Archive for December, 2008

‘The Picchu’

Posted in South American Styling on December 30, 2008 by J. Noble

Cusco Peru:

Cusco is a beautiful city, well preserved and maintained as the tourist trap that is clearly is. Its great that the city has retained much of its Spanish colonial influence. *note: the Spaniards were clearly not interested in maintaining the ancient Inca culture and so proceeded to destroy all their works, which were quite a few and the Incas are rumoured to have been stone masons and architects par excellance. The Spanish used the stones from the Inca houses to build their own larger houses and the materials from demolished temples to erect Catholic churches, on the very ground the Inca holy sites had been raized from – an effective stick up the ass in my opinion.** So while the stone might have been Inca hewen, the stonework is all Spanish. Which is fine of course for the tourists, they all think they are coming to the ancient Inca capital (which they are) but to assume present day Cuscois an Incan city is a bit of a farce. From the handful of cathedrals to the glowing Jesus up on the hill, the city is clearly Catholicized.

However, I like walking along cobblestoned streets and looking at colonial architecture so I wasn’t complaining. Thunderstorms wrent (¿is that a word?) the sky into tattered strips like a kite torn in a raging wind. The thunderclap was so loud it shook the ground. And it rained. It rained and it rained, everyday. But only for  half the day, the latter half. So each morning was a glorious bright summer morning high in the mountains, around 2600m. The green Andes surround the city but not in an enclosing way, more of a gentle caress like a kiss hello or goodbye between two male taxi drivers, or a diner and the maître d’hôtel at some restaurant that one walks by in Buenos Aires. Barnes and I were in Cuscofor one reason and it was not to sight see. No we were in search of services, a specific service that can only be aquired in Cusco. The service being, of course, a five day date with a bunch of burros and a few short Peruvian men. We were seeking a hiking guide to the famous Machu Picchu. And we got more than we bargined for.

Staying at our humble hotel with us were an American couple by the names of Nate Jordan and Annie Bell. Arizona grand canyon river rafting guides (say that ten times fast)

**note: addiction to smoking is progressing nicely; since Frankie has left us, my smoking has halted abruptly – the reason being that I cant handle keep up that pace and expect to live out the month. Frankie is a seasoned professional who has been killing himself slowly with great precision. One cannot expect to jump into an addiction head first with only a spread palm for protection (get Jack or Nate to demonstrate sometime) and expect to swim. No, no no, this is a process which I am happy to have the chance to get into, but Frankie is a master, a black belt if you will. I am not yet a pack-a-day smoker, simple as that. To get there I have some work to do and I am prepared to take those steps, but for now I need to get back on the breathing free train. Life with constricted nasal passages and a runny nose, while continually sneezing is undesirable for anyone, except perhaps the masachistis standing babas of the northern Indian range. The reason I say the addiction is progressing nicely is because the two Parisians sitting to my immediate left have been chain smoking Marlboro red’s and I’m tempted to ask for one instead of move tables.**

Where was I? Ah yes, yes, the daring duo of Bonny and Clyde. They turned out to not only be adept at crushing beers and navigating white water (hearsay only) but damn funny, hilarious even. It was a good match. With a series of botched credit card transactions and one that finally worked (possibly several the exact inverse and I will be charged 6 times for one trip after I am wlel out of the county, a good con if I ever saw one) and we were set to depart.

There was, of course, one other reason to venture into the Andes of Peru which was the relentless search for yagé that Barnes had been on since reading Lee Burroughs’ Interzone and Naked Lunch. I myself hadn’t had the simultaneous good pleasure and outright dry heaving feelings that come from reading Old Bull Lee and so was not prepared for the effects of the tea as my compañeros were. However, if there’s one thing that compañeros need it is trust with a capital T. Barnes and Noble have such an ingredient in spades so as their trip documentor I felt obliged and enthused to be a part of the action. Said tea was purchased at the market from a woman selling an assortment of mild narcotics from a stick of fresh rolled tabacco that must have wieghed five pounds, so San Pedro cactus juice, to natural cleanses to Shaman grade yagé. Barnes picked out some – just below Shaman grade – yagéfor the three of us and the kindly woman handed us a fistful of beedies to prelude the tea cleanse. The serve two purposes: firstly traditional and secondly as a relaxant. More to come from the Yagé Diariesluego, but suffice to say that it is a potent cleanser – in more ways that one – and the side effects include nausea, ED, mild to extreme halucinations, and religious experiences. The Shamans use yagéfor: predicting the future, finding lost objects, determining the problem to any question – such as, who stole the cookie from the cookie jar? – curing tapeworm and other stomach dwelling parasite problems, and any other ailment that might cause someone the need to have their digestive tract purged with the vengance of God almighty himself! Ya its that kind of cleanse.

Upon arrival to the bus at 3:30am one fine Peruvian night (it was still dark even thought it was technically the morning) and immediately Noble jumps up to the front of the bus where there is posted (foolishly) a map of the projected route the trekkers are about to be taking through the mountains. Noble has a knack for remembering little shpeels (¿?) that people give, but this particular one was given to us about 17 times in 3 days so a purple assed baboon could have reapeated it. However, only Noble (and maybe the baboon) would have the audacity to jump up in front of a crowd of people at 3:36 in the morning and start shouting and jumping and pointing causing a rucus to wake the Inca spirits[i].

[[alright we’re gonna take you on here on the first day to 3800m and you’re gonna feel a little light headed, but don’t worry we’ve got coco tea. Yessir coco tea gonna make you right in the head, then we’re gonna have the burros take your stuff here, then you can make the photos on the side, beautiful view you understand, and then we walk some more. Watch out for the cornbacked rattlers on the side of the road. Then up up up! To the highest point on day two 4600m very beautiful you can make photos there, time for a snack then the tents will be set up for you, oh yes no problem, yes no problem. Then we come down, Salkantay glacier, very beautiful ok time for pictures. Then to Machu Picchu, yes very nice for photos, long walk, no problem for you, yes we have every thing is included, but you must bring some things?]] What are you asking me or telling me¿ Im not following, is it all included or not? [[yes yes, no problem everything included, you must bring sleeping bag, your clothes for the horses, and snacks, of course tippings are not included]] ¿Ok so I bring my clothes for the donkeys? I feel like this tipping is going to be mandetory, it is isnt it]] And that’s how it went, or at elast thereabouts. Chris and Jojo, Kelly and Mike, Eddy and Pam, Nate (Jordan) and Annie, Alessandro and Daniella, and of course Barnes sat in the audience with a blank, somewhat amused/horrified looks on their faces…Barnes and Nate (Jordan) were the only ones with amused looks, while Annie was probably amused she sometimes pulls that horrified face in mock sarcasm, very effective.

As the bus finally pulled away we were intruduced to Wilson, who would become our guide, friend, and most annoying traveling compañero. But a sunrise over the green peaks of these lower Andes brought all attention of those still awake to the East, which happened to be the right side of the bus, the side that I was sitting on, and we watched as the firey orange star rose slowly at first then with gathering speed it rose from the peaks like I imagine a pheonix might (fawks) and shed its illuminating rays on the deep blue night sky turning it into a sea of flaming primary and secondary colour, excluding green of course. Every colour and shade from purple to yellow was represented but none from yellow to purple. The hills turned a rich lilac like the trees that line the streets in California and the Eucalyptus trees gave off a heavenly scent as they took shape and turned pale blue. The sky looked like a great Cali (Colombia) style salsa dance between the teams imaginatively named vermillion, purple haze, and tangerine. It was a good start to the trip.

Each of the 5 days on the trek had its ups and downs **the writer gooses himself for making such a whitty pun** but my favorite were the first two. Climbing mountains must be in my blood.

Day 1: ascent = a lot. 2700m to about 3900m over 17km on a gravel road, approaching a glacier that looks like it should be a lot high, only it is a lot higher than I think because staying in Cusco which is already in the clouds, one’s sense of altitude is askew. However, the lungs are not fooled and they protest each breath of meagerly thin air with a gentle puff that grows into a reproduction of the Three Little Pigs as each of us plodded along, rucksacks on our backs.

But sleeping in the bossom of two fatally beautiful glaciers is reward in itself and instant coffee never tasted so good. By the end of day one the morning antics were lost on everyone and a surprisingly deep circle of friendship had formed, we even all played frisbee before dinner, after which a round of joke and riddle telling left us all rolling in tears as Wilson sought to record each new word in his notebook and asked for the best jokes to be written down for him. Of course when he failed to ask Annie to write down a joke that we all laughed hard over, we laughed even harder when she asked Wilson why her joke wasn’t good enough for the book.

Day 2: Sleeping on an incline near a rapid and tumultuous stream/small river is not really condusive to sleep and I didn’t sleep much. Also the sleep pads were more like compressed straw. I awoke around 4am. Half an hour before the coco tea wake up call that our cooks would be giving us. I had a problem, the problem was this: no motions had been made in the past 2 days. Seems the yagécleanse had cleaned me out, but I was eating heartily and wanted the return of my morning tradition that is steeped in, among other things, nostalgia or a time when I had my own lou.

