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Ecuador

Pictures from the South Coast of Ecuador

sunny 0 °C

Below are some pictures from the last 2 weeks:

These are some of my friends from Quito. They grew up in the Galapagos Islands but came to Quito because of their band....Arcabuz
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As I mentioned earlier...here are the Sharks that were caught off the coast of Manta. This is the picture I got yelled at for taking.
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The next 4 pictures show the different stages of the shipbuilding I talked about.
In the first picture you can see one of the men using a chain saw to shape the logs.
I thought this was pretty amazing.

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Here are a few pictures from the cliffs above the beach....near Puerto Lopez along the coast of Ecuador.
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Ramon, Andy, Scott, Fani, and Gina in Puerto Lopez
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The main attraction near Puerto Lopez was whale watching. I was skeptical beforehand but the guide came through and Scott got some good action shots (see below)
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Posted by Hughes9115 29.08.2007 09:00 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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Headed to the west coast of Ecuador

overcast 18 °C

Back in Quito, I decided to sleep on my friends floor (the guys from the band Arcabuz) this time instead of heading to a hostal or back to the family I had been living with before. One of the nights we celebrated the 25th birthday of another friend.

My next move was a flight to the coastal town of Manta where I would kill some time before meeting up with Scott in 3 more days. It turned out Manta sucked and I only spent one night there. The one night I was in Manta was right after the huge ¨terremoto¨ (earthquake) in the south part of Peru. I was watching the news and remember the guy talking about a tsunami and wondering if I needed to take off for high ground. I never saw anyone freaking out so I just went to sleep. In the morning I wandered around the beach checking out the fish market and the ship construction. There were lots of small sharks that had been caught and I was soon surrounded by 5-7 local fishermen after I took a picture. I just said I was sorry and they left after they had some confidence that I wasnt there to turn them in (I guess its illegal to catch that type of shark). The ship building was really cool too. They were literally building large fishing boats right on the beach. There was a guy next to the boat shaping logs with a chain saw before they were to be attached to the frame of the boat.

That same day I was on a bus south to Puerto Lopez where I would meet up with Scott. Scott updated his blog site and you can check it out here....

http://sgoolsbey.travellerspoint.com/

Look for the UPDATE FROM SOUTHER PERU entry for a summary and some pics. Scotts blog covers the last week of travels along the coast of Ecuador and then into Peru. Right now we are in Arequipa planning our adventure around southern Peru. We will be in this area (Arequipa, Lake Titicaca, Cusco and Macchu Pichu) for the next 2 weeks!!!!

Send me an e-mail if you have any comments or questions!!!

Posted by Hughes9115 24.08.2007 13:28 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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Lago Quilotoa, Banos, Tena

FINALLY UPDATED

all seasons in one day 27 °C

After the last post I decided to leave my friends and head to the Jungle town of Tena solo. The bus ride was only about 2.5 hours and I met a guy on the bus who walked around with me for awhile and ended up showing me a good hostal (which also runs trips deeper into the jungle as well as white water rafting trips). The next day I decided at the last minute (1 hour before departure) to go on the Class 3 white water rafting trip. We had 2 boats and the trip turned out really great, far above my expectations. I was in the boat with the more interesting guide. He was always pulling stunts like jumping out of the boat onto a rock in the middle of the river while we looked around wondering how he was going to catch up with us before the next set of rapids. However, he was able to catch up in plenty of time. Sometimes he would have people sit on the very front of the boat with their legs hanging over the front for the smaller class 2 rapids. One of the girls on the boat got tossed too many times and she was scared so the guide sent her to the other boat where the little kids were riding. The whole trip took about 8 hours....5 of which were on the water.

I stayed in Tena for another night and met up with a German guy and we went out to the bars. It turned out that he was headed back to his volunteer post in the Jungle the next day and it sounded very interesting. I managed to arrange a very cheap one night stay in the Jungle near where he was staying. I didnt pay for the whole guided tour so I just wandered around a few of the paths solo in the morning. When I returned to the ¨Cabana¨ one of the guides told me that I had to hurry back to the main road if I wanted to get back to town. It turns out there were 2 problems. 1) The local public transportation system was not running because of a strike. 2) The long distance bus from Tena back north to Quito was not running due to a large landslide that blocked the road. I hurried back to the main road and the owner of the hostal picked me up in his truck just as the jungle guide had promised. After that I had to catch a bus back to Quito via an alternate route that was about 3 hours longer than I had planned.


Lago Quilotoa
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After the Lago Quilotoa hike with friends from Spain
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Spanish friends and local kids at Lago Quilotoa
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Riding rented 4-wheelers near Banos
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Local kids in the Jungle community of Serena
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Same Kids
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Checking out the Napo River before heading back to Tena
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Jungle Cabanas
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Posted by Hughes9115 15.08.2007 16:48 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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Quilotoa and Banos

sunny 18 °C

So I never added details about the trip to Mindo by bike but I´ll have to do that later because I´m in a town called Banos now and internet is about 3 times more expensive than I´m used to.

Since that last post.........

