tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-62632601528512079122024-02-19T00:24:58.119-08:00Travel Diary"Travel is more fun, shit life is more fun when you treat it as a series of impulses" Bill Brysonmattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.comBlogger250125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-13080914275657666772017-04-23T17:28:00.002-07:002017-04-23T17:28:23.507-07:00Santa Marta and Paso de Mango<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Our group split in Cartagena with one person heading home and three of us going on to Santa Marta, which is like a cut price version of Cartagena but with an excellent museum. I spent a night in a hot dorm while the others opted for private and in the morning they were off to the Lost City trek, which I don't have time to do.<br />
<br />
Instead I went to Finca Entre Rios a guesthouse owned by the same people as the Santa Marta hotel and located in an area called Paso de Mango.<br />
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To get there I took a bus to a place called Bonda, which was hot and dusty with ugly breeze bloc buildings. From there it was a motorbike taxi up a dirt road. As we climbed it got greener and cooler but also more humid till the place itself which was deep in forest.<br />
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The guesthouse turned out to be two buildings. I was put in the one by the river, which was a self contained little house. I had an ensuite bedroom, sitting room and a terrace overlooking the swimming hole in the river. There was also a kitchen but that was locked to me and used by the staff, who provided lunch, dinner and breakfast.<br />
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I swam a bit in the river but it was mostly full of locals. Including a young boy who rode his bike deep into the water doing a wheelie until the seat was submerged then turning and pedalling back out and a group of old ladies who walked in fully clothed till the water was up to their shoulders and stood chatting.<br />
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I walked up the hill to see a pre Colombian stone staircase and terrace and in the morning it was time to leave.<br />
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Back in Santa Marta now at a hostel that has a pool and aircon in the dorms.<br />
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From here it is basically moving all the way. One night Santa Marta, one Cartagena, one Bogota, one Miami and one on a plane. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-52126677841788345122017-04-20T15:41:00.003-07:002017-04-20T15:41:39.359-07:00Cartagena <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Flying in Colombia is interesting as the airlines don't translate anything to English, or do safety demos, or any of the other things you might expect.<br />
<br />
We landed in Cartagena around 10pm and I knew at once I was back in the tropics. The hotel was in a narrow alley and I was a bit bothered by the half naked old man shouting in the street but everyone else was friendly and he was inaudible from my room.<br />
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In the morning we wandered around the old city more or less aimlessly, doing a large section of the walls. Then found a museum in the old Inquisition building. Most of it was in Spanish but one translated section listed their targets as Heretics, witches, Jews and solicitors. Obviously practicing law was a serious matter.<br />
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In the afternoon we went to the fort of San Felipe. This is basically a hill that has been built over so much with fortifications it looks like a giant building. It is riddled with tunnels some of which are open to visitors. In the longest one, returning from deep underground I found my way blocked by a man with a laugh like a cartoon villain. "Bwahahahaha" he bellowed on seeing someone in his way. I squeezed against the wall and he led a small group past before breaking into a high pitched cackle this time.<br />
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Ate dinner on a rooftop enjoying the view of people dancing in the square below.<br />
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Today was a boat tour to a nearby island. Nice symmetry with the boats in El Nido at the start of the trip.<br />
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I had expected to visit several islands but instead after a long wait at the port it went like this. We were jammed into an oversized speedboat, it took a large group but bounced over the waves spraying everyone the same way. After an hour we approached a beach and a woman shouted something that sounded like "Princess Alma", which resulted in her getting off the boat. Ten minutes later we were at another busier beach and the captain made a long speech in high speed Spanish. Some more people got off.<br />
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The boat sped on for another 30 minutes and stopped by a building on a rock in the middle of the sea. We could see a group of people swimming in the distance - another speech but this time no one got off. Then we went to what turned out to be an aquarium, where there was finally a rough translation of what was happening. That we had the option of a dolphin show or snorkeling. I opted for snorkeling so went with the, now nearly empty boat, back to near the building on a rock. Where we hired snorkels from the captain and jumped in. The fish were colourful but the reef was mostly dead and not a patch on El Nido.<br />
