Sunday, November 25, 2012

Drinking with the Incas: Lima to Cusco, through Bolivia, down to Argentina.


Currently sitting in Hostel Linda in Salta with obligatory Australians and Israelis.  I’ve been in Argentina just over 24 hours and have already had epic steak, seen Tango, seen loads of beautiful women, seen rugby highlighted- and I also saw a sign at the border saying, inaccurately, that the Falkland Islands (or whatever they call them) are Argentinian.  Pretty much all preconceptions have been met.

After watching the Wales Argentina game, and England Fiji game in my hotel room in Lima a couple of weeks ago, I checked out of my hotel in the Mira Flores district and went about booking a bus to Cusco.  In the travel agent the Senora told me it would actually be the same price to fly to Cusco- except an hour rather than 24 hrs on the bus…  Decisions, decisions.  After booking the flight for the next day, and paying, she then said it was actually at 6AM, and I needed to be at Lima airport at 4AM.  Read the small print and weep. 

While contemplating my next move, I found myself in ‘Ye Olde English Pub’, looking for lunch, and finding a diverse crowd of characters.  This included a load of old boys, both American and Aussie, who were Vietnam veterans, and were not only interested in hearing about Afghanistan, but also about my visit to ‘Nam at the beginning of last year, as none of them had been back.  There was also a 22 yr old ex-British soldier, who had come back from Afghan in March, various American and Canadian ex-pat, business types as well as a particularly bitter, old Irishman who was emphatically not British- and who took an immediate shine to my sense of humour “Don’t worry mate, you can have some of my potatoes…”

Somehow or other, I made it from the pub to the airport for 4AM, with all my kit, and got the flight to Cusco.  Cusco is the old Inca capital, where the invading Spanish graciously smashed up all the Inca temples and built churches on the same sites.  Today Cusco is a tourist trap, which reminded me of Hoi An in Vietnam because it is clearly aimed less at the scruffy, ‘wife-beater’ wearing Australian/ ‘Gap-Yah’ back-packer and more at older, rich American tourists.  It is also extremely high up- although I don’t think my initial feeling of nausea when I arrived there was entirely due to the altitude…

Main Square in Cusco.

More Cusco
The reason why everybody goes to Cusco is that it is the gateway to the ‘Lost City’ of Machu Picchu, and there are various ways of getting there- the most famous, which people book months in advance, is the 4 day ‘Inca Trail’ march through the jungle.  This is not only quite expensive, but potentially quite a ‘rooting’ (as the Aussies would say) and not in keeping with my policy of not exerting myself when not being paid to.  However, I did need to go and see the Lost City, and couldn’t quite bring myself to get a bus to the top, so I booked myself on the 2 day variant, which involved a 6AM start on the Tuesday.  The sensible thing to do would have been to have had a quiet night on the Monday night… so obviously I went out to the Irish bar (highest in the world, to be sure) then ‘Mama Africa’s’ Club, before going back to the hotel I was staying in, packing my kit and heading to get the bus.  Drinking all night, followed by a 6-7 hour bus ride along extremely narrow, winding mountain roads is not exactly the most, possible fun to be had in life.  We were in a tiny minibus, with as many ‘gringo’s’ as possible rammed in, but there was no way, at all to make yourself comfortable, and my head, knees, elbows were getting bashed with every turn, while I just felt like death warmed up.  At one point we were stopped at a Peruvian Police Vehicle Check Point and all had to get out and line up as the vehicle was searched.  One of the Americans laughed that this was where we would all get shot- “I certainly hope so!”

Once we eventually got to our ‘Drop Off Point’ we were told that it was just a walk straight down the railway track to ‘Agua Calientes’ (Hot water), where we would spend the night in the hostel- and that “You can’t miss it…”.  I found myself teamed up with a Dutch couple from Utrecht (my current favourite European city) and a German couple, and it was quite a pleasant stroll through the jungle. We also had to jump out of the way of the train as it came up behind us, all good fun.  As with all these things, I couldn’t help thinking about whoever it was who had to hack their way through the jungle initially to build the train line- rather them than me! 

