Monday, December 26, 2011

Here I Go Again On My Own!!!!

So, it happened again.  The greatest boss in the world told me to leave the country.  This time it was a sudden surprise, I thought I was gonna have to work.  About three weeks ago, Bill told me that he won't need me until March 1st.  Hmmmmmm, what to do?  Central America!!

This is what I know, I will arrive in Guatemala City tomorrow at 2 PM.  I will be arriving with my old traveling buddy Sarah.  She has decided to join the parade for two weeks.  I am excited to be joined by my old friend!!  We will get on a bus, and head to Xela and meet up with two of the greatest people I have traveled with, Rachael and Nick.  Sarah and I spent the holidays with Rachael in the Patagonia two years ago.  Nick is a member of the infamous Coco Loco crew that traveled from Santa Cruz, Bolivia to Rio de Janerio for Carnaval last year.  After that I have until February 23rd to arrive in the capital city of Honduras.

I will keep this updated as I my journeys take the normal unforeseen madness.  Thank you all who follow this blog, I enjoy writing about my travels and it blows my mind that you all find my rantings entertaining!

I leave you with the first picture of this journey, Christmas with the family.  The first Christmas I've spent with the folks in many years.  It was great, even though we celebrated with a bromeliad tree!

Peace and Happy New Year!!!

Friday, April 8, 2011

The Final Chapter of this Journey

What does one do after climbing a mountain in a full on blizzard?  There is only one answer....go to the biggest party in the world!!  This wasn't in the plans when I got to Santa Cruz.  But in Santa Cruz, I met Heidi from Minnesota.  As Julia was packing to make her way to Buenos Aires, Heidi and I were plotting and scheming.  I had been in touch with my old Canadian friends - Ben and Jesse - they were on their way to Santa Cruz and apparently had a place to stay in Rio de Janeiro.  Decision made, we will stay put till they arrive and then make the move!  In the mean time we met Leanne from Tahoe, and Nick from New Zealand, among many other great people.  All four of us agreed that Rio was a great idea!  Ben and Jesse finally show up and explain the living arrangements that they have set up for Rio.  They will be staying in a tent, on the roof of a hostel that is in a favela (slum).  Not ideal, not ideal at all.  In steps Leanne and she has a house that her and her friends are staying at, done Leanne is our savior!!

My first picture of Coco Loco, they weren't happy about that!
The four of us decide to make a quick stop in the Pantanal on the way, while the Canadians went straight there.  We traveled to the border of Brazil together, and then parted ways.  To get to the border, there is an option of a train.  Options?  No bus?  The train was amazing, movies, comfortable and a dining car!!  We hung in the dining car, watched movies and slept.  The train was slow, real slow.  At one point a person on a bike passed us, but who cares, it was comfortable!!


Moss covered tree

Cool trees everywhere
Coco Loco on the river

Toucan, best part of the tour
         We got to Campo Grande and found a three day tour.  The Pantanal has always been a dream of mine, I was very excited.  The Pantanal is the biggest wetland in the world and borders the Amazon jungle.  The only problem is that it is rainy season, ideally at this time of year, one would travel to the northern end of the wetland and take a tour out of there.  The southern end at this time of year is flooded, so all the animals migrate to the north.  Since we had major time issues, this was our only choice.  All I have to say is that I will have to return to the Pantanal one day and do it right.  Luckily, I was in great company and made the best of it.  The tour included a ton of mosquitoes, rain and crappy food.  The wildlife viewing was minimal, a couple of howler monkeys, some cayman, birds (including toucans which was cool) and mosquitoes!!

The tour ended, thankfully.  We were covered in mosquito bites and ready for Carnival!!  We boarded the next flight to Rio and arrived ready for the madness.  Leanne’s house was perfect, only floor space, but comfortable.  First things first, off to the store to purchase the necessities, food, wine and ingredients for Caipirinhas, the Brazilian national drink (you can see where we are headed with this).  We ate, made the necessary preparations and headed for the festivities.  The house was a bit of a haul from downtown Rio, but that’s what subways are for!