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Finally we returned to the second beach now even more rammed with people where a lunch of fried fish was served. There was a rumour we had to stay for three hours but it turned out to be only two (still at least 45 minutes too long). After lunch I walked to the end of the beach and tried to remember some climbing moves on the rocks. Swam a bit and then had to wait.<br />
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It wasn't even sunny but the crowds still did the classic, let's pay to lie on a plastic lounger and do absolutely nothing. I was reminded why I don't do normal beach holidays.<br />
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Now back on shore.<br />
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mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-88167825563487161832017-04-17T15:51:00.001-07:002017-04-17T15:51:50.711-07:00Salento <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
On the first day we walked down a muddy track to find an organic coffee farm. The tour was almost too good as I can't remember most of the details but basically they are trying to recreate an older system of coffee growing. The Arabica coffee they grow needs shade, for which they grow native trees and they use other plants to fix nutrients instead of chemical fertilisers. The coffee was good too, I bought two bags.<br />
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Today we went to the Cocorra valley. Starting with a half hour jeep ride, which so full I had to stand on the back board - great fun winding along the mountain roads. Then it was a five hour hike, up a river valley crossing several times on hanging bridges with gaps in them. Up to a hummingbird sanctuary where you can drink hot chocolate while watching hummingbirds on the feeders.<br />
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From there we descended to the valley and climbed again through the cloud forest to a viewpoint before following the route down. This was a wide track with a gate at one point to stop cars getting up and sweeping views of the valley and surrounding mountains. The route passed several groups of wax palms, the tallest palm trees in the world. Before eventually returning to Cocorra village and the jeeps. This time I got to sit down. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-19062166148090776852017-04-16T06:32:00.003-07:002017-04-16T06:32:53.756-07:00To Popayan and Salento <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
To get to Popayan you need to book a taxi, or navigate several bus changes - we took the taxi.<br />
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The road was surfaced at first before becoming a dirt track for a couple of hours. It climbed up and up into a national park. Cloud forest on either sides, the only other sign of humans a sign warning of possible tapirs in the road. Eventually the road crossed the high point and started going down and traffic appeared again, including several large tankers that really didn't belong on such a road. Then we emerged to a surfaced road again and through small villages to the city of Popayan.<br />
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In our one night in Popayan we saw the parade there which is apparently second biggest in the world. It certainly took a long time. Not just floats and marching bands but a man in a pointy hat, police, firemen and at one point the string section of an orchestra were wheeled past on a kind of trolley.<br />
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Next morning I was crossing the road on the way to the bus station when I suddenly found myself on the ground with my rucksack under a motorbike. Obviously my first thought was how angry the driver must be for my getting in theway but luckily she was fine about it. There then followed the arrival of a policeman, ambulance and a man with a bottle of whisky he wanted to pour on my grazed leg. All successfully waved away.<br />
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Despite all information suggesting it was impossible we found a minibus from Popayan to Armenia. Driven by a man who drove fast and talked faster. We went down and down to a flat hot plain with sugar cane plantations then up again to the city of Armenia.<br />
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From there it was a taxi to Salento. A process which required my passport number, a special permit, which the taxi driver got from an office and refuelling where we had to get out in case the car exploded. It didn't.<br />
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Salento turned out to be a hillside village perched on the edge of a huge valley. More tourists than anywhere else in Colombia and more restaurants. The village was crowded with Colombians and foreigners. I was reminded that by far the quietest place in Colombia so far was the capital.<br />
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They didn't have easter parades but a bonfire lit by throwing burning lights from the church tower (with a guide line).<br />
<br /></div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-84605452063536115022017-04-15T16:27:00.001-07:002017-04-15T16:27:43.445-07:00San Agustin <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
We flew to Pitileto landing on a narrow strip of tarmac in a field before waiting in an open sided hanger for luggage to be individually delivered. From there it was a taxi past coffee farms and steep mountains to Hotel Imperio Cococababa. This was family run and very friendly but if I had to criticise I'd say the sloping ceiling that meant I could only walk to one end of my bed and the way the noise from the street carried.<br />
