Feliz Navidad & Prospero Ano Nuevo!!
Hello everyone ~ we've been remiss in our blogging but you know how the holidays are....
Where to begin... well, our guests Susan & Tom returned from their travels in the Andes on the day our holiday break started. We got to try out some recipes from our new cookbook ~ it's a vegetarian (and some fish) ecuadorian cookbook.
We made a traditional potato soup (locro) that has a big slice of avocado in it, a quinoa and cabbage soup (yum) and a weird peanut/plaintain baked dish. The thing about ecuadorian cuisine is that you always need to serve a salad because there's not a lot of green vegetables in the recipes.
Anyway, on Christmas day we woke up and passed the morning drinking mimosas with fresh squeezed juice and sat on the terrace enjoying the warm weather.
Later, the four of us went over to a friend's house ~ a teaching couple with two kids and a bunch of visitors. We had a great meal with them and then hopped on the bus and headed home.
The day after christmas we were hanging out and were itching to play a game. Chris suggested pinochle but we didn't have all those cards you need and the rules and stuff.
So, I got on the internet and printed off the bidding rules for bridge and tried to teach the group (with my limited knowledge from playing with my family and cousins). It was so much fun that we played until 4 in the morning (chris and I never stay up that late!) and unfortunately had to get up a little before 7 am to catch a bus for our 4 day adventrue to the Black Sheep Inn.
It's this amazing ecolodge in this remote area that is absolutely beautiful ~ like nothing we've ever seen.
To give you an idea of how remote it is, here's how we got to the inn which is right outside a village called Chugchilan...
We took a taxi to the Quito bus station and took a two hour bus ride south to a town called Latacunga. Then we got on a different and much more 'rustic' bus for a four hour ride to the town where the inn is.
This ride is almost all on dirt roads and winds around driving on the edge of a very steep ridge. At one point a truck came around a curve heading toward us and luckily the bus driver had quick reflexes and stopped and backed up so the truck could pass.
The bus was packed and stopped at lots of people's houses along the way to drop them off and unload their stuff from the roof of the bus.
Here's some pictures of people in the towns we passed and stopped in along the way.
The inn itself is full of backpackers from all over the world and is in a perfect spot for hiking. They serve gourmet vegetarian food ~ we had the most delicious swiss chard soup and veg. shepherd's pie.
It was pretty busy and the first night we had to stay in the bunk house but the following two nights each couple had their own room with a shared bathroom with a composting toilet and a little garden in the bathroom and a fabulous view.
The next day the four of us went on a hike to a cheese factory (yes, a cheese factory) and along a paramo. It was the most beautiful hike I've ever been on. Chris and I just kept saying we couldn't believe the view, it was really stunning. Make sure you click on the pictures to enlarge them to get a better idea of the view.
I'm not sure if we've mentioned this but Ecuador is not exactly the land of delicious cheeses. You basicially have cheddar tipo (type) which is pre-sliced and lots of white cheese (queso fresco). So, at some point some aide workers taught some local people in this area to make some swiss style cheeses in order to help them create a product they could sell. Well, we had tried the cheese at the inn and I was hoping to find the factory open to buy some emmental cheese that was really delicious.
But back to the hike... here are some pictures of the scenery and us taking lots of rest breaks.
At first, we missed the turn to head up the hill but some nice guys who were hanging out pointed us in the right direction and to make up time we took the 'short cut' which is basically straight up hill instead of following the road.
We hiked and hiked and finally found the factory but it was closed. Apparently it closes around 11 am but I can't imagine they get much walk in business after seeing its location. When we started to walk back up the driveway a woman who had seen us walked up and offered to unlock the doors and sell us some cheese. We bought 2.5 kilos of emmental (the smallest amount almost 5 lbs!) and Tom graciously carried it in his backpack for the rest of the hike.
We took a route back that took us along a paramo and we walked through the clouds ~ again it was just really amazing.
The only downside of the hike was that Susan lent me her sunscreen - it was one of those sticks that you use on your face.
Well, let's just say I'm not a fan of the stick - I ended up with a white stripe across my forehead and to read stripes on either side and the rest of my was a patchwork of white and red.
I really looked crazy ~ it's finally started to fade.
The next day about 12 people from the inn hopped onto the back of a cattle truck and rode for about an hour to the Quilotoa crater lake ~ another crazy ride being jostled around like... livestock.