Stroll through the jungle.

More 'J'...
Mind the train!

After a couple of hours, and a couple of ‘Sickener’, false horizons, in the dark and the rain, we eventually got to Agua Calientes, located our guide in the main square and were taken to our hostel.  The form was we’d sort ourselves out, go to dinner at some restaurant that was part of the same tour company/ racket, and then get a brief on the next day’s activities.


At 4AM the following morning, after a couple of hours sleep, as I was standing in the rain, in the dark, making sure everybody was OK, and had got the right kit etc, it did occur to me that I’m supposed to be on holiday!  We then wandered the 20 minutes or so to the gate by the bridge for the start of the climb, as instructed, and were then told we had to wait until 5AM as it didn’t open until then- so far so standard, “If you can’t take a joke, don’t join… etc”.   We were told it would take about an hour and a half/ 2 hours to climb the thousands of steps up to the main entrance to Machu Picchu, and the German couple swiftly dropped back feeling their chain smoking, while the Dutch couple who were clearly the active, sporty type, decided to ‘beast it’ up the hill.  Sadly, I couldn’t help keeping up with them as I was remembering previous jokes about Dutch people and hills, and nothing in life is about turning up and taking part!  After 45 mins, I could hear a bus going past on the road, that criss-crosses the steps all the way up, a few meters ahead of me, and I was cursing myself for not getting the bus.  However as we got up to where the sound of the bus was, we discovered it was actually the main entrance, and the end of the ‘hike’- thank f*ck!
Tourists waiting to get into 'Lost City' at 6AM.
Once inside Machu Picchu itself, it was obviously quite a spectacular scene, and definitely worth getting up there earlier than the main crowds.  The exact original purpose of Machu Picchu is unclear, although there are various theories, so it is a bit like Stonehenge (which I’ve seen once, from the back of a 4 Tonne lorry) in that an awful lot of effort was clearly put into building it- but God knows why.  The other thing that struck me was the fact that when construction of it began in the Mid 15th Century, those building it were obviously oblivious that a couple of decades later Christopher Columbus and co would be getting ‘Navigationally Embarrassed’ on their way to India/ China, and finding America by mistake.
Looking down at Machu Picchu
More Machu Picchu

And some more.

After a half day or so of wandering around the Lost City (which had only been found by an American ‘Indiana Jones’ type in the Twenties), it was back to Cusco for a couple of days.

The plan was to go from there to La Paz, the Bolivian capital by bus.  However, once again, we discovered that it was as cheap to fly- and there was a small matter of a rugby match to watch with some Aussie boys I’d originally met in Colombia, who turned up at Machu Picchu, so we stayed until after the rugby.  (Needless to say if any Aussie asks, I have no interest in rugby, and never have had…)  Sadly the airline decided to ground the flight that day, so we didn’t leave Cusco until the Monday- 8 days after I’d arrived.

On the flight to La Paz we flew over Lake Titicaca, one of the things to see in South America, 20 minutes after Take Off- rather than 12 hours after the bus would have rolled off.  Been there, done that!

Lake Titicaca, on Peru, Bolivia border.

My plan in La Paz, which I had no particular interest in seeing, was to spend a night there and then head off to Argentina, which like Colombia I really do want to see.  Sadly, Wednesday was the day of the 10 yearly national census in Bolivia so nobody could go anywhere from the Tuesday, and nobody could go outside the hostel at all on the Wednesday on threat of US$1,000 fine or 8 days in jail.  For me, this meant I spent a few hours on Tuesday walking around the city embracing the high altitude- and feeling like an asthmatic, chain-smoker doing the London Marathon.  We then just had to stay in the hostel with everyone that was there, drinking Cervazas and Jaeger bombs all day and night on the Wednesday, which pretty much wrote off Thursday for everyone.
La Paz

La Paz- this particular 'plaza' reminded me of Ramallah, in the West Bank.

