(18) Eat. Play. Laugh.

12 02 2011

Before I left Ecuador I had to complete 2 more tasks:

The first one, eating guinea pig, was accomplished in the city of Cuenca.

    cuy

    Great Success!

It was not very spectacular, tastes a lot like chicken but is way more expensive.

Further south lies the little town of Vilcabamba with nice hiking opportunities:

oscar

Yes, other people make videos too 😉

cactus

I like

One of those hikes brought us to a small village. And that is where I completed the second task: Playing Ecuavolley.

Ecuawhat? It`s a very popular game in Ecuador, especially in small villages. It is like volleyball, but you play on about the size of a beach volleyball field with a football, 3 on 3 and the net is 3 metres high. That way you can hardly smash the ball down; but if you think about it, that is probably a clever idea if you are as small as most ecuadorians you rather want nobody to be able to do that, than just all the people from other nations ;-).

ecuavolley

Shoes, socks or barefooted: Which is the best outfit?

3times

Trying to stop egoism 😉

That was a lot of fun and we nearly forgot the 6 hours of hiking we did to get to that place. If people are at least half-capable of what they are doing, it is very hard though to force scoring a point, so it can be quite exhausting.

In Vilcabamba I stayed in a german hostel with great german food. Quite nice after 2 weeks of having mostly the same food all the time. They even had Currywurst on their menu, but seriously, who eats that for dinner?

My first attempt to leave the country failed due to a bus which left 15 minutes earlier than scheduled. The second attempt did not go without complications as well, as I found out on departuring, that one of the little dogs of the owners had parts of my bagpack for dinner:

dogfood

Yummy! Too bad when your bagpack feels twice as heavy suddenly 🙁

Nearly 17 hours (I guess that was not the fastest way 😉 ) of busrides later I arrived in the little beach town of Mancora in Peru. The (party) hostel I stayed in there made it quite hard to find sleep. But with the beach 5 metres away and the benefits coming with that it was still a kind of nice place to hang out:

seaview

Probably the nicest view I got so far from my bed

sunset

Sunset in Mancora

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(16) Doing the Quilotoa Loop

1 02 2011

Finally I knew where to go from Quito: I went to Latacunga to start the so-called Quilotoa loop from there. One hour after arriving there I had met Stephan from Holland and Maike from Germany and we soon discovered we had the same intentions, so shortly afterwards we planned how we were going to spend the next few days together.

It all started with a bus ride to the Quilotoa lake situated inside of a volcano at about 3900 metres of altitude. Having passed the following obstacle, we were ready to start:

accident

Our first day we were hiking along the crater and we had magnificent views all the time.

quilotoa

The Quilotoa lake, just stunning.

volcanobeach

We were quite surprised finding a „beach“ up there!

After that day I felt really sick (altitude ?), but the next day everything was fine again, so the adventure could continue. The next step was to hike to a village called Chugchilan and after having found the right way and going up and down several canyons, we arrived our destination for the night and I could learn some dutch card games ;-).

readingmap

Discussion: Which one is the right path?

bruce

Keeping a tree from falling Bruce-Willis-Style

Our third and last day of hiking should bring us then to another small village called Isinlivi and it was another day of going canyons up and down.
All in all, all the hikes were great. Awesome views, friendly people and many animals (sheep, cows, dogs, horses, donkeys, lamas) on the paths.

donk

What a donkey!

dog

I like the dog´s expression 😉

Getting back from Isinlivi to Latacunga was not an easy task, as we had to ride on the top of a milk truck for a while. It rained and as we got up to 4000 metres again, it was quite freezing for some time. Luckily my clothes passed this rain-proof-test, so it was still quite fun :-).

milktruck

Milk, me, Stephan and again Milk

All in all a really great trip, especially as we barely met other people. I wonder if it will be the same in 5 years, as it is already in the lonely planet….

A completely different experience was the city of Baños. You could not walk 5 metres without somebody asking you „Hey my friend, wanna do a tour tomorrow?“ Not my thing.

So after having made a bike trip to some waterfalls, which involved climbing down and up the tower which you can see below, I left this area again.

tower

only 26 metres high, so very safe

towertop

Maike, relieved to be at the top again

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(15) „Dame tu mano..

24 01 2011

y venga conmigo!
Vamonos al viaje para
buscarlos sonidos mágicos
de…

Ecuador!“

That´s how the awesome song Ecuador by Sash starts. But what else do you know about this country? I did not know much, that is why it took me some time in Quito figuring out how to proceed.

Meanwhile, I was discovering this city and its surroundings:

oldquito

Photo taken at the Basilika of Quito, the figure in the background is the so-called Panecillo

P1000512

View of Quito from above at about 4000 metres, a cable car takes you up there.

quitoevening

Yes, the landscape around is more beautiful than the city itself.

Nearby Quito is a place called Mitad del Mundo and as the name suggests, the equator passes through it. Well at least that is what some french scientists thought in the 18th century and so they built a monument there.

monument

If they knew….

Funny thing, it was later found out by GPS that the equator passes actually 200 metres away, where there is now a museum. In this museum I got a diploma for balancing an egg on an nail:

filigranarbeit

It is really much harder than it looks!

Also you can make the „flush-test“. People who watched the Simpsons (or paid attention in school) may know this but for everybody else: On the northern hemisphere water flows down a sink counter-clockwise whereas on the southern hemisphere it does so clockwise. On the equator itself it just drops down. This is quite amazing to see there, walking 1 metre north or south and seeing that effect with your own eyes!
Furthermore, if you want to lose weight, you might want to travel to the equator ;-). As the gravitation forces are not as strong here (why, I have no clue, ask a physicist), you lose approximately a kilo in weight. (Of course when you go back it will appear again, so don’t take that advice seriously.)
Wow, there is a lot to learn in this entry. I will see you after a short break.

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