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In the afternoon we had a walking tour of two sites with rock carvings, one overlooking a deep river gorge.<br />
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Walked into the town of San Augustin for dinner and found an easter parade going on. The floats had plastic statues that could be called tacky but the overall effect was amazing. Something about the drumming that filled the air and the way the whole town joined in a chanted Ave Maria made it very powerful.<br />
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The next day was spent viewing more sites starting with the archaeological park then in the afternoon a car tour of outlying sites and a waterfall.<br />
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Little is known about the San Agustin culture, except that bthey carved a huge number of sculptures some of which were found on or in the entrance of tombs. Archaeology suggests the statues stopped being made about 300 years before the Spanish conquest and the people who were there at the conquest denied all knowledge of who had made them or why.<br />
<br /></div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-55575301668332062632017-04-11T15:59:00.002-07:002017-04-11T15:59:59.706-07:00Last day in Bogota <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Today we started with a walking tour that took in the colonial area and the central square. We were given chicha, which was not nice. To get an idea get a can of sweetcorn and blit in a food processor to a kind of mushy soup, pour in about half a teacup of beer and a squirt of lemon juice.<br />
The tour finished with a game of tejo. Imagine quoits but instead of getting a hoop over a stick you have to hit a small piece of dynamite with a stone. No one managed so the guide stood over the target and dropped a stone to demonstrate.<br />
After lunch we went to the Museum of Independence, which had very few English translations. It did say however that the war of independence started with an argument over whether a vase could be lent to a Spanish official or not.<br />
Thenwe visited the oldest church in the city and the emerald museum, neither of which allowed photos.<br />
The emerald museum is on the 23rd floor of an office block and you need to give a passport number to get in. It starts with a walk through an imitation emerald mine then a selection of green stones in various shapes and finally a shop where you can buy emerald jewelry priced in US dollars and going from $50 to $10,000. The mine was my favourite bit? </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-20575254185691004752017-04-11T15:46:00.001-07:002017-04-11T15:46:56.369-07:00Salt Cathedral <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
On Monday we went to the salt cathedral at Zipaquirá. This required getting the transmilenio - a kind of bendy bus to a terminal. The journey was improved by the buskers including a woman who carried a full size harp onto a crowded bus and played for ten minutes.<br />
From there it was a regular bus to the town of Zipaquirá and a walk uphill to the entrance. The cathedral is separate from the working mine, which is now done by what sounds like fracking (water is injected at high pressure and the disobedience salt pumped out). The actual cathedral is part of a much larger complex including an underground shopping complex, a light show (not worth seeing) and a 3D movie about the history of the mines.<br />
Had lunch in a restaurant overlooking the main square, which was excellent value as they kept bringing extra things that were included so it ended up as a three course meal plus coffee. While we were in there the heavens opened so we sat watching the horses in the square nearly drown until it dried up a bit. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-38652588708730436582017-04-09T18:57:00.000-07:002017-04-09T18:57:00.989-07:00First day in Bogota <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
For the final three weeks I'm travelling with friends. It makes a nice change so I've largely let the others make decisions.<br />
<br />
This morning we joined the crowds walking up to a church on top of Cerro Montseratte, which sits above the city. About 500m ascent all on stone steps and with the air getting thinner at every stage. We took the funicular railway down.<br />
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From there we walked all about the city, seeing the house of independence leader Simon Bolivar, the gold museum and the historic areas. The skill of some of the gold work was incredible, life size insects and flowers.<br />
Failed to see the changing of the guard, which from what I can mak out is off limits to visitors - makes you wonder why they do it.<br />
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In the evening we confirmed that eating out in Bogota is near impossible. Most food options are cake shops or takeaways and they close around 4pm. We found one place, which reluctantly did meals. The portions were large but my chicken pasta seemed to be chicken and spaghetti boiled together and served in the cooking water with no seasoning. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-42120837333266138272017-04-08T15:02:00.000-07:002017-04-11T16:06:07.611-07:00Rio<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
I took yet another bus to Rio de Janeiro.The bus station was full of warning signs in multiple languages about the dangers of taking unlicensed taxis or public buses so I booked a taxi from a stand to my hostel in Ipanema. The hostel itself was pretty much as expected except for the roommates who took napping to extremes. When I arrived at 6pm they were going to bed. As I went to bed at 11.30 they got up. They then returned about 5am and presumably slept most of the day, though they weren't there when I got back at 4pm.<br />
