Friday, August 31, 2007

Ontario: Yours to Discover

And it certainly has been mine to discover, with the help of my good friend Alicia who drives me around to places and shows me boats and takes me to great restaurants.

In truth, I really love this small, quaint town of St Catharines. It has so much character on its own and is so peaceful and quiet - totally different from the loud and busy streets of Tokyo. Furthermore, Alicia's company has been therapeutic, to the extent that I feel so much better about where I am in life and who I am, and am grateful for the awesome friendships that make my life the wonder and beauty that it is.

Niagara Falls (picture above) was also a great time. I wandered through this casino-town built on the shores of one of the world's greatest natural wonders, thinking about how sad it is that such a natural beauty has to be accompanied by an unrestrained form of commercialism and hedonism. I myself could literally sit on the look-out dock and watch the Falls for hours on end, breathing in air that is actually more oxygen than carbon monoxide, feeling the mist of the waters from afar (and this you actually can) and listening to the echoes of roaring, powerful waters.

And now, after having finished an entire bottle of wine with Alicia and having thai curry at a local bar restaurant, I am, for the first time in a few months, totally tipsy and it feels great. But not it is time to go to bed. So much for my brief moments of intoxication.
Read more!

Sunday, August 26, 2007

From Pittsburgh, PA to St Catharines, Ontario

So my week in Pittsburgh was fantastic and I greatly enjoyed staying with my friends Daniel and his wife, Joyce. Pittsburgh is such a character-full city, with most of its buildings - new and old - constructed with red brick. The Heinz factory lay nearby, and bridges stood over the merging of two great rivers. A wonderful city, and most importantly, wonderful company.

I always hope, when riding any type of vehicle (train, bus, airplane) that someone interesting would sit next to me so that the hours spent sitting can be spent entertained. Well, my train ride to Buffalo, NY where my friend Alicia awaited me, manifested this hope into reality but in a most extreme manner.

I sat next to an African-American man with corn-rolls, who was taking the train out to Chicago and then to Michigan to visit his 16 year-old son. But it wasn't him who turned the 2.5 hour ride to Cleveland interesting for me; it was a Chinese lady, probably in her late forties, who sat across the aisle from me. When everyone boarding from Pittsburgh settled down into their seats, she let out a huge "OH MAAANNNN" in a tone of complaint. I hadn't a clue what she was complaining about, exactly. She continued to sigh, and move about in her chair, talking to herself. Then she got up, and starting folding and refolding her blue blanket around herself, until it was wrapped around her to her utmost satisfaction. It was then I realized that this woman was probably mildly autistic.

Moments later she declared to the conductor walking past, that she needed to use the restroom. The conductor put a finger to his lips and explained where the toilets were located in the car. It took four more repetitions of directions to the toilet facilities before the woman started walking in the direction pointed by the rather frustrated conductor.

My interesting train ride physically began when the woman returned from using the restroom. She walked rather energetically up the aisle towards her seat... and then passed right by it. Opening the door to the next car, she slid through them and continued to walk. Few seconds later, she came back, looking confused. Staring at the numbers above the seats, and concluding that her seat did not exist in this car, she returned to the next car, only to return a few seconds later. When she went off to the next car again, I couldn't stand just watching anymore, so I pulled off my iPod and my alpaca sweater onto my seat and ran - yes, I had to run as she was now running down the aisle - to guide the woman back to her seat.

"Ma'am, are you looking for your seat?"
"Wha...?"
"Are you looking for your seat," I repeated, a little bit louder. She nodded. I gestured to her to follow me.

When we returned to the original car, I pointed to her seat and her blanket, and told her that that was her seat. However, she remained looking confused, and after a few seconds of pondering she shook her head. "This isn't my seat. My seat is number 53. This isn't my seat. 53. Number 53."
"But that's where you were sitting, that's your blanket, right?"
"Yeah, that's my blanket. No, I'm sitting in number 53 with the same colored blanket. Next to a fat white chick. I remember because I felt squished against my window. You have to help me. I have to get back to my seat. It's number 53. This isn't my seat.." and it went on.

