Tag Archives: travel blog

Two Picture Perfect Colonial Pueblos!

6 Nov

R is taking the month of November off from blogging because she has committed herself to National Novel Writing Month! She has also committed herself to talking time off from the Internet and yes that means chatting with you fellows! This is very important because she will spend hours reading blogs and emailing where she could be writing! This is a serious matter, you can tell because she has even given up reading!!! Lets all be a little surprised and support her by giving her this month to write away at her novel :-)! DON’T TALK TO HER!!! Unless you’re G, then please send her the missing pieces from last year :-)!

Great! After we got R‘s passport settled we decided to vacate the giant city of Bogota and head to the small colonial town of Villa de Leyva. After doing research about places to stay and not finding a couch surfer to host us, we ended up at a biologist’s hostel, Renacer Guesthouse. After the twenty-minute hike uphill with our very heavy bags (we are carrying 6+ pounds of peanut butter a piece) we arrived at the pleasant hostel. I immediately felt comfortable as soon as I saw the password to the Internet was 24681012! He must be a kindred spirit, he likes science and also fancied even numbers :). We quickly set up tent and went and wandered through the beautiful cobblestone streets between the old colonial houses to gather veggies for our exciting home-cooked dinner (and no, R stayed true to her promise and did not make me get carrots)!

Villa de Leyva:

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The next morning we decided to go hike around the surroundings! We had read about a pleasant hike located behind our hostel that led to two waterfalls and a mirador of the colonial town. It was beautiful, but finding the correct path was a bit confusing so we ended up scaling some hills and appearing in the middle of a random house’s backyard!
Hike behind the hostel:

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Shortly after the hike we decided to get some meditation time in at the local cactus farm. We thought it sounded as random and wonderful as you probably do. We hiked for about two hours through the beautiful wide open space (reminding us of Wyoming) and passed some impressive blue swimming holes before ending up at the cactus meditation center. We were greeted by two hostel friends and the strange owner who instructed us to take off our shoes to begin the meditation. He spoke to us about the powers and thought behind native patterns like the medicine wheels from home and told us to enter the maze with an open heart, one at a time. Once the person in front reached a certain point in the maze, the next in line was to to enter. The entry and exit points are the same, so as soon as these people crossed paths they were meant to embrace each other. Once we had all exited our group meditation, we each broke off for some solo meditation around the garden.
Hike to the cactus:

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After finishing our indigenous practices we walked back with our two lovely hostel friends and scored a hitch home thanks to some lovely villagers! We enjoyed our time so much in Villa de Leyva that the next day we decided to stay one more day (of course only after we had already packed and taken down our tent) in order to have a nice bonfire and quality time with fellow travelers. Also it was the first day of November and R was starting her novel so I thought hanging in hammocks may help start the process!

After saying our goodbyes we packed up for real this time and headed to San Gil, the adventure capital of Colombia. Upon arrival to San Gil’s bus terminal we asked the taxi driver to take us to our hostel that was 25 minute walk away, as this was the recommend type of transport to the city. He simply told us he wouldn’t be able to drive us unless we were willing to wait 20 some minutes at the terminal because the streets were closed down due to horses… We clarified to make sure we had understood the Spanish correctly. Strange, but we decided to hike our heavy packs in to see if we could camp at the hostel we found in our bible, aka Footprint: South America 2010. As we dragged ourselves and our ridiculously heavy packs through the streets of San Gil, the horse explanation began to bring us both back to some dark days in Panama, but we were both afraid to bring up those memories. After the long trek, still with those heavy peanut butter-filled rucksacks, we entered the horse-covered streets and watched the locals take shots of aguardiente from horseback. We enjoyed the entertainment warily and then wound our way up the steep inclines around the horse-infested streets to continue on to the camping hostel… It was closed! All of the sudden we both had panic attacks and looked at each other through scared Panama-remembering eyes and quickly found the quickest route, the last bus, to the neighboring city of Barichara.

