Thursday, September 18, 2008

Gringos of the Caribbean

`South Africa!, You know, my son is in South Africa right now!`
`Really? What city?`
`Angola.`
`Right.`

These are the kinds of conversations we have to put up with on a regular basis. I fear that loads of tourists will be scattered around the southern area of Africa in 2010 wondering where the world cup is, because no one seems to understand that South Africa is a country. Recently, an Israeli chap displayed such careless and dismissive ignorance about South Africa that I was temped to ask whether Israel was somewhere within Palestine. I held back, for fear the Uzi.

Onto more recent events. We are currently in an internet cafe in Cartagena de Indias, on the Caribbean coast of Colombia. The guy who runs the internet cafe uses it as a promotional tool for his soft rock/fusion band, in which he plays guitar AND sings (he has told me this 5 times). I am so sick of hearing his 3 songs, which he sings along to just to prove that he is the singer, that I am currently looking up the necessary vocab to express myself properly (I can´t seem to find `wanker` in Spanish). He also uses his customers to practice his English, a process which takes a long long time. Ah he´s playing the first song again - I already know all the words to this one.


Right, now that I´ve got that out the way. Here are some pics from Medellin, which I forgot to put in the last blog. www.picasaweb.google.com/steveo.zogg/Medellin


From Medellin we could not bear the thought of the 14 hour bus ride up to Santa Marta. However, the flight was far too expensive, and we had no choice, so we manned up and boarded the overnight bus, set to arrive at 9am. At 9am we were nowhere near Santa Marta. At 1pm we were no where near Santa Marta. At 4pm, after two roadblocks, tyre burnings, alternate routes, being stuck in the mud, and a bus change, we arrived in... The Most Humid Place on Planet Earth. We found ourselves looking up to see if it was raining, saw clear skies and realised it was our own sweat that was pouring down off our faces and onto the floor. After checking into a hostel, having 5 cold showers and still not knowing what to do with ourselves, we walked down to the beach and had dinner. Getting to sleep in 35 degrees and 90% humidity, we´ve discovered, is quite difficult.


The next day we caught a bus to Parque Nacional Tayrona, a pretty special place where mountains covered in Amazon rain forest meet stark white caribbean beaches, and with the whole huge area being a national park, its been left completely pristine. We had heard that food and drinks within the park were hellishly pricey and that the food was not good at all, so we took supplies with us, including a bottle of rum (when in the caribbean), which our driver smuggled inside the park for us. At the park entrance we were thoroughly searched by the army, who were presumably looking for cocaine. I should rephrase that - the men wearing uniform lightly searched most of the passengers, and roughly molested me. Seriously, he skipped the pockets and went straight for the balls. Twice. I told him that he could at least buy me dinner first, but the humour was lost on him, since he only had one thing on his mind - my manhood. I haven´t heard from Sergent Ramires since - not even a phonecall.


The truck dropped us off at the start of the path through the jungle, and we began to walk through the humid sweaty rainforest. After about an hour, we emerged out of the jungle onto the snow white sands and the bright blue water of the Caribbean. We had another 1 hour walk along the coast, through the tiny idyllic bays, and eventually arrived at the Cabo, the campsight where we managed to rent some hammocks on the beach to sleep in. We put our stuff down and dove straight into the azure luke warm waters. The beaches were virtually empty and looked like they were straight out of a post card - the slightly bent palm tree, the clean white sand, and the sea. The sea was the best part of all of it - the water was bright blue, completely calm and so clear you could see fish while underwater without using goggles. Just behind the beach was the thick jungle, which receeded up into the mountains. The sun shone for pretty much every day we were there. I can´t say much more about the place, except that it bore all the signs of idyllic paradise.














Before you get too jealous, try to imagine sleeping in a hammock for three nights, pools of sweat collecting, and squadrons of giant mosquitos carrying out planned attacks on your ankles. The idea of a hammock on the beach sounds romantic and appealing, but the reality is slightly different, especially when you have been badly burnt by the vicious Caribbean sun. Also, eating canned tuna and crackers for every meal is not fantastic.


