Saturday, December 29, 2018

18, Feliz Navidad


Wax palms, whatever they are, live nearby where we have been camping so it would be rude not to go check them out. We are told they are kind of a big deal. There are lots of hikes you can do through these palms in the valley, or you can just take the lazy option and drive past loads on a mountain road instead. Turns out they are huge and lanky growing at a cool altitude above 11,000ft.







A mediocre camp spot by a mediocre lake served its purpose that night, and an awkward realisation in the morning that fresh underwear was currently out of stock was quickly remedied by Mr. Pre Soak and Mrs. Spin Cycle.




Apparently there was nothing of interest during the next day’s driving because we don’t have any photos. But we DID take a bad photo at the hot pools by which we slept. A huge pool fed by boiling hot water was the epitome of relaxing until we were joined by a large family up from a local town. Initially disgruntled our peace had been disturbed by Latin American dance music on a cheap Bluetooth speaker, we were pleased to find out this feeling hadn’t manifested onto our faces as they made us tea from the hot spring water and a plant nearby, and gave us shots of a local rum. Humans are, for the most part, lovely.






Colombia is huge, so we made another crack at getting across a large swathe of it heading south towards the border. The route was quiet and well paved along a valley with very little around. Elder native ladies were very frequently found beside the road, putting a hand out for money as every car drove past, something we imagine would be hard to make a career out of. Some had a few tricks, like making the effort to get up awkwardly and taking a couple of steps closer to the road to win you over. 



More hard done by souls, Venezuelans that were also heading towards Ecuador were perched on almost every truck heading south. 







In order to appeal to the younger audience, we decided we should try to take Instagram worthy photos in the hopes of being retweeted or whatever. It isn’t as easy as the kids make it look, coming up with this fanciful hippy “life changing” inspirational bullshit.




We had to adjust the mirror first so that you wouldn’t see Jenjen picking her nose. It really is an art #nofinger

iOverlander, our travel god app, continues to provide us with daily gems and our final destination this day was no different. A rural hotel/restaurant that frequently hosts campers in their car park if you buy their daily dinner. For the measly cost of 6 Canadian, or 4 Squid, we got a three course dinner with fresh trout, local cheese and a miscellaneous berry juice drink.

A bonus was our neighbours for the night, a lovely Colombian couple out enjoying the countryside in their very own campervan, a conversion very closely resembling our own. They gave us biscuits, wine and even a small 12V fan after we expressed our jealousy that they were better equipped for the coast than we were. It was a really lovely night, but what we didn’t know was that things were about to go incredibly wrong before the sun rose.





Steve goes to hop out the van, but staring down at the grass in disbelief, shock, horror, disgust, sadness, disappointment and anger finds flop missing. Flip was still there, but flop was gone! Flop had had a tough life, almost worn through and paper thin he had been mauled by a dog in Mexico which was lovingly repaired by Steve, before being torn again whist wading through a fast river in Honduras before being repaired again. What’s the big deal we hear you thinking? Well, Steve is US 13, UK 12 and apparently nobody south of America has feet this big because despite countless efforts to locate a flip and a flop to replace the tatty scraps Steve was tramping around in nothing had ever been found.

Investigations began with a through sweep of the entire area and some very stern questions to the bear sized dog who was a potential suspect to this heinous crime using Flip as bait. It also became apparent, thanks to the discovery of a small scrap of black plastic that our rubbish had also been stolen from the back of the van. This also was impossible to find, whoever had stolen this had left no trail. Professionals.



After an embarrassingly long time looking, we gave up and drove away. Somehow through the tears Jenjen spotted our rubbish, mauled and abandoned (minus the chicken bones…) some 200 metres away from the scene of the crime. But, no flop. Please take a minute to mourn this great loss, and to wish Steve luck in mastering the art of hopping.




Colombia seems to know when are planning a short day of driving and puts road works after road works in our way to ensure that even if we think we are just driving for 3 hours, it ends up being 5. At every stop at least 5 people walk past offering water, coffee, oranges, windscreen washing, tyre checking etc etc etc. We’re getting repetitive strain injury shaking our heads, it really is a health risk.




Making ourselves at home in a cable car carpark for our last night in Colombia we get endlessly harassed by a pair of locals wanting nothing more than to chat and be friendly. Embarrassingly they knew more English than we did Spanish… We got a picture of Jenjen with them because we guess it might have been a bit weird if it was Steve in the photo.