            I set out in search of peace, beedie in hand. I don’t really like the beedies, the tabacco is too strong for me, fresh cut and hand rolled with no filter, it packs a punch, but a punch is exactly what im looking for – the nicotine will help with the motions. We’re high in the mountains and it’s a frigid morning. I can see my breath and the shape of the land but little else as the sun hasn’t yet graced us with its presence. The morning is overcast to there is no light from the stars which im sure must have been heavenly. My only companion is a bull cow that is strangely following me around the glacial meadow as I search for freedom from that which binds me: namely…fear. I have no idea what the bull wants but after having recently viewed a bull fight and being dressed almost entirely in red I am a little apprehensive. Luckily its quite dark and I don’t think this guy can see that well in the dark, plus he’s no that big, but still, out weights me by about 606lbs. I chase off the bull with some jaguar like noises (mostly mating noises, grunting sniffing and gurgling, or course) and climb the incline to search for my rock, Im like a dog sniffing the ground. As first light appears, I watch the cooks make their rounds with the tea and I am squatting up on the hill in bright colours watching my fellow trekers get out of their tents and stretch the stiffness away. Roaming farm animals:sheep, burros, horses, cows are on the slope with me as are the horsemen from our troop collecting our burros to be packed up. I could have gone for a quieter location but there was none. After a victory, albeit a minor one, I returned to camp, no doubt with a mischievious grin on my face, the look of a new Sub that had been developing in my psyche for the past few weeks. Jack strolled among the tents and was greeted by Nate

Nate [frosting rocks up there? You gotta watch out for those cornback rattlers in these parts]

Jack [ya I spotted a few of them up there but nothing I cound’t handle]

A puma purrs in the distance. Both men turn to the West and listen

Jack [One time, back when I was a pup, me and my old man go walking up in the Apalachians. We liked to camp there, drive on over from Illinois. It took a while, you understand, but that was summer vaccations with my pa, ma never liked camping. So we were walking in the foothills and this large water mocasin comes a gliding out of the woods, very rare to see one there, you understand, but it was 1978, the year we had that crazy rain all spring and then it warmed up unnaturally. All sorts of wildlife migrated north. Anyhow this big ol’ snake comes right down the path towards us and my pa pulls out his SigSauer P220 semi automatic, he used to be a cop and carried a Smith and Wesson snub nosed special but switched over to the SigSauer for the extra punch. So he just pulls out his pistol like it’s the movies and blasts this water mocasin right in the middle. Well I’ll be darned if 9 babies didn’t just come squirming out of it and wriggle off the path.]

Nate [Damn]

The sun has risen by this point to shed light on the Eastern Glacier, both men stare at it for a few moments, their breath rising like the mist over the alpine meadow. One of the young Peruvian cooks sticks his head out and calls them to [¡Desayuno!]

Jack rememberes the time when he was awakened by an angry, balding father of two rather unattractive Ecuadorian women who shouted at the top of his lungs: “BAÑO LIBRE! DESAYUNO!” Which of course was a rather rude awakening when one considers the amount of time that Jack had been asleep for.

He shudders in the morning mist. Both men head towards the mess tent with purpose and anticipation.

Mike and Kelly are already around the table, as is Pam, accounting for one half of the Asian-American doctors in the group. Ed joins shortly exclaiming:

[Man they weren’t kidding around about not flushing the toilet paper down. Did you see what happened to the toilet?]

Eddy **not to be confused with the infamous arch enemy of the author – Eduardo –  is of coruse refering to the clogged WC in the middle of the field. Without doing an unnescissarily thorough inspection of the facilities I would assume that it is a hole with a John placed on top and 3 wooden walls erected to give a semblance of shelter, aka a shitty outhouse.

The Germans mosie in, geared up and ready for the day. They are wearing the exact same thing as the day before and explain that the material is “full of technologies” and will stay “keeping fresh” for some time in the mountains. Christophe goes into a story about engineering something or other and I notice Jack is reaching for his 4thcup of instant coffee mixed with coco and powdered milk, I fear that Cornback may be at it again.

The hike starts off around 7am and immediately the pack thins out. A steep incline to begin the day is always a clear indicator of who is hurting most from the day before. Hibbons is up front with Wilson and Mike, trekking with a purpose. Ricardo brings up the rear and inbetween are the sandal repping river guides, Nate and Annie; the geared out Germans, Christophe and JoJo; Kelly who is chatting with the Californian doctors; the Italians, Ale and Dani who are not as talkative as the rest; and Jack who is talking to me, or rather monologuing at me.

Jack [and of course that’s how my uncle invented the face dig in professional beach volleyball. Which of course reminds me of the time that I was hunting the rare bird of paradise commonly known as a ‘red skwack-tail’ by the locals, in the cloud forest of Colombia. Those little pygme buggers may only stand waist high but they can shoot a cross bow like a regular William Tell. Of course, only a few ever get to see them alive, they usually don’t take kindly to trespassers, luckily for me I had an extra large bag of McSweeney’s teriaki beef jerky which they happen to love and I traded it for my life and a guided red skwack tail hunting trip.]

            Suddenly I realize I am walking by myself. I turn at the last second to catch Jack’s walking stick.

Jack [hold that for me will ya, I think I spotted a Cornbacked Rattler over yonder] he calls in a Midwest accent. Soft, like the way they say “Soda”.

JN [¿Como?]

Jack [Frosting a Rock Julian, cover for me!]

He runs off as a Condor circles overhead.

            The group haults at the top of the hill as it gently graduates into a peaceful incline towards the pass between Salkanty glacier and the adjacent mountain. The pass is just visible through the clouds still loath to get up out of their resting place and face the rising sun, not that I blame them. The valley is green and soft to walk on, bordered on one side by a steep mountain rising to a jagged peak, and on the other by glacial till created by a hundred thousand tons of ice stealthily creeping its way toward the lowlands, then retreating again, leaving a deep gash in the mountain like a knife wound. From where we are standing Cornback is clearly visible in his red Gore-tex jacket. He is squatting ackwardly on the slope trying to bake a salmon. Thankfully he is too far away to be heard or smelt. But like a young buck he comes bounding over the boulders and soft grassy hillside to reach us, out of breath from both exersion and the altitude.

Nate [frosting a rock over there? Doing a little crop dusting?]

Jack [Nuked a gourd the size of Hiroshima! Could have been a McD’s chocolate soft serve the way that Clevelandcoiler piled up, I’ll say!]

            Pam and Annie wrinkle their noses and the rest of the group looks nonplussed. Hibbons shakes his head admiringly. The rest of the hike progressed uneventfully (for Cornback that is). Scenery: jagged peaks of mountains and glaciers 6000m into the sky, cascading water run off from the morning rains and the melting glacier, the sound of a thousand kilo chunck of ice, crushed by its own weight, tearing off the ice blanket covering the mountain side and rushing towards the ice blue lake below, aquamarine due to the steady stream of thousand year old water of the purest sort.

            I reach the highest point of the hike, top of the pass at 4600m first and place a piece of quartz I picked up on top of the ever growing rock pile at the summit. There is something very soulful (might have made that word up) about being at very high places. The Incas believed that the mountains were “Apu’s” or had spirits in there, or were spirits, something like that. It is easy to understand why they thought that. The sheer size and awe that they inspire is incredible. There is a really insignificant feeling that is both humbling and refreshing, just like being on a small boat on the ocean out of sight of land. The clouds were low so the sky was gray but they were high enough that we could see the glacier on the side of Salkantay that we were facing. Every few minutes there would be the sound of gun shots, thunder and a waterfall in a medly that signified an avalanche had just broken loose. It was barely above freezing there but the glaciers there, like everywhere else, are receeding every year. I hiked over to the ridge and looked a hundred meters down at a glacial lake the colour of a wolf’s eyes. Cornback and Hibbons walk over and sit quietly as the three of us watch avve’s cascade down the mountain in deadly elegance.

Troy[I narrowly escaped from an avy one time. Spent the winter season in Patagonia between Chile and Argentina, naturally Argentinawas better, girls, empanadas, lifestyle, you understand]……

……Jack [you gonna finish that tear jerker there little buddy?]

Troy [Hot Damn! I drifted off, were was I? oh yes that’s right so we were riding this ridge getting set to run a chute and this sound like a thousand kites being torn by the wind  echos off my eardrum at a thousand fuckin decibles! Well that only means one thing so we got the hell out of there prettty fast. Soon as we traversed out of the way the whole side of the fuckin mountian came down like a stampede, son of a bitch it was a close one!]

 

The decsent from the peak isabout 12km of pure downhill. While that might sound nice, when you are carrying a pack, the extra weight on your knees makes them feel like all the tendons have been shorn and there is only skin and a capula holding the femur to the shins. Excruciating by the end of the trip, not to mention cold, driving rain and passing through three biospheres. We went from the glacial pass, down to apline meadows, further down to alpine forrest then into a cloud forrest were the amount of sweat we were all producing replaced the rain that had soaked our gear for the previous half of the hike. Naturally the Germans were high and dry with their highly superior tech gear and steel reinforced, nuclear proof hiking boots. Poor Christophe, the elder of the troop at 43, was suffering pretty badly by the time we made camp. Nate, ever the nature enthusiast was loving life as we passed through fields of wild flowers then trees of wildflowers, then groves of wild flowers, then groves of flowering trees, also wild. It was a nature lover’s ideal day. I myself also am a nature enthusiast which I exclaimed several times and was right beside Nate most of the way snapping photos, pressing flowers in my journal and doing other, regularly socially unacceptable activities for two grown men.

Decending a long way from the peak of the mountain was all killer and no filler. It was agonizing and excruciating to say the least. By the end of the day we all had severely swolled ankled and a deep passion for a cold beer. The beer was forthcoming and the swelling barely subsided or may have gotten worse as soon as I took the shoes off and allowed the blood to flow where it wanted to go. However, that was the least of our concerns as the pungent smell that radiated from the collection of feet was enough to skin a donkey live, which it did. We lost several pack animals that day and sadly we can no longer in good concience place the tag “no animals were harmed in the making of this film” at the end of the motion picture that will undoubetly be written about this hike and then purchased and produced by Disney. But that is a small price to pay for the distinct pleasure of knowing that I (my feet) am a deadly weapon, something that I and every other self respecting american longs to be from the time they cease sucking at their mothers tit.

The crew around the table which included most of us – the Dr’s were missing as were the Italians – demolished the pre dinner snack and immediately felt the shame of not having shared the bountry with the others who had just completed and therfore expended similar amounts of blood, sweat, and back sweat to get there. The solution was obvious to everyone and so we amalgamated the remaining plates into a few small ones that looked full of creackers, tea biscuits, and popcorn to give the illusion that A, we had waited patiently; and B, the cooks had really skimped out on us this evening. Not sure if we fooled anyone – Cornback and Hibbons had crumbs all over their respective mustache and beard.