Not that any of this matters when you can wake up every morning, walk 10 steps from where you are sleeping and take your morning shower in the Caribbean sea, before having a long morning nap in the shade of a palm tree, your only worry being falling coconuts. Those were actually a worry though - a 1kg coconut falling from 20m up could cause a lot of damage to your head. We got through without being rendered retarded by a coconut. Our days were spent switching from lying on the beach to swimming in the sea, with sporadic breaks taken to injest our tuna and cracker rations, often washed down with rum. I´m not entirely sure why people in the Caribbean enjoy rum so much, because it warms you up, and being warmed up is just about the last thing you want to be - its right up there with being raped by a pirate. At night we lay in our hammocks, beating off the mosquitos. One night I fell asleep listening to my iPod, woke up to some noise, and realised it was an English girl with a terribly annoying and loud voice shouting nearby. My iPod told me it was 4:30am, which outraged me, so I got up and unleashed hell on the poor rosbif lass, not realising that my iPod clock was wrong and that it was actually only about 11:30pm. That was slightly embarassing.














Eventually we decided to leave paradise, and so we packed up and made the trek back through the jungle and caught a ride back to Santa Marta, where we eventually found a bus to take us to Cartagena, where we are now.


Cartagena is quite possibly the most beautiful city we have seen on this continent. Its position on a large peninsula in the Caribbean means it is virtually surrounded on all sides by turquoise water. What makes it so special is its colonial past, the sense of history you get while exploring it.


The city, called Cartagena de Indias, was founded in 1533, and was the most important port and city for the Spanish in the early days of colonisation (otherwise known as `killing the natives`). However, Cartagena was used as the storage city by the Spanish for the gold they had plundered from the indiginous people, and combined with the vulnerability from the sea, Cartagena was a pirates wet dream (arrrrrgggh). It was attacked and put under siege by pirates throughout its early history, including John Hawkins and Francis Drake, until eventually massive walls with watchtowers and cannons were built around the whole city to protect it from the pirate cannonfire. These walls are still in almost perfect condition and still surround the Cartagena´s old town, which is a labyrinth of beautiful old colonial buildings and streets and looks like it should be a museum, but, incredibly, its a functioning part of the city, a living exhibit of a colonial Caribbean port city. To make things even better, all the old colonial buildings and the fort walls are all lit up at night by their own individual lights, which makes strolling around the city at night a pretty magical experience. To enter or exit the old town, you have to pass through the 6m thick walls at the clock tower. This part of the city is still protected by many many policemen, guarding against the modern-day pirates who want to rob the gringos, so the old city is perfectly safe. What makes Cartagena so special is being able to enjoy a meal or a drink in one of the many centuries old squares and look over at the massive fortress like sea walls and cannons - the same cannons which fired at pirate ships hundreds of years ago. Arrrrg, I say. Ho ho ho an a bottle o rum.


























I don´t think the walls kept all the pirates out. I think many of them still live here in Cartagena, on the very street we´re staying on. Our hostel is not exactly in the most pleasant of areas - it lies outside the old town walls, where the pirates run free. Everyday, we walk out our hostel onto a street filled with crazy people who talk to themselves, spit a lot, are dressed in rags and drink rum out of the bottle. Many of them have only one leg. They often shout incomprehensible things at us - I think it might be the caribbean spanish equivalent of `Shiver me Timbers`. Despite the pirates, we stay in a conveniently located area with lots of good cheap restaurants.
We have spent most of our time exploring the old town, which mainly involves gauking at its beauty while getting lost in it. Unfortunately, a lot of our time has been taken up by doing admin in preparation for our trip to Cuba, which begins on Friday 19th Sept. The main problem has been trying to track down some damn Euros to take. Since Castro isn´t too fond of Bush, to change US dollars into cuban pesos you get hit with a 20% comission! However, every place offering money exchange here only actually offers dollars or colombian pesos. Eventually, after a lot of wasted time, we found a man named Oscar who had lots of Euros, who sold them to us at a very reasonable rate, thus ending the Euro Saga.