"Strewth!"  Skippy getting a 'pick-me-up' during the census.

La Paz

Enduring the Bolivian census in the hostel...

As my Aussie friends’ plans of going to the jungle had been written off by the census we all just decided to fly down to Uyuni in the South of Bolivia to have a look at the Salt Plains there, on the way to Argentina.  Interestingly we discovered that the Bolivian Air Force Logistics Arm was used as a tourist, budget airline!

After getting up at 4AM on the Friday we headed to the Bolivian Air Force base in La Paz to get our flight to Uyuni, I was looking out on the tarmac at a load of C130 Hercules transport aircraft there, and I laughed at the possibility that all the tourists were going to be introduced to that particular joy.    However, as it got lighter I realised that those particular aircraft were actually wrecks, rotting on the flight line- a typical 3rd world use of, no-doubt, American aid for some ungrateful regime or other.  There was, however, another, newer, C130 in full Coca Cola livery, which I still am at a loss to work out what its story was!!

Genuinely, WTF???

At about 8AM we arrived at Uyuni, which truly is a sh*t hole and reminded me in terms of both wealth and architecture of Southern Iraq, and we set about heading out to see the Salt Plains.  We then discovered it would be much easier to get the train that night (unfortunately 10PM, rather than ‘Midnight train’) to the Argie border, so we booked the train then headed out to the desert/ Salt Plains, via some railway graveyard, in a 7 seat Land Cruiser, with a Bolivian guide and 4 Argentinians, none of whom could speak English.  There is much fun to be head with photography in the featureless salt Plains...

The majestic beauty of Uyuni...

Had to be done!

Train graveyard at Uyuni

Local wildlife on Salt Plains...  Perspective is a wonderful thing!
And some more...

After a spot of dinner (authentic pizza…) we then got on the train, which was actually like the yank AmTrak trains, built for big Americans, rather than tiny Bolivians.  Once at the border town of Villazon, where we arrived about 8AM, we were pleased to discover that our bags were still there, and we then got a cab to the border and strolled into Argentina.  Once inside I was the last of our crowd of Brits and Aussies to go through Argentinian border control, and for some reason the chap looking at my passport, which has no indication of how I earn a living, decided to call his boss over, and the others wondered if I’d been ‘pinged’.  However they eventually gave it back without comment, and off we went. 

Border crossing- last photo before Argies told me to put camera away.

I was thinking that the Argentinian paramilitary ‘Gendarmes’ running the border did remind of pictures I’ve seen of Argentinians surrendering by the thousand at Goose Green, Port Stanley etc, and sure enough we were greeted by the below sign:

Welcome to our British guests...

Regardless of anything else, they lost the Falklands War spectacularly, they achieved nothing except getting 700 odd of their own soldiers killed, and they will never get them back as long as the Falkland Islanders themselves, who despise the Argies due to the way they were treated during the invasion, continue to wish to remain British.  The latest opinion poll of the Falkland Islanders when asked about the choice of British or Argentinian nationality stated 98% wanted to remain British- probably somewhat higher than if the same question was asked in the United Kingdom!  If Mrs Kirchner wants to pick a fight, she’d be better off invading Bolivia- they need it more.

Anyway, from the border town of we got the 8 hr bus to the city of Salta.  On the bus you can see the transition from the indigenous poverty of Bolivia to the ‘Western European’ Argentina as we got closer to Salta.

We then dumped our kit in the hostel, had a few beers and headed out to see what goes on in Salta- and were pleased that our pre-conceptions were proven correct.  Going out to get an awesome steak dinner at midnight is a bonus anywhere, and will no doubt be being done again tonight…

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Leaving Colombia, through Ecuador and down to Lima


Currently in the first Starbucks I’ve found in South America on the Pacific waterfront in the well-off Miraflores district of Lima, Peru (that’s the capital, for my American amigos…)

My initial trip from Salento to Popayan had been delayed by some coke-head Dutch bird begging me to stay one extra day as she didn’t want to travel on the Colombian buses in FARC territory on her own, which was probably fair enough- not that I’m exactly Jason Bourne.  However, she then got a better offer of a lift from a London-based South African couple who were ‘flash-packing’, driving through South America, so I was on my own just a day later.  There are 2 things in the world I have no time for:  weakness of any form and being f*cked about, unnecessarily, by other people.   Needless to say, that was her off the Christmas card list.