We made camp and slept like babies who had just walked 18km up and down a mountain and stunk to high heaven. A few brave souls showered in the icy spigot. Nate, the beauty that he is dipped the essentials into a stream behind the cottage we were tenting near then at dinner pulled out his 2.5L tub of butter that he carries around with him on all such trips. Interestingly we used the butter for a lot of things. I mean when you have 2.5L of it there really isnt any reason that any of us could see to “go easy.” And I mean c’mon, we were burning a lot of calories every day. What’s the harm in a little (couple) spoonfuls of butter? Wouldn’t you? We also used it in our coffe in the morning; de-loo-la-licious! Cornback used it as an anti-chaffing agent on his inner thighs on day 3 after the previous day’s rain left him rarer than a 18 ounce porterhouse seared lightly on both sides and served cool in the middle.

Laughed myself to sleep remembering the image of ze germans coming around the bend from the cold showers and Christophe, the worlds hariest man, in booty shorts with a towel over his shoulder wearing his gore-tex hiking boots and carrying a bottle of vidal sasson shampoo in his hand, would have been the perfet commercial if only the cameras had have been rolling. Confouned unions and their coffee breaks!

 

Day 3:

I awoke to the distinct scent of putrid flesh and a pleasant aroma drifted towards my nostrils. Only once it was too late did I realize that the smell was one of Cornbacks flatulations disguised as aerosol by the rapid expulsion from the instument in question and the tell tale hissing sound that usually accompanies such spray cans. Once I had stopped the dry heaving by leaving the tent through the window, which incidentally didn’t open before that rapid escape, I headed towards the breakfast table where I was greeted by warm hellos all around except from the Italians who had apparently had the ill fortune of occupying the tent beside Cornback which they assumed (rightly I might add) that I had something to contribute to the cause.

The hike was now through the cloud forrest as the group had descended in a tour de force by almost 2000m the previous day. Spirits were light as we crossed a suspension bridge that looked like it was about to become past tense, taking along with it anyone foolish enough to try and cross the many gaps in the boards that were dangling by a threat. Miraculously, we only lost one burro and it was carrying only one tent as we had already gone through some of the rations.

Beautiful walk that day up and down the canyons following a river downstream 12km to where a bus would meet and transport us towards the evening festivities. Jack, being of another mind, or perhaps completely out of it gave us trail conversation for most of the day when he decided to “get low” during a group “jump” photo and looked like he was making the motions – easily could have been, Cornback is like no other.

The mission for the day was to end up at the hot springs which we had been promised the previous night by our dubiously funny guide Wilson who was enamoured with the english language, moreso for the tips he may perchance to make if he had a better grasp of the beautiful tongue than the fact that he was a scholar and a saint. He carried around a book in which he wrote all the “funny” sayings and jokes that were told by the gringos along the trail. However, the funniest thing that didn’t make it into the book was because of Annie MC who told a hilarious, if not quite confusing riddle, that took us a long time and a few hints to get. Clearly, because of the confusion and amount of explaining that was necessary to get all of us English speakers to find the answer to the riddle he wasn’t keen to get the riddle written in his little book. This all happened while we were sitting around the dinner table…

Annie MC [why don’t you want my riddle Wilson?]……

…no response……**resounding laughter**

            So there we are walking our legs off…

Jack [son of a gun!]

            And the clima gets hotter and hotter until the clouds part and we arrive in a clearing with incredibly short grass, im talking about masters short grass. WHO IS CUTTING THE GRASS HERE! Seriously they could be cutting the grass as any course or front lawn that I mowed as a niño. But then again, how much of a skill is grass cutting? I used to think it was a big skill until I found out that the grass at this place was being cut by GOATS! That’s right dea reader, mother grass cutting goats! If I grew up here I would have made Tiger Woods look like Gino Odjeck at the Roxy when I was there crushing Van Gogh espresso vodka shots; which is to say poorly!

            We walk through some deep mud and I secretly wish that someone will fall into it. But im one upped when Cornback shouts: “I hope to high hooches some silly city slicker falls into this shit hole!” I immediately regret wishing ill footing on any of my fellow trekkers as Cornback once again displays the lower common demoninator.

            He once tried to tell me a story about Windsor Palace. Whereupon I immediately reminded him that he is wanted by interpol on numerous charges, the least of which being pubic indecency. He is the kind of guy who sits in the corner of the kitchen in a youth hostel and just lets the biggest farts rip at the highest velocity and decible level as is humanly (and otherwise) possible. I mean C’mon!

            So it gets hot and we reach the “destination” where the bus is supposed to be to pick us up; the weary travelers. But it isnt there. No, no no! this is Peru! Hahahahahahaha. What did you expect! Ba! [ah well there mister guide I expected that when you told us all that there would be a bus in the most bug infested part of the trek so far that it would be there. I mean if you had said it might be there then my hopes wouldn’t have gotten high at all but you said it would definitely be there, so you know, it kind of led me to believe that, well you know.]

            There is no bus to be found so we hoof it. Wouldn’t you? There were flies everywhere! Long way down the road about ¾ of the way there the bus comes. I ride on the roof with Mike and Dr. Eddy. We arrive at our destination after being molested and assaulted by tree branches, bamboo and other flora, then depart the bus and wait till after lunch to reboard.

            At the “restaurant” that our outfit has rented to cook us lunch we can purchase nice, almost cold beers. We do. We all get crushed off of one beer. That’s what happens when you hike for three days and expend tons of water and energy, you get crushed off one beer. It was awesome. Cornback naturally made the first assault on the shit hole, which was a hole for shit.

Jack [The old squatty potty routine! Drop the shorts, get into the deep squat and let ‘er fly!]

Dr. Pam [Jack we all know how to take a bowl movement in a hole in the ground, no need to explain it to us as we eat our rice mixed with frioles that looks like, nevermind.]

            The cooks are getting gased in the kitchen about 4 feetaway from me. Its one of those open kitchens so you can see out into the room. They must be around 16 and the two horsemen (boys) are leaving us as we will be carriing all our gear form here on out. They are getting gassed as well. For them, it is a nice journey back to where we started from without having to wait for all of us. Hibbons comes over to me with Nate, they are discussing the skill of the apparent horsemen and their stamina on the trail.

 

Nate [im telling you these guys may be 15, may get juiced off one beer but they sure are troopers to head up on back there in the hills to do that trek in two days that took us three, and they have more uphill to make. I mean do you think they actually walk the whole way? I doubt it, how could they leave camp after us, pass us with silly grins, set up camp for lunch every day, take down camp as we get a head start, pass us again insulting gringos in their quechua or whatever indian language they call it and set up camp again for the evening?]

 

Troy[well I’ll tell you how it is Nate. These little son’s of heffers, old want’s to be with horse and ladied man or whatever their nicknames are, they ride those horses the whole way. Then as soon as they see our group or any other hikers for that matter they dismount and run alongside the animals. Its like the horseman code: make all the idiots walking feel like they are one of us, that way we don’t get jealous and demand that they carry the tents themselves and we ride the horses! I’ve a mind to tether one up and ride that monkey all the way to Picchu town!]

 

JN [Ya I concur with Jack on this one, he’s got a point. We arent exactly a slow group, how do these little fifty pound when soaking wet mountain men do it without riding. Sure they don’t have any packs  on but c’mon.]

 

We give them a tip despite being a bunch of cheaters and then buy four more litres of beer to share around on the bus ride. Jack lies to the vender who wants the bottles back and we roar the hell out of there before he tries to collect his two sole deposit, about sixty cents.

            The third night’s camp is reached via bus along a road that looks like it is about to give out at any second, which would result in all of us rolling several hundred meters down a steep and rocky slope into a river that the raft guides tell us is unpassable, aka to our death. Upon arrival at the campsite we were immediately greated by two spider monkeys that ran all over us like a pack of goombas and pulled some bugs out of Hibbons roaring mane that he refered to as “the quoff”. I personally saw a June bug and some sort of moth looking creature. My suspicion of the ever darkening foreshadowing deepened when Annie gave a throaty eghhhuuaa sound that was a cross between a Marine’s salute and a dying migetcry. Naturally I investigated. Much to my pleasure I found 4 young boys skinning a cow that looked all but moo-ing. The hide was off but and the body had been “halved” but the rest was fairly intact. Annie and Kelly, being vegetarians looked on with dispassionate disgust while a pool of drool began to form around the feet of the men who were probably thinking about their favorite cut of medium rare beef. I was pondering who would be the poor souls who would have to share a tent that night due to the rather unfortunate loss of a burro (and one of the horsemen, did I fail to mention that earlier?) The cow was skillfully, but reluctantly, cut apart with a hack saw (normally reserved for cutting metal pipes) that looked like it couldn’t cut through a watermelon. This was not the worlds sharpest tool. Another highlight of the greusome event was the opening of the stomache which could have easily weight in at over 150lbs. The release of gases and partially digested cud was a pungent sign for us to get the hell out of there and off we went to the hot springs.

The hot springs were cut into the side of the mountain where (evidently) piping hot water was streaming (trickling) out. There were 4 pools of different temperatures (1, 2, 3, and 4, of course) and the group, by this time, the end of day three, moved as a herd from the warm to the hot with frequent stops at the ice cold pool for those with aching joints – which was all of us but only Nate, Jack, Troy and I had the gall to endure the waterfall of what must have been supercooled water (look it up). I caught Christophe and Troyhaving a heart to heart in the über small two man very hot tub cemented onto the side of the rock face catching a tiny trickle of exceedingly hot agua. Clearly, judging by the look on Troy’s face (eyes glazed in a complete trance of incomprehension) Christophe was in the middle of telling him about his boots or a recent project that his engineering firm had done for some Korean automaker. Needless to say, his stories were technical and is severely broken english.