Other than that, we have just been getting to know the place, relaxing, and trying to endure the neverending humidity. We are on quite a tight budget, since we have changed all our money to Euros and only have a few Colombian pesos remaining, so we are living cheaply. When we realised we were on such a tight budget, we did the reasonable thing and spent most of our remaining money on sketches of Cartagena. Whoops. Today we went to explore Cartagena´s biggest fort, Castillo de San Fellipe, which was used as the central fort to defend the city. It was rather cool.















That concludes the final blog on South America. Tomorrow we leave this continent and fly to Cuba, where we will be for a bit over two weeks before returning home to Angola, the famous South African city. Its been a completely crazy journey which has taken us through such complete opposites - from the freezing Bolivian highlands to the humid Carribean, from sophisticated cities to dusty jungle towns, from the Southern hemisphere to the Northern Hemisphere - we´ve pretty much seen a continent in 6 months.


















We´ve got a long wait in the Sao Paulo airport before our flight home, so, if we have the money, we´ll write our final blog about Cuba. Until then amigos,


Adios!
www.picasaweb.google.com/steveo.zogg/SantaMarta

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Colombia!

Hola blogees!

Well its been a while since the last blog I know, but we have been busy little gringos. The astounding beauty of Colombia has distracted us and kept us away from the blog for a while. We have also been a bit rushed, having to cram many places into very little time. However, the time has come to catch up.

We´re currently in Medellin, which is famous for Pablo Escobar and his naughty henchmen. However, things have changed dramatically since the days of Pablo doing lines off strippers and simultaneously shooting people and blowing things up - Medellin is now a safe and shockingly well organised city. But we shall get to that in due time.

When we last wrote we were still in Quito, and the only other notable thing we did there was going to the Equatorial line - the middle of the earth. Ages ago, a french dude built a huge monument on the line of the Equator and made a pretty big deal out of it. The only thing is he missed by about 250m - zut allors! Anyway people still visit his monument and swallow all the lies they tell there, unaware that down the road is a museum and the site of the real equator. As it turns out, a native civilistation had built a monument on a hill top in the precise location of the equator, with angles of exactly 23.5 degrees (the tilt of the earth - i think). Smart little buggers. So we spent the day hopping between hemispheres and draining basins one meter on either side of the line to watch them drain in opposite directions. Also, it turns out you have far less strength and can´t balance very well while standing on the line. Pretty strange. After this we decided that it was time to leave Quito and head for the border. That proved slightly problematic. We got up at 4am and headed for the bus station to catch our 5:30 bus - only to wait until 8:30 before giving up and getting a ticket for the next day. The next day we got up at 4am to catch our 5:30 bus, only to discover it had left unexpectedly at 4am. Not wanting to give up, we got a taxi to drive us onto the highway and flag down a bus to the border.


A border crossing and a full day´s travelling later, we arrived in the small colonial town of Popayan, famous for its beautiful whitewashed buildings. However, we discovered that after a day or two one gets bored of just looking at whitewashed buildings, and although the town was strikingly pretty - we decided to head north to the city of Cali. Once in Cali we found the Tostaky Hostel in the pleasant neighborhood of San Antonio. We spent our days walking the streets lined with tropical trees, and sweating. Cali is very very hot. Its a bustling vibrant city and its leafy windy streets and large green parks make for excellent wandering around. We drank far too much coffee in Cali. In fact, since we crossed into Colombia we have been drinking far too much coffee - it is too good not too, despite the health risks.



While in Cali we began to eat a lot of fruit. Colombia has incredibly fertile soil - you notice this everywhere in the country - everything is green green green. We have seen every shade of green possible. Anyway all this greenness means that they can grow the best fruit imaginable. Aside from juicy watermelons the size of small cars, pineapples the size of... very larg pineapples and bannanas the size of Zeus´s... reputation in Greece; Colombia also has about 17 different fruits you cannot find anywhere else. They are all delicious. For instance, a Lulo has orange flesh that tastes like a mixture between a kiwi fruit and a naartjie; they also have passion fruits AND granadillas (two different fruits apparently) - the granadillas are the size of grapefruits. There is another kind of fruit that resembles a spikey papaya, but inside the flesh is snow white with tiny black seeds. Anyway I think I´m rambling on a bit about fruit.



