Anyway in Popayan, after hearing some local advice, I had to persuade some people that, despite my initial enthusiasm, overnight bus rides through FARC/ bandit territory were not a good idea.  No matter how big and tough you (think you) are, if you have an AK muzzle up your nostril and end up without laptop, camera, passport and wallet, you will look like a knob for not waiting a couple of hours and going in daylight.   I also pointed out that this was coming from the guy who was quite happy to visit the West Bank, on Pre-Afghan leave, so ‘over caution’ is not really an issue.   Subsequently about 6 of us got the 10 hr bus on Friday morning to the Ecuadorian border.  The only noteworthy thing we saw was some church built into the side of a valley, near the border town of Ipiales, which was worth a look- even if you’re not remotely interested in churches, which my Catholic education ensured I’m not.

View of church at Ipiales from road.

 
... and from in front.
 
Once we’d had our passports stamped on the Colombian side, it was just a stroll over the bridge to the Ecuadorian side.  It is possible to just stroll back and forth, without any checks, carrying whatever you want, but apparently it becomes an issue when trying to leave from, say, an airport, and you’re required to return to your arrival point to get a stamp.  The Senorita at the counter there started gibbering at 100mph, so I had to clarify that “No entendiendo nada!”, (“I understand nothing”), much to the delight of everyone present, so she switched to English.   After a cab to the bus depot and buying some tickets, all paid for in US$ as Ecuador has no currency of its own, it was a straight forward 5 hrs to the capital Quito, and we got there about midnight.  I’m sure this is a different arrival in Ecuador to how Julian Assange of Wikileaks would have imagined himself arriving.  Sadly for him the only place in Latin America he will be going is Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
 
Border crossing from Colombia to Ecuador.
 
 

In Quito we headed to the Casa Secret Garden hostel, which had been recommended, and we were let in and pointed to rooms by security guards wearing full body-armour, with ballistic plates, which was an interesting touch.  In the morning we saw the dynamic of the hostel was that there was a very arrogant and rude Frenchman (who I actually warmed to) in charge with a couple of pleasant, but stressed English guys working for him- which was an unnatural arrangement.

Rooftop bar/ restaurant at Secret Garden Hostel, Quito.


On the first day in Quito we just went for a walk around the city centre, around the old town, up some church for good views etc.  On the way back the Aussie guy was navigating back to the hostel through some ‘short cut’, with map fully opened, extended in both arms, just in case we didn’t look enough like tourists.  I made the observation to some girl that the area we were in, about 2 blocks from the hostel didn’t seem the best, though I’m not sure exactly why my 6th sense was on form.  Anyway, an SUV drove straight up to me and the smartly dressed woman driving shouted at me in broken, but to-the-point English “This is bad neighbourhood!  Get out!” which seemed like sound advice, so off we strolled back to the main road, and the long way back to the hostel, without incident.

Downtown Quito, Ecuador.
 

Main Square in Quito

That evening there was a plan to go out to the main ‘going out’ bit of Quito, being organised by the same old coke-head bird who had turned up in the same hostel.  I very much like the idea of not having to organise anything when somebody else is doing so, “Lead, follow or get out of the way” is a sound policy to observe, and I hopped in a cab and followed.  However, after being lead as part of a dozen-strong procession up and down various streets, apparently on the off chance we might bump into some friends of hers, who might be about, my sense of humour began to strain.  Once there was then a head count of how many people wanted cocaine, and she started going up to every single person in the street asking them for it, I definitely felt it was time to make my excuses and just get the f*ck out of the area.  Each to their own, cocaine is very much part of Western culture, and I don’t really care what my friends do, but it certainly doesn’t improve the quality of any company and I’m seriously not going to end up in a South American jail- regardless of how much writing material that may offer, in 20 yrs time!!