It took a good 15 minutes to convince the lady that the seat she was looking at, with the blue blanket, was indeed her seat. I even conceded to take her to seat 53, which was occupied by an elderly couple who was fast asleep. "See, this isn't your seat." Pulling her by the arm towards where I had seen her when I first got on the train, I pointed again and told her, "That's your seat."

When she finally sat down and I was able to convince her that it was now time to sleep because everyone else in the car was also sleeping, it had be an entire hour into the train ride. It was nearly 1 in the morning and I was getting drowsy. The woman kept trying to have conversations with those sitting behind her, telling them she could 'help them' - in what way, I wasn't entirely sure - and I kept putting my finger to my mouth, encouraging her to keep her volume down, and telling her, "Not now. Later." Furthermore, she kept insisting that the Chinese youth sitting behind me was my brother, that everyone in the car were "my people" and that they knew me, and that I looked like her younger sister who apparently only cared about her 'faith'. Whatever she thought after my appeasements I don't know, but she finally did stop talking and started gathering her blanket, with which she attempted to hit my legs. When I just smiled, she took her blanket and started wrapping herself with it.

I closed my eyes and was starting to drift off into my dreams when a "Oh god!! Oh no!" woke me up and startled me out of my seat. I looked to my right, and surely enough, there was the Chinese woman again, looking confused and worried and fluttered. What now?? I thought.

"I've lost my bag. It was up there (pointing to the overhead storage space), a black bag. You have to help me find it. I'm sitting at seat 53. This isn't my seat.." and the whole ordeal had started all over again. What concerned me most was not that her obsession with seat 53 was up and running again, but that, according to her, her passport was packed into the lost black bag. Thinking that the best idea would be to speak to the conductor about it so they can search for it rather than herself, I told her, "We'll find it. But not now."
"NOo, but I need that bag now. My earphones are inside it and I need them. My passport is in it. Shit. I need to find my bag."
"Nooo, you are not walking around, we'll find the bag, don't worry," I said.

In a few moments the conductors came walking down the aisle. I stopped one of them and explained the situation. The conductor then told me something I didn't even think about: "At the station she got on from, she had been tested for alcohol and they found that she was drunk."

Drunk? I could no longer figure out whether the woman was mildly autistic for plainly drunk and unemployed and nuts. The good news was, upon hearing of the entire ordeal, the conductor decided that he would keep a careful eye on her in case she caused any more problems. When I got off at 3am in Cleveland, OH, the woman was no longer in our car but was relocated to some other car. Thank god!!
Read more!

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Pittsburgh, PA

Pittsburgh has their salad with french fries on top. As healthily I try to eat (although, getting back into school-mode hasn't helped, as my body now craves cookies with my tea), if I get french fries with my salad, I mean, what can I possibly do?

I'm starting to feel a bit gross with all this American food.. THAT'S IT, I'm going running tomorrow in the cemetery. Thunderclouds and rain?? Bring it.
Read more!

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Memoirs of Loner Traveler: Conclusion?

Note to self: don't travel to a country you've never been to and whose language you don't speak fluently totally alone because it's not really all that fun. It's good to have travel company, especially if a magnitude 8 earthquake happens to hit you with its epicenter less than 20 miles away from where you're staying.

However, surviving what I did made every other problem in life seem stupid. I feel stronger, and I surprised myself for all the decisions I made down in Peru, instantaneous ones. At least now I can sit back and relax, and read and be peaceful.

Transitioning back into modern society was somewhat awkward. The new Macbook and iPod Nano is awesome and I love it. But, the paved roads, the un-crumbled brick buildings, the relatively low crime rate, the smell of grass and not poo, packaged fruits and accessible internet and the huge library, all seem too perfect and somehow unfair. The world, I feel now more intensely than ever, is so divided, and neither side of the division line know what life's really like on the 'other' side. It's sad.

Hopefully all these experiences will come in handy once I start studying all about it in the academic sphere.
Read more!

Monday, August 20, 2007

Pictures from Peru

Available now, here!
Read more!

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Memoirs of a Loner Traveler: Ica to Lima, Peru

Of course, the last two days had to be the most 'adventurous', to put it euphemistically.

