Friday 20 March 2009

galapagos photo links & journal


Photos and a bit more of a detailed journal on these links

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=103950&id=543366004&l=a4762036b1

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=107754&id=543366004&l=eea7cbf791

Friday 13 March 2009

Galapagos!


So now I find myself in the Galapagos islands.Galapagos is AMAZING i´m so happy to be here and so happy to be doing the conservation project I signed up for in San Cristobal. I´ve landed myself a really interested personal project that i´m heading up with a couple of other younger volunteers fighting our way through dense vegetation with machetes to unexplored areas with a GPS and find petrel nests (endangered bird only present in Galapagos and Hawaii) and identifying threats such as wild pig, cat, rat (which predate on eggs) or dense brambles which block the nests so habitat management can be implemented later. Actually reminds me a lot of water vole surveys I do back home, looking for burrows in water courses and keeping an eye out for habitat management and invasive species which threaten their survival. We had to camp out too under the stars to listen out for petrels, although was a bit windy so they weren´t active, but got my fix of cooking dinner on the fire and making shelters out of guava trees. A group of the staff came along to make sure we didn´t get lost and aggressive wild pigs didn´t attack us(!). I´ve also started off this self guided nature tour identifying invasive, native and endemic species, and had a go at some invasive species management (macheting) and reforestation work. I´ve had weekends off and scived a bit of work to go on a 4day tour around some of the other islands, all in all been getting my fair share of amazing snorkeling with sea lions, turtles and manta rays, white tipped reef sharks, moray eels, big schools of colourful fish in a little beach round the corner, not to mention all the parrot fish box fish and ususal stuff you only normally get to see diving. Also went diving yesterday but managed to miss the two hammerheads and massive Galapagos shark that a few others saw a few metres away. Apart from that the guitars been out almost every night, there´s been lots of camp fires and singing and i´ve been dishing out my percussion instruments to everyone to join in. I´ve met some lovely people on the project and its been so much fun. The sea lions are my favourite animal and so playful, they swim right up to me when i´m snorkeling (like face to face) and lounge around on street corners sleeping. Havn´t managed to upload any Galapagos pictures yet, but will do soon! Only got a few more days left here so gonna love you and leave you all, and head to the beach for a few hours to try find some sharks to swim with.

Montanitas, surf, sun and reggaeton


So montanitas, crazy place. we soon discovered that the only thing you can really do here is surf and drink cocktails. We happend to stumble in on Saturday night of the international surf competition total frenzy everywhere. Hot tropical climate again, strangly the wet season in the rest of the country doesn´t seem to affect the coast. Lots of chileans and argentinias in Montanitas, and lots of hair does (didn´t realise how popular mullets were in chile). Anyway it turns out that chileans and argenitinas are lots of fun. We ended up spending about ten days, alternating with big night of salsa, meregue, reggaeton and cocktails, followed by a day of recovering on the beach, playing the guitar, sitting off in hammocks, followed by early night, followed by healthy day of yoga and salads, surfing, followed by another large night. It wasn´t planned in that way but within the ten days we had the first weekend surf competition, a night out to meet and gather crew for beths birthday, beths birthday (the pinnicle of it all), farewell parties for crew gathered for beths birthday, and of course the national carnival which lasted 5 days.

havn´t managed to upload any of my photos yet,but a few of our chilean friends have beat us to it..

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=2021654&id=699236560&op=1&view=album&subj=543366004&aid=83852&auser=699236560

Also beth´s birthday dinner...

Guayaquil


Three weeks of being fit and healthy was about to be ruined by ten days in Montanitas, the surfer village on the pacific coast. Bit of a crazy place to say the least. Unfortunatly on the overnight bus ride to guayaquil one of our three bags we put in the luggage hold mysterously disappeared. Typical for beth – 15months of travelling latin america and her bag gets stolen in the last two weeks. We got the security gards in the bus station to radio in for some police who asked us to write down our names and date of birth (!) on a bit of paper and personally escorted us to the police station where they waited around 2 hours for us to give a reference, then drove us around the city to change some money, asked if we wanted to have breakfast or buy new bikinis for montanita when we passed a shop window (commenting on which ones we´d look best in) and also putting on the siren at every opportune moment to get through traffic, striking up a conversation about why we weren´t married with children at our ´mature age´ and finished by giving us their number in case we had any more problems in guayquil or wanted to salsa dance. Reallly this kind of behaviour would be sexual harrassment in Europe, but totally acceptable in Ecuador. Wasn´t long before we had another bag stolen from beneith beth´s feet (the legendary food bag full of yogurt and granola). Two bags in 5 hours, pretty good going. Oh yes, forgot to say our incident at the police station made it to ecuadorian news. And i thought the guy shoving his mic in my face was part of the police wanting film evidence of our statments, turns out he was putting together a programme of ´bad things that happen in ecuador – our seciton was ´they rob the tourists´, a guy in montanitas recognised us from television.

havn´t managed to upload any banos photos yet on facebook, but here´s one of the village and the crazy dog gringa who came on the walk up the mountain to protect us

