to see how easy or difficult the process for getting a Brazilian visa was, and with the magic of the internet, easily found the Brazilian Embassy. I was guided through an online form on the office’s desktop computer, and I came back a day later to pick it up. No problem.

My hotel was totally booked for Easter so I moved to the modern end of Montevideo for a few days, with skyscrapers and air conditioned shopping malls, featuring many international shops. A lovely marina with a variety of sailboats was the perfect backdrop for daily strolls and the nearby Museo Naval was quite interesting with ancient canoes used by the Charrua native people and Uruguayan maritime memorabilia. It also featured a model of a German ship, the Graff Spee, that sank nearby in 1939. Perhaps that old car at the OXO cube museum had been recovered from this shipwreck?
 
Modern Montevideo

 
Museo Naval

 


I managed to figure out the bus transit system and made my way to El Prado Park for the Criolla or Gaucho Festival, a big event during Semana Santa or Easter week. It was like the Calgary Stampede, but on a smaller scale, and I felt right at home walking past booths with saddles, spurs and cowboy hats, all for sale. Instead of the mini doughnuts they had chirros stuffed with dulce de leche, a caramel sauce, and arts and crafts were sold in the pavilions. The grandstand show looked like it had just one event, but it was quite interesting. An unbroken horse was tied to a pole and blindfolded, a gaucho got on and then the horse was let loose in a frenzy of bucking. Meanwhile, announcers played guitar and sang funny songs about the gaucho, made up on the spot. As it was all in Spanish, I understood not a word, but the audience was enjoying it immensely. Only one ambulance had to be called when a fallen gaucho found himself on the ground with a horse on top of him. The stadium had an adjacent Botanical garden with lovely old buildings and tropical plants, which I was delighted to see thriving outside in this wonderful moderate climate.
 
Gaucho Festival in El Prado Park

 


A rider goes down

 
Botanical garden near the Gaucho Festival
 
A long walk up the Rambla on Easter Sunday morning took me to Ramirez Beach, a lovely stretch of soft sand, and an ocean-side park with lush plants covering cliffs, stone bridges stretched across the duck pond, the Faro lighthouse in the distance. As church and state are separated in Uruguay, Easter celebrations here were not a big thing. I looked in on a service at a Catholic cathedral and the celebration looked very much like what one would see at home.
 
A walk along the Rambla

 
Rameriz Beach along Montevideo's Rambla

 


A pleasant walk up tree-lined avenues took me to Tristan Narvaja street market with blocks of stalls containing veggies, CDs, clothes, shoes, household goods, antiques, cannabis and cannabis accessories. Fun Fact: Uruguay was the first country in world to legalize marijuana, in 2013. Which was the second country? Canada in 2018 (The Netherlands never legalized - it is just “tolerated” there). Back at the hotel MotoGP Argentina was on t.v. and I watched Maverick Viñales ride his way to motorcycle racing victory, knowing that Ekke was also watching at home in Canada.
 
Tristan Narvaja street market

 
Argentinean MotoGP on the TV
 
Uruguayans are passionate about art, and the quantity and quality of art museums was a testament to this. I really loved the National Museum of Visual Arts, featuring many Uruguayan painters and I stared in awe at Blane’s beautiful portraits of women in period dress, and Saez and Viale’s Impressionist works. Something I’d never seen before was quite cool: many of the pieces had a metallic detailed outline and braille writing on a stand in front of the painting for people with visual impairments to touch so they could get an idea of what the painting was all about. Accessibility to the max.
 
National Museum of Visual Arts

 
Finally the day came when Ekke was to return from Canada and I took a bus downtown, looking forward to meeting him and resuming our trip together. After a big hug, I took him to the marketplace for dinner. I was really looking forward to sharing with him, my Montevideo.

Ekke Writes


Back home in Calgary I had spent some quality time with my Mom and Dad and even Onno managed to come to visit for a short time.  Also, one of the main reasons for my visit was to have the knee that had been giving me trouble ever since the surgery for the ruptured patella tendon in September inspected by my doctor.  The MRI done in Buenos Aires seemed to show that the patella tendon had stretched and my surgeon in Calgary confirmed it.  Fortunately, he said that I could wait until after the trip to get a second surgery on it to tighten it up.  With that good news I left Calgary on April 17 flying over Toronto to Buenos Aires.

