Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Photo Album from our last Two Months
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
We Made it to Santiago, Chile!
Well, after a brutal travel day we finally made it to our hotel in Santiago, Chile. Coming off our LONG climbing day in Bolivia, we were up early the next morning and off to the airport. We awoke to a La Paz covered in snow! Nothing quite like a snowy July 27th. Fortunately, the airport was operational and after a drawn out check in we boarded our Lan flight departing from the world´s highest international airport. An hour later we landed in Iquique, Chile. From 19,000 feet on Huayna Potosi to sea level in 30 hours. Iquique is a unique coastal town located in the Atacama Desert, where there is literally not a plant in sight. Turns out the rest of the passengers on OUR flight were heading on to Santiago immediately. For some reason our booking skipped the next 3 flights and left us with a 10 hour layover! We tried the stand-by rountine, then gave up and headed into Iquique as originally planned to spend the day. A nice taxi driver took us to town, gave us a little tour, then returned us to the airport 8 hours later. We enjoyed a great walk along the beach, explored the town´s historic district, had great seafood, and sampled Chile´s beers. Our Santiago bound flight arrived at 2:00 AM and to our great relief our bags arrived safely once again!!! This was a huge milestone as our ski gear has now traveled through 9 airports enroute to this southern hemisphere ski destination. Our first no show transfer of the trip left us to find our own ride to the Hotel Orly, where we arrived (at a reduced rate no less) arround 3:30 AM. Makes us tired just thinking about it. Our hotel is wonderful and we are excited to explore Santiago over the next 2 days before heading up to Valle Nevado ski resort.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Our Bolivian Send-off Adventure

Day 1: After getting all of our gear, we were driven to the base camp hut and given our mattress to sleep on for the night on the floor of the loft along with 17 other climbers. Decked out in our gear we hiked up to the leading edge of the peak´s main glacier and spent 3 hours climbing, traversing, and descending it using ice axes, crampons, harnesses and ropes.
Day 2: With full packs we climbed from the base camp at 15,000 ft. to the Rock Camp (advanced base camp climber´s hut) at 17,000 ft. The hike up was brutally steep on a loose scree field. While in an amazingly picturesque setting, the entire area reeked of urine and we shared an even smaller loft. 20 climbers slept in the loft from 5:30 PM after "dinner" until midnight when the climb for the top begins. We were elbow to elbow, feet to feet, with a six inch corridor down the middle of the two nasty foam pads. Just imagine 20 foreign climbers who hadn´t showered in 2 days and all their gear packed in this stuffy, freezing space. By the way, we were the only English speakers. You can imagine the sounds and smells. Speaking of which, let´s not even talk about the bathroom facilities.
Day 3: After not really sleeping, at midnight we put on all our gear and with headlamps shining the way, began the steep climb up the glacier roped together with our guide. After a brutal 5 hours we neared the final exposed pitch up the summit pyramid. Unfortunately, the typical perfect weather this time of year here, was not to be. It had snowed earlier in the night, leaving the trail soft and a nasty, cold wind was gusting. Feeling the strain of 2 sleepless nights, the elevation, and uncooperative weather we decided to not risk it and turned back after successfully exceeding 19,000 ft. We descended a bit, not believing how steep it had been, then watched the sunrise before returning to high camp for our things. Once packed up we descended the now snow covered scree field to base camp. An hour later we were in a car heading back to La Paz and the Hotel Rosario.