Banos


Having spent almost 2 weeks on a detox with yoga and trekking we were feeling fit and healthy and decided to check out Banos, the town with natural thermal springs due to its location adjacent to a huge active volcanoe, and famous for its outdoor activities. Being located in the cloud forest it rained a fair bit, but on the first sunny day we decided to tackle the 60km bike ride down to the amazon basin, aptly named ´routa de las cascadas´ due to about sixteen waterfalls passed on route. The most exciting thing is seeing the change in ecology and habitats as the route drops from cloud forest to amazon. Also hearing the change in sounds and insect buzz, hotter climate and general more tropical lazy chilled out vibe (old men sat on street corners too chilling in the heat).
More amazing quilatoa loop photos on here. Heres the dodgy 1-log bridge we had to cross twice

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=106293&id=543366004&l=424c1

Quilatoa Loop


Next stop Quito, to stock up on hiking gear after learning our lesson at cotapaxi. Also i bought a new lumex after my old casio camera suddenly died on me  Also managed to sneek in a night in a salsateca to get my salsa fix, followed by the usual consequences of having to get up to catch a bus having had 3 hours sleep. Quilatoa is a beautiful crater lake up in the andes. We stayed with an indegenous family then spent the next 3 days hiking between villages around the loop – first day down to the lake and on to Chugchilan, Next day onto ilinizi, then final day to sigchos. 3 days of 7-8hours trekking through the andes with no guide other than lonley planet inaccurate descriptions of the paths, and inevitabley losing the route and having to whistle over to some farmers and indigenous folk every now and again (good job beth can do that whistle thing or we´d still be lost) and fight off aggressive farm dogs with stones, cross dodgy 1-log bridges over fast flowing rivers (then having to cross back realising we´d gone wrong) and having to tackel tiny footpaths which carve their way around steep mountains over sheer drops down to certain doom. Occassionally stumbling accross and 80 year old Quetchua farmer lady with no teeth who giggles a lot and manages to mumble a few spanish words saying she´s minding the cows. No retirement out here.

for more cotopaxi photos check out
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=106284&id=543366004&l=49319

This one was taken around about the time we started to panic (note beth´s not too happy about me taking the picture)...

After a couple of days of taking it easy we thought we should check out the national park itself. A swiss couple were having a go at the summit, so we decided to hitch a ride with them to the lagoon, the idea being to hike around the lagoon, see the beautiful snow capped volcanoe from the bottom, and then get a lift back to the main road to cathc a bus back to the farm. Their guide persuaded us it would be much more exiting to get to the refuge where hikers spend the night before attempting the summit at 1am the next morning, and perhaps see some glaciers. Also more chance of finding a lift back he said. For some inexlicable reason (perhaps the glorious weather down near the lagoon) we let ourselves get talked into this idea, only to suddenly find ourselves completely underdressed (beth in sandles and socks, neither of us in waterproof trousers) in a blizzard at some 4000km altitude. One of those moments of slow panic / dread as everyone around us put on their full on cramp ons, snow gear and basically look like their about to tackel everest. We decided to sack off the stupid idea of going higher and seeing glaciers get to lower altitudes as fast as possible. Within a few minutes we were both freezing, cheeks burning, and to make it worse a couple of vehicles passed by and didn´t stop. One of those feelings of slow panic-dread and visions of it getting dark and us being lost, with little but a pack of peanuts in our bag, no map, no compass, having to camp overnight with no shelter, getting attacked by wild horses roaming the landscape or dying on route. Luckily within half an hour a car of sympathetic americans stopped who said we reminded them of their daughters and gave us a lift back to civilisation.

Couple of days in Otavalo and we decided we wanted to find a chilled out farm somehwere to spend a few days, get a routine, catch up on sleep and detox alter Colombia, do some yoga and drink herbal teas. We found a gorgeous little farm near Cotapaxi national park with a perfect barn to get the carpets out on for daily yoga practice. Friendly dogs and llamas, lots of clover and dandelions to pick and put in tea and open fire and guitar friendly vibes at night. Even had a jacuzzi in the back yard.

First stop, Otovalo market to stock up on al paca goods- jumper, poncho, socks, gloves, hats, jackets. So much colder in the andes than i´d realised, or maybe i was just thinking about the first carrebbean leg of the journey. Anyhow the al paca ponchos and pan pipes in otovalo really made us feel like we´d arrived in Ecuador. Even the night life was live pan pipe andes bands in indegenous gear and long hair. Very different feel from colombian hot Cali salsa. We decided to make a little trip to the animal market where all indegenous folk from surrounding villages decend every week with cows, pigs, gotas, sheep, chickens, guinea pigs, cats, dogs (BTW guinea pig is the nacional ecuadorian dish) i´ve stuck to my salad, crackers, sea food rice and lentils.

more photos on http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=106284&id=543366004&l=49319

Ecuador


So, we manager to cross the colombian ecuador border at night without any problems, lots of police presence and road blocas and convoys but i slept my way through it all luckily. More of a concernĂ­ was that beth had forgotten her yellow fever certificate and we weren´t sure she´d get through, but a bit of a flutter of those blue sparkly eyes at a the officials and we were through