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With only limited time I booked on to a city tour that covered the main sights. The Christ statue, a historic area called Lapa, the cathedral and Sugar Loaf for sunset.<br />
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The second evening I made a point of finding the recommended local food, feijoada. This was on the menu for two people but they assured me there was a one person option. I think they mixed it up though because the meal was huge. A giant pot of bean stew, another of the same with six pork chops and a piece of bacon in, crackling, fried manioc, manioc flower, rice and salad. Then desert was included as well. I doubled in size over the hour or so I was in that restaurant.<br />
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My second day I was recommended to see the museum of tomorrow. This is in a great location by the sea and a weirdly shaped building, which they seem to love in Brazil. It started with an imax type film, which was completely in Portuguese so I have no idea what it said but there were lots of exploring stars, space scenes and wildlife footage. From there it was a series of interactive screens covering subjects like medicine, climate change and robots. Very well done but I didn't really think it was distinctive to Rio.<br />
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Portion sizes continued to defeat me. A 'snack' of cheese and chips came in a foot long oval bowl with chopped pepperoni. Tasty but I must have had about a quarter.<br />
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Overall impressions.<br />
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<ul style="text-align: left;">
<li>Despite the reputation I never felt unsafe anywhere in Rio.</li>
<li>The landscape is absolutely stunning but is let down by the buildings, which range from standard commercial box to favella shack.</li>
<li>They have a huge mountain rainforest around the Christ - right in the city. This alone makes me want to go back sometime. </li>
<li>I never saw the famous dance clubs, probably because I was in the wrong place. </li>
</ul>
</div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-28122715332983843292017-04-04T13:55:00.000-07:002017-04-04T13:55:23.971-07:00Sao Paulo <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
This trip seems to be accelerating as I go. Another day on bus delivered me to Sao Paulo. With a day to see the city I joined a walking tour led by an overenthusiastic guide.<br />
The tour focused on the less obviously tourist areas with lots of street art. One negative was the tendency to stop at a junction and announce that there was something worth seeing ten minutes that way. Only to then lead us in the opposite direction. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-79492920140455776992017-04-02T15:57:00.000-07:002017-04-02T15:57:09.788-07:00Into Brazil <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
I crossed the border to the country that inspired a haircut you can't show off at work easily enough. Warned that the buses tend to drop you at passport control and drive off I took a taxi all the way through to the long distance bus station in Foz do Iguaçu and spent 12 hours on a bus to Curitiba. Luckily Brazilian buses turn out to be very comfortable and the roads are good.<br />
Curitiba is something of a show town with lots of grand architecture, although the sheer number of apparently homeless people going through the bins was distressing. There is a local bus service with odd bus stops that are enclosed pod like platforms. When the bus arrives it puts out a kind of ramp to the sliding doors of the pod.<br />
I visited the historic centre, which was largely shut apart from a street market and found the museum. This might have been very good but with signs only in Portuguese I had no idea.<br />
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<ul style="text-align: left;">
<li>From there I walked up past some kind of cycle race to the Oscar Niemayer museum, which the man at the hostel said was one of the top 20 in the world. The numerous rooms of abstract art were largely wasted on me but I can't deny the eye on a stalk building was a landmark - just a shame it was empty. The most distinctive thing was the foyer was full of groups of teenagers each of which had brought a small radio and we're practicing various dance moves.</li>
</ul>
</div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-55378775244885827892017-03-31T17:33:00.000-07:002017-03-31T17:33:08.602-07:00Iguazu falls <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
The first thing to say is wow!<br />
The area around the falls may be a bit of a theme park but that is completely lost in the sheer scale of them.<br />
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Two huge horseshoes of waterfalls, one above the other then further back a third waterfall called the Devil's throat.<br />
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I got a shared taxi from the hostel then explored as many paths as possible. There were there broad areas. Round the entrance, with little view, the lower path and upper paths and the Devil's throat walkway, which went out across the river.<br />
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Walking between these seemed to be forbidden but there was a little train included in the entrance price.<br />