I woke up in the morning not really rested, the obvious reason being the sporadically shaking earth, and the less obvious reason being the uncertainty of how I was to get to Lima in time to catch my plane. Earlier in the day I had the guy at the hostel reception help me book a bus ticket back to Lima. He had told me he would have it for me by that afternoon, but afternoon came and went and he was no where to be found. Much later, I found out that immediately after the earthquake, apparently he tried to rush back to the hostel from wherever he was in Huacachina, only to be injured when a brick wall collapsed upon him. Allegedly the injury was so major that some of his toes had to be surgically amputated.

So when morning came, I still had no bus ticket and we had no clue what was going on - no one did. Even the police were useless; with all electricity and telephone lines unavailable, Huacachina remained horribly isolated, besides one battery-run radio whose frantic DJ made me increasingly nervous. From what could be gathered, we found out that going to Lima was nearly impossible, as the infrastructure on the southern coast were mostly destroyed.

When you're 23, and lived a fairly multinational life, the likelihood of you encountering a totally virginial, first-time scenario is very slim, unless you are forced into participation. So in Huacachina, in this isolated neighborhood, I was facing a VERY virginial situation: how to get from point A to point B in the face of a major natural disaster, in a foreign country whose language I did not speak. I couldn't even think of where to begin, especially with limited access to any means of communication.

In truth, I was horrified and wanted to cry, even though that wouldn't have solved anything. I started by gathering as much information as possible, listening to the radio and talking to people who came into Huacachina from Ica. the problem was, no one was really sure about the information they had; it was almost always second-hand, something they had (over)heard in an adjacent conversation. Some people said that the buses were running to Lima, others said that nothing ran to Lima. Some spoke of a bridge by Pisco that had collapsed, other said it was half-collapsed and you can walk to the other side... So, by the end of my information gathering, I felt I had gotten nowhere, and was still as lost as when I had started.

I laid out the options in my head: I could stay in Huacachina until further information could be confirmed - this was something I instinctively wanted to do. Someone would, I hoped, hand me the best answer in time, and I could delay my decision until then. But, the fact that I couldn't speak Spanish, and the hostel owners' unwillingness to do much (like feed us or give us up-to-date info) told me this was a poor option. I feared nothing would be handed to me. And the 30m+ sand dunes on all but one side of Huacachina was nerve-hacking and didn't help my mental health: the image of a gianormous sand avalanche I had so feared causing the previous day appeared all at once plausible of happening.

My second option was to tag along someone else in Huacachina, who also wanted to get to Lima and had already figured out how. There was a Swiss family - a mother and her three kids - who had decided that they would attempt to fly to Lima, as they had a 2pm flight to catch that day. The mother had spoken to some woman at Ica's airport, who claimed that they were already building a substantial waiting list for flights to Lima. There were, of course, a few problems: because communication lines were nonexistent, the airport could not get a confirmation from Lima's airport that they could, in fact, land. Until that confirmation was attained, the lady claimed, there would be no flights. And when this confirmation was to be attained, she had no clue. Secondly, the chances of squeezing myself on to a plane when there was already a back-up seemed to me less than slim. Going to Ica's airport, therefore, had some major risks.

My final option, however, seemed to me at the time the most ludicrous of all: I would gamble my luck with the scant information that bus companies were running to Lima, and/or the bridge crossing the river north of Pisco was only slightly collapsed and I could walk over it. This option was entirely based on my desire - however unsure - to get moving. It was only 8:30am. Even if it took me 20 hours to get to Lima, I would still make it for my flight at 10am. My hesitations came from my lack of any knowledge of the earthquake and its aftermaths; the fact that I would be going right through the epicenter, Pisco, on my way; and that I would be doing this seemingly stupid ordeal on my own. But, in consideration of the other options, I felt I had no other 'real' choice. I have to get back to Lima, I thought, and so, I packed up my belongings.

Tom and Elly accompanied me into Ica's bus terminal. There were long lines everywhere, surrounding the terminal office like a tangled bunch of yarn. I lined up behind a Peruvian couple, in a line I figured would lead me up to a counter. "Do you know if going to Lima is possible?" the man asked, surprisingly, in English. "We have no idea, we're hoping," we said.