[The most memorable moment of the day goes to Nate Jordan, who, after setting the timer on his camera and setting it up for a group shot has to cover the 20m between himself and ourselves. However, we are all in the middle of a shallow pool, about 22 feetdeep, and he is already at the closest part. So he does what I expect any ten year veteran of the raging Colorado river would do. He sits down on the edge of the pool which is about 6 feethigh and face plants himself in while covering his face with an open hand and leading with the elbow as if it will somehow break the fall. *mouths drop open* There is a splash that would make a breachng whale jealous and then Nate covers the 20m in perfect butterfly that would make Micheal Phelps look like a Guinea Pig in a kiddy pool. Either fate was smiling or Nate has a perfect internal clock because as he finishes his last stroke he surfaces and turns to face the camera and smiles with fist raised like a true Champion and at that precise moment the shutter does its thing! Nate is the only one in the photo looking at the camera. The rest of the group is studying the back of his head with such incredulity that he might as well have been a rare Himalayan miget! Cornback then suggested a game of sharades where he and only he acted over and over the image of Nate sacrificing the body for the group shot. Dr. Pam almost drowned…because she was laughing, not because she’s Asian. Could be the funniest moment of my life to date]

            Back at the camp site we have a delicious dinner and then are forced into watching a local dance that consists of hopping around. Mike and I somehow got pulled into it and hopped along really not knowing what the hell we or anyone else was doing. The blank smiles from our table confirmed what I was thinking. No wonder the civilization is extinct, this is the best dance they could think of? Then we were guilted into tipping the little girls which took the whole joy out of learning the 5 step peruvian hot with a five and sever year old about the height of a St. Bernard.

That night as we all went to bed, except Dani the Italian, due to a warning about the early rise that was necessary to make the days journey in daylight, we were lulled to sleep by the inhebriated shouts and calls of our 14 year old cooks getting severly obliterated on some ungodly liquor.

The 5:30 wake up call never came and by 7am the team of trekkers was up looking like a herd of wildebeasts on the serengetti that had been replaced by astroturf. The previous nights dinner and dishes was still strewn around the table like savages had been dining the night before. Our guide was in his tent and the cooks were laying facedown on the kitchen floor. A sorry sight. Spurred into action by the growing hunger pangs and a fear that if Jojo didn’t get coffee soon someone would be dead, the team rallied to clean dishes, get water boiling, cuss out the guide and kick the peasants masquerading as cooks with great vigor. The audacity! Shouted Hibbons as he lit a match on the head cook’s cheek and lit the stove. Preposterous! Cried Cornback from the grimy dish pit (read tiny filthy sink). The shamefaced cook were finally aroused and two pineapples appeared courtesy of ze Germans who got a series of thanks and strange looks that said “why have you been carrying two large pineapples for the past 47km up and down 4600m?”

            The bus is late but it arrives and everyone gets on happy to be leaving the recent location of a murdered cow and a dirty kitchen that we got to clean.

            Dropped off at the end of the road we have to sign into national park regestry and Cornback is sweating all of a sudden despite the 15ºC weather that is overcast and even slightly drizzling.

Jack C [man you guys, I havent told you this because I didn’t want to alarm anyone but im a wanted man. 6 countried in Europe, Cambodia, Iceland, and Burma. Interpol has their cold hands as close to closing around my nut sack as they can and the grip is tightening every day. I cant sign in here, I need a fake name.]

            For some reason unknown but to the gods be settles on Hank Fischer. I’m stunned, naturally. He keeps his eyes down as he signs the ledger and no one in the guard shack seems to notice the sweat on his palms blot the previous page. Personally, I don’t think these guys have even heard of Interpol.

Jack [I’ll bite my way out of here if I have too. I once bit the recess lady’s breast!]

JN [no you didn’t Cornback, you were just listening to Pearl Jam on the bus and smoking gage in the back seat, now settle down you leper.]

            We walk a few hundren meters down the road to where we are having lunch, a mere hour after we had “breakfast”. But the cooks are still mangled and they’re twelve so what the hell. On a detective’s hunch and a local rumous overheard, as well as a little tour of a local Inca ruin that took us into the forrest we (Mike, Hibbons and I) pulled the classic “stop to tie the shoelace” routine and go on a search for avocado trees. We find that this forrest has them in spades. However, avocado trees grow to heights of like fourty damn meters! So we were relegated to forraging on the ground for ones that had fallen and had escaped the scourge of foul and insects. Returning with arms laden full of fruit we felt a bit like Christpoher Columbus (white men in Peru and all). The rest of the party gave a great cry of delight and wiped tears from their eyes, though not because of the avocados.

            It turns out Christophe was in the middle of his one and only story that was understandable…and it was hilarious. The subject? Why a banana split of course.

Christophe […ziss von time I voz viss my friendz for dinnah and ve ver having such a nice dinnah. Zo my friend he haz a shteak and I haz a pazta dishez. Den after ve are sinking, vat about dessert? Zo I am azking ve vaiter if de dessert iz coming. I checking ze menu and YESS I ZEE IT, DEY HAZ DA BANANA SHPLIT. Zo I order ze BANANAAAHH SHPLIT! My friend he orderz ze ice cream but I get ze Banana Shplit. Zen ve are vaiting and vaiting, and I azk ven iz it coming ze Banana Shplit! Zen I ZEE IT COMING ZE BANANA SHPLIT! AhhhhHH I am zo exzited for zis I get zis and I put my face in it ze Banana Shplit and AHH it iz sho good zis banana SHPLIT!]

            And so on and so forth this went for about 5 minutes and the result was the most raucus laughter from Team Salkantay that there were unabashed weaping and floor rolling, it was the second funniest momemt of my life right after the head dive. Well after the laughter subsided momentarily, because it continued for the rest of the trip, we got about to making the guacamolé, and Nate that head diving son of a mother went down to the shacks at the train tracks and picked up an onion, tomatoe and garlic which made for the worlds most ferral and delicious guacamolé ever.

            We walked along the train tracks for about 12km while getting Christophe to say “Banana Shplit” as often as possible until we reached the ‘base camp’ town of Aguas Calientes, meaning “hot water” after the hot springslocated nearby. Light was going down and the group was dissapointed that they wouldn’t be able to do the 4 hour hike up a nearby mountain that offers a view of Machu Picchufrom across the valley. Hibbons and I decided that 4hours was probably for the “lay person” and now that we had just come through the mountains to reach this joint we werent going to let a little thing like the sun going down from preventing us climbing a mountain that was very steep and would be a real shit storm in the dark. Turns out we championed this mountain in fifty minutes and sweated about 17 litres of man sweat on the way up probably setting a new record. The first half was nearly straight up and the only way is via the wooden ladders. Then it levels out just enough to not need ladders but is essentially straight up for 2 hours unless you think the sun is going to go down before you make it to the top and move like a bat out of hell, which we did.

            At one point it becomes flat for 30m as you cross a ridge between the mountain and the peak ascent where on either side there is a 300m drop to the valley bottom. Going from there through the quad burnout to the top another 200m up was surreal and the view at the top indscribable. This place is called the belly button of the world because all around this peak there are slightly higher peaks but they are all over 5km away in every direction with Machu Picchuperched perilously on a cliff face several km away with the sun slowing sinking behind it. It was quieter than a library up there as the huge expanse of space swallowed up all sound like a good Argentinian cat jajaja. No wind, just the sound of sun rays piercing the air. It took 5 seconds for the echo to come back, seemlingly out of no where as our shout was swallowed whole like Jonah.

            We descended in 45 minutes and met up with the Team for Happy Hour in town after taking the first shower in 4 days of serious sweating. Glorious. Naturally, as is a regular occurance among friends, we got a little cut, which is also in part, a large part, because of our severe intollerance for booze. After a few rounds of beers, margs, and mojitos we moved on to the last supper with the cooks who were obviously bashful for having let the team down that day. But we had a hilarious time as Christophe led the table in rounds of laugther. He, being a little drunk would go into peals of laughter which sounded like the beginning of an air raid siren followed by hyega chuckles, which of course sent the rest of us following suit in our personal laugh of choice.

            The evening finished far too late seeing as the alarms were set for 4:30. Around 2am we finally left the soccer game we were watching in the street. We had just talked our way into the next match when we came to the collective realization that we were: exhausted, all wearing thongs, not soccer players, and most importantly – drunk. So we got out of there before the locals schooled us and took our ante money.

 

Day 5, the Picchu.

            As we all suspected it would, 4:30am was quite early. Two hours of sleep under the belts of us few guys foolish enough to try and play soccer in the street made us a sorry bunch but we rallied and made it to the town square for 5am, the meeting time. One hour of forced marching towards ‘the Picchu’ in order to make it there for the parks opening. It went by without events worthy of noting…that is unless you consider the fact that Cornback had to stop twice for roadside rock frostings. The best was when Nate and I were walking with him and he stopped and dropped on the side of the trail. We moved on about 40m to give him privacy (which he clearly didn’t need) and also to avoid any sounds and smells that were certain to eminate from the general vicinity. However, my attention in the early morning twilight was drawn the the deep squatting and laughing character of Cornback who was nearly occluded by the four hikers that had just walked by him.

Jack [I was squatting there doing…]

Nate [leave it out Jack]

Jack […right. So I was squatting and I hear this noise right behind me and four people walk silently right by me as a lay a nice clevelandcoiler in a steaming heap on a rock. Little dusting. And all I think to do is say ‘Good morning’]

            We didn’t have any mountian money so he was forced to using dewey leaves. It was a good thing then that he had to go once again at the top where there was a WC with real TP for him to use. However, with that guy im not sure if it makes a difference.

 

            Machu Picchuis an incredible work of archeological art. Being there early in the morning was well worth the hang over which we had worked off by 6am anyway. One of the first ones in and the morning light is the only way to see such an antcient city like that. We toured around with Wilson making jokes and recounting the proud history of the once supremely dominant civilization that ruled that stretch of the Andes. It was truly awestriking to see the intricate stone work at such an elevation and on such a pricipitous slope. ‘The Picchu’ is perched on a ridge between two peaks that are part of the rim around the belly button that I had climbed up the previous day. Flowing water through the city from an aquifer follows channels carved into the stone city giving them flushing capabilities and a constant stream of running water. Carrying anything up those steep streets would be labour intensive. They even farmed on the mountain in steppes carved into the mountain. The last steppe is literally the last step. Take one more and it’s a long drop with a fast stop hundreds of meters below. I hiked up the the peak overlooking the small city and it was imporssible not to marvel at the engineering feat that it is. By 11am, the tour groups who made the trip from Cusco in a bus that day started to arrive and the magic was diminished by the sea of SLR’s poking out of ever doorway and window. Together Jack and I puched a few weaker tourists off the mountain and called it a day, only the strong survive.