Overall: On one hand we had the unique opportunity to spend 3 days in one of the most amazing mountain environments on our planet. We saw eagles soaring, watched numerous Andean peaks illuminate from dusk til dawn, and had a world class climbing experience. On the flip side, the cramped, dank huts, permeating smell of urine, horrible food, sleepless nights, and intense suffering at 19,000 ft. in gale force winds made us very happy to have this adventure end.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Surviving the Death Road
After returning from Copacabana and Lake Titicaca our next adventure was to mountain bike down the old road from the Andes above La Paz at 17,000 ft. to the subtropical Yungas at 3,000 ft. We arrived at the tour agency at 6:30 AM, met the great group that would join us for the day, then an hour later were on our high end downhill bikes at the pass covered in snow. The canyons we descended rivaled Hell´s Canyon and the snow gradually gave way to tropical vegetation. During the section of the ride known as the Death Road vertical cliffs dropped away from the narrow, rough dirt road. Eventually we were Death Ride Survivors lounging at the pool of a hotel near the end of the ride. We drove back to La Paz on the new road that bypasses the section we rode, amazed at what we had just accomplished. Bolivia is a wild and exotic place, and in a few minutes we are off on an entirely different type of adventure. If you are interested look up Huayna Potosi. For the next two nights we will be staying at two different huts on the flanks of this great peak.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Lake Titicaca & Isla del Sol
Due to the strong winds this morning the harbor in Copacabana was shut down and no boats could go to Isla del Sol. Lucky for us, our amazing private guide had his buddy drive us out to a peninsula closer to the island where he had one of the local boatmen take us over. Turned out we were the only tourists to get to go to the island today. As a result, we had a very uncrowded experience exploring the Inca ruins and hiking the ancient trail from one end of the island to the other. While it was a bit windy, there was not a cloud in the sky and the views of Lake Titicaca and the Andes were incredible. The bonus ride out to the boat launch provided us additional amazing vistas and the opportunity to see numerous lakeside villages. An amazing day that only we were fortunate enough to experience.
Saturday, July 18, 2009
From Quito, Ecuador to La Paz, Bolivia via Lima Peru

Thursday, July 16, 2009
Ecuador Reflections
Some random thoughts as our time in Ecuador comes to a close...
- Much more of a cultural experience from indiginous women in traditional clothing walking leashed llamas to graze to kids in Quito wearing Vans Off the Wall hoodies with pierced lips and 80´s hairstyles talking on cell phones.
- 90% of the tourists we expected to be American were actually non-english speakers (mostly Germans).
- Interesting Regional Specialties: we passed through a small town with 40 ice cream shops in 3 blocks, Baños had row after row of identical sugarcane/taffy stalls (after watching a guy pulling the taffy wipe his nose with his bare hands and then go back to pulling the taffy, we opted not to try any), and another town had a dozen denim stores in one block.
- A much more personal relationship with food from market to table.
- The ability to live like a king, tours/nice hotels/great meals/shopping/etc. and still being able to stay on budget.
- In Ecuador you are not on yellow or orange alert, it is always red. For example you don´t carry your ATM card around. You go straight to the bank, then immediately back to your hotel. When you are out on the town it is locked in your room at a gated hotel with a guard.
- You know you are not in Boise anymore when you overhear another table´s conversation at dinner, "Would you rather be shot or stabbed when being mugged?"
- Waking up at a lodge in a tropical cloud forest with tucans in the trees and butterflies everywhere, then going to sleep in a 300 year old hacienda overlooking the paramo and a distant glacial covered active volcano in the same day.
- Being asked to hold the raft while our guide went to see if the nearby vultures had found a woman who had recently drowned.
- Continually asking ourselves, "Where are we?" in a figurative sense. For example, after returning from the hot baths in Baños full of local people experiencing one of the countries most sacred spots at the base of a waterfall fed by a spring coming off of the active Tungurahua, sitting down at the Posada del Artes restaurant and enjoying vegetarian paella while surrounded by works of art by some of Ecuador´s most famous artists.
- Obviously no liability insurance, but it sure makes for great and cheap rafing, rappeling, and biking adventures. You wouldn´t believe the rickety bamboo ladder we had to climb up after free rappeling down a 120 ft waterfall with a guide that couldn´t have been much older than 16.
- Revisiting the same restaurant your purse was stolen at, sitting at the same table, ordering the same meal, being a little wiser (remember the gate hotel where our stuff was left this time) and not letting the rampant crime in this economically challenged country get the better of us.
- Heading back to our hotel through the streets full of local weekend revelers, we once again noticed that we seem to be a magnet for bizarre looking 3 foot beggars (they really are 3 feet tall!). For some reason they only seem to ask tourists, AKA "white people", for money. Bill contemplated just starting to give each of them $1 to take their picture and then making a calendar or something. Would you like one of those for Christmas this year?