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I saw everything by 3.30 and spent an hour establishing there were boat trips in my price range before waiting for the pick up at 5, which turned out to be 5.30 as two of the passengers went awol.<br />
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Tomorrow, I should cro<br />
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<br /></div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-85193391828764594412017-03-31T16:17:00.000-07:002017-03-31T16:17:55.450-07:00Esters de Ibera<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
The Esteros de Ibera are the second largest wetlands I'm south America after the Pantanal in Brazil and not the easiest place to visit.<br />
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First you need to get to a small town called Mercedes. Coming from Buenos Aires the only buses run overnight. Then wait.<br />
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At about 12 a dirty yellow bus marked Crucero del Norte leaves for Colonia Carlos Pellegrini in the wetlands. After 30 minutes the tarmac stops and for the next three hours the road is made of sand. Eventually the road crosses a wooden bridge and arrives at Carlos Pellegrini, where I was dropped at my guesthouse.<br />
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Very little of the wetlands is accessible to the public. There are a series of walkways that take 2-3 hours and boat tours of the one lake nearest the town. Even in this small area I saw lots of capybara, caiman and some marsh deer, which if I understood correctly are endemic to the Ibera wetlands.<br />
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Getting out was a stroke of luck. The only way by public transport is back to Mercedes, which for my plan to get to Iguazu falls would have meant at least four different buses and 18 hours on the road. Instead it turned out a Belgian couple were going the same way so we split the cost and paid the guesthouse owner to drive us to Posadas to the north. Again this was a long, straight sand road. This time for five hours. The landscape gradually changed and we came out of the wetlands and passed huge farms and stands of woodland that seemed to be pine.<br />
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Then quite suddenly we came to a junction with a busy surfaced road running into the suburbs of Posadas. From there it was easy to get a bus through to Puerto Iguazu. As I walked out of the bus station there was a place called Tango Inn opposite so I checked into a dorm.</div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-43359551300041782472017-03-28T04:04:00.001-07:002017-03-28T04:04:46.282-07:00Buenos Aires and on<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
I landed in Buenos Aires four and a half hours before taking off, which is a useful trick if I could work out how to use it.<br />
The immigration officer decided to question me about the design of my passport, which had me wondering if there was "must know obscure shit to enter" rule but eventually he let me go.<br />
Once through I headed for the official taxi desk and was accosted by a man offering to take me to the city centre for US$45. I waved him away and booked at the desk, where they gave me a slip of paper with the cost in various currencies, it was $14!<br />
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The hostel struggled to find my booking at first but eventually decided I was the Matteo Leban someone had put in their system and I was shown to a bed on a kind of mezzanine reached by a ladder. I promptly went to sleep for an hour, got up to have a pizza then went back to bed.<br />
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Food portions are often ridiculous, I ordered what was on the menu as café con leche, tostadas, y jamon. Apparently it wasn't worth mentioning that the ham came with two fried eggs, or that I also got a glass of orange juice, a fruit salad and a slice of cheesecake.<br />
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I was pleased to discover I did remember enough Spanish to navigate the subway to the bus station and book an overnight bus to Mercedes.<br />
Less pleased to find that Monday is when every museum and tourist site in the city closes so I spent a long time wandering the streets. The city seems very European, if I didn't know and was told I was in a suburb of Madrid or Barcelona I would have accepted it.<br />
My bus seat was what they call suite meaning it could be laid flat and I had the best sleep I have ever had on a form of transport and got to Mercedes at 7am. Now waiting for the onwards bus to Colonia Carlos Pellegrini, which might be at 8.15, 8.50 or indeed 12.30 depending on who I ask.<br />
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<br /></div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-32861115656706221722017-03-25T21:25:00.002-07:002017-03-25T21:25:16.227-07:00What time is it?<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Due to my own stupidity I ended up with a little over a day in Auckland, not enough time to do much let alone adjust to the time zone before going on.<br />
Overall impressions, a bit like home but there are definite echoes of Australia in the culture. Both are what you get if you try and build a copy of England fast, on top of a completely different place and people.<br />
Yesterday I visited the Pasifica festival and saw dancers and music from around the Pacific. I was disappointed that what was on offer as typical Po3lynesian food seemed to be chop suey - I was looking for a change from east Asian cuisine. I did try the taro, which turned out to be the blandest food ever. Think plain boiled potato with a drier texture and less flavour.<br />