Easter in Airdrie with Mom and Dad

 
A short layover in Toronto before continuing to Santiago and then Buenos Aires


I arrived in Buenos Aires and had a taxi take me directly to the Buquebus terminal at the port.  The driver managed to complete the 45-minute trip in about 30 minutes, and I was just in time to catch the fast boat across the Rio Plata to Montevideo.  So, 30 hours after leaving Calgary I arrived in Montevideo just in time for dinner on April 18.  Audrey had found a neat area near the docks with some cool restaurants and even though it was quite early by Argentinean/Uruguayan standards a restaurant was open and willing to feed us.  Soon a mountain of meat came off the parrilla and we tucked into the “asado para dos” or BBQ for two.

Ekke's name on the sign board at the taxi company assured a quick getaway

 
The Buquebus ferry docks in Montevideo

 
Almost back together!

 
Dinner for Two


Wow, that's for two?

 
The next day Audrey showed me a few of the sites that had kept her entertained for a couple of weeks.  First up was getting my application in for the Brazilian visa.  It was so easy since Audrey had already done the legwork to obtain hers.  A gaucho museum in an old mansion was really interesting as we come from cowboy country ourselves.  The biggest difference seemed to be a much greater interest in tea, or maté .  From there we made our way to Palacio Salvo, Montevideo’s most iconic building.  The building was originally planned as a luxury hotel with a lighthouse on top and was the tallest building in Latin America when it was finished.  Now it is a residential and office building with a small museum dedicated to La Cumparsita, the song most associated with the tango.  Visiting another mansion-turned-museum we found an amazing collection of Greek artefacts in the basement, afterwards visiting Teatro Solis.  We were just a bit too late for the 4:00 PM tour but joined a tour already in progress.  Too bad we couldn’t visit the theatre itself since they were setting up for a rock concert that evening.  Museo Andes, dedicated to Flight 571 was incredibly fascinating in its story of the Uruguayan rugby team that crashed in the Andes.  If you get a chance to see the film or read the book “Alive!” have a look, it is a truly astonishing story of survival.  Before we finished our time in Montevideo we rode (the first time on the bikes in a couple of weeks!) over to the local Touratech shop to check out some of the motorcycle toys.  The owner of the shop provided information for our trip north to Brazil, including mentioning Touratech Brazil, with whom we would end up shipping our motorcycles home.

Most intricate spurs ever?

 
Maté is a big part of the gaucho culture

 
Now those are fancy maté cups

 


Cool!

 
Maté at a construction site

 
What amazing mansions turned museums

 


Greek artefacts in the basement of a mansion

 


Spectacular theatre

 
At Palacio Salvo (tallest building in Latin America at time of construction)

 
Independence Square

 
Tour of Palacio Salvo

 
Now Palacio Salvo is a residential apartment building

 
The classic tango music (La Cumparsita) originated in Montevideo

 
Ekke checks out the tango scene on the 100th anniversary of La Cumparsita

 
Museo Andes chronicles the crash of Flight 571

 
Two of the rugby team managed to hike out for help

 


Checking out Touratech Uruguay


On April 22 we packed up and got back on the road.  Audrey had spent 3 weeks in Montevideo and was itching to get the wheels rolling again.  We rode east along the Rio Plata on a beautiful sunny day, stopping for a picnic along the road before reaching Punta del Este’s Atlántico Boutique Hotel.  OK, 130 kilometres might not be our longest day, but it seemed that half of that distance was riding out of the city of Montevideo.  Uruguay is South America’s second smallest country (after Suriname) and the distances aren’t great.  

Heading east out of Montevideo

 
A Dutch overland vehicle on the way out of Montevideo

 
Riding along the Rio Plata

 
Stopping for a picnic

 
Audrey discovers that dolce de leche is delicious with a banana

 
Exploring small coastal roads

 
Entering Punta del Este

 
Sunday we donned our walking shoes and set about exploring the beaches and city of Punta del Este.  We walked all around the point (after which the city is named) taking in a surfing competition, a Canadian totem pole and also finding the right hand rising out of the sand that matched the left hand of Mano del Desertio in Chile.  La Mano (The Hand) was created in 1982 by Mario Irarrázabal as a warning to swimmers for the rough waters on the eastern beach.  Mano del Desertio was created ten years later.  On the 24th we rode out to visit the home of one of Uruguay’s most famous artists, Carlos Páez Vilaró.  I had the same feelings as when we visited other famous artist’s homes such as Pablo Neruda’s home in Valparaiso and Oswaldo Guayasamin’s home in Quito even though Casapueblo itself wasn’t even remotely similar.  They were all so eclectic and an extension of the owner’s talents.  Physically Casapueblo looked more like something created by the Spanish architect Antoni Gaudí.  The home, built in stages to resemble the mud nests of a local bird, was filled with Vilaró’s art and had an area dedicated to his son, Carlos, who was one of the 16 survivors of Flight 571 that crashed in the Andes.