- A journal excerpt from our day of rafting (remember we said it was amazing?) - In Rio Negro we stopped at a restaurant that looked really nice with a big porch for the lunch that was included in our trip. The meal however turned out to be the scariest one yet. Much more in the typical local style than catering towards gringo travelers. The first course was soup with big chunks of chicken parts, mystery vegetables, and a weird sort of greasy slick on top. We sure hoped it had boiled for a long time. Bill later told me that he almost didn´t even eat because he was disgusted by the young waiters dirty fingernails that were partially submerged in our soup as he set it on the table. This was also the case with the small glass of warm orange soda that did little to quench our thirst after several hours of rafting under the Equitorial sun. We were so famished we uncharacteristically threw caution to the wind and dug in. When the main course of rice, lentils, and some horribly tough, nasty mystery meat arrived we decided we had pushed our luck far enough. We ate some rice, picked at the lentils, and prayed we wouldn´t be sick in the morning. Thankfully the meal was over quickly and we were back in the van heading for Baños.
- Another journal excerpt at the opposite end of the spectrum. - High above Quito at a pass overlooking the valley our guide Christian, the former Ecuadorian downhill mountain bike champion, set us up on our high quality mountain bikes. He began to lead us down the initial descent with our shuttle car following slowly behind. The road surface continually changed from old pavement, stone, gravel, and dirt while the vista at each turn seemed to get better and better. At nearly 12,000 ft. valley after valley that we would be descending spread out before us...8 hours later we pedaled into Mindo Gardens. Hummingbirds fluttered outside the beautiful main lodge, and our host Rodrigo was there to greet us with a pitcher of lemonade. We were then escorted through the gardens on a beautiful path to the riverfront lodge that we would call home for the next 3 nights.
- Overall, we have had an amazing time. From our first meal in Quito´s gringoland at the Magic Bean, to our taxi ride with Gonzalo back to the capital city for our departure, this has truly been one adventure after another.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Back in Quito, Ecuador
Just a quick one today. Check out our updated profile, websites for Bolivia, and itinerary.
Bill ended up chickening out on bungee jumping and went mountain biking instead. On his guided trip, he was dropped off 3,000 feet above Baños, then after a 2 hour climb they descended for 2 hours though amazing country. He arrived back at the hotel just as Jessica had finished up her day at the spa getting a massage and facial. The next day we went waterfall rappeling again. It was an amazing experience rappeling, sliding, and jumping down smaller falls before free rappeling down the final 120 foot waterfall. We had to switch hotels for our last night in Baños, we posted the website, then returned to Quito via taxi (bus rides just being too sketchy in Ecuador these days) to our hotel La Cartuja. As we acclimatize here for our arrival at the 13,000 ft. airport in La Paz, we hope to next post our reflections on Ecuador.
Bill ended up chickening out on bungee jumping and went mountain biking instead. On his guided trip, he was dropped off 3,000 feet above Baños, then after a 2 hour climb they descended for 2 hours though amazing country. He arrived back at the hotel just as Jessica had finished up her day at the spa getting a massage and facial. The next day we went waterfall rappeling again. It was an amazing experience rappeling, sliding, and jumping down smaller falls before free rappeling down the final 120 foot waterfall. We had to switch hotels for our last night in Baños, we posted the website, then returned to Quito via taxi (bus rides just being too sketchy in Ecuador these days) to our hotel La Cartuja. As we acclimatize here for our arrival at the 13,000 ft. airport in La Paz, we hope to next post our reflections on Ecuador.
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Greetings from our Playground South of the Equator

Yesterday, after a lazy, rainy morning, we rented bikes and headed down La Ruta de Cascada (Avenue of the Waterfalls). Baños is located at the base of the active Tungurahua volcano on one of the only roads that crosses the Andes into the Amazon Basin. See attached picture. On this all downhill ride we passed countless waterfalls, cable cars, suspension bridges, and multiple long, dark tunnels. After several hours of exploring, we loaded our bikes in the back of a truck for the return trip to this beautiful and bustling resort town. All this for $13. We have found things to be very inexpensive, maybe a quarter of the price of comparably priced hotels/tours back home. By the way, Ecuador, if we haven´t mentioned already, has no change, not even $1 bills!