We spoke to the driver about the possibility of a location outside of town that was reported in our bible to have inexpensive camping. He dropped us off there, but did warn us that he was unsure of this so-called camping spot! After walking down a hill in the dark to the noise of dogs barking the lovely owner told us that No es possible acampar aqui… We then proceeded to hike back uphill for the 5 minutes to Barichara, again with our heavy packs (now thinking is this peanut butter worth it?!?). We luckily passed by an old ladies artesian store that had a hospedaje sign along with helados. Ice cream and a bed? This place sounded perfect! We asked to see the room and were quickly sold when we saw we would both get beds (that were about as comfortable as sleeping on a dining room table), have our own bathroom (that had chunks missing from the walls so we could see the solid cement bricks behind), the place was surrounded by plants (since we were staying in a pottery tienda), had a kitchen to use (that smelled of the multitude of cats she had), a rock to close the door (the room was missing a door nob and the door itself couldn’t fit in the frame), and a stick of incense that our sweet old lady gave us (by jamming it into the hole in the wall in the bathroom) to help us sleep, all for the low price of $24,000 COP a night! And there was ice cream! The owner was the most adorable little old lady ever, the place had incredible charm, and it was so perfect for us that we didn’t even look any further. What a steal!

After our rough travel day, the next morning we decided to hike around the city as well as visit the tiny village of Guane located down a beautiful camino real trail through the gorgeous mountains!

Barichara church:

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Hike to Guane:

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Guane is a small village that is famous for goat products, in particular goat milk liquor called Sabajon. We sampled some before our hike back to Barichara. It tasted much like Bailey’s to me.

The following day we decided to do a hike that our bible recommended to the villages of Villanueva, Los Santos, and Jordan that ended in a decent into the Chicamocha Canyon! It was stunning, but fairly far away along a hilly road. We tried to wait out the hottest part of the day with some fantastic ice cream in the plaza of Villanueva, since there is no escaping the madness of the sun’s hot rays without serious shade. Our impatience to get back to our little oasis in Barichara pushed us out into the sun, and it was so very strong that I could feel the life slowly draining out of me on the way home. I was so wiped out I passed out just after 19:00, aka 7:00pm!

Hike to Los Santos:

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On our final day in town we took the advice of an adorable local tourist information man and went on his favorite hike through el bosque. It was a splendid hike! We passed a waterfall, saw beautiful views of the breathtaking cliffs and ended up on some strange pilgrimage hike with stations of the cross. We were however reluctant to finish it because it was down a giant cliff! This meant we would have had to hike back up, and after the previous days of hiking and our looming trip carrying our peanut butter filled backpacks again our bodies said no thank you!

Hike to Cabera:

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While hiking back to town a very nice local pulled over without us even thumbing and asked us if we wanted a lift. We ended up with a free ride and 6 mandarins from a kind local farmer, who asked us to share with the US how friendly Colombians are and how we feel about the country. Well, Colombia is honestly a beautiful and diverse country, with it’s share of problems. We have felt safer here than we have in many other countries around the world, including our own. The people here are warm and open, and we hope that as more travelers journey this way it stays that way, even though we feel it will not. Tourists seem to wear locals down and drain a lot of the good will and welcome out.

We said farewell to our lovely old lady when we got back to town and caught a bus to the city of Bucaramanga (which is one of the most beautiful drives in Colombia)! More to come next week :-)!

I hope everyone exercised their right to vote! R and I will be watching the coverage tonight from our hostel!

Bogotá, in pictures

30 Oct

We have spent a week in Bogotá, which has surprised both of us. We have been staying with a couch surfer, who has been kind enough to let us have our own room and bathroom in his high rise apartment. The best thing about our living arrangements is his dog.

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Her name is Oyuki, and she is the most adorable, playful puppy! But she needs a lot of attention and will demand it incessantly with her high-pitched, ear-bursting yips. How could you not want to play with her? She is a bundle of white, fluffy, wild fun!