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In the evening lookingfor somewhere to eat I was taken aback when I had my bum pinched by a man wearing a feather boa in rainbow colours, speedos and a big grin. Not something that would have happened in ruralSumatra I think. Plus that bar didn't even do food!<br />
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Today I wanted to go to Rangitoto island but with it being a Sunday decided not to risk being trapped or delayed by a lack of public transport. Instead I walked through the city to the highest point at Mount Eden, which turned out to be an extinct volcano, complete with grassed over crater. <br />
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Now already back at the airport.<br />
<br />
Yours in exhaustion</div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-86902101505080599422017-03-23T20:24:00.000-07:002017-03-23T20:24:40.994-07:00Once there were tigers <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Singapore always comes as a shock. The high technology, English road signs and cultural diversity - it could almost be London or New York if not for the climate.<br />
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The streets are not as clean as I remembered but otherwise it is all ultra modern but withtiny patches of natural vegetation. It's hard to believe Wallace was stalked by tigers here - so much gained and so much lost.<br />
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Singapore zoo is worth seeing, despite my doubts about polar bears in the tropics and whether they can really describe orang utans on a small island with a climbing frame as "free ranging in the treetops".<br />
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In the evening I found somewhere to try the famous chilli crab, which required some navigation as the Chinatown train station seemed to only have exits into a shopping centre, not to outside.<br />
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From there I went to the Gardens by the Bay. I know there are many bits I didn't see but the supertrees alone were worth it with incredible views.<br />
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Woke up in the morning to a panic. 24th is meant to be the date I land in New Zealand, not the date I set off. Currently ar Changi airport, they can get me on tonight's flight but I need my travel agent in the UK to organise it. Really hope he starts work early. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-11926934410561895712017-03-21T01:37:00.000-07:002017-03-21T01:37:01.436-07:00Malaysia <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
In the absence of any obvious surface route between Medan and Singapore I flew to Penang, setting off far too early. Malaysia feels so much richer than Indonesia, it's hard to imagine the roads here being unsurfaced or getting random power cuts. No more 5 star accommodation though, I slept in a pod bed that was like being in a box.<br />
In Penang I went to the top of the tallest tower on the island, complete with glass walkway and laughed at the people concerned it was too cold and rainy (it was like a warm mist).<br />
On the way down I passed several bizarre floors including a replica of a Japanese street, a room where children rode robot dinosaurs and a 7D cinema (any ideas?).<br />
Then I visited the nearest museum, which turned out to be an upside down house.<br />
In the evening I met up with Hannah from the Orang utan project, who was in town to sort out a visa and we had dinner.<br />
This morning I got up too early again and walked down to the free ferry to the mainland to catch a train to KL and eventually, via getting off in the wrong place and a lack of signs found my guesthouse and promptly fell asleep for an hour. I know I should try and see something of the city but I really don't feel like it so will try and save my cash for Singapore. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-37094056846983119392017-03-19T00:21:00.000-07:002017-03-19T00:21:27.665-07:00And now for something completely different <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
For the midpoint of my trip I decided to break from backpacking to try out a bit of luxury. The five star Marriott in Medan has bed and breakfast for £70 a night, a lot for budget travel but in the range of a two or three star travelodge or Premier Inn at home.<br />
So I've been enjoying the huge buffet, roof top pool and views from the 28th floor. The real luxuries for me though are a powerful shower, a toilet where you can flush paper (if you don't understand this you don't want to) and the quality of the aircon, which keeps my room at 16 degrees without a big noisy box on the window. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-61475397522663812182017-03-14T04:26:00.000-07:002017-03-14T04:26:09.672-07:00Orang utan Orang utan! <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Just got back from five days jungle trekking with a total of 17 orang utans, 11 of them fully wild?<br />
On the first day we visited the edge of the national park to see the semi wild Orang utans, who were released from a rescue centre. Then we followed the river about four hours into the forest and set up camp on the banks. It was very basic, the toilet arrangement was "here's a stick, dig a hole and bury everything, washing was in the river and food was cooked over a campfire.<br />
The second day we went up a very steep, very muddy hill and along the ridge. As we were descending we found our first truly wild Orang utan a young male. After a bit he was joined by a mother and baby, then another male arrived and the first left. Finally as we were returning to camp a male and female crossed in front of us.<br />