Today we went rafting. It was amazing, we started in the Andes and ended up at the edge of the Amazon basin. Being "winter" here the river was a huge, raging, muddy torrent. It was the first bluebird day we have had in a while. Looking up past the waterfalls and steep jungle covered hillsides with snow capped peaks in the distance was truly amazing. I didn´t use amazing twice by accident. We have 3 more nights in Baños and are looking forward to some down time. However, Bill is contemplating bungee jumping while I am definitely getting a massage!
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Adventures in the Andean High Country

We were picked up from our hotel in Quito by our ex-pat Swiss climbing guide. We checked into our amazing room which provided a panoramic view of the countryside including the 19,000 ft Cotopaxi volcano, at a 300 year old hacienda. The next day we toured Cotopaxi National Park and climbed to the Refugio at 15,840 ft. in a blizzard with high winds. The following morning we headed deep into the Andes, getting an amazing perspective for the indiginous culture eeking out a living at nearly 12,000 ft., then hiked around the Quilotoa crater lake, pictured at right. On our final day we headed to Saquisili for market day and experienced what is said to be the most important indiginous market in South America. It was an amazing few days, but the real adventure started shortly after we left the hacienda. Our market guide, Carlos, drove us out to the Panamerican highway, passed a small restaurant with cuy (roasted guinea pig) displayed outside, and just as he turned onto the pavement we noticed the bus we were hoping to catch was right behind us. At 70 mph he was able to flag down the bus. Our bags were quickly thrown underneath and we found ourselves packed into a standing room only chicken bus. No, literally it was a chicken bus. A few pick-ups later 4 bags each holding 10 live chickens were thrown into the same compartment as our bags. It was an eventful ride and we were grateful to make it to the resort town of Banos. Check out the link to our hotel. We plan to spend the next 5 days relaxing, getting $20 massages, rafting, biking, and waterfall rappelling.
Monday, July 6, 2009
Adventures in the Cloud Forest of Ecuador
Our journey continues and just seems to keep getting better! We arrived in Ecuador, had a great day exploring the sites of historic Quito, then Jessica had her purse stolen. Luckily the only thing in it at the time was about 5 dollars, some sun sceen, and all 4 of the CDs we had backed up our photos on. We had just come from an Internet cafe and were trying to post some. All the photos are still on the cameras however, and the CD of photos from our rafting we should be able to replace as the other couple with us purchased one also... We were in a nice restaurant and are still baffled at how the thieves pulled off the grab. Good learning experience, even though we have been VERY careful. With that episode behind us we headed off the next morning to the cloud forest town of Mindo. Check out the Mindo Garden website. We actually rode bikes there with a guide, the former Ecuadorian downhill mtn bike national champion. It was 30 miles of downhill, around 9,000 feet. We passed from high mtns. through ever increasing vegitation, past trout farms, finally arriving in the town of Mindo, known as one of the best bird viewing spots on the planet, with a wildwest feel. Our room at the lodge was right out of a magazine. The peaked ceiling, wooden construction, and wall of windows overlooking the river and forest made for an incredibly enchanting setting. We had booked an "adventure" package and that is just what it was! We climbed straight up a mountain, took a cable car across a valley, hiked to a waterfall, went zip-lining over the canopy (one of the 13 lines was over 1500 feet long and almost as high!), hiked 2 hours back to our lodge, then after a very late lunch we went tubing down the class 3 Rio Mindo. That was day two! That evening Bill too tired to pee standing up, fell asleep sitting on the toilet. Day three we were back on bikes and after visiting the local butterfly garden and an hour ride, we hiked deep into the jungle up a beautiful creek to the 240 foot Corizon waterfall. Then, we rappelled down it! What an amazing experience. One funny note, the canyoneering guide was missing his right thumb. Turns out we were the guinea pigs for this tour, as not many people (brave souls) have booked this package. Luckily we had a fabulous guide throughout and had signed on for an extra night at the lodge for a relaxing down day. We are now back in Quito at our little safe haven of a hotel, La Cartuja, preparing to head south down the Avenue of the Vocanoes to the Cuello de Luna hacienda.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Reflections on Costa Rica
We´re posting two posts at once, so don´t forget to read the one below also. For those of you anxious for pictures, you have obviously never been in an internet cafe in a third world country! We´ve taken over 500 pictures so far and will be eager to share when we get back, if we are not able to while on our trip.