The crater lake hike is supposed to be one of the best in the country and Chris and I were very excited to try it out (we're really getting into the whole hiking thing ~ can you tell?). Susan and Tom decided to walk down to the water and take the bus back instead of hiking so Chris and I and a fellow named Stuart headed out with our map (we decided not to join the rest of the large group on the hike with a guide in favor of going out on our own).
Stuart was a great hiking partner ~ he and chris tried to decipher the directions and we were all going at similar paces and there was just the right amount of chatting and silence.
It was a crazy hike. You start out hiking along the rim of the crater looking at the blue/green lake below. Then you head off and hike along some fields for a while and through a small town.
If I knew how to put a caption or an arrow on these pictures I would to show you how when we were on the rim of the crater we could look out way across the canyon and see where we were going and toward the end we could look back and see where we headed down off the crater rim ~ it looked incredibly far and impossible to get from point A to point B because of the canyon in the middle.
Next we started heading down, down, down into a canyon until you're at the bottom. You have to hike along some very small ledges ~ at one point the path was kind of crumbling away and there was only enough space for one of your feet. Again, it's moments like these that I'm so glad I'm hiking with Chris. He's so calm and helpful just like during the rock climbing.
After you get to the bottom of the canyon you, of course, then have to climb back up and up and up. This is by far the toughest part of the hike. You pass a few villagers along the way who are going from one town to another and they seem vaguely amused at us hikers. The whole hike took about 5 hours. We were very tired by the end and were so happy to make it back to the town until we got to the bottom of the Black Sheep Inn's very, very steep driveway. Stuart looked up the steep hill that was between us and the inn and simply said, "Shit!" It was pretty funny.
We played bridge in the evenings and hung out with some of the other guests and ate the yummy food. We ended up hiring a driver to take us back for the return trip because the one bus that passes through the town passes through at 4 am and then you have to get 2 more buses. So, instead we paid a guy named Lex to drive us and we arrived home in under 4 hours - much better (albeit much more expensive)! It was Dec. 30th and a lot of the small towns put up make shift road blocks and wear masks (usually they're supposed to go up on the 31st) and ask each car to give them around 25 cents to help fund their new year's party. We had to stop several times to pay to pass through the blocks.
For New Year's Eve we decided to stay in and eat and drink and play bridge at home (we quickly turned into bridge addicts). A little before midnight we heard fireworks so we went out on the terrace and watched the fireworks going off in all directions. There's also a tradition in Ecuador where people sell saw dust filled dummies with masks that you're supposed to burn at midnight. This is supposed to symbolize burning the old year and some of the masks are politicians (we saw lots of George Bush and even Nixon masks) and some are just generic masks.
Our neighbors burned one at midnight on the street outside our house so we watched this, fireworks and played music on the terrace and it was so much fun. It was a beautiful night and there was even some dancing (does anyone remember Susan's 'interpretive dance' from the wedding?).
Susan and Tom left a few days after New Year's and Chris and I are back to school on Monday. We've had incredible weather ~ it's been a mini dry season. Although we've heard about all the warm weather on the east coast (we stream NPR on the computer) and we're a little nervous because we just saw "An Inconvenient Truth".
We have two weeks of school and then we go on Chris' biology class trip to the jungle for a week. I am lucky enough to be going as a chaperone. We're going to a research station really far into the jungle, almost to the border of Peru. You take a plane, boat, bus and then motorized canoe to get there. We're so excited ~ it sounds incredible and of course we'll take lots of pictures.
Well, that's about it for now ~we'll try not to let too much time lapse between posts.
We miss everyone and were thinking of all our friends and family over the holidays.
One last picture. It's kind of like our international moment of zen (stolen from the daily show). Susan took a couple of photos of our last sunset for 2006 from our terrace....
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3 comments:
Chris and Sharon
Thank you so much for the commentary and pictures. I know it takes a lot of work but we are so grateful to you for letting us know what you are doing and how you are. We're so happy that you tell us all about your adventures after you get back safely rather than before you go. We know you made it. When you get back you are going to have to write a book on "hiking in Ecuador". You're doing so much we wonder if you are really teaching or is that just a ruse. Actually I know better than that. Keep up the great work. OH OH! snowflakes here--first of the year and it's Jan 10. Can't complain. Look forward to seeing you in the summer.
Love you, Dad
Hi Chris & Sharon:
Thanks for sharing your adventures. I don't get to check it as often as I'd like, but I find it to be inspiring. Amazing stuff.. thanks for all the hard work you put into sharing with everyone.
I didn't mean to leave my message as anonymous....
Have fun.... Chrissie
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