 



Disregarding all advice to get to the border early, we headed to one last attraction in the Colombian mountains. A big massive churchy cathedral thing built across a gorge because nothing says believe in god more than good engineering.






And so with that we made our way towards Ecuador (which translates to Equator). The border is crazy, hundreds and hundreds of families waiting in huge lines for their turn to seek refuge across the border. Luckily for us there is a “tourist” line at both sides, but it still takes an agonising 4.5 hours of standing in queues before we finally make it across. We joined the Ecuador entry queue, asking a gentleman handing out wrist bands, if we were in the correct queue and he said yes, yes you are. So we waited for 2 hours and upon reaching the front, this same gentleman was there and told us that since we didn’t have wrist bands we would need to go to the back. Ahaha, no but also no and with a bit of extra no on top. Google translate helped us explain that it was him who hadn’t given us wrist bands when asked TWO HOURS AGO, and the amigos around us in the queue also attested to the fact we hadn’t pushed in. Needless to say we didn’t go to the back.




It really is hard to explain how that sound of the final authorisation stamp really feels. Like a cross between getting a pony for Christmas and a really, really good sneeze.



So that was Colombia, a bit of a mad rush but a great start to South America. It was huge, beautiful and again filled with lovely people and amazing locations. We felt safe the whole time, the driving standards are a little less insane than some countries we have been through prior and we felt welcome wherever we went.

So apparently drug trafficking is a problem and so a police stop just into Ecuador involved a big sniffer dog being tossed into the van. He didn’t even brush his paws, we would expect better manners from a figure of authority. At least he didn’t steal Flip.




We found a lazy church, a few chairs thrown into a huge cavern with a cross at the front and noted how quickly the scenery had changed from Colombia. The lush green mountains replaced with deep canyons and sand.





North and South, and there exists a point at which you are between the two. The long fabled Equator, we reached it! Neither up nor down, we marvelled at this halfway point in our long drive. Just outside of Quito, the capital of Ecuador, there is a “Mitad del Mundo”, “Half of the World” park where you can take selfies straddling the hemispheres. The only thing is, thanks to the modern technology of GPS we can see that this location is not quite accurate thereby rendering it a complete and utter fallacy! Liars, cheats, bastards whatever you call them we went to find the real 0 degrees, 0 minutes and 0.0 seconds Latitude. We found it, tucked away on a dirty backstreet a few hundred metres north of the disgustingly misleading tourist attraction built by the kind of person who dives in the penalty box.

But we went anyway and it was great! They even had mock historic houses with information about the cuisine. Poor cute but apparently delicious guinea pigs.







They even had Llamas! They weren’t very interested in us until Steve saw a stack of neatly arranged plant (probably to be left alone) across the way and grabbed a handful. Suddenly the eyes widened, the beasts came right to the fence and snatched that whatever it was right from Steve’s hand. We don’t know what “thank you” is in Llama language but they didn’t spit on us, so that is probably it.






Another night, another drive in the dark and another weird camp spot. This car park in the centre of Quito is a popular overlander stomping ground, charging just $2 per 24 hours next to a quiet park.



Two hours of walking in the morning and we were in the historic district and so began a day of great timing.



Great timing 1. We sat down in a park, a guy started playing “Feliz Navidad” on the saxophone in the centre of the park. It was a lovely backdrop to a busy and lively square. He was then joined by a flute player, and then a couple of trumpets, and then more instruments we don’t know the name of before they all walked up onto a staircase and were joined by dozens more forming a full (we guess?) brass band. It was incredible, suddenly we had a front row seat to an amazing live performance by the Fire Brigade band.





Great timing 2. We wandered into a big ol’ church just as a ceremony kicked off with smells and candles and procession stuff. But it was in Spanish so we got bored and left.



 
Great timing 3. A huge flock of pigeons left then returned to the church face but not a single one pooed on us. Perfect timing.



Great timing 4. We stopped to pick up Christmas goodies at a supermarket inside a mall. But we couldn’t find the shop itself, until we spotted a couple of the workers who run your loot down to your car for you. So we tagged along, followed them into the elevator and tracked them all the way back to the source of chocolate, biscuits, alcohol and all other festive treats.