Exploring Punta del Este

 


Surfing Competition

 
Audrey decides to try it out too, getting a little more wet than she bargained for

 
La Mano is the right hand that matches Mano del Desertio in Chile

 
A Canadian totem pole in Uruguay

 
Those are delicious looking cappuccinos

 
A ride out to Casapueblo

 
Casapueblo is the home of famed artist Carlos Páez Vilaró

 
Build to resemble a local bird's mud nests

 


The artist's son was on the doomed Flight 571 into the Andes

 
Striking a dashing pose with Punta del Este in the background

 
On the way out of Punta del Este on the 25th we stopped off at La Mano in the hopes of getting a photo of the bikes in front of the hand.  Just as we were trying to figure out the logistics of taking that photo a friendly woman came along and offered to take the photo while standing in the median of the road.  Nice.  Riding northeast we stopped at José Ignacio to admire its lovely lighthouse and then continued down a dead-end road to visit Laguna Garzón Bridge.  It looked for all the world like a roundabout except it was over water and only had two entrances.  The apparent purpose was for traffic calming but considering it was on a dead-end road there wasn’t a whole lot of traffic that needed calming.  Pretty though.  Back on the main highway we stopped at a roadside gas station for lunch since the lovely seaside towns were shuttered for the season and continued to La Paloma.  We made quick work of the remainder of the day’s ride, all 120 kilometres of it.  (Did I mention it is a small country?)  At our hotel we found a hose in the parking lot and decided that it would be a good time to give the bikes a bit of a bath.  After all it had been since Peru (just before entering Chile) that they had last seen a soapy bucket.

A last photo of La Mano as we head out of Punta del Este

 
OK, what's this then?

 
A roundabout on a deadend road over a lagoon.  No, it doesn't make any sense to us either.

 
Riding through ranching country

 
First good wash since Peru!

 
April 26 looked miserable enough with rain and a strong wind.  Fortunately, after we finished breakfast the rain had quit, and the wind had dried out the bike covers so it was pleasant riding as we continued north.  We stopped at Cabo Polonio where it is possible to take a six-wheeled truck out a few kilometres to the seaside town.  At the visitor centre we asked about the truck and were told that we needed a minimum number of ten people before the truck would make the trip across the dunes.  We waited about an hour but only one other person showed up, so we decided to cancel the trip to this unique village and continue riding north, ending up at Punta del Diablo.  We found a nice apartment on the edge of town and thought to ourselves we might want to stay a while.

Gaucho country

 
Still think it looks weird to see cattle and palm trees

 
A beach walk along Punta del Diablo

 

 
We did a bit of laundry and then rode out to Fortaleza de Santa Teresa the next day.  The fort, built by the Portuguese in 1762 and later taken over by the Spanish, was nicely restored with lots of interesting exhibits.  It was fun exploring the ruins on a beautiful sunny day.  Upon leaving the fort we popped across the street and picked up some picnic supplies before riding out to the nearby park to watch the Atlantic waves crash ashore while snacking on a sandwich.  Sometimes life is pretty darn fine.  After lazing around for a bit, we swung by Laguna Negro with the hopes of seeing some of the wildlife (no luck) and then returned to town where we went out to the actual Punta del Diablo.  It was obvious from the way the waves pounded ashore and rushed through multiple surge channels how the Devil’s Point got its name.  We picked up some groceries on the way back to the apartment and enjoyed making our own meal for a change.  With strikes in Brazil we decided to spend an extra day in Punta del Diablo, walking along the beach, before heading for the border on April 29.  We had enjoyed our time in Uruguay and learned to love this small, laid-back country with its rich history.

Ekke whips up breakfast in our apartment in Punta del Diablo

 
A ride out to Fortaleza de Santa Teresa

 
Built by the Portugese in 1762 and taken over by the Spanish

 




Audrey reprises her famous pose from Crac Des Chevaliers in Syria

 
Picnic along the seashore near Punta del Diablo

 


Botanical Park

 


The actual Devil's Point with smashing waves and surge channels

 
A day of walking on the beach as Brazil has a day of strikes

 
Map of our route  

Chapter 16: Brazil to Foz do Iguaçu


Y LA MUJER!

Chapter 17: Paraguay and the Pantanal

Chapter 18: Brazil

Chapter 19: Mexico City to Home

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