I relaxed in Quito for a few more days and went to my friend´s concert on Thursday night. That was really cool. The only problem was I ordered a Cuba Libre (Rum and Coke) as my ¨free drink¨ after paying the 5 dollar cover. The coke part was fine but I think the alcohol wasn´t Rum. It tasted more like rubbing alcohol and was painful to drink. For a few days I thought my throat was damaged. From now on I´ll stick to beer where I know what to expect.
I stayed in Quito through the weekend. Friday night was great because I went out with friends to all their favorite bars. Saturday night was boring and I just wandered around and then went home to pack up my things, I wanted to finally get out of Quito on Sunday morning.

On Sunday I took a bus to Lago Quilotoa, which is a crater lake in the mountains about 3 hours south of Quito. On the way to Lago Quilotoa I met 3 people from Spain (actually Catalonia....like all people from Catalonia, they were quick to tell me that Catalonia is NOT Spain). I´ve been hanging out with them for the last 5 days. One of the first days, we hiked around the crater lake (Lago Quilotoa) which took about 4 hours. I have quite a few pictures that I´ll post when I´m able to. After we finished there, we took a bus to Banos and have been here for 3 nights so far. The first day we rented mountain bikes and rode approx. 62 km from Banos to Puyo. The bikes were pretty decent GT bikes with front suspension and only cost 5 dollars for the whole day. It was a good ride because we passed many waterfalls along the way and as we progressed we could see the ecology change from mountains to jungle. The ride took about 6 hours and then we took a bus from Puyo back to Banos. The next day we rented 4-wheelers and rode up and down 2 different mountains around Banos. One of the quads we rented was pretty good and really fun to ride on the stone/dirt paths up the mountain. The other one had some serious problems with the alignment and/steering and was very hard to control at speed. It was pretty dangerous to go any more than 30 mph. Overall it was fun and it only cost about 30 dollars for 2 quads for 2 hours.....so not too bad. The Catalonians are going on a jungle tour tomorrow and I´m trying to decide if I´m going to go with them on the tour from here in Banos or stick to my original plan of heading a little farther into the jungle to a town called Tena and getting a tour from there.

To be continued later.........gotta go.

Posted by Hughes9115 09.08.2007 15:46 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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Mindo by Bike

sunny -17 °C

Sorry that its been over a week since my last update...........

So I´m back from my bike trip to Mindo.
I don´t have time to update with all the details but here is a bit of info and a few pics. The rest should be up in the next few days.


Day before departure:
Starting to get sick
Front wheel of my bike has a bad bearing/hub and the brakes are not that great
Had to borrow baby toys to modify my ¨hard as a rock¨ bike seat.

Post Trip:
Amazing trip.
Made it to Mindo in 11 hours with a few long breaks.
30+ MPH downhill sections were great.
Approx. 60 percent down hill and 40 percent uphill.
¿One dead guy? found in ditch.
Lots of strange yellow mucus coming out of my eyes.


READY TO GO
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BIKE SEAT MODS
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AT THE EQUATOR
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ROAD DOWN THE MOUNTAIN
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FINALLY MADE IT
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HIKING NEAR MINDO
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Posted by Hughes9115 01.08.2007 17:09 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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Post weekend update

21 °C

Its Monday afternoon and I´m about to start my second week of Spanish class.
The weekend was pretty decent. On Friday I just hung out with Gabriel, the only other chico in the house that I live in. We just went to eat and then had a beer back at the house.
On Saturday afternoon/night I had some miscommunication with friends and we were not able to meet up. I was supposed to call them to confirm our get together but I didn´t realize that so they never came into town. I didn´t know where my other friends were so I decided to go "downtown" solo and check it out. I was just goint to walk around for an hour or so then head home. Instead, I ended up seeing some friends of friends who were headed to a concert. One of the guys is in a different band so he knows a lot of people and was able to get me to the front of the line without much of a problem. There were 2 bands playing. The first one was some sort of Rasta band from Colombia. They were pretty good and threw in some cover songs by Bob Marley during the show. The second band is supposedly pretty famous in the underground rock scene here in Ecuador. It was really fast and reminded me of 311 in some ways. They finished about 2AM and we were about to leave when a DJ stepped up and started spinning some drum and bass. It was pretty good and I got some good excercise between 2AM and 4AM dancing. After that I wandered around the street with some people and then caught a taxi back home.

On Sunday I met up with I girl I met on couchsurfing.com and we had lunch. The other purpose of our meetup was to discuss a potential adventure next week. She is big into mountain biking and had told me earlier that she could get one of her friends to loan me a nice mountain bike for a few days and we could ride to another town called Mindo. Its supposed to be very unique because its right on the fringe of mulitple different ecosystems (mountains, jungle and costal I think). I think the ride is about 100km but a lot of it is downhill since we are on top of a mountain right now so I should be fine. The plan is to leave here next Sunday or Monday. Ill update on the status of that later.

Tomorrow for dinner I´m supposed to meet up with some dude who just motorcycled around South America with his girlfriend. I´m sure he will have some really intersting stories.

