Tag Archives: Quito

Mindo & Quito

13 Mar

Sorry people! Due to a combination of lack of foresight, laziness, and a freak electrical outage Tuesday afternoon this is posting a day late. Good news is we are indeed still alive!

We have spent last week finishing everything on our list for northern and central Ecuador. This moment has been both extremely exciting for me (who doesn’t enjoy checking things off lists, right?) and massively stressful. Because once the list is done, we are left making decisions again. And even we have no idea what we will do… *sigh*

Our second to last stop was Mindo, a place just over 2 hours outside Quito that we had been hearing about since Panama. We had meant to meet up with a friend from the Colombian Caribbean beaches here, but the timing and correspondence didn’t work out.

We did spend some time exploring the area, walking around the cloud forest, and getting our laundry done. The area was beautiful! Birds, butterflies, and flowers everywhere.

But it is expensive, since all the Quiteños are so close by. This means that the many waterfalls nearby all have an entry fee, along with butterfly farms, tubing and rafting trips, and evening frog concerts. Tons of things to do, just all for a price.

The accommodation was also fairly expensive, so instead we pitched our tent and paid to use La Casa de Cecelia‘s bathroom facilities for $2.50 each. Very reasonable!

We woke up each morning next to a rushing river, birds chirping, and these strange pink bananas tempting us to pick them.
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But how does one know when a pink banana is ripe? One butterfly in particular had a crush on Clifford and would cling to him whenever possible.
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But the most memorable thing about Mindo was undoubtably the rain. The rainy season was early this year (the locals were all surprised with how much their climate had been changing lately), and it rained hard, daily, and for hours. The streets were rivers, drain pipes became angry waterfalls (where we would rinse off our coating of mud from our hikes), and parks were lakes. This put a bit of a damper on our camping, but we still made an effort to take walks, even in a deluge.

We were soaked almost constantly, but the views and local livestock were pleasant.
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After three days we decided to move along back to Quito to dry out. Our last city on the checklist!

This was actually our third visit to Quito, since we had met G & M there in February, seen them off after their visit, and now decided to thoroughly explore the city. The thing about Quito is that it is ridiculously long. Not super wide, just a strip of endless city from north to south.

We settled into the middle, in the least expensive hostel we could find, El Centro del Mundo. $5.60 per person, including breakfast? What a deal! What we weren’t expecting was that everyone else in the hostel was planning on spending their savings on booze and drugs. And our bunks were in a hallway right near the common room. Yay.

After one of our worst night’s sleep and some commiserating with our friendly Belgian hallway mate we decided to get an overview of the city from the Teleferiqo just outside town. We set out on the trolley and shuttled to the far northeast of the city, where one of our guidebooks claimed there was to be a shuttle. Not so much.

So we climbed onto the metro and moved to the mid-northwest area where a friendly trolley employee had informed us there was a shuttle. Not so much.

So then we went to the central west part of town where we were supposed to be able to flag a cab for $1.50 or $2 according to the friendly information booth attendant. Except the cabs insisted on charging us $4. Not so much.

Our morning was at this point sufficiently spent. Ecuador had decided that we were not going to be visiting the Teleferiqo that day. Good news is that our entire morning adventure had cost all of 50 cents since we had managed to stay within the trolley-metro system! I glanced at my guidebook map and noticed that we were very near to one of our intended stops for a different day, Parque la Carolina.

We strolled over, played on the see-saw and tire swing, sat in the shade, and watched runners and paddle boats while we came up with our next plan.
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We decided to hike uphill to the other side of town and visit the museum. Turns out one was closed (and the security guard looked at us like we were crazy, so it’s possibly permanently closed) and the other had doubled in cost. 😦 Against our promise to each other about paying for museums, we handed over the cash and looked at some seriously depressing, huge murals.

We cooked our dinner at the hostel, took advantage of free rum & coke night, primped, and went out salsa dancing. We found out that in general Quiteño clubs prefer electronic music, reggaeton, and American top 40 pop songs to salsa, so most of the salsa clubs are closed. From a collection of 5 suggested locations now there is only Wednesday nights at Aguijón and Salsa Studio in Plaza Foch (which we never saw open).

Salsa was good. Not great, but fun. I danced off the skin on the tips of my 4th toe and some girl opened up a cut on my foot so I’m probably slightly pessimistic about the evening. H was able to snag a job offer as a bio-chemist with Ecuador’s president, an invitation to cook breakfast for an adventure tour into the Pacific coast jungle, and a free beer. Nice.

We headed back to our hostel, ran into a friend from Colombia, and then returned to the drunken debauchery that free rum & coke nights had turned into. Worst. Night’s sleep. Ever. Ever, ever (including illness, heartbreak, college, and camping).

H told me first thing the next morning that we would be packing up immediately after free breakfast and moving hostels. Our new place, the Blue House, was so friendly and chill I nearly cried when they said they had space for us.