When I got to the counter, I said, "Lima," and the woman blurted something in Spanish so fast I couldn't even catch the verb or its subject. I poked the couple in front of me and asked for a translation. "She's saying, you can't go to Lima. The bridge collapsed," the woman said. Then, whom I determined as her boyfriend conversed with the counter lady, then advised me to buy the ticket to Pisco. "Don't worry, we'll help you, buy the ticket and follow us. You can walk across the bridge to San Clementine." Seeing as there was no other option available, I did as I was told.

The man and woman whom I thought were a couple turned out to be siblings. "We'll take you to Pisco and across the brdige so you can catch a bus on the other side for Lima," the brother, named Pepe, said. I gave my bag to the bus driver to stow away, and bid Tom and Elly (who decided to leave Ica the next day) farewell. "Good luck, you'll be alright," Elly said. I wasn't so sure about 'being alright' but really, there was no other positive thought to sustain, and so I took it in as much as I could.

Inside the bus, Pepe took my ticket and told me to sit next to his sister, Paola. "We're from Pisco," she said, and continued to tell me about where she was at the time of the earthquake, how she was working at her bank, and was worried about the whereabouts of her brother who turned out to be in Ica as well at the time, and how her father, who was in Pisco, was also doing alright.

The ride to Pisco was peaceful up until the last bit, approximately two miles away from Pisco's outskirts. The bus, in fact, had stopped behind a hundred other buses, and the bus driver merely sighed. Obscenities flew around for no more than 10 seconds, and everyone started getting off the bus. "Let's go, we're walking!" Pepe shouted. So there I was and Pepe and Paola, two miles away from Pisco, the asphalt cracked in various locations, hundreds of buses lined up all the way to the horizon. "I'm a man!" Pepe claimed, and took my 11kg bag, as we walked towards Pisco under a very aggressive sun. I felt like a refugee carrying her entire life on her shoulders, migrating to some unknown land somewhere beyond the horizon on the bare hope that things will work out in the end. To be sure, things WERE starting to work itself out, since the moment Pepe and Paola offered their help, and for this I was unspeakably thankful.

Evidence of the earthquake's realities were painfully visible the closer we got to Pisco. Not only was the road destroyed, shacks and housing were flattened, brick walls partially standing, heaps of rubble were everywhere, food scraps and human feces rotting away on the side - the sewage system was done for. About twenty minutes after we left the bus, we entered the city of Pisco, and even Pepe and Paola were shocked. "We had no idea it was this bad!" Paola exclaimed. "My house is partially collapsed, my friend said." The extraordinary thing, I thought, was that she said this in the most lightheartedly way possible; she was even smiling, laughing, and I was terribly grateful of that, too.

Pepe, in the meanwhile, was talking to various people - friends, I assumed, from their familiar interactions - and asked about how to get to Lima. "We're going to find a friend to take you to Lima," he said, and I was shocked.
"A friend?"
"Yeah, we're from Pisco, we know lots of people. Don't worry."
Still shocked and not knowing what to say in the face of such kindness and really, my luck to have met these two, we continued to walk towards the notorious bridge.

Probably a good two miles from the bridge, Pepe found a family - a woman and her two daughters - who were headed towards Lima, and gladly conceded to take me along. here, Pepe gave me my bag, I gave Paola my email address, and they both smiled and said, "Go, go! You don't have much time!" I turned to the woman with her daughters, who looked at me urgently and pointed towards the bridge, saying something in Spanish at the same time. I looked around for Pepe and Paola, and they were already gone, lost in the migrating crowd.

The sun was hot, very aggressive. With the heat rose the stench from the side of the broken asphalt. And soon, the collapsed bridge was visible, and its pseudo-standing surface swarmed with people. I conversed in my broken Spanish with the two girls, Nadia and Paola, who were fascinated by the fact I was from Tokyo, and asked all sorts of questions, only less than half of which I was probably able to satisfactorily answer. Sharing a bottle of water between us, we half-ran, half-walked towards the bridge, the mother claiming we had to stick together.