Later,
Andy

Posted by Hughes9115 23.07.2007 11:13 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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First week of Spanish class complete

16 °C
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Well....
I just finished my first week of Spanish class last night and everything is going well. I understand quite a bit of what my house mates say and I can basically communicate my ideas. I´m sure I sound like a caveman because I don´t know how to turn all the verbs into the correct tense....but I can get my point across.

Like I said before, the food is incredibly cheap here. I just had lunch which included popcorn, a large bowl of chicken soup, some exotic juice and a plate of rice, veggies and beef (like very thin steak).....and the grand total with tip was ............$1.50....crazy. Most days for lunch I stop at this middle eastern cafe and get a Flafel pita sandwich with a side of rice and lentil beans.....grand total.....$1.00.

I bought a used local cell phone for $20 so I can call friends and its good to have for an emergency. If you want the number, send me an email and let me know. It might even be possible to send me texts through the internet for free...I´m not sure though. Actually I have 2 phone numbers because here in Ecuador there are 2 major cell phone service providers. Porta and Movistar are the names and its very expensive to call from Porta to Movistar. My phone came with a Porta SIM card and then today I bought a Movistar SIM card for $5 that even has a few dollars of credit allready on it....most people use a pay as you go system here....no contracts.

I´ve met quite a few people here and its not that uncommon for me to see people that I know while I´m walking around town....kind of funny after only one week. So the plan for now is to stay here for another week and keep taking Spanish classes with the same guy. I also need to learn how to Salsa dance. Sounds funny but the people here are insanely good at Salsa dancing and its pretty fun. I went to some Salsa bars the other night with the people I live with and I was really amazed. I´m told that knowing how to Salsa dance for girls is like knowing how to play soccer for boys here. They grew up with it, now its instinct.

Send me an email if you have any questions. I don´t really know what to write about in these blogs so if you have suggestions please let me know.

Later,
Andy

Posted by Hughes9115 21.07.2007 13:21 Archived in Ecuador Comments (1)

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Mi nueva habitación

18 °C
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Yesterday I decided to check OUT of The Magic Bean hostal and find a new place to crash. I walked around most of the day just checking out the city again. I made it all the way down to the Old Town and went into the Secret Garden hostal. Its a nice place that has cheap dorms and an amazing view from the roof top terrace. I decided not to check in there because it´s so far from Mariscal where my Spanish classes are. Instead I just hung out there for an hour or so trying to read a spanish newspaper and enjoying the view. On my way back to Mariscal I stopped to check my email and found an e-mail from some people looking to rent out one room of their apt (I had sent them an e-mail a few days ago based on an ad I saw in an internet cafe). I called the their house and had some serious trouble conversing with the people that live there. I decided to go look at the place around 6:30PM and grabbed a taxi. Their house is about a 15-20 minute walk from the tourist ¨Mariscal¨area and I was in a hurry since it was going to get dark soon. To make a long story short I went up and checked the place out and told them I would live there. 25 minutes later I was back with my bag setting up shop in their house. I have my own room and its $5 per night. I can use the kitchen, washing machine, etc. To be honest I´m not too sure exactly how many people live there. I think 4 + 2 little ninos. One of the people is a 28 year old engineer who speaks decent english. The other 3 are sisters, between the ages of 15 and 30 something, none of which speak English.......so I hope this living arrangement will help me learn Spanish a little quicker. The engineer has a car and he was running me around town so I could eat and pick up my bag, so that was really cool.
Today is Monday and I´m just relaxing until my first Spanish lesson starts at 1:30.

Later,
Andy

Posted by Hughes9115 16.07.2007 09:55 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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A few pics

-17 °C

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Quito from 4,100 meters

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Quito Park

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Me at 4,100 meters above Quito

Posted by Hughes9115 14:10 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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First few days in Quito

sunny 23 °C
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Everything has been going well here in Quito the last few days. On Thursday I wandered around the Old Town and the University. I have some pictures that I´d like to post but I need a new cable to connect my camera to the computer. On Thursday night I meet up with a local that I met through couchsurfing.com and we had a beer. I´ll probably meet up with him again soon. I spent a good portion of the day Friday doing some research on the local Spanish Language schools. I visited 2 of them and now I just have to decide which one I want to attend. The plan is to start early next week. Typical cost for one on one Spanish lessons is approx. 6$ per hour. Thats for a program where you dont have to commit to a certain number of days and you can schedule the lesson time whenever works for you. Thats a bit expensive but I need to start learning Spanish quickly so I think I just need to get started rather than worry about saving a few bucks. I may even try a different school for the 2nd week just to see what works best for me. Last night, Friday night, I met 2 American guys in my hostel that just finished a 2 month long volunteer program in the jungle region of the country. Their task was to improve the water for some small amazon communites and they built many rain water collection tanks themselves over the last few months. Their tales of life in the amazon are amazing. Some of the communities required them to hike for 5 to 6 hours off the road to be reached and one required 9 river crossings at waist depth! One of the guys even had to eat monkey soup.....which had a monkey arm sticking out of the bowl...

Thats all for now....
Andy

Posted by Hughes9115 14.07.2007 08:20 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)

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