 

            Walking back the way we came we copped a “post-checkout” shower at the hotel we stayed the previous night in and were literally chased out. Its only water c’mon! We took a train and a bus back to Cusco that nearly everyone fell asleep on and sadly had to say goodbye to our new found family there as I was catching a bus south with Barnes and the river dogs. But we swore to stay in touch and rendezvous sometime in the following year at ze German’s house. I doubt if I’ll see everyone from that trip again but what a memorable trek it was. I have an unsettling feeling in my gut that it wont be the last of Cornback and Hibbons that I have to endure and survive before my South American adventures are through. The last thing Mike said to me as we shook hands and parted ways was, “Keep an eye out for Cornback, he’s a dangerous son of a gun!” Foreshadowing doesn’t get any more ominour than that.



[i] Barnes comes down. “¿What no wake up?” He seems somewhat miffed but that’s just his morning face, he is kinda upset at the world for waking him up for a few minutes, which is exactly why I didn’t wake him up.

“Ok man I was lying in bed and I let out a huge fart, mostly for you, then I rolled over and you werent there, and I was like Oh! I just let out a huge fart in front of three girls. Like a Big Morning Fart!” “Thanks man”, is Julian’s reply.

 

Galapagos: Dear Charles…

Posted in South American Styling on December 17, 2008 by J. Noble

December 4 – Day 1

Descending like a plane from the clouds I landed in Guayaquil with little to no issues save my decision to go for peach juice rather than a black coffee. This error in judgement (nothing against peach juice it was delicious) was rectified on the second leg of the journey which was of course to Galapagos, where I was of course heading, of course. It felt good and strange to be back over the Pacific ocean and I wondered aloud inside my head how many times I’ve crossed it, at the time I didn’t add them up but I will right now, and the answer is 4, but now you might say 4½. There and with that answer firmly in me head but not yet, because it only came there in the future I circled the island of Bar-something and landed in the fabled Galapagos islands.

I was greeted by a stiff breeze that carried the smell of the sea and unfortunately not any baked goods from a German delicatessen because I was feeling famished despite the in flight meal and a hot cup of aforementioned coffee  that I slammed out of habit. A cursory $100 in $20’s was literally slapped down on the immigration table with all the authority I possessed (there was no way I wasn’t going to see some Animals (jaguars)!). Then I was greeted a second time by my soon to be guide Linea and a couple of my shipmates Klaus (something gurgled and forced through the throat in an inhuman manner) and honey, they were, of course, from Holland, where they say everything with unnecessary guttural throat rasping which immediately brings to mind the dry heave being counterbalanced by making the sound of a goose in Stanley Park hissing at you (while that wouldn’t really counterbalance the dry heave it does sound remarkably like Dutch). From Goos’ clean shave and pot belly, to Honey’s darkly chain smoking stained teeth (and matching pot belly) and their real suitcases I knew that this was going to be a good trip. As it turned out, we were the only three on the yacht for the next 4 days, which was going to suit me just fine. It seemed that they might have been expecting more and my immediate thought was: “How many did they buy rations for?” I felt like they might be prepared for me after all. Upon arriving to the boat I was also pleasantly surprised to find that I had the pick of all the cabins on a boat designed to sleep 16 but can take up to 18 and has 8 crew. So I took a cabin with a double bed and a bunk and spread out all my earthly possessions just for the fun of it. My revelry didn’t last long as I smelt spaghetti with a delicious tomato and onion sauce accompanied by garlic bread – which consequently was what we were having for lunch. And so I ate heartily of the spread which consisted of, you guessed it: spaghetti with a delicious tomato and onion sauce accompanied by garlic bread. This turned out to be the smallest meal of the entire trip.

I just got bit by my first Galapagos mossie and it is making me want to cut my leg off above the ankle!

Day 2

Eating like a champion, breakfast of scrambled eggs with sausage and toast, fresh fruit, meat and cheese plates with fresh squeezed juice that definitely had cantaloupe in it. Lunch was a nice broccoli soup to start followed by rice, green beans in a cream sauce, boiled and crisped potatoes, a pork tenderloin topped with a pineapple, cilantro and other goodies tomato sauce. Salad on the side of iceberg lettuce with onions, peppers, pickled capers, artichoke hearts and tomatoes. Desert was more fresh fruit: pineapple, cantaloupe and oranges. Guess who had two thumbs and isn’t getting scurvy? THIS GUY!

While I was reading in the gorgeous Galapagos sun my attention was distracted as I watched a small black tipped shark get in a tiff with a pelican and a great frigate bird over something that had fallen/been thrown off our boat. The pelican seemed to win even though I don’t think it was edible.

The sea life is incredible and while the water is not as warm as the Caribbean with a wet suit it was alright. Able to dive down and look at stunningly beautiful and colourful fish, play with sea lions, and watch boobies dive down and eat fish right in front of me. Incredible.

There are many boats anchored here now when last night we were only two. The number is 4 so not really crowded in the entire bay but there are small dinghies and zodiacs coming and going at random. All tourist boats. It is no small wonder that the flora and fauna here (does that include animals) have remained so tame. It is almost as if we are in one giant zoo or aquarium here. A petting zoo where you cannot pet. But seeing this many sharks and other animals around at all times is wild, it almost makes me want to jump in a play with them as my pets. Clearly that is a no and one of the great reasons that the animals will come right up to you but not attack is the fact that the guides are fairly vigilant when it comes to the animal life. Sea lions came within inches of me while snorkelling today, they are incredibly curious and friendly. I think they just want to continue playing as all I see them do is lie in the sun and play with one another. Good life being a sea lion while there are no orcas or large sharks around. Apparently this is a good place to see orcas close to shore as they come here to breed and to feed on the abundant sea life. It is almost as if the animals are vying for our attention at some grand talent show. The pelicans are constantly with us sitting on the boat, dingy or floating along in the water hoping for scraps from the kitchen window, while an army of puffer fish wait just below the surface to take what’s left and sometimes nip the sea birds to remind them of their place in the world. Sharks cruise around the boat from time to time like the giant sentinels of the ocean. They aren’t that big but they look impressive nonetheless. When an animal that large and feared simply swims by it seems so anti climactic. For their size they make no sounds which somehow one anticipates coming along with them thanks to the Hollywood studios. They are just big fish doing what fish do, swimming, eating and hiding from other big fish depending on how old they are.

This is a truly beautiful and unspoilt place. The constant sea breeze is fresh and invigorating wile the sun shines with a warm intensity following a near perfect arc across the centre of the sky. This morning before the sun was above the island behind us I sat and watched as the landscape came into focus with the day light and obtained the elusive colouring of the early mornings. The ocean transformed from the deepest blue, almost black, like a rich navy tux that Daniel Craig would wear while playing 007, there was a deadly coolness but also grace and elegance to the water which warmed like the landscape as the sun broke the top of the island and began to warm my neck. The other islands took on deep orange hues and burnt ochre with rich browns, greens, yellows, and blues of all shades making up the colour of sea land and sky. It was a time that I wish I was at Benjamin Moore or at least had a swatch of paint chips in front of me so I could accurately describe the incredible song my retinas were somehow listening too.

We went on a hike up Bartolome after breakfast and the terrain was completely foreign to me. All of the Galapagos are formed by volcanic activity and the islands are very diverse in age, ranging from (God only knows) a mere 700,000 years to 6 million. As the hot spot created by the convergence of tectonic plates continues to create the archipelago, the islands shift with the plate about 7 centimetres south east ever year. Erosion takes its toll after a million years (or much sooner) leaving the islands with distinct characteristics that betray their relative age. We climbed up the mountain of hardened lava and magma covered with solid ash that forms as the hot magma comes into contact with the cool pacific and explodes creating little cones everywhere. Our companions were lava lizards and grasshoppers and a few lady bugs as we reached the 148m summit and were rewarded with quite the view of the surrounding waters and islands. The sun was hot but not overbearingly so because of the cool pacific breeze. I could see Sea Lions splashing around in the water.

Well we haven’t been boarded yet by anyone or animal tonight, but then again its only 8:26. I may end up in bed at 9 tonight because we are pulling anchor and heading round the other side of Santiago at 5am, for a 6am beach date with some sleepy Sea Lions and their young. So anticipating that I will wake up as soon as the Guantanamera gets underway I will need to turn in early if I want 8 hours. That said it has been a long day already and with the dinner portions being as large as every other meal I could use some sleep to help me digest this load of food in my belly. Oh what did we have for dinner? Let me tell you: Luis cooked us up breaded fish sticks for the main with green beans and button mushrooms, rice, mashed white carrot and a salad that had shredded carrots, beets, and some fruit maybe apple, then again maybe not. Dessert was a banana drowning in warm chocolate with crumbled walnuts sprinkled on top. All together more than I could handle but of course I verily licked my plate clean. I immediately felt the rumble of the chocolate in my stomach which should provide for some interesting sounds and smells for any remaining cockroaches in my room (5 have died very gruesome but quick deaths so far). If there is one thing I won’t tolerate it’s a mosquito in the room while I am about to sleep, I will hunt that son of a bitch down until I see its (or my) blood smeared on whatever surface it was foolish enough to land on in my presence. If there are two things I won’t tolerate its a bunch of cockroaches running all over the floor and walls like this is a Taiwanese kitchen when you are sharing a house with a bunch of dirty Ukrainians! For any future trivial pursuit questions that may arise (I can see it now) I would take cockroaches over mossies any day and twice at night.