* We had been weary about the crime - not an issue.
* Leary of being taken advantage of - from the amazing raft guides, hotel staffs, and just genuinely nice Ticos we enjoyed every moment.
* Afraid of crowds - Amy & Jamie, Joy & Kyle, Meghan & Jared, fellow travelers we met helped make this an incredible time.
* Too touristy - ease of travel, availability of accomodations and restaurants, lots of English speakers, tour opportunities, all made travel in Costa Rica almost simple at times (A comfortable budget helped too!)
* Rainy season - they call it the "green" season, couldn´t have been more lush and beautiful, plust the rapids were going off!
So are we not really on that much of an adventure? When Jessica´s fish dinner looked back at her, buying empanadas and changing buses in San Isidro, Latin American roads and drivers, rays surfing in waves, too many bug bites to count, not judging a meal until the morning after, a frog in our bed, tropical lightning storms, and we still have almost 2 months left to travel. Yeah, we are on an Adventure alright!
* We had been weary about the crime - not an issue.
* Leary of being taken advantage of - from the amazing raft guides, hotel staffs, and just genuinely nice Ticos we enjoyed every moment.
* Afraid of crowds - Amy & Jamie, Joy & Kyle, Meghan & Jared, fellow travelers we met helped make this an incredible time.
* Too touristy - ease of travel, availability of accomodations and restaurants, lots of English speakers, tour opportunities, all made travel in Costa Rica almost simple at times (A comfortable budget helped too!)
* Rainy season - they call it the "green" season, couldn´t have been more lush and beautiful, plust the rapids were going off!
So are we not really on that much of an adventure? When Jessica´s fish dinner looked back at her, buying empanadas and changing buses in San Isidro, Latin American roads and drivers, rays surfing in waves, too many bug bites to count, not judging a meal until the morning after, a frog in our bed, tropical lightning storms, and we still have almost 2 months left to travel. Yeah, we are on an Adventure alright!
Final Costa Rica Post
As hard as it was to change the sunset-surfer title picture for our blog, it was much more difficult after 6 days to leave our little piece of paradise in Dominical. After our bus ride south we secured a room at Domilocos, a new hotel just south of the main part of the village. We ended up with the upstairs corner room, the only one with an exterior view. All of the other rooms looked in towards the courtyard. Loving our host and room, we decided to book for the rest of our time in Dominical. Each morning at 5:30 AM Bill would look out our window, across the pasture, through the row of palm trees to check out the surf. Without fail he´d be in the water by 6 AM on the board he had rented. Bill took full advantage surfing 10 times in the consistent and often big, well shaped, beach break waves. Friday morning was one particular session, highlighted by a double overhead set wave that scored him a perfect tube ride after the big drop. The pelicans outnumbered the surfers...Bill had died and gone to heaven. Each day was the same routine, Jessica slept in, buffet breakfast, beach time or adventure (one day we hiked to an amazing waterfall), sandwich at a spot on the beach, chill time in our room, evening rainstorm, more surfing, bed, repeat. We made some great friends, a Canadian couple, and many meals and activities were spent together. On our final night together we decided to splurge at our hotel´s amazing Italian restaurant. What was planned to be an early dinner, through confusion with Bill´s order, turned into a four hour affair, with the incredibly nice hotel owner, Michael, paying for our meal, making a special dish for Bill, then treating our table to every dessert on the menu. By the end none of us could stop laughing and all we wanted was for our Dutch host to stop feeding us and let us go to bed! In the morning after two bus rides through the mountain interior and a taxi ride from the bus station we were back in our hotel room in San Jose reorganizing our bags we had stored preparing for our morning flight further south.
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