The bridge was in terrible shape. Thankfully the river was very shallow, being the dry season, and we were able to cross it without getting wet. Police were fully armed and protected, guarding both ends of the bridge. Some were chasing down prisoners who had escaped a nearby prison that had broken apart during the quake. When we finally reached San Clementine, people were in a slightly rioting state, banging on cars and yelling at its drivers who were forcing their way on to the bridge. I assumed people were angry at such a selfish action that could very well fully destroy the barely standing bridge.

Once on the other side in San Clementine, we forced ourselves on a bus headed towards Chinchay. We literally flagged down a bus, and ran up to and into it while it drove on at 20 km/h. for a couple hours we rode on in the bus along the coastline and I could smell the salt in the air. Along the way we saw more houses collapsed, more roads broken, more people not knowing what should or should not be done.

Somewhere beyond Chinchay, we got off, and the mother pulled me towards another bus where I paid for another ticket. The bus, however, kept trying to go, and the mother kept trying to stop it. They took my bag, opened the side of the bus and launched it inside. The mother gave me a hug and kisses on my cheek, the ticketseller pushed me on to the bus, and like that, like it was with Pepe and Paola, the lady and Nadia and Paola were gone. The bus was off, and I was headed to Lima.

On the bus I sat next to a man who kept insisting on showing me pictures of Pisco and Ica's devastation - mainly in the form of dead bodies - on his cell phone. I looked at him in disgust and was very happy to move to another seat when it became available. This ride, too, took place through a menagerie of destructed environs, the bus tipping this way and that as the tires tried to avoid the gaping cracks in the asphalt. I dozed off for a bit, and when I woke we had arrived in the district of Lima.
Read more!

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Memoirs of a Loner Traveler: Ica, Peru

15 August, 7am
I stayed in a hostel at Huacachina, located on the outskirts of Ica city. Huacachina, which advertises itself as being "America´s Greatest Oasis," indeed strictly follows the definition of "oasis": it is smack in the middle of a desert! Now, I had never stepped into a desert landscape until today, so the great sand dunes were a marvelous sight to me. I declined the hostel´s offer to take me into the desert for some sand-boarding fun, but did manage to hike up the nearest sand dune. My feet kept sinking into the sand, and I desperately hoped that my solo-escapade did not end up launching a sand-avalanche to swallow up America´s greatest oasis. Fortunately, my fears were not manifested into reality... at least for that moment.

After taking some breathtaking pictures of the desert, I explored the mini-town of Huacachina. It was basically a tourist resort location. The roads and paths leading up to the smelly, green lagoon were completely paved, and some major landscaping work had been done all throughout; this was slightly disappointing, although I can understand that America´s greatest oasis could not possibly be left untouched while it bore such a title.

I spent the rest of the afternoon reading Anna Karenina, and munching on Gummy Bears Aya had given me in a ziploc bag at Puno. I decided to settle on one of those instant noodle bowls for dinner, as I reckoned my stomach needed something familiar and soft, after the malicious bite into some deadly hot pepper nearly killed my poor stomach at the lunch buffet in Chivay. Tomorrow: Lima

15 August, 7:30pm
HUGE earthquake. Never felt anything like it in my life, even while in Japan. It´s about 11am in Tokyo, and my parents are probably freaking out. But there are no means of communication available; the first thing to do when I get access to a phone is call the Japanese Embassy.

At the moment we are outside. I´m with an English couple, from Bristol: Tom and Elly. We grabbed our stuff from the hostel once things settled down a bit; the earth still shakes every now and then. When it first shook, I thought it might be over quickly, but I was VERY wrong - it continued and escalated into one that cut out the lights and slid my bed from wall to wall. I knew then that being inside the building was probably not a good idea, and I ran out the door without even bothering to get my shoes on.

The shaking continued once I made it outside, and I congregated with the others who had already been outside from the beginning. The earth shook, and shook, and shook. When finally it stopped, I went inside the building - which up to now had already survived two large earthquakes and this fact I did not know whether to take in relief or panic - and gathered my things.

The rest of the night shook with the remnants of the earthquake, as the plates underneath us tried to settle into its new positions. We were, however, under the stars, an entire sky full of the smallest ones ever invisibile in Tokyo, plus the Milky Way. Although we woke up with a startle every time there was a low rumble and the ground shifted under our sleeping bags, I will and can still remember the sky that was almost entirely white with stars.
Read more!