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Day three saw us back at the same fig tree by a shorter route , where there was a different mother and baby<br />
Later joined by the mother and baby from the day before. We stayed until we had a faecal sample (this is research) and then headed back.<br />
Day four and instead of crossing the river we stayed on our side and climbed the hill behind camp. On the other side we saw a dominant male and another mother and baby. We headed back via a waterfall.<br />
Today was walking back along the river followed by lunch in Bukit before returning to Coconut Island, sweaty, covered in dirt and insect and leech bites but very very happy. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-88650018016769075882017-03-08T02:50:00.000-08:002017-03-08T02:50:15.717-08:00To the forest <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
I stayed a night in Medan before being picked up for the Orang utan project.<br />
The base is a small bamboo house in the middle of rice fields. There is electricity and wifi but no mains water so we shower with rainwater and flush the toilet from a well.<br />
Today we did a practice trek of four hours. We passed through rubber plantations before wading across a river, then headed uphill into the forest. No orang utans today but we did see a nest.<br />
The down was steep and slippy and then we walked along the river, crossing loads of times. At the final crossing everyone stopped and we sat down in the water for a bit.<br />
Then we walked back to the tourist town of Bukit Lawang for lunch. The river by the town looked very fast and rough but we still saw people rafting on it.</div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-83545050877593420132017-03-04T06:53:00.000-08:002017-03-04T06:53:04.455-08:00Indonesia -a review <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
The last couple of days have been pretty much covered by my photos, tomorrow will be getting to Medan and then I'm off to the jungle, so I decided to review a whole country. Because why not?<br />
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1. Do not travel by road, you will have worked this out from my previous posts but seriously just don't. Getting anywhere takes about a day, roads are bad and driving worse and let's not even mentioned what pass for vehicles. Take internal flights it will be worth it.<br />
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2. Food is highly variable. I had some amazing meals especially in Ubud, but I also had some terrible ones. In Java the sauces tend to be watery and in Sumatra many places think food counts as fresh and hot if it has been cooked the same day. On the other hand Sumatra also provided Jemny's on Samosir, where I just ate freshly caught and fried lake fish, which was great. If in doubt go for the fruit, there is lots often straight off the trees.<br />
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3. English is rarely spoken and even people who think they speak it will struggle with questions like "What time is the bus".<br />
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4. If you can interact with an Indonesian in a non commercial setting you won't find anyone more friendly and helpful. If they are in any tourist related business you can trust them only after you have paid and even then expect to be given the hard sell for something extra. The big exception bizarrely is actual shops where they seem content to leave the door open and be somewhere in the neighbourhood rather than actually sit behind the counter.<br />
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5. Despite being the largest Muslim country in the world an awful lot seems to be non Muslim. Bali is Hindu of course but so is the area around Bromo and the lake Toba area seems to be mostly Christian although with traces of another religion that involved ghosts, magicians and sacrificing bulls.<br />
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6. In hotels you will find proper toilets, elsewhere, I was very glad that as a man I don't have to touch anything except with the soles of my shoes. Squat toilets are common and the flushing and washing arrangement is usually an open tank and a small bucket so you can pour the water from it.<br />
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7. On the subject. One of the oddest things has been the way so many places like petrol stations have a prayer room in with the toilets.<br />
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8. The landscape can be truly amazing.<br />
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9. The adverts include the bizarre Pro Mild. Which I think are cigarettes, although that makes the use of the English language slogan never quit all the more questionable. Which brings me to.<br />
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10. No I don't smoke and actually yes I do mind if you do, especially in a confined space like a minibus. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-19444371999777194062017-03-02T02:01:00.003-08:002017-03-02T02:01:50.454-08:00I might have broken <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
That last journey was pretty horrible. Six hours in a minibus on terrible roads.<br />
I got to Parapat around 9 last night and to my surprise was dropped at the police station. I explained my situation and was taken to a travel agent, who sold me a ticket for Medan on Sunday, before showing me to my hotel.<br />
By this point I was exhausted and dehydrated so I downed some water and collapsed.<br />
