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  • Mas Montanita

    Early start to the day to have time for breakfast before Spanish lessons started. Kerri was disappointed as the menu for today was supposed to be French toast. Instead we got a big breakfast quesadilla and a big slice of pineapple. Matt thought it was great, Kerri not so much.

    After that we began Spanish lesson with our instructor Dario. Nosotros hablomos espanol un poco. Knowing beginner French and German does not make it easy. Reading it is going okay, forming replies is the hard part.

    After four hours of Spanish we headed to the beach for two hours of running, paddling and pushups.  Matt broke a fin off my board after his first time finally getting up. Kerri is pretty sure her blood pressure is no longer low after drinking half of the ocean. It was a lot of work and the waves only got bigger as the afternoon went on, so it got harder.

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    Los pelicanos volan.

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    Este pes globo no vive.

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    Un pajaro vola

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    Unos pajeros volan

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    Este son mucho caracoles en la playa.

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    Este son los caracoles.

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    Adios sol!


  • Montanita

    Today we took the bus to Montanita for Spanish lessons, to hopefully make us sound a bit more like the locals, and surfing lessons, to hopefully make our skin colour a bit more like the locals. We expect it will be a long, hard week.

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    It’s a dog’s life.

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    The bus ride was uneventful. Their bus station is nicer than Edmonton’s. The landscape on the way here was very arid with most of the trees looking dried out or even dead. Perhaps after a rain everything greens up a bit.

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    After making it to Montanita we had a good walk to the hostel. Kerri thought it was closer so quite a bit of that walk was on the beach which was very hot at just after noon with all the bags. Eventually we made it, checked in and got settled in the room and dressed for the beach.

    We took a long walk all the way from our end by the rock wall to way past where anyone really was. The beach by the town is very busy and crowded.

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    But our side is so deserted crabs will occasionally pop out of their holes during the day.

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    After the walk we turned back and grabbed some pizza as a snack before heading closer to the hostel to find a spot for chilling on the beach. That’s where I spent the rest of my day with a book,

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    While Kerri took pictures of the sunset. It sets really fast here because we are so close to the equator.

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    So Matt missed it.

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    A quick walk to town got us pasta for dinner and we looked around for an umbrella to help provide some shade, considering there isn’t any at all here. Nothing grows on the beach. Attempts to keep sand from getting into everything appears to be failing although I will remain every vigilant as I don’t want sand in all of our gear. The hostal is nice

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    And has good wifi from the hammocks.

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  • Guayaquil

    Today we spent in

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    Our hotel room is suffering from what Matt insists is not a plague of locusts because two is not a plague. Matt killed the noisy one in our room, and the one up where he couldn’t reach was quiet, but there is a third one across the hall that was chirping all night. Grasshoppers are definitely not one of the insects we were worried about having problems with in South America.

    We started with a nutritious breakfast that had strawberry juice and pineapple jam. I guess things are a bit different south of the equator.

    We wandered up and down the walkway by the river.

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    The river is extremely wide and even siltier than the North Saskatchewan, and in this portion the direction of flow changes with the tide.

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    There were lots of crabs in the sand:

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    The houses are colourful:

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    But not as colourful as Matt:imageThere was a nice little garden and koi pond:

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    Being unable to speak Spanish we were unable to read the plaques next to most of the art. But we’re pretty sure this guy was upset about losing his arms:

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    This guy is indicating to his buddy that the ground ahead is level:

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    This is a wild boar that China gave to Ecuador in 1991. I couldn’t read the rest of the sign. I assume Ecuador was hungry?

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    Not sure what this guy is up to.

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    There were lots of birds.

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    Before ruffling:

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    After ruffling:

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    There was even a pink one!imageimage

    These guys were trying to build a nest:

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    This is the Cathedral. The stained glass circle is really pretty from the inside.

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    We also went through a small park with a bunch of giant iguanas.

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    This guy lost his tail and is growing two new ones!

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    imageimageWe went to the museum of anthropology, which has the world’s largest collection of pre-Incan artifacts. They wouldn’t let us take pictures though, so Kerri decided to blow the museum up with a cannon.

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    In the museum they had artefacts from this area dating back to 5900 years ago. Most of the pots that old had very little engraving visible, but one had hundreds of little flat topped triangles covered in hatches. I thought they looked like pyramids, but this was thousands of years before they built pyramids.

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    (Artist’s representation. My drawing skills aren’t great, but the guy was carving freehand into a pot with a stick, so that’s about what it looked like.)

    There were also little carvings from that time I thought looked like stone voodoo dolls.

    As they got more recent the carved designs were more and more intricate. Some of the newer pots were also coated in an iridescent paint, which you had to look very closely to see.

    In general the artefacts looked a lot like Greek ones from about the same time, but with more monkeys and armadillos. And most of the people had nose rings, which started out as a lump of clay under the nose and gradually become more ring like, until finally they embedded metal jewellery into the clay. And by 600BC the people are wearing little shorts/sarongs with polka dots painted on them.

    There was an exhibit on the patterns found on the artefacts, but because we don’t speak Spanish we didn’t understand much of it. We might try again after our lessons.


  • Quito

    There was not much time after we finally got up before we have to go back to the airport. Especially because we picked a hotel closer to the airport so it’s not in the central tourist area. So we got a pizza at the Italian place next door and are now waiting in the pretty garden outside the hotel.

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    Nobody speaks much English here. Which is odd because driving in last night a lot of the graffiti on the freeway was in English. We have been having some trouble communicating. The lady that runs the hotel is used to tourists and speaks in short sentences with occasional English words so that works out OK.

    “Check in manana. Sueno ahora.”

    In the morning I came down for the wifi password and wound up with breakfast.

    Time now to head to the airport, although it seems that we should have booked a cab a while ago as we might be in a bit of a rush. Here’s hoping everything is fine.

    
    												
  • We are in Quito

    Do not be deceived by the flurry of pictures from Alberta and the “We are here” map that is stuck in Edmonton. We have arrived safely in Quito.

    We arrived at midnight and it was raining. So I haven’t seen any of Quito other than our hotel room. And Matt’s still in bed, so he probably wouldn’t approve of me posting pictures of that.

    I’m just uploading some old pictures from Alberta I put together on the plane so we can convince people we meet that Alberta is nice too. Well, not so much right now, but for a couple of months a year at least. The pictures are pretty random as we just downloaded files onto a USB key at the last minute. So we have pictures from Lake Louise, with no actual pictures of Lake Louise, and pictures from Writing on Stone, but no pictures of the writing on the stone. Well planned. 🙂

    Hopefully Matt will recover from the long day of travel before we have to get on the next airplane so we can do something interesting.