We also have the advantage of an awesome location in the north of Bogotá, with sweeping vistas of the city.

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That, for example, is a view from the roof. We also enjoy evening lightening storms over the surrounding mountains.

We stroll about the city during the day while our host is at work. We frequent La Candelaria, where the colonial buildings are mixed with the new modern high rises in an interesting juxtaposition.
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The Plaza de Bolivar is the heart of the area, and the backdrop of the mountains is just 7 blocks away.

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The city is modern and absolutely huge, but still has its random moments of horse drawn carriages mixing with the rushing daily traffic.

But there is a general feeling of boredom in this city. Whether from the sea of dead faces that ride with us on public transportation, or the listless strollers through the streets, everyone seems to be detached from the feverish spirit of Colombia we were used to on the Caribbean Coast. For this reason, we have been very good about going on day trips to Zipaquirá, attending comic conventions, watching zombie walks, hiking up the nearby mountains, and spending entire days at the US Embassy. Ok, so that last one is not so exciting, but it was the reason we had to stay as long as we have here.

Our couch surfing host took us to H’s first comic convention, and we all decided to get into the spirit and dress accordingly. We raided his mother’s closet (she is a HUGE Halloween fan, even had her second marriage on the day in theme) and came up with an M&M costume for H and a vampire cape for me. Easy. Then we joined the serious costumers, an anime character, Frodo, and the Frank from Donnie Darko.

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We toured the site, tempting ourselves with Japanese Pocky and strange foods with faces. There was even a full-size Quidditch field, interactive Angry Birds, graffiti art by one of our favorite artists here in Bogota, archery and sword-fighting ranges, inline skate obstacle course, and dance area for the evenings. Random and awesome!

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On the Saturday night before Halloween we went downtown to watch zombies march through the pedestrian street in La Candeleria. They gathered beforehand in a park where we saw them “attacking” non-zombies, and with my irrational fears on display I convinced H that we should watch from a safe distance. H was of the opinion that we would be safest if we just went and joined them, and undoubtably she is correct. But my fear is irrational, so we hid in a coffee shop until I was sure they were not of the intimidating, crowd-attacking variety of zombies I was used to from living in Seattle.

Sunday we decided to shake off the cobwebs and get back into the hiking and exercise options in our southern lives. We braved the elevation and climbed the graded steps to the top of Monserrate. The elevation here is brutal to begin with (something like 2,580 meters) and then climbing an additional 2,000 meters is ridiculous. Also, every guidebook we read says that this is a bit of a dangerous hike, so we were glad to do the walk up the mountain with thousands of locals so we could blend in (we can actually do that here, everyone is pale from the cloudy weather/epically strong sun combo that leaves them sunburned easily as well!).

The hike was intense, and we are out of shape (our diet had been leaving much to be desired lately), but after gasping up untold number of stairs and inclines, we made it!

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Our view from the top:

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There was a church, with mass in session (I still don’t know the etiquette regarding pictures with that, so no interior for you. Although it was interesting).

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The panoramic view of the massive size of Bogotá was impressive.

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After it all, we have finally completed our task for Bogotá, and I have a new passport coming my way (eventually) in the next few weeks/months. This only took an appointment online and then an entire day alternating between pushing papers and staring at walls at the embassy. (H could not keep me company as she was not allowed inside the building for some reason. Instead she sat in the large grass mall inside the two layers of security fencing)

We move on tomorrow, but some small part of me will miss the impressive amount of time we spend either riding the TransMilenio bus system, or being in grocery stores here in Bogotá.
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My map to the bus system, so good! Their buses are their own section of road, and have free transfer points across the city, so we could get basically anywhere for less than a dollar a piece.

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We also entertain ourselves by looking for strange deals that combine toiletries and sweets,

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Trying strange fruits that are slimy and require sucking them out of their pods,

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And making strange raw veggie meals in the grocery store eating areas (this one is lettuce, worchestire sauce, avocado, chips, and tortilla).