You know when you think something, but you don’t say it out loud because as soon as you do you know that you will summon the gods of “jinxing it” accompanied by the powers of “sods law”? Well just a day prior to Quito Steve commented, out loud and stupidly, that we hadn’t got a puncture yet. Well, guess what we found in the tyre? Yeah, a big fat screw. Do we leave it in since the air is holding? Or pull it out before it works in deeper? Ahhhhh why did Steve open his big fat stupid gob. Well, we pulled it out, and the air stayed inside, man we love these tyres. Warning heeded, we have stopped saying anything out loud we now just text each other like that couple in the restaurant you laughed at once.



Oh but what’s this, driving in the dark AGAIN we headed up towards Volcano Cotopaxi. Actual snow near the actual equator, nuts. As we pulled into our camp spot we scared a pack of maybe wild Llamas, they do move fast! We spent the night at 12,000ft where it got pretty chilly.



The moon was so bright that using a long exposure, Steve’s photos came out like broad daylight despite it feeling pitch black to the naked and puny human eye. You can see below the night time what looks like daytime photo, and the photo of the camera having just taken a photo but with a phone camera to show what it actually looked like. Magic!





Quick stop in the park as we cut through on the way to our Christmas destination, we picked up a couple of German hikers at the entrance gate and gave them a lift in exchange for sharing the research they had done on the park which was a lot more than our exactly none.



Christmas eve, we park up at a hostel in a town called Banos with a little line above the n that we don’t have on our keyboard. Banos with a little line above the n translates, no kidding, to bathrooms or toilets. This, obviously, was a continual source of amusement.







Navidad en Banos, aka Christmas in Bathrooms. Hahahaha.




The hostel also had a sign detailing the beauty of the town, one that we had to use the translate app to understand. We hope you can read the below, but if you can’t our favourite part about “Toilets” is “A landscape happy and multiple sources, thermal waters, crystal waterfalls”. Hahahahahha



But it is a nice little town, despite the name.




Suddenly it was Christmas day, and right on form the weather was grey, cold and miserable. After chocolate for breakfast, some family Skype and a 10am beer we headed into town and found a British themed café for lunch followed by an Irish pub for another beer before making our way back and almost falling asleep at 3pm. Instead we chatted to a Mexican and couple of French cyclists also making their way south. It was a nice day, different, but nice. We hope you had a good one, if not try being a good boy or girl for once and Santa will bring you better presents. Stop wasting time reading this blog and go volunteer in a soup kitchen etc.







Boxing day chore day, laundry is dropped off in town and we restock our supplies from the local market for peanuts. $7.50 US buys us most of a chicken, two cabbages, a lettuce, a big bag of green beans, a huge bag of carrots, a bunch of tomatoes, half a dozen bananas, three mangoes and a dozen eggs.


 

Jenjen asks Steve again, “what’s wrong?”. He’s been staring into the distance not saying a word for ages, lost deep in thoughts with eyes glazed over. This has been going on for days. Why is Steve so distant? Is it something I’ve done thinks Jenjen.

Steve asks Westy Rick again, “what’s wrong?”. He’s been making horrible noises. A nasty metallic rattle under weird circumstances has been consuming every waking minute of Steve’s thoughts. This has been going on for days. Is it something I’ve done thinks Steve.

Investigations begin, off all the issues we could encounter a blown engine would be catastrophic. They don’t have them down here, not until further south. We have taken an engine with 266,000kms, removed it from a 1.5 tonne Subaru and put it into a 2.3 tonne van and trashed the knackers off of it.  Jenjen hops in the driver’s seat for the first big stint behind the wheel. Steve in the back with the engine cover removed we carve our way along a mountain pass. A couple of weeks ago we watched the Italian Job (the real one) so Steve, completely unhelpfully begins singing “This is the self-preservation, society….” But Jenjen manages not to Big Willy it and so there was no need to listen up lads.







Anyway the engine sounds terrible when it rattles, like a washing machine full of ball bearings, so in the hopes it will make some difference the fuel pump and 4 month old fuel filter are replaced. The black crap that comes out the back of the filter reminds us of the terrible fuel quality we are inflicting upon the poor engine. Basic fuel in Ecuador is the cheapest we have encountered so far, $1.48 US for a gallon! 0.52 CAD or 0.30 GBP per litre!!! But maybe it’s mostly water, so perhaps we’ll try the “Super” tomorrow which is twice the price, it better be good…





So there we are, Christmas has been and gone and we continue down through lovely Ecuador with virtually no traffic, a rattling engine, lots of mountains and amazing scenery. Have a good start to 2019, well once the hangover wears off obviously.