Coco Loco crew ready for the madness!!
We entered downtown Rio, it was madness and I had no idea what to expect.  Some say that Rio is the most dangerous city in the world, others tell stories of the inherent dangers associated with being at Carnival.  It was a bit daunting at first, but I soon realized that everyone was having fun and it was relatively safe.  They call this the largest party in the world for a reason, the city was packed full of people dancing and drinking.  The night went on meeting people and dancing in the streets.  If any of the Brazilians spoke English they would stop and talk to us and thank us for coming to Rio, it was incredible and these folks were great!

Downtown Rio, early in the AM!!
The following night we changed speeds and went to the beach, thinking it would be less crowded and a bit tamer.  We were right about less crowded, as for tame, no.  We got off the subway, walked onto the beach and boom – party!  We joined in, I began looking around and it dawned on me that we were definitely at the gay party.  Everyone was dancing to Madonna, Brittney Spears and more “great” music like that.  It was a blast, the girls loved it because they weren’t being approached by men constantly, and we were on the beach!  The beaches in Rio are right in the middle of the city.  One would think that they would be covered in trash and a general mess.  This couldn’t be further from the truth; the beaches are clean and have beautiful white sands.

The parade begins!!
The big thing to do during Carnival is to go to the Samba Dome.  This is where all the famous parades with the crazy costumes take place.  The only problem is that to get in you have to pay a large sum of money.  As a budget traveler, this was unfortunate.  The solution to this is to join in on the free parades that take place every day, called Blocas.  Major roads within the city are closed off.  Then a truck with huge speakers, with a band in front of it becomes the center of the “parade” on these highways.  Basically what happens is thousands of people show up, in costume, with booze and begin to dance alongside the band, following the band through the streets.  This goes on for hours and is incredibly fun!  Once again we were surrounded by fantastic and friendly people!

Love Brazilians dancing in the streets

Crazy costumes everywhere

Happy Birthday Julia!!
So that’s how it ended, well almost.  I got on a 48 hour bus to Buenos Aires, hung out with my Swedish friends for a few days and flew back to the States. 

How was it you ask?  Incredible.  There were so many amazing things that I did, so many amazing people that I met and so many amazing memories of this trip. I went over board on the outdoor activities, in the process almost dieing several times and injuring myself.  It was awesome!!

What were the highlights?  There are to many to rank them.   I was on the beach for Christmas and New Year's, I fell out of a raft while class V rafting, I slept in a cave, I witnessed an insane border crossings, I was alone in Machu Picchu, I finally made it to the Cordillera Blanca, I played soccer in Las Pampas, I attempted a summit of Huayna Potosi in blizzard conditions and I went to Rio for Carnival!!  That is just a few of the amazing things I did, they were all awe inspiring.  I will carry these memories for the rest of my life.

Would I do it again?  You have to ask?  The draw of traveling to me is the absolute freedom that comes with it.  When traveling you can change plans in a second and end up somewhere that you had no intention of going.  There are no schedules, no plans, you just do whatever makes your heart content. In addition the people that you meet are amazing!  It is like a great big family, moving across a continent.  Everyone is the same mind set, get to the next destination safely with a smile on your face.  You meet people on a regular basis that you have an instant connection with.  You learn to trust these people instantly, something that we can't find at home.

Meeting people, from locals to other travelers, expands the mind.  The experiences, from the good to the ugly, makes one stronger.  You learn to live with the basics: food, clothing and shelter.  You begin to realize that in reality we don’t need all the things that we have, and to live simply is actually easier.  There are a lot of places in this world, a lot of cultures and a lot of people, they all have something to teach us.  I look forward to the classes!

Thank you to all my friends, you guys made my trip!!  I hope to see you again in some far off country.  Always remember safety first, teamwork second and fun all the time!!

I leave you with the best of Bolivia, Brazil and my four days in Buenos Aires.
I can't get enough of this bus ride

Las Pampas, boat rides are the best

Johanna
Anaconda hunting with the best crew ever!


Safety first!  The guide dragging us around

Hiking the ridge

Break time

Insanely cool!!

Beautiful!!


Almost to high camp

Julia at high camp

5,800 meters (19,029 ft) in a blizzard

The descent is just as hard

Upscale Bolivian bus, bathroom break

Santa Cruz with friends
Why is piranha fishing such a tourist draw?

Another great idea from Coco Loco!!
Rio Carnival

Dancing in the streets

People everywhere!!