The next day, the only thing to do was to head to what an English guy in the hostel referred to as ‘That line thing’- The Equator.  It was about 90 mins drive from Quito, and it was quite a good set up.  There also seemed to be some kind of party on as it was a Sunday, and we could get beer there, which apparently we couldn’t in Quito, so we got drunk on the equator, as it seemed like the thing to do.  We then got back to Quito and discovered you can actually buy ‘grog’ on a Sunday, so we did and had a good party in the hostel, and I considered spending an extra night in Quito.
 
'That line thing'  The Equator.
 
 
Marking the Equator, as seemed appropriate!

Fortunately in the morning my decision making process was facilitated by the Frenchman throwing us all out of the hostel for drinking on a Sunday.  Some of the others found this strange and unusual as we’d been perfectly welcome to drink there the night before and were apparently being thrown out for no reason.  However, having been a soldier for 10 years, it seemed entirely in keeping with the level of logic I have come to expect- and I paid up and headed to the bus depot on my own.  No hard feelings.

At the bus depot I asked for a bus to Lima, but they said there was only one going as far as the border, leaving in 5 minutes, so I just thought “Inshallah”, bought a ticket and jumped on.  Once on the bus, I checked whereabouts on the border it was going, and it was a town called Huaquillas (f*ck knows how you pronounce that), and the Lonely Planet’s only advice was “Stay away”, so I thought that should be quite interesting as I was the only white ‘gringo’ on the bus, due to arrive at 2AM…


During the trip, I initially spent my time gawping out of the window at the mountainous jungle, in between reading about Jack Reacher’s adventures in the latest Lee Child novel.  At about 6PM, roughly last light on the Equator, we got out for a 20 minute leg stretch and some food, before heading on into the night.  I fell asleep against the window with my arm round my day-sack (black not camouflaged) that has my laptop, camera, passport etc in it, and when I woke up about 0130, I was the only passenger still on the bus.  As we got into Huaquillas it was completely deserted, although well lit.  I wondered what my options were going to be, maybe head to the border itself and find a dark corner to sleep until it opened or maybe get filled in by some locals who had never seen a gringo, but assumed I was an American millionaire.

However, the 2 bus drivers pointed me in the direction of a hotel, which they said would be open, so I strolled off down the deserted street towards it.  On the way, I spotted a guard dog lying sleeping and it suddenly jumped up and ran towards me- which was nice. 

On my 2010 tour to Afghanistan, I once had a guard dog charge at me and a couple of Americans as we strolled through a village, next to our base.  While I remember that particular Afghan dog as being about the size of a horse, it was probably closer to a Jack Russell, but I did draw and aim my pistol quickly enough to win the Americans’ approval:  “Woah man, he’s like Clint Eastwood!”  Fortunately for that dog, its chain caught it about 10 feet away from us, as I was still taking the 11lb pressure on the first round of a de-cocked Sig-Sauer, so it avoided getting ‘Lit the f*ck up’, as shooting a chained up dog, no matter how rabid and unpleasant, would not be very sporting.  Obviously shooting a chained up Jihadi/ IRA terrorist would be fine, though.

The Ecuadorian dog, however, had no chain, I had no Sig-Sauer, just a civvy Bergen and daysack, and some positive vibes, as it got to about a meter from me, snarling away.  Thankfully, it got distracted by something else and ran off down the road,  I spotted the owner of the dog, who was apparently guarding a hotel, and I got let in, paid $8, and got my head down for a couple of hours.
 
Huaquillas, as seen from my 'modest' hotel room.
 

In the morning I took a stroll around, found an internet cafĂ© to check in with the FaceBook Ops Room, and then went about crossing the border.  Like anywhere else in the 3rd world, there was no shortage of helpful fixers, of the ‘Dell Boy’ mould who could sort out my exit stamp, get me over the border, and no doubt put me on a donkey all the way to Lima.  Between them, I managed to get my passport exit stamped, and then walked over the border.