The second round of SHHHNORKELING as Goos would put it, was just as grand as the first. Visibility was about 10-15 meters and we came across a very placid green sea turtle resting and munching away on the algae covering the lava formations posing as rocks. It was a little wider across than my shoulders and about from my head to belt in length. I could swear that it was the same turtle that was cast for the part of the surfer lingo speaking turtle in Finding Nemo (oh what’s that? Yes we’ve been boarded by the first of the night’s free loaders, a female Sea Lion which shall be named Dot) because not only did it look exactly the same but I’ve got a monkey for an uncle if that turtle didn’t give me a high five. He also took no notice when I gave his shell a light and friendly knock to make sure that it was indeed a turtle and not a playful baby Sea Lion in a paper maché shell (it was a turtle). There were also all sorts of other fish cruising the rocks eating, defending their territory, playing and schooling, which looked like more fun that when I was their age.

After the ditty with the sea going animals it was time for us land lubbers who were freezing our fingers off (this is not the Caribbean) to get back to what we do best (walking, not eating, I can’t stereotype Goos and Honey as Fat Kids – despite their protruding bellies – because they don’t eat fast enough and I haven’t seen them ask for seconds yet). However, this was no ordinary walk. For the next hour we picked our way around a massive lava flow that is a little over 100 years old. Small weeds are just beginning to grow in some of the lower spots where water pools for longer but other than that it was barren. That is because for quite a long time (80-100 years) lava flows such as this one emit sulphuric gas thus making the environment very hostile towards green growing things. Linea walked on with his steve Irwin shorts and safari shirt that he seems to have on at all times (except for night when he favours a track suit that would make Italian or Mexican gangsters/hoopsters jealous enough to shank a brother). And of course his hat that has the neck protector. I scampered (yes I did) along behind or to the right or left, basically wandering all over the place like an excited puppy who thinks maybe he should smell every single bush, post and curb for the scent of new piss that he might have missed the last time he went on a pee-walk 5 minutes ago. Somewhat behind lagged Goos and Honey in mid calf socks (technical not white), full (and quite rugged might I add) hiking boots and each wearing a backpack containing two sets of binoculars (for bird watching) and a nice cannon SLR (which never left Goos’ neck so I have no idea what else filled up those bags and I may never find out). Linea and I had sandals on.

The expansive lava flow looked like 10,000 moms (probably Mennonites) got together and decided to bake the world’s biggest cake, except they let the cake mix and icing sit too long and it hardened, so they stuck the electric beaters in the giant pan and began to beat, but instead of whipping into a smooth pan the batter and icing twirled into great swirls and rope like shapes then cracked all over to high heaven leaving an undulating and rather unearthly set of geometry shapes and forms that would make my grade 12 geology teacher, Mr. Okinawa, lose his ahi ahi lava shaped mind. The Hawaiians have come up with two names for the type of basaltic lava flow that we witnessed and they are something like ahi ahi and laki laki. The laki is meant to represent the smoothish swirling lava flow that is ok to walk on with bare feet while the ahi flow is rather spiny and broken like someone walked into a candy makers in the English midlands, took all the rock candy and taffy twirls, then mixed them and smashed them with a bal peen hammer (definitely looked like the work of a ball peen). It was strange and beautiful and utterly black except for the areas where the lava flow (about 1-2 meters deep) failed to cover the existing volcanic formations that are a reddish brown colour that resembled a giant mound of instant coffee such as might be found by Gulliver in his infamous travels.

Camera stopped working and it is causing me quite a fair amount of grief. Shame.

Day 3

Darwin noticed that there were no palms on these islands, a fact about which he was quite right (right up until Palms were introduced – they now thrive). It is a very curious characteristic about these “tropical islands” that gives them a largely different feeling than anywhere else I’ve been or seen. It is because these islands are formed only from volcanic activity giving the soil a very arid quality. Darwin wrote:
“The thin woods, which cover the lower parts of all the islands, excepting where the lava has recently flowed (meaning anywhere from 100 to several hundred years ), appear from a short distance quite leafless, like the deciduous trees of the northern hemisphere in winter. It was some time before I discovered, that not only almost every plant was in full leaf, but that the greater number were now in flower (this was mid September). After heavy periods of rain, the islands are said to appear for a short time partially green.
For myself, I have not yet been close enough to these trees to tell so I will reserve my judgements until I can see them up close. But from the deck of the yacht on which we are now motoring it appears just as he has described. A black lava flow has whipped out all life to the coast from where is spewed out of the ground but further to the left and higher up on the island where the lava hasn’t been for hundreds, or more likely many thousands of years, there is the leafless appearing vegetation and further up still a green hue that could be small trees, shrubs or other thick bunching of grasses and cacti. From this distance maybe a kilometre is it very difficult to tell the height of the vegetation.

This morning we began motoring at 5am. It was exactly at that time that I was roused from my slumber so I decided as any rational person would to get some coffee.

The world began to take on colour from the deep hues that it was hiding in before Senor Sol begins his daily routine. With a cup of coffee in hand I began to monologue in my head (it never stops) and this is some of what I came up with: sweet glory this is incredible. A sunrise on the ocean is more spectacular that a sun rise on land because the sun seems to appear out of a blue envelope, kind of like the Oscars (what colour do they use?). You can actually see the first ray as it meanders across the waves of space and time to kiss the back of your eye which promptly sends the greeting on to your brain and a smile comes to the lips like the salmon instinctively flock in Capastrane! Then the world rolls over and takes a breath, and at that point the land changes completely from the glowing illusion that it is in pre-dawn light to the tactile terra firma – if you will allow me to exercise the extent of my Latin – that we know and love it as. I think when the sun is coming up and doing down its favourite colour must be blue because every shade of that (my favourite) colour is represented over those moments when the earth turns and all sun worshipers like me and the marine iguanas either smile or sigh. I would take a sunrise over a sunset every day except Friday and Saturday and this morning, whatever day it was, Christmas came early. Let’s leave the rest in my semi-romantic sepia toned Renoir of my mind.

The damn Chinese have made it all over the world and spread their litter as they go, which is why the island we visited in the morning is called Sombrero Chino (Chinaman’s hat), also there is a possibility that it refers to the shape of said island. Here we splashed down in the clear waters to find an aroma wafting to our nostrils (mine were flared) that was both pungent and repulsive. In essence it smelled like shit. Which I was soon to discover was the precise origin of the scent. Here was the breeding and suckling grounds for a (not sure how one judges colonies of Sea Lions with respect to size) colony of Sea Lions. We walked around them well within kicking or biting range (although neither was necessary) of the cows (why do we constantly refer to females as cows?)and pups. The moms and pups were sleeping, making strange noises that are beyond literary definition kind of like those noises that accidentally escape your mouth when you’re a kid (or 23) and everyone looks at you and in unison chime “what was that?” but they don’t need to say it because the look on their faces is enough to turn you redder than a red boobie’s (correct spelling) feet. So we enjoyed watching Sea Lion pups run towards or away from us, I think we were merely in or not in their way and our presence seemed to be of no consequence. Except the time when Honey failed to move her under muscled pasty legs (picture a woman who chain smokes is mid 40’s and Dutch) from the direct path of an oncoming mother con pup and it literally reached out its neck in what was for me slow motion, and bit her ankle, not once but twice, that is how slow Honey’s reaction was. They didn’t even leave a mark (to my disappointment) and seemed to be friendly get the f’ out of the way lady, mother with child coming through kind of bites. Our guide naturally told Honey to move who seemed to be jarred to life by this suggestion as if it hadn’t occurred to her before. I was naturally mesmerized. Goos looked on with an expression that betrayed absolutely nothing; similar to what many of might describe as dumbfounded or just blank. Where else in the world can you pay to watch Dutch tourists get bit by Sea Lions followed by a Daniel! (Eggs, bacon, hash, toast, coffee)!! Which is what we had for breakfast.

It appears that Darwin was not so much of a conservationalist as many might believe this great man of science was. An excerpt from The Origin of Species reveals this:
“The inhabitants believe that these animals (land tortoises) are absolutely deaf; certainly they do not overhead a person walking close behind them. I was always amused, when overtaking one of these great monsters as it was quietly pacing along, to see how suddenly, the instant I passed, it would draw in its head and legs, and uttering a deep hiss fall to the ground with a heavy sound, as if struck dead (probably causing it so much stress it would soon die). I frequently got on their backs, and then, upon giving a few raps on the hinder part of the shell, they would rise up and walk away; – but I found it very difficult to keep my balance.”

We have spent the last few hours motoring towards Puerto Eges on Santiago the Western side where we will continue our and based exploring and more snorkelling. Pelicans and frigate birds are hitching a ride in the sun and the bunch of bananas swinging in the stern is getting lower, thought because of me not the birds, they are strictly carnivores it seems. I can see the trees now as we are only 150m off shore and they are indeed trees, albeit not very tall. And interspersed are green shrubs, however, the trees still do appear to be leafless. The sun is hot but the air is cool in the shade because of the glorious pacific breeze. Saw a large green sea turtle off to one side and we passed through a long stream of bright vibrate red krill or tiny shrimp (the captain used the word camarones which is shrimp but this was much smaller and I believe I made myself clear when I asked if it is whales food and he nodded ‘claro’) Off to the East is the large island of Isabella with her three large peaks rising over 1600m. Along off in the distance is Isla Fernandina some kilometres away. The sea is a colour blue that I wish covered the whole world it is so glorious to look at. We are passing a small cruise ship but big for these waters as it probably holds well over 100 passengers and I’m glad to be one of them pause not. Around this bay there are three largely eroded but once perfectly symmetrical compact ash peaks formed as Darwin describes them as: “finely stratified volcanic sandstone. The latter in most instances have a form beautifully symmetrical: their origin is due to the ejection of mud, –that is, fine volcanic ashes and water, —without any lava.”

I’m now struggling to stay awake as Luis has out done himself once again. If a Daniel for breakfast (that’s right) wasn’t enough we had a delicious Colombian style soup for lunch with potato and chicken in it. That was only the starter. Rice with a celery sprinkle, a salad including the likes of our friends crushed walnuts and pears, tomato with pickled capers on it, and a potato that was scooped and stuffed (twice baked) with shredded carrots in the cheese medley that was the topper.