Then we hiked over to Guápulo to check out the expensive ambassador neighborhood. It was luckily a very quaint area, because the church we were meant to visit was closed for lunch when we arrived. We sat on our bench to wait out lunchtime.
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We were there for almost 2 hours and made friends with the landscaper. Then, the church opened and we got to peek through high reflective glass into the pretty interior.

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We drug ourselves back up and downhill and that evening went hunting for more nightlife or a film but instead we tucked into bed early.

Our last (planned) day was officially Old Town exploration day! Old town is beautiful, fun to explore, and dangerous. Many, many people are robbed here (also many robberies in our neighborhood in La Mariscal, but those are mostly at night). But we were not one of them (I believe our Ecuador robbery static requirements were met in the Amazon)!

We were able to climb the towers of the huge Basilica; for only $2 they set you free into the stairwells and we ran all over the church! There were seemingly endless stairs, balconies, catwalks, sketchy iron ladders, a belfry and so many windows. We were even able to scale the roof!

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To take in the view

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Best cathedral visit yet! We then sauntered to Parque Itchimbia for sunset. The place was a strange mix of shopping, medical center, recreational park, and reforestation but it had some spectacular views of Quito.

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All while playing American classic rock from a strange furniture store/glass house/cultural center (?), and we sang loudly to Journey.

After the sun left us it got quite cold, so we headed to Parque la Alameda to enjoy their free light and music show. It wasn’t Vegas, but we enjoyed ourselves and the company of some local police watching over us.

The next morning we decided to put off our decisions for one more day and try to make it to the Teleferiqo again. We walked kilometers, missed our street, walked through a university, found some new ice cream, and eventually stumbled onto the right street, straight up the side of the volcano Pichincha. We finally arrived at the cable cars only to find that a ride is $8.50 per person. We went to a movie instead for $10 for both of us.

Then we had a decision to make. Which we did. In the middle of the night, using my very flimsy and incoherent night logic.

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Oh dear.

Boobies!

4 Feb

That’s right, the guest star is back for more fun-filled Epic Adventures and this time I have managed to drag M along for the tour – actually all I did was mention the possibility of the Galápagos Islands and she jumped on board. Her reason for going – to deliver new salsa dancing skirts to mis hermanas; unfortunately the skirts did not arrive in time to make it in her suitcase… Haha

After 18 hours of flight and airport time (Ecuador is really far away from Hawaii, at least as the plane flys), M and I arrived in Quito and were NOT greeted by our REI Adventure and Red Mangrove guide (NOTE: I was projecting forward during the original draft of this post). This will be our first time traveling with REI – I love their stores, products and company, just ask anyone who has had to drive me to their store on mainland visits (no stores in Hawaii 😢, but free online shipping which is a big deal in the islands). Most visits to the Galápagos Islands are arranged through travel tours, because to go anywhere outside of the port towns you must have a tour guide (to protect the natural setting) – although my travel book says it is possible to just fly to the islands and hook up with walking tours. With M’s requirement (and my extreme interest) to go to the Galapagos, we decided to take REI up on all those Adventure emails they send. And I have been talking about Boobies, the blue-footed kind, ever since!

But before the islands there was a day in Quito and we managed to fill it with a trip to the Equator, a trip to the actual equator and some old churches. Our first stop was Mitad del Mundo where we looked at a large ball (which was the earth) on top of a giant podium (which was a giant podium). We grabbed the typical photos standing on the equator line then booked it next door to the Museo del Intinan where the actual equator is. Apparently when the French marked the middle of the Earth they were about 300 meters off according to GPS. The Museo was quite good and included not only different experiences to try out while standing on the equator, like draining water in each hemisphere, balancing an egg on a nail and trying to walk in a straight line, as well as shrunken heads and a highlander dance in which we all participated. We end our daylight hours by peeking in the doors of churches (apparently everyone gets married on Saturdays) in Old Town Quito.

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We called it a early night due to our early flight the next morning.

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Our guide arrived exactly on time in the morning for our transport to the Galapagos (which I am told is quite an event since Ecuadorians are usually late). Our morning consisted breakfast then transit from one end of Ecuador to the other with a 2nd breakfast then onto the islands with an early 11zs via a plane then to another island via a boat then over to the other side of the island via a coach to our Red Mangrove Lodge all before 11:30am. We explored the lodge for the rest of the morning and watched marine iguanas swim in and out to sea, brown pelicans bathing themselves, sea lions sleep under the deck, frigate birds cruise the wind currents, and examined the finches’ bills as they came to our table to display.

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After lunch and the arrival of the rest of our group, we headed to the beach with our nature guide to enjoy the beautiful afternoon – then just as H and I swam out into the ocean we noticed an usual bird sitting next to the pelicans – our first blue-footed booby! We immediately swam out to check out his feet which were a lighter blue then we were anticipating, still a beautiful blue though. The rest of the afternoon we watched numerous pelicans and boobies drive bomb the ocean in search of fish – all and all a pretty great start to an exciting 2 weeks.

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