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Memoirs of a Loner Traveler: Arequipa/Chivay, Peru

4903m! I´m pretty sure that´s the highest I´ve ever been without the use of an airplane. I was actually more than relieved after arriving in Arequipa - never again, I had thought to myself, would I ever go 3000m above sea level. My days in Cuzco and Puno were fun and great, but my goodness, the altitude! It simply drains the energy right out of you. In any case, little did I know that I would be achieveing my all-time record after Puno´s 3800m, in Arequipa.

But before we get into that: Arequipa. Probably one of the most modern cities I`´ve been to, even compared to Lima. Allegedly Arequipans pride themselves to be slightly different from the rest of the Peruvian population, and their provincial pride can be seen from as small as a beer brand, "Arequipeña" to as grandiose as their own city-festival - held unfortunately after my departure, on 15 August - totally devoted to the celebration of Arequipa. I suppose they do have much to celebrate, as they are 467 years old, and I´ve found Arequipa to be probably one of my favorites.

Part of the reason why my stay in Arequipa is longer than any of the other cities I´m visiting is because of my planned visit to the Colca Canyon. I had booked a tour online, through the hostel I´m staying in, and I expected teh tour to be one of this trip´s highlights. Things brings us back to the earlier number, 4903m. About three hours into the drive from Arequipa to Chivay, our guide gets on the micorphone, and enthusiastically claimed, "We will now be stopping at a rest stop. We are at 3800m above sea level, and I highly encourage you to drink some coca tea because we will be reaching 4800m within the next two hours." Not only was I shocked to hear the numerical value of "4800" (and I even stopped teh guide to confirm), I was surprised that we were already at 3800m and nothing had happened to my well-being. But here I was anyway, relieved to be out of altitude´s way after Puno; my body doesn´t like extreme altitudes, I know, but Altitude apparently likes me.

It turned out that we were oat 4903m for about half an hour, during which we stopped to do touristy things like take pictures and buy more alpaca commodities. I myself bought a small coin purse for 5 soles to celebrate my newly achieved record. And then after that, we gradually began to descend, towards Chivay.

Chivay is a small town, but it fed me well. The meals I had at Chivay were probably some of the best I´ve had all trip. I also tried alpaca meat, which was very tasty and very similar to beef; as well as cactus fruit, which was sweet and juicy but you had to swallow all the seeds. In any case, lunch was at a buffet, and dinner in a local restaurant (probably serving tourists only) where a local group performed some dances with Andean live music.

The next day began bright and early. We loaded our buses at 6am to head towards Cruz del Condor, a look-out spot located inside the Colca Canyon, from where giant condors can be observed in the early hours of the day. With good weather and clear views, the condors were uplifting to watch as they freely soared through the valleys, which, by the way, are 2500m+ deep. Pictures to come later.

When we got back to Arequipa, the city was in total chaos, albeit it may have been pseudo-organized. Its people had started celebrating Arequipa´s 467th anniversary, and certain roads in the city - especially around the Plaza de Armas - were blocked. Our tour bus let us off, therefore, a few blocks from the Plaza, and I exchnaged email addresses with a German couple whom I had met on teh trip. Hopefully I can visit them when I get to Germany in April.

I walked back to the hostel, avoiding the super-crowded Plaza as much as possible, although in hindsight I probably should have paid the celebrations a visit, if only for a moment. In any case I took the 20:45 bus out of Arequipa for Ica and Ica is where I am now. Unfortunately the weather is somewhat gray, but I´m hoping it will clear up soon so I can surf through some of its famous sand dunes.
Read more!

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Memoirs of a Loner Traveler: Puno/Arequipa, Peru

So I thought that the altitude wasn´t getting to me much, but it hit me a lot harder once I arrived in Puno, located at 3800m above sea level. I got tired really easily, and definitely lost my appetite - all I could swallow was a piece of bread. On my second day in Puno, I met up with my friend Aya who was also getting pretty sick of the altitude. Once we felt a bit better, we ventured out on a tour of the floating islands of Uros located on Lake Titcaca (at this point probably reaching near 4000m above sea level). The sights there were pretty amazing.