Snorkelling before lunch was wild. I counted 10 different green and black sea turtles but there must have been about 15 there munching seaweed on the rocky point. I floated around in my wetsuit, riding the surge of the waves like all the aquatic life under me was doing and they seemed to accept me the more for it. The turtles chewed enough grass to make a cow jealous. I wanted to try some but I had a snorkel in my mouth and decided to keep on breathing.

As I started to make my way back to the shore I noticed a bull Sea Lion floating nearby. Then I noticed a baby playing right around me, next I couldn’t help but notice the 175kg bull swam straight at my face only to dodge at the last second, his massive body gliding effortlessly past mine somehow without even grazing. He did this again then gave me an earful, literally a full and powerful bark right in my ear reassuring me that I was indeed in his territory and unless I wanted to join his harem and get you-know-what I should proceed to the beach with the rest of the two legged mammals. So I split. Did I feel like choke slamming that oversized water going golden retriever? Yes I did, but I thought better of socking that fatty and made for the beach.

Lunch was (see above) delicious and then we mounted our steeds, or rather boarded the dingy for another excursion on land. The island of Santiago is right in the middle of the Galapagos and one of the more eastern main islands. From Eges Bay we looked across to the West at Isabella where the volcanoes of Wolf, Darwin and ???? where clearly visible and Fernandina between Wolf and Darwin rising up like a volcanic cone from the sea (isn’t it?). While the climate here “cannot be considered otherwise than extremely arid, and for an equatorial region, remarkably temperate.” (Darwin) it does get damn hot on land when you are shielded from the pacific wind, such as we were on the majority of this nice little nature walk we were embarking upon. Somewhere in the 30’s is enough for me to take my shirt off (hell I’ll take it off wherever to bring greater glory to the moustache by means of a supporting cast that is predominantly my chest hair; the nipple hair is great too) so I did. Immediately I felt my shoulders begin to burn (weak skin is a side effect of the malaria pills I’m taking, as are wild dreams such as the one I had about Kyle, or was it Ryan Himleman last night – the dream wasn’t only about him, you were in it too but he had the main role). Flora, Fauna and other such treats to the nature enthusiast were plentiful and I was able to discern that the son of a bitch (Darwin) was right about the trees. There were green shrubs that were spiky with thorns and nothing else (their whole existence appeared to be a proverbial or literal pain in someone’s side) and there were acacia trees with some greenness but the actual trees I was looking at as being barren where (and still are) called holy or incense trees (this is, of course, not their Latin name but I, of course, don’t know it) that smelled FANTASTIC when you (I) broke off a twig and gave it a jolly sniff (the kind you might give a runny nose).

Proceeding onwards we were greeted by a plethora of baby Sea Lions doing one of two things with the same goal: sleeping or playing in tidal pools, waiting for their mothers. These little guys (I wouldn’t worry about that little guy) didn’t worry about us too much (not at all) and continued playing with great ardour (means passion – look it up, I certainly did) sometimes with the Marine Iguanas that were everywhere looking like the great descendants of the Saurian (some sort of lizard race) that they are. These clever little fellows have (at numerous town meetings and Awona clubs around the islands) decided to become algae eating vegetarians for the sole purpose of playing in the water more often and throwing biologists for a loop. Well they got me and I quickly was added to their legers as yet another tourist who believed some hogwash about them being vegetarian descendants of the great lizard king (I saw one eating a Big Mac with a 10 piece set of nuggets and another one bit my ankle while I had my back turned). I think they also are in cahoots with the tour companies and charge per photograph taken which can in turn buy them all the gourmet algae they can stomach.

I once heard a rather vulgar joke about Chinese pussy which I just thought of as the sun went down. The glowing tangerine sun has just set, gone from whence it came – namely the other side of the world. In its process it has thrown the colours it keeps hidden from us all day, unashamedly across the sky: gold, brilliant pinks, magenta, the colour yellow gold mixed with a pink rhododendron (of course I know what colour that would be!) and the palest yellow that is almost blue white like a white dwarf before it becomes a black hole like the spot on my iris’ where the sun used to be, and now it is gone leaving a colour that might be a shade, and once again I am left feeling like a cloud has covered my vision – because it has. The horizon which is about 2/3 the distance between the base and tip of my thumbnail when held at arms length with one eye closed, is being heavily guarded by the navy gray skies and the steely blue ocean, so you can forgive me for the crude reference I recalled at the beginning of this passage (as well as the creative freedom I allowed myself to describe the various colour in).

So the iguanas are eating/sunning themselves and the Sea Lions are doing much the same, as are the Galapagos Fur Seals which we came upon later in the nature walk when (oh Goos has bought me another beer God bless him) the arid path gave way to volcanic beach which is what happens when Basalt lava flows into the sea, which it had some time ago. The lava (or as I prefer to say, MAGMA) tunnels varied in size and depth. One such tunnel had formed a sort of blow hole as each successive wave came in the narrow chute and was then forced out by its own inertia meeting the back of the cave producing an “old faithful” sort of effect (for you non-nature enthusiasts out there look up ‘geysers in Yellowstone national park’). The magma had also given way in some spots where the formation was neither of those two fun words I made up for the other flow we walked on, but rather called pillar basalt (really), to form mini bridges above the water that came in crystal clear azul blue and the green of the Irish-Japanese woman’s eyes that haunts my every waking moment (when I am in the shower using Irish Spring soap that is).

We also saw a Galapagos hawk that landed near us so we decided to investigate. We walked right up to that hawk to within 10 feet so I could clearly make out the blood on its talons and the mischievous look in its eye like when you’ve been caught with your hand (or in this case talon) in the cookie jar. I would have gone closer but the hawk engaged me in a deadly game of chicken. Since I was clearly playing with a hawk there seemed to be no doubt in either of our minds who was going to be the chicken in this case and I bowed out respectfully but a little embarrassed.

One thing that can be said for all the things that are said about the animals in the Galapagos, which is that they (the things said) are true. Here’s what is usually said: the animals in the Galapagos are fearless. And that is largely true. While I have yet to see the Giant Tortoises, the animals here regard humans in an entirely different manner than those on the mainland. This characteristic of these animals and also birds on the Falkland’s led our dear Chuck Darwin to conclude that fear of man is a learned reaction and not an instinct. This learned response is then passed down through generations as an instinct. When Darwin landed birds could be captured by hand and killed with a stick. I am very sorry to say that many people did just that including our good and well loved bird killer/evolutionary theorist Charlie D. Since then (1835) the birds have wizened up a little, but you can still approach them remarkably close. One could walk past a Sea Lion within a foot and it barely bats an eye, and swim past you so close that I thought they were going to lick my face/bite my throat. Iguanas will tolerate humans to within any distance so long as you don’t make a fast movement or actually touch them. Sea turtles (who swim all over the ocean and are shy other places) seem to be oblivious of any human threat here. It seems that Darwin and his gang of lizard stuffers (eat your heart out Shakespeare, bet you wish you invented that one) were part of the trend that has caused these birds to shy away (albeit marginally) from the time when they literally had zero fear of man and could be picked up by hand. Thanks to our good friends (a.k.a the tree huggers) people have stopped molesting the animals and eating those they could, in favour of conservation so we can continue to enjoy nature perhaps as it was intended. There are however, no reports of sharks ever being friendly or not biting the hand that feeds, if you will.

Goos and Honey have been a delight to travel with these last few days, because it’s hilarious to watch them. Life on a boat wasn’t really designed for people with poor balance or underdeveloped stabilizer muscles, which I think it is safe to say that if not both they, are victims of the latter. And who’s to blame but technology for all our middle aged folks being unfit and accustomed to moving linearly, not laterally. Getting in and out of the dingy is a particular pleasure of mine whether it is from the plank at the stern of our boat or onto the beach. Either way it’s hilarious and the only reason I hold it in is for fear of being there myself one day. Honey, being a vegetarian and all, also has provided some good antics while at the dining table, most of which revolve around quite obvious comments such as: “this has chicken in it” which is quite clear to anyone with two eyes and a nose. Then Luis produces her “veggie” dish which is always waiting in the wings and I sight wistfully as a second helping of meat might as well have just fallen into obscurity. Luis, to his credit is not only an incredible cook, but always offers me seconds which I took him up on only once after realizing that my eating like a true champion (see also fat American) probably means that the crew are not dining as well as they might have, and they are not experiencing the full menu that we are enjoying in the first place. Some could argue that $636 for 3.5 days is worth eating all you can even if that means others going hungry, but I’m a Fat Kid, not an ogre. And with that thought and the deep but somehow rich darkness I await dinner as the smells from the kitchen waft upwards to my flaring nostrils.  

Our guide linea (this only sounds like his name and I’m sure is nothing close to the real spelling – or sound) comes up the stairs to the deck where the three of us are sitting. As our eyes meet I know that he has come up from his movie (Fast and Furious) to tell us its time for the evening meeting before dinner. We all see him and know that he wants us to come down. Instead of simply saying “its the time to meeting”, he rings the bell. I am less than 10 feet away from the bell, it was completely unnecessary. Maybe he likes the finality of ringing a bell, I know I always did. The meeting was funny as always and punctuated by the words: attraction, animals, and species an innumerable amount of times. Dinner was the best thing I’ve ever tasted: chicken breast wrapped in bacon (twice in one day!) with rice, beets, something else delicious I can’t remember because desert was so rich: a crepe filled with candies fruits and covered with chocolate and maraschino cherry drizzle.

After diner I came back on deck (after a conversation with the Dutch couple that was somewhat strained because like in everything else Goos forgot most of what he was trying to say before the words ever fully formed on his lips. Both Honey, whose name (I only just discovered) is actually Hannie and I had a difficult time making out anything. They are so completely Dutch I smile just thinking about it. Then on deck I had an extremely long conversation with Luis where I may have said as little as 9 words, no one can tell for sure. The conversation went from the nationality of the crew to Luis cooking experience to American politics to the logistics of feeding people on a boat. It was fascinating and when I awoke I believe 6 of the 9 words I spoke the whole time where: what just happened? I blacked out.

And then I did.