Aside from the Cali Cartel, Cali is famous as the Salsa capital of the world. And I´m not talking about the stuff you put on your nachos, I´m talking about people shaking their asses. We decided that we needed to visit one of the famous Salsotecas. Anyone who has ever seen me try to Salsa will say, after shuddering, that I cannot. For this reason, I decided to recruit a CaleƱa salsa teacher to show us some steps. After large amounts of rum I managed to get the basic moves down, and Nadia finally had a worthy dance partner. We were now ready for Tin Tin Deo, one of Cali´s best salsa clubs. The club itself was pretty simple, the music and the dancing was pretty spectacular - everyone in the club was at least a semi professional salsa dancer, and it was quite intimidating for the Gringos to shake it. But the rum kept flowing and soon we were in the midst of the sweaty and sultry dancefloor.


Cali is an amazing city - one of the best we´ve seen on the trip - and we ended up staying longer than expected - if time was not an issue we would probably still be there. Through a friend of a friend, we had gotten in contact with someone who is from Cali, but lives in New York, and as it turned out, she was going to be in Cali for two days while we were there. After having lunch with Maria Eugenia at her apartment, she arranged for her personal assitant/driver/cool guy called Eriburto, to take us around the countryside surrounding Cali for a day. Eriburto was a smooth old cat who I constantly wanted to call Papa Georgio - although I managed to fight this urge. On our trip, Maria kindly arranged for us to have some muscle, in the form of two armed men who accompanied us throughout the day (although I am confident that if we had met the FARC along the way, they would have taken one look at my impressive biceps and run away). We spent the day driving around the spectacular countryside, visiting a lake, and the old sugarcane haciendas. From El Paraiso, a famous old hacienda we could appreciate just how beautiful Colombia is. Bright green sugarcane plantations dotted with old colonial houses stretch into the distance until they hit the green hills, which disappear into the clouds. Not bad at all.















Soon it was time to leave Cali. Our first impressions of Colombia were of an unimaginably beautiful place of rolling green hills and endless fields of fruit trees. Our first impressions of the Colombian people were of incredibly warm and open people who go out of their way to welcome you to their country - we have lost count of the amount of times a stranger has come up to us and begun chatting away like we were old friends, before ending with, `Bienvenidos a Colombia!`. Colombia has a reputation it does not deserve, and every Colombian you meet is grateful to have the chance to change your preconceptions about them. When you think of the country, the first things that come to mind are cocaine trafficking and endless bloodshed, of dodgy people who want to kidnap tourists. Apart from the guerilla groups who are hiding in the jungles to the East, the Colombian people are nothing like that, and Colombia itself is nothing short of a paradise.


It must be mentioned however, for the sake of an unbiased view, that Colombia´s problems are not completely a part of their history. This was most evident when, while watching tv in our hostel we were startled by an incredibly large rumbling sound, which turned out to be a car bomb exploding at the house of justice in the city center, about 5km from where we were, killing 5 and injuring 20. Sadly, these types of incidents, though very isolated, are still something that the Colombian people have to put up with.


From Cali we headed North into the Zona Cafeteria - the lush valleys of coffee plantations. We arrived in the town of Armenia (not in Europe, although there is also a town called Montenegro here), and then travelled to the nearby town of Salento, a tiny charming little town surrounded by misty mountains and valleys, in which you can see hundreds of fireflies at night. The highlight of our time in Salento was a day long walk through the Valle de Cocora, which I am convinced might just be the most beautiful place on earth. The valley is surrounded by (surprise - green) forested mountains that fade into the clouds, and hundreds and hundreds of wax palms shoot up above all the vegetation - some of the tops of the palms also hit the clouds. I won´t say much more about the place, except that its completely magical. Take a look at the pics.
