The same night, I hopped onto a bus to take me 6 hours away from Puno - and thank goodness, to a lower altitude - to Arequipa, which is where I am at the moment. I couldn´t sleep on the bus despite its 22:00 departure, due to a massively snoring man to the left and an eternally coughing youth right behind me, plus the movie Departed being played twice around, the speakers right above my head. So at the moment, I am very tired and sleepy, but am glad that I got a full meal for the first time in days since arriving in Peru.

Tomorrow I am off early in the morning for a tour of the Colca Canyon, from which I return early in the evening on the 14th, and then I am off to Ica.
Read more!

Friday, August 10, 2007

Memoirs of a Loner Traveler: Puno, Peru (I)

Arrived in Puno at 3 in the afternoon today, after an 8 hour bus ride on a unexpectedly sketchy bus. Well, actually, it wasn´t that bad. It´s just that, the company that I booked with wasn´t running for some reason, and the dispatcher put me on a bus of a different company. The roads from Cusco to Peru are pretty rough, and at some points it made you think you were off-roading in the middle of a desert or something - I swear the bus could´ve fallen apart at any minute!

Plus, there was the mid-ride seating change. I had found a seat amongst three Japanese women who were traveling together, but then about 3 hours into the ride, the dispatcher came and dislodged me from my seat because two Belgian (?) men were whining about their seating arrangements in the back of the bus. I found a seat in the bottom deck, thank god, which was actually a lot cooler and more comfortable. All was good until someone on the upper deck decided to vomit out of their window, and its former-stomach contents splattered our windows. That was a nice view.

Puno, I find, is a lot more approachable than Cusco. Maybe because it is smaller, or maybe because there are fewer tourists around (although, there are still a lot, considering my hostel is fully booked until next week), the place feels safer.

Anyway, tomorrow I´m rendezvous-ing with my friend Aya and we are off to tour the Uros islands. Tomorrow night I head out to Arequipa!
Read more!

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Memoirs of a Loner Traveler: Cusco, Peru (II)

The altitude hasn´t hit me as bad as I expected, although I suppose I did sleep most of the day off yesterday. I am only reminded of the substantial altitude of this place on two occasions: one, when I wake up in the morning to find myself with an annoying headache, and two, when I am climbing stairs and I´m panting madly after just a few steps. The headache was thankfully solved by a dose of Advil, so that was nothing to worry about. Otherwise, everything - healthwise - has been great.

I suppose that if I had more companions with me I would go out and venture into Cusco´s cuisine; however, I couldn´t find that energy today and thus resorted to a pack of peach juice, three apples, and a noodle bowl.

The reason for my fatigue today was a horse. I, for the first time in my life, rode a horse today and it was much fun! We trotted out to Tambomachay and Pukapukara, both of which are Incan ruins on the outskirts of Cusco, and are apparently pretty similar to Machu Picchu. I had a passing glace at Saqsaywaman on the way back, but was much too tired by then to hike that as well.

Tomorrow: off to Puno!
Read more!

Memoirs of a Loner Traveler: Cusco, Peru (I)

Cusco is a lot bigger than I expected. My expectations were more along the lines of a single street, with hostels and bars along it, and a desolate airport and an even more desolate train station attached to it. In other words, I was expecting a shanty village. Cusco, however, is a legitimate city. Full and long boulevards and lots of traffic, venders on most corners and spray-paint graffiti on cement walls. Cars beeping, trucks honking, trains returning from Aguas Calientes letting out its steam like a high-pitch fog horn at night, llamas and alpacas trotting around the stone pathways.

It is not the metropolitan, cosmopolitan mega-city like London or Tokyo, but still, a very legitimate city located in a valley. Its architecture reminds me of Rome or even Florence, with their brown roofings and white, straight walls; the occasional window is nothing fancy but an oblong square hole in the wall, looking as if it were cut out by a cookie-cutter. The loveliest thing about this city is its winding pathways of all different widths, and its undeterminable destinations could easily get you lost. The city-center is the Plaza des Aramas, and is definitely the culminating spot for most tourists. Tourism is certainly the overriding business here, and for this reason the city is well-maintained and clean. Perhaps a bit too clean for a South American city.