Day 4

My 4 day cruise ended 1.5 days early, because that’s how they sell these bitches, but it was worth every penny. So at 7am, after a rather mediocre breakfast (Luis was apparently drinking all night after I left him talking to mainly himself on the upper deck, I couldn’t blame him because the company probably wasn’t great or talkative. With scrambled eggs, toast, and fresh fruit I was rushed off the boat (I like to take my time on the Lou after a round of coffees, feel me?) to see some giant tortoises. These mothers are huge. I was pretty blown away, or would have been if they did anything. Alas, they just sat in the mud, munched grass, or hissed (they do this when scared as Darwin duly noted in his notes). I mean they are tortoises so I couldn’t blame them but I was really mad at the hare (the one who lost the race) for embarrassing itself and all other mammals for losing to this largely uninteresting animal. One thing that can be said for tortoises: they live a really long time (maybe over 200 years, all the scientists keep dying before they can tell), they make good eating (apparently) and the oil from their fat is nice and fine. However, since we can’t eat take their oil what can be said for them is they live a long time. I hope one day we discover that the cure for cancer is in their large turds because a lot of money and effort is going into preserving them here. Well, I suppose it’s only fair since it was us who nearly wiped them out in the first place. Sailors used to take them away by the hundreds because they can live for up to a year without food or water and thus make a steady supply of fresh meat on long voyages. Suddenly I was suspicious of everything Luis fed me.

Linea left us in the town thus officially ending my and his time with the tour, I tipped him $30 and the Dutch couple tipped him nothing. He thanked me and then shouted at the sky in Spanish which I can only assume meant “why Dutch God? WHY!??” Since I hadn’t had my fill of Tortoises I found a hostel and went to Darwin Station where they are breeding the giants. There I was surprised to find myself completely alone in the gated but unlocked pens and so strolled around and tapped on many a shell and felt the leathery legs imagining what it might look like roasting on a BBQ. I know you’re not supposed to touch them but I don’t think they are aware of what’s happening in the world around them anyway so I didn’t see any reason not to.

Later in the afternoon I took the opportunity to burn my nose quite badly in the equatorial sun as I walked the 3km to the beach. Upon arrival I was stunned to find the most pristine beach I’ve ever seen. The water was as clear as the Caribbean and a much better blue, the sand was so white and fine it felt like baking soda and I took a vile of vinegar I always keep with me for such times as that and sprinkled it on the sand to see if I could make a volcano. Alas, it was real sand not baking soda posing as sand. Strolling along the beach I though how nice it would be to share this moment with Brett, if he were a girl, so actually I was thinking about how lame walks on the beach are by oneself, so I ran which is very cool to do on a beach by oneself. I discovered a nice and placid (is there any other kind?) group or maybe harem (I didn’t lift any tails to find out) of Marine Iguanas. Here again I touched and picked them up, probably to the dismay of park officials everywhere but I’m a nature enthusiast and I had too. They were surprisingly light and seemed to enjoy being rubbed (who doesn’t?) but did run away after being picked up. By ran away I mean took two steps very quickly in whatever direction I set them down in, then stopped and seemed to forget the whole ordeal ever took place. They were far more concerned with soaking up the rays, which I decided to do as well. On the beach I was delighted (yes really) to find the Darwin finches were quite inquisitive, or perhaps evolution has taught them that humans are messy eaters on the beach. Either way, one alighted on my left leg as I lay face down reading, and proceeded to hop its way to my heel which it inspected for a few seconds, and upon being satisfied with the situation flew to my sunglasses which I had tossed aside with the ensuing cloud cover. In response to seeing its reflection it pecked the lens in a (I can only assume) friendly manner and flew off to join the others. This was repeated in various sequences several times.

 Ate soft serve ice cream on my way to the beach and then again for desert with apple pie at a cafe. Life was pretty good.

Day 5

If the previous 4 days weren’t excitement enough for a nature nut like me, Day 5, if I had known the night before, would have been enough for me to lose all sleep. A 7am appointment with the animal I most desired to swim with: sharks. That’s right, I was going diving. In all my pre-trip planning I really didn’t budget for the approaching $1000 I had now spent on scuba adventures but they are beyond wild. Nothing like swimming 100m in an hour to get the blood racing. But without going underwater you’d be missing half or in this place a majority of the fun.

The ocean is, I think, a perfect utopia where you can eat anyone you want as long as you can finish your plate (and catch them), mate with as many females as you want as long as you can fight off the other males tooth and flipper, and enjoy life while constantly looking over your shoulder for the other guy who wants to eat you or steal your bitches. I mean who doesn’t want that? There are no fat animals in the ocean, they eat what they need and live in harmony the rest of the time. Rays eat shells, Sharks eat rays and fish, fish eat other fish, and Sea lions eat fish and are eaten by sharks and whales. But everyone needs the fish to clean their coats and floss their teeth, so they don’t eat the really little ones. It’s like the world’s greatest catch and release program except they don’t bother to catch unless they aren’t going to release, take out the middle man if you will. All I know if the world would avoid a lot of problems if only the strongest men could mate with females. First of all it takes away the pressure for the women to shop and spend money on frivolities; we could use that money on feeding people. There wouldn’t be any crime because the other men who were dominant would just kill or cast out that one from the group, (who would then be eaten by the lions that would roam around every city, or polar bears) and we would get taller, stronger, faster and smarter with every generation instead of what is currently happening to us. Also a great way to control the population. Yes, I say down with human rights, let’s get back to the laws of the jungle – or ocean!

White tipped, Black tipped sharks, Hammerheads, a school of 19 spotted eagle rays, golden rays, sting rays as wide across as my arm span (approximately I wasn’t about to pull a Steve Irwin), tuna fish (not yet canned), spotted moray eels, sea lions circling us like the sharks would have been if they were hungry enough, sea turtles chilling, schools of fish that bend and turn then SWARM just like Planet earth and as I descended into their midst they parted for me in a great circle, garden eels, blue nudibranchs, sea urchins, giant clams, caves, swells, more fish than you could shake a stick at, Mobula rays (related to the manta but a little smaller), ocean sun fish, the dreaded surgeon fish, King angle fish and many more. It was enough to give any true nature lover a stiffy in 20C water while wearing a 2 piece 7mm wet suit complete with hood and booties. I was smitten with the Galapagos and probably ruined as far as diving goes forever. Watching small fish clean other fish and turtles brought enough tears to my eyes that I was suddenly glad for all the PADI training that allowed me (in case such an event ever did occur) to clear my mask with safety and ease, I was the toast of the diving town – if you will. I didn’t pee in my suit (this time) out of excitement because Pablo told us that there was no peeing in the suits and if we did then the punishment was to clean them all; he said they had a detector in each suit. While I didn’t believe a word of it I wasn’t sure enough to find out – I still don’t know.

Watching Sea Lions floating on the surface from 15m below them as they stare at you deciding whether or not to call their Pa over and then come down to play is, well its actually pretty exciting. It is an interesting perspective that made me realize how sharks can get us confused with Seals and Sea Lions since we are almost the same size and put a wet suit on over our pink skin and we look just as tasty. I vowed not to hold it against all sharks in the event of my ever getting bit, but to seek swift revenge on the single offending member of the species nonetheless (possibly due to my love of the movie The Life Aquatic and my inherent desire to embark on a similar voyage with Bill Murry, Owen Wilson, and Jeff Goldbloom). After the dive I decided to punish myself with what I originally thought would be good for me – the jury is still out. I ran to the beach and along it twice then back (stopping to look at boobie (blue footed ones)) for what turned out to be a very long way. I could feel the fluid in the new blisters sloshing around between my toes but decided that stopping would only prolong the inevitable (them popping or my getting home to take off my shoes) and so kept on going for about 12km. A major feat considering my last effort was three countries, two times zones and innumerable beers ago. Beat I took a cold shower, though not by choice, at least it didn’t hold a candle to the water in Popayan, and headed to eat a nice $5 shrimp dinner, which I just did. Tomorrow I fly back to reality where animals are animals and we try to eat them all. But my time here has been totally otherworldly. It cost around $1,500 for 5 days but has been some of the best money I’ve spent (on myself) ever. I’m selfish when it comes to pristine jewels like this and I’m almost temped to spread bad rumours about this place to people won’t come and visit, at least no more overweight retirees with their Jack Wolfskin zip off pants, their tilly hats cinched tightly around their double chins, their white socks pulled mid calf out of brown leather shoes and their vests with a million pockets as if they are a National Geographic photographer on an Africa safari with no camera bag. Who besides fly fishermen need that many pockets! I mean C’mon!

Have you ever noticed that the Japanese haven’t changed at all, ever? As samurai’s they were fierce warriors, as Kamikazes they were fierce warriors, and as tourists they are fierce warriors. I don’t think they enjoy traveling at all, I think they do it out of a sense of duty to the land of the rising sun. For example a bunch just walked past my cafe with their hands clasped at their backs, ominous looks on their faces that say: “wait till the next war white boy, we’ll get you!”, and canon digishot™’s slung around their necks like samurai swords waiting to capture every moment no matter how uninteresting or mundane it is. Another example: a swarm of them passed me today on the street. They were all perfectly the same size (like soldiers) and wearing broad brimmed hats like they were tending rice paddies, imitating the Viet-Kong, or flying into ships in Pearl Harbour; they each had a digital SLR camera around the neck with the bag of lenses, extra memory cards, and light diffusers off one shoulder like some automatic weapon to cut down the invading pale face; they had an extra Sony powershot™ digital camera in their breast pocket like a grenade to capture action at close range with devastating efficiency. These guys haven’t changed a smidge. Do they even ever smile? I need to visit Japan for more research, look for the book titled, “How to survive the year of the Nip” in stores early 2011.

So tomorrow I fly back to reality while I am sad to leave such an incredible place. I am, as always; excited to be back on the road with Barnes in what will undoubtedly be the worst 3 days of our lives as we bus from Guayaquil to Cusco, Peru in search of the Inca ruins of Machu Picchu. But it will be punctuated with tales of high seas and jungle explorations; hopefully he got his hands on some Yagé and freaked out for 4 days envisioning Jaguars and other crazy hallucinations.