Salento lies about 250km west of Bogota, the capital. 250km does not sound like much, but because of the high mountains you need to cross to get to Bogota (which sits rather high up at 2800m), the bus journey takes 10 hours. Let me rephrase that - the bus journey is meant to take 10 hours, but it took us 20. 20 hours to do 250km. Bugger. About 3 hours into the journey we stopped at a massive traffic jam, at 1am! As it turned out, the bridge crossing a deep valley, the only way of getting across the valley, was completely blocked off. After eventually falling asleep and hoping we would get moving soon, we woke up at 7am to find that we were in the same spot. What had happened was that the day before, two cranes were lifting something very large out of the valley, and it turned out to be too heavy for the cranes, which were pulled over the edge (crews and all) and plunged 200m to a very messy end. The locals of Godknowswherethehellwewhere told us the road might be open at 6pm that evening, or perhaps in a few days. A plan was needed. We spoke to an old man who had a jeep, and he agreed, for a fee, to take us across to the other side, from where we flagged down another jeep which managed to take us to the town of Ibague (it broke down twice and was repaired by the driver smacking it with a hammer in random places) from where we could get another bus to Bogota. On the way to Ibague, we got a chance to see the chaos that the bridge accident had caused, in the form of the longest truck traffic jam in history. The truck drivers had obviously given up on the traffic moving, and were taking naps under their trucks. A few of them had strung hammocks up on their trucks and were sleeping in those.Thus, after a hellishly long and complicated mission, we arrived in the big big city of Bogota in the early evening.
















We had been in contact with someone from Bogota via a website called Couchsurfing. Couchsurfing is a phenomenon that is growing by the day - it is essentially a large community of people online offereing their couches for no cost to travellers - it has grown so much that you could travel the entire globe surfing people´s couches. Our first experience surfing a couch was a good one - Sebastian Gonzalez and his family took us into their house and treated us like family, even though we were two smelly South African backpackers that they didn´t know at all. This is the sort of thing that makes Colombians so welcoming - they are genuinely interested in other cultures and especially in people who travel to Colombia, which means there is always a welcome house to stay in. We were in Bogota to visit the Cuban Embassy and get our tourist visas, and also to explore Colombia´s giant capital city, with the help of Sebastian, a born and raised Bogotan. We soon realised we did not have nearly enough time to see Bogota - the sheer size of it, as well as its many many old churches, museums and amazing architecture prevents you from seeing the city entirely in a few days. What we did see of it gave us the impression of a busy and very important city with a good metro and bus system - the sorts of things Joburg really should have - although its huge and busy, the city runs pretty smoothly and its easy to get from one side to the other using the transport.





















From Bogota we headed for Medellin, where we are now. Medellin is a city roughly the size of Cali (about 2.5 million), and is a very surprising place to visit. Infamous for Pablo Escobar and the Medellin Cartel, what you expect is a dusty and dodgy place - what you find is a very modern, clean and good looking city which boasts amazing backdrops of the surrounding hills (again, as green as a leprechauns hat) and a public transport system that should make Jeff Radebe feel like a complete tool. An efficent, safe and on time subway system (except that its above ground) spans the length and bredth of the city, and the system is integrated with cable cars that connect the suburbs in the hills to the center - getting out of a brand new metro train and onto a brand new cable car (powered by Solar panels!) and travelling 30m up over the city had us asking the question - why on earth can we not get it right? It also had us asking the question - where the hell does all the money come from? (Straight out of Pete Doherty´s pocket perhaps?)

To sum the blog up - Colombia has been an amazing surprise. We are regretting not having more time in this country, because it is a seriously cool place. We will be back here one day, hopefully quite soon. In a way, the horror stories of Colombia have meant that the hoards of tourists stay away, and while this is not a good thing for the Colombian tourist industry, it does mean that the few gringos who do venture into the country, end up with an Eden all to themselves. We are trying not to eat the apple, or get bitten by the snake (or sleep with the snake, I´m not quite sure how the Adam and Eve story really works).




From Medellin, we head up north to Santa Marta on the coast. Which means in a few days we will hit the top of a continent we have been trying to get to know for the past 6 months. Celebrating this will not be hard, because if you get your maps out, you will notice that Colombia´s large north coast in slap bang in the Carribean. I think Colombia is about to get even better, if that´s even possible.
We shall see.
Adios!

Here are the many many pics from Colombia so far - go look at them to see what I´m on about