In the morning, with my head still pounding I got a ferry to Samosir Island. Got upgraded to a 'deluxe' room because the standard ones are being rebuilt but I'm not sure what the difference is. Anyway today I am mostly sleeping, reading and avoiding people.<br />
Feel a bit better now so fingers crossed for tomorrow. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-60862729130042431322017-02-28T19:21:00.000-08:002017-02-28T19:21:35.505-08:00Nothing is true <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
"Everything we were told in Indonesia turned out not to be true. Sometimes this happened at once. The exception was if we were told something would happen at once, in which case it turned out not to be true over several hours" -Douglas Adams, Last Chance to See.<br />
<br />
The claim that buses out of Bukittinggi only run at night was wrong. There was a 1pm bus and it was full size and surprisingly comfortable. Although I could have done without the pink mood lighting and ballads. The first bit of the journey was very twisty and slightly nauseating, like accidentally turning on a TV when Piers Morgan is on, but after that the roads got straighter.<br />
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The views were breathtaking with limestone hills covered in jungle, rice terraces and fast flowing rivers. I tried to get a few pictures from the window but not sure how well they will work.<br />
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We arrived at Padang Sidempuan at 10.30, it would have been 9.30 but there was an hour break for the driver to have his tea. I was put in a tuk with instructions for "hotel, hotel" and delivered to Hotel Natama, a basic place where at least one receptionist spoke a bit of English.<br />
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No one else did though. I had to deal with them 'thoughtfully' turning on the TV and removing the toilet paper.<br />
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I was woken first by the middle of the night prayers, which seemed to go on for about a year. Falling back asleep I was woken by a knocking on the door. A boy who looked about ten was standing there with two breakfasts, each consisting of a cup of black tea and two slicesof untoasted white bread with strawberry jam.<br />
He struggled to place it all down on the tv stand as I tried to explain I was only one person. Eventually I picked up one meal and handed it back to him.<br />
I spoke to the receptionist who almost understandsEnglish and he told me to take a tuk tuk to the ALS bus station and wait two hours. However at the station my attempt to buy a ticket to Parapat was met with "Parapat, no bus" so I returned to the hotel and after finally making it understood where I wanted to go was told a minibus would pick up from there at 2pm. So now pretty much trapped here hoping it comes.<br />
The good news is that all the indications are that it will only take 5 hours. Which by Indonesian standards is barely time to find a seat<br />
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<br /></div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-2897422864190906132017-02-27T17:29:00.001-08:002017-02-27T17:29:39.755-08:00Jakarta to Bukittinggi <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
I can't say Jakarta was very impressive, though I did like that there are commuter trains, saving me from the chaos of the streets.<br />
I visited the historic centre, now called Kota, which was once the Dutch colonial city of Batavia. Sadly all that is left is a square and a few streets. I looked in a rather bizarre museum of puppets and then in the history museum.<br />
This had two rooms with old maps of the city and intermittent English signs. The rest was taken up with rather plain wooden furniture. This was presumably historic but there were no signs indicating how.<br />
After lunch in Cafe Batavia on the square I tried to get to the historic docks but gave up in a maze like light industrial area with sacks of metal bits and sheets of canvas all over the streets.<br />
In the morning I flew to Padaang in Sumatra and took a blue bird taxi to Bukittinggi. This turned out to be way up in the hills and so cooler than I've seen so far. Checked in to the De Kock Kafe and guesthouse, which I would probably like more if I hadn't been told all onwards transport runs overnight. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6263260152851207912.post-60256400193516411722017-02-25T03:27:00.000-08:002017-02-25T03:27:03.428-08:00Interlude<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
So, to solve my visa conundrum I went to Kuala Lumpur for a night. The first pleasant surprise was that there are decent taxis, no fighting off a scrum of drivers, no arguing over the price. I simply walked up to a row of blue taxis, gave my destination as Gambir station and he turned the meter on.<br />
From Gambir there was a bud to the airport and then I was temporarily back in the first world, enjoying such luxuries as signs in English and shopkeepers who stayed in their shops, confident in the price tags doing their job, instead of chasing down the street shouting "For you special price".<br />
I saw virtually nothing of KL taking a train to a small guesthouse, which had to my amazement UK plug sockets. I was so shocked I nearly forgot where I was completely and ordered half and half for dinner. Remembered in time though and went for the roti with dahl.<br />
Rested and back in Indonesia I find myself liking Jakarta more than I thought I would. The streets are surprisingly walkable and there is less hassle than many places.Tomorrow I will have more of a look around. </div>
mattylevanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16851740616896706581noreply@blogger.com0