More dancing in the streets

Weird, just plane weird

Late night costume fun

Brazilians love Carnival


Best birthday party ever, we never made it out...there was only six of us!
Birthday girl and the best travel partner ever!! Thank you Julia!!

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Huayna Potosi - 6,088 meters (19,974 feet)

As you all know I am always full of good ideas.  Take for instance my bright idea of going paragliding last year.  Being afraid of hieghts, it turned out I should have bought some adult diapers before running off that damn mountain!  Well, once again another patented great idea - moutain climbing!  Really, how hard can that be, include my fear of hieghts, easy!  I just had to find someone equally as "brave" as me, that was easy, my Swedish friend Julia once again fell for another of my great ideas.

How did this all come about, you ask.  Well, all the trekking at high altitude this year gave me inspiration.  Imagine standing on top of the world and having that feeling of acomplishment.  Yes, done we were off.  We found a great mountain climbing operator that specialized in Huayana Potosi excusions, they even had a doctor talk to us about the trek, safety first.  We scheduled our trek for two days later, this gave us time to prepare ourselves and have one final drink with the Pampas crew.

That morning the lady at the agency told us that it was unlikely that we would make high camp, let alone the summit.  She said that the weather outlook was poor at best, and if we wanted to turn back now it would not be an issue, she would return our money, but if we went it would be our loss.  Being budget travellers we discussed this in detail, being idiots we told her to put us in a car and send us to the mountain.  Three hours later we arrived at base camp, 4,750 m (15,584 ft) with our guide and had lunch.  After lunch it was time for our training session.  This included a four hour round trip hike to and from a glacier.  The glacier was neccesary because we needed to learn how to use our crampons and ice pick.  The hike itself was a test, mainly beacuse mountain climbing boots are not like hiking boots, there is no flexibility so walking is a very stiff and labourious ordeal.  Even after four hours in them, I was still not fully comfortable.  Then you add the crampons and things get a bit strange because you have to walk with your feet apart as not to trip up in the spikes.  Add an ice pick and then you stare up at an ice wall and think to yourself "that may be a bit steep, even with all these spiky things I have attached to me."  But, you climb it anyway, several times, and decend it several times.  Then the guide sends you to walk down an ice ridge, the fear of hieghts sets in and you forget to spred your legs while walking, you trip and almost fall.  Fun.

Heating up and drying cloths
After the training was over it was time to warm up by the fire at base camp, eat and dry cloths.  You see it was snowing the whole time that day.  At this point the guide is unsure of our ascent to high camp, but says we will make the attempt.  As for the summit, he does not want to put our lives in danger, so if it´s bad we will return to base camp.  Fair enough, we knew that going in.  The four hour trek had made us tired, add to that the practice session on the glacier and it was time to go to sleep.  Did I mention it was cold, Minnesota cold?  So sleep was a chilling experience, even in our sleeping bags.

We made it through the night to wake up to more fridgid tempuratures and heavy snows.  The guide was unsure of our attempt at high camp at this point.  We were to relax and wait until after lunch to make the move.  So we waited and waited some more.  The snow would lighten up a bit, but return to falling in bunches.  Finally the guide told us to get ready.  We had a four hour uphill hike to high camp, 5,300 m (17,388 ft) and we had to get there by nightfall.

Fearless (or stupid) friends at the start of the trek

Hiking a steep ridge

Snow is starting to get deep, and the climbs steeper
High camp
The trek began in the snow, but it began to taper off to a light flurry.  It was all uphill, straight uphill at points.  I guess when climbing a mountain uphill is the norm.  The snow was not to deep, and easily handled at the begining.  Once we passed the permanent snow line, it was thick.  The hiking became more labourous and steeper, but we pushed on.  Then a miracle, blue skies!!  Yes, the final push to high camp included beautiful blue skies, we were extatic!!  We made it to high camp in the alotted time, and had a chance to enjoy blue skies and beautiful panoramic views.

High camp was a bit small and rather cold.  Actually it was freezing once the sun went down.  But by then it we were already in our bags and trying to sleep.  At that altitude, it is hard to sleep.  You constantly wake up gasping for air, and then fall back asleep just to repeat the horrible cycle over and over again.