Today I spent most of my time resting. Arriving at my hostel at 11am barely conscious due to a series of long flights and an unexpected chill in Lima, I was not impressed by where the hostel was located: on a hill. Climbing a set of stairs was already a full-on workout, if you could imagine that. I met three boys - recent high school graduates from Colorado! - at the hostel and we went out for lunch at a pizzetaria, a rather curiously common cuisine in Cusco (they are everywhere). Dodging offers for massages, llama/alpaca poo, and occasionally the odd pouch of cocaine, we found a place called Chez Maggy´s, run by a Peruvian surfer man who was very hippy-esque; his character was mostly reflected in the internal decor of the restaurant, which was more like an 18th century cabinet of curiosities than anything else. The pizza was delicious, too!

Additionally, I met a Japanese girl in the hostel, so that has been nice. She and I are meeting up again in Puno, to tour Uros together. Good times. But, the most exciting thing is, I get to ride a horse tomorrow!! Will take pictures of Cusco and post them up soon..
Read more!

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Memoirs of a Loner Traveler: Lima, Peru

7 August 11:44 am Tokyo, Japan
I´ve been in this overpriced cafe before, with its high ceilings and echoing conversations. I´m drinking a $12 cup of latte! Who pays for such things? There´s a buzzing headache growing at the back of my head and my eyes are heavy and achy. Why did I leave my parents´ so early? Oh, right I didn´t want to prolong the parting with them for so long. Advil soon.

7 August 16:45 on LP 605
I think to myself, why am I doing this to myself? This is stupid, I don´t even know the language. It is, in fact, the exact same thing I did 5 summers ago, traveling alone to Italy. No knowledge of the language, and therefore not a clue what the sings meant or said in the airport.

If I can determine such a thing as the worst airport I´ve ever been to, it would be Los Angeles International. To begin with, it´s gianormous, making it really difficult to navigate through in a short period of time. Secondly, it´s set up according to flight companies, regardless of their international or domestic destinations. So, although Tom Bradley is an exclusively international terminal, the other 2 lengths of terminals aren´t exclusively domestic, which makes "Tom Bradley International Terminal" slightly pointless. Then of course there was a volunteer guy dressed like an airport services dude, who helped me navigate through the airport, and then said, "Now hold on a minute, I´ve got one question for you. You see, I´m a volunteer for this (pointing at this laminated ID badge) organization and we´re raising some money for kids. And I know you LOVE kids, so could you dig down in your heart, and donate some money? We take all currencies." My prompt reply was, "I´ve got no cash on me, I´m sorry."

This was, after all, post-2.5 hours lined up at customs, immigration, and connecting flight baggage check-in. It would be another 30 minutes before I had finally reached my boarding gate in Tom Bradley International. And the connecting flight baggage check'in thing was superbly sketchy. I swallowed hard into my guts watching my large pack getting sucked into a black square hole, its destination unknown, and the conveyor belt lapping every bag into it. I inquired about my bag to every LAN attendant that I laid eyes upon, but I can defintely see my bag not appearing on the conveyor belt in Lima, at 11pm. How fantastic.

17:00 on LP605
Turbulence!! I hate flying! Why am I going to Peru again?

0:30 Peru time, getting off LP605
Landed. Thank god. I´m free of airplanes for... eight hours.

I hopped onto a bus after getting off the plane, one of those that takes you to the terminal. On board, there were a group of American elderly people who were quite energetic after the 8 hour flight. "Are you all off on vacation?" I asked, and the answer I got was a little more than what I expected. "Oh no dear," one of the ladies said. "We´re Evangelists and we´re going up to Iquitos on an elderly health camp. Last year we went to Costa Rica. We´re volunteers and we talk to elderly people about health risks, like hepatitis and diabetes, and teach them how to take care of their health."

"Amazing, that´s really awesome. And you get to travel to so many places," I said.

"Yes, it is quite a fun and amazing experience for all of us. But the most important part of it is," the lady leant over towards me in a hush but with a bright