Just about to stroll into Peru- in pursuit of a razor!


On the other side of the border I was taken by cab to the town of Tumbes, where I could get a bus all the way to Lima.  I was having a good chat with the cabby in Spanglish, and he said he’d been a ‘soldado’ in the Peruvian army, and he was loving the fact I’d been to Iraq and Afghanistan.  There is some kind of bond between all soldiers around the world- if they’re not actually shooting at each other.  Once at Tumbes he took me to the bank where I could change my US$ into Peruvian ‘Sols’, and then he dropped me at the bus station.  As I went to pay him, he smiled, took a 50 Sol note from my hand, jumped in the cab and drove off- and I was a bit slow to realise what he’d done, as I was still doing the maths and translation in my head.  We’d agreed US$5, which is approx. 15 SOL, but he’d played the ambiguity, ‘lost in translation’ card and taken the 50, before I realised.  I think I couldn’t quite believe another soldier would do that- especially with the fact I was twice his size and, generally speaking, people don’t f*ck around with me.

Unfortunately, another reminder that no matter how street wise you may think you are, there are scum all over the world who can be that little bit quicker.  Rather than sulking though, I just had to put that down to an over confident ‘intercepted pass’ and I was metaphorically looking over my shoulder at the guy racing down the pitch and scoring a try behind me.  Sh*t, happens, lesson learned.

Anyway, I then got my ticket and waited to get on the bus, which didn’t go until 3 that afternoon.  The bus to Lima was a big, double-decker, which was reasonably comfortable and I just looked at the ‘desert meets the ocean’ landscape in the North, until it got dark, slept all night, then read Jack Reacher’s adventures in the morning until we got to Lima about lunchtime.  One thing, if nothing else, I’ve learned from the army is the ability to be patient, and just sit and wait for things to happen- like arriving at your destination.  However, I will say that long journeys are best done, hungover with no sleep, as you will go out like a light, and feel fine at the other end.  ‘Concurrent activity’, ‘Anticipation’ and all that other rubbish officers like to say.

Desert meets ocean, in Northern Peru.

Desert meets ocean, about an hour or so North of Lima.

Once at Lima there was a Senorita with a clip-board at the bus station who was organising cabs, and for some reason she looked at me and assumed I was an English speaking tourist, needing one…  Anyway, she sorted me out with a cab to the Miraflores district, where there was a hotel that had been recommended to me.  She wrote down on a piece of paper that it was 15 Sols.  I then confirmed with the cab driver, who could speak good English, the exact address, and he started playing the ‘mis-hearing’ game like his mate in Tumbes, and was saying that it was 50 Sols:  once bitten, twice shy.  I grabbed his arm and dragged him back to the woman with the clipboard and confirmed that the price was still 15 Sols, which it was.  I then gave him a quick introduction to me that began with “Listen in, d*ckhead!”  I explained that I’d been f*cked over in Tumbes, and then explained that if he tried the same thing, I would do to him what I wanted to do to the other guy, which he seemed to ‘comprenday’ quite clearly.   He then drove me to my hotel, and took his 15 Sol very gratefully.    

Despite my first impressions of Peruvians, I have come to really like Lima and Peru- even if I have not yet ventured far out of Miraflores the American/ Western , Diplomatic area.  There is a spectacular waterfront, with people paragliding at all times of the day, every day, and there is that capital ‘buzz’ that I always enjoy- even if the weather is a bit colder and greyer than my ideal.  I also enjoyed the Cervice fish meal, and thoroughly recommend it.
 
Lima- Miraflores waterfront, onto the Pacific.
 
Miraflores waterfront.

Right, next priority is to get to Cusco/ Machu Picchu, one of the wonders of the world, by Saturday morning…  As England are playing rugby, and apparently there’s a bar there where it will defo be on!