At midnight it was time to get up to attempt the summit.  Before we laid down to sleep we felt good about the summit, mostly because of the blue skies.  But when we awoke, disaster - full on blizard conditions.  We had a small breakfast and discussed the situaution.  The guide told us it was up to us, we could start and if it was absolutly terrible, we would turn back.  We, being stupidly fearless, agreed that the summit it was!

At 1 AM we began the six hour ascent.  The snow was blinding and visibilty was about 20 meters.  It was pitch black out, the wind was blowing like crazy and all I could see in front of me was the shadow of the guide in my headlamp.  We were roped together, me behind the guide and Julia bringing up the rear.  We were each about 10 meters apart, the rope helped us stay in line.  When we looked up, we were blinded by the snow, so keeping our heads down helped.

I have no idea how the guide knew where he was going because it was a sea of white.  This is a time in your life when one has to put all his faith in another´s hand and hope that the person knows what the hell he is doing.  Luckily, our guide had 14 years of experience on this mountain and others in Bolivia, so we felt good about it.  So we continued this way for about an hour, being blindly led up a mountain.

At this point he said that it seemed we were the only ones to make the attempt, but thought we could continue.  After a while he roped us in and said that in this area is where the crevaces began.  Instructions were as follows - "Keep the rope taught, if I fall, drop and get yourselves in the break position and wait for me to climb out"  reasuring, I know.  We plodded along, passing crevaces hundreds of feet deep.  You could see them ahead of us, like grey monsters splitting the snow, once we were on top of them my heart would race and the pace would pick up until we were all clear.  At one point we were surrounded by crevaces and had to turn back and find another route up the mountain.

The groups behind us

5,800 meters, time to turn back

Julia in the waist deep snow

Finally off the mountain, a bit frozen
We stopped for a breather, we were already behind schedule because of the insane weather conditions.  All of a sudden in the distance behind us we saw headlamps, there were three more groups behind us, following our trail that we were creating in the now knee deep snow.  We continued as the other groupd gained on us.  Apparently following someone else´s tracks is alot easier than trying to make your own path.

Eventually the groups caught up with us, we let then lead from here.  The next battle came at a ice wall atleast 100 feet high at an 80 degree angle.  The climb was a killer, the snow was so deep on the wall, it was hard to get the pick into a solid spot, let alone the crampons.  When we finally got to the top, no rest, we needed to continue.  We were way behind schedule at this point and the summit is still a way off.  We continued along the ridge for another hour, at this point it was about 6 AM.  The guide stopped and explained that the summit was not going to be reachable and we had to make a decison, continue or head back.  We were freezing, air was at a minimum and we were still in the midst of a blizzard.  We finally made a wise decision and headed back.  We made it to 5,800 m (19,029 ft), to us an incredible feat in such extreme conditions.  Later we found out that none of the groups made the summit.  The most experienced team, four French mountaineers, made it to 5,900 m (19,357 ft).  By that standard, we did great as inexperienced mountaineers!


So we began the long decent down, the weather seemed to worsen as the sun began to light up the mountain.  When we reached the bottom of the ice wall, Julia was standing in waist deep snow.  The wind was blowing steady at high speeds.  We were covered in ice, at one point my left nostril was iced shut.  We passed areas that looked like white darkness when we were climbing, now we could see the details of our attempted ascent.  The crevaces were bigger, the snow deeper and the the true steepness of the mountain stared us in the face.


We plugged along and finally reached high camp several hours later, only to have a quick snack and head to base camp.  The trail to base camp had vanished under three feet of snow and once again we were slowed by the snow.  We finally got off the mountain at 11 AM, ten hours after we began, completely spent!!

This seemed like a great idea at the time.  In retrospect is was the greatest idea I have ever had!  We didn´t make the summit, but we were faced with impossible conditions, and fought through them!  The feeling of making it to 5,800 meters was incredible, I could not imagine what it would have been to make it to the summit.  This won´t be my last mountain, I just hope I can find another person as strong and insane as Julia to do it with!!

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Las Pampas

After 33 hours on a bus, I finally arrived in La Paz, only to get on another bus for what was supposed to be 18 hours the next day.  Great life I lead, you see it´s not that glamorous to travel!  At this point I have joined up with my Swedish friends Johanna and Julia again and we´ve got plans, we just don´t know getting to our destination was going to be hell.

We get on the bus, a Bolivian bus - no baths, no AC, no movies, a bit rancid and not so comfortable.  As Bolivian buses go this one was a bit above average, so it´s looking good so far.  To get to Rurrenbaque, you have two choices, this bus for $11 or a plane for $130, bus it is.  This bus travels out of La Paz, up a mountain pass, then proceeds down said mountain for many hours and finally reaches the Amazon basin 18 hours later.  Atleast that is what your told.

We hit the mountain pass and all is good, except it starts snowing, really snowing, kinda reminded me of home, but I was on top of a mountain.  The bus slowed to a snails pace and stopped a few times.  It was freezing on the bus, no AC also means no heat.  The snow ended but the cold persisted for a few hours.  I was not prepared for this, neither were the Swedes, the Brits or the Dutch kid.  So there we sat, freezing and trying to sleep a little.  The bonus here was that the road was paved, so it was a somewhat smooth ride.

Passing another bus
At the first bathroom break it was starting to get warmer and we could feel the humidity starting to set in.  Shortly after the break the rain began and the pavement ended.  Not only did the pavement end, but the road became a series of switchback along the face of a mountain.  The drops were several hundred feet, if not more.  When looking out the window, you did not see the edge of the road because the tires were riding the edge of the road.  Did I mention that the road was wide enough for the bus and that´s it?  So, if on coming traffic was encountered, one of the vechicles had to back up?!?!  and make space out of nowhere for the other vechicle to pass. 

Clearing a landslide, with what appears to be a river running through it.
Same bus company, different driver...we hope!
The end of the bus hanging over he edge of the road
When on a bus in a foriegn country, with the majority of passengers being locals, their reactions to events happening around the bus should set the mood for the foreigners.  So when the Bolivinas panic, you panic!  Johanna was first - "If this bus backs up anymore, I´m getting off the fucking thing and walking!!"  This took place when the bus backed up to let the other bus go by.  I looked out the back window and noticed that the end of our bus was well over the edge of the cliff, I couldn´t see the tire, probably for the same reason I couldn´t see the road.

For some unknown reason we kept passing other vechicles on the left, the side of the drop off.  Julia with the most intense look of panic on her face "Why the fuck are we passing on the left?!?!?"  This went on for hours, we were all freaking out, along with the Bolivinans.  We passed several landslides that were being cleaned up, the roads were absolute shit from the rain and the fear of falling off the face of the earth always present!  The winning moment of this stretch of road came when we passed another bus in the river.  This bus was from the same bus company that we were riding on, safety first!

We finally got to stop for dinner, mystery meat soup and mystery meat main course, delicious!  From here on out it seemed that the road was much better, muddy and not so wide, but we weren´t hanging off 1,000 foot cliffs anymore.  The sun went down, so we couldn´t see what was happening outside, this eased our minds and we all fell into a restless sleep.

I awoke to find the sun up and the scheduled arrival in half an hour.  We were riding along a nice level plane, no mountains, just fields along either side of the bus.  So nice, well not exactly.  As I mentioned before it was raining, alot, you know rainy season in Bolivia.  The road was worse then the mountain road because the water had no where to go.  It was hot and the opened windows were of little relief.  In some areas two vechicles could pass, but in most it was a one way muddy mess.  We were constantly stopped letting other vechicles by.  The bus would lean side to side almost tipping over.  One local told us - "if it tips over, it´s no big deal, it just kinda lays down."  Reasuring.  But we finally made it, not in 18 hours, but in 24 hours, 24 hours of pure hell!

This is the second time in as many years I have been on this bus.  What could be so incredible to make me get on the most hellish bus ride in all of Bolivia, twice in two years?  Las Pampas.  These are wetlands that lead into the Amazon jungle.  There is no canopy, so animal viewing is insane.  It´s a wetland, need I say more.  Our group included five Dutch, one Brit, two Swedes and me.  An amazing group for an amazing time.

I won´t bore you with the details of the three day tour, but let you enjoy a few pictures!
Yellow monkey
Cayman hanging out by our camp

Sunset over Las Pampas
Anaconda hunting in the puring rain, ankle deep water and thick reeds, safety first!!
Swimming with the pink dolphins in the Amazon
The best group in the world!!
Playing futball in a swamp!
The muddy mess
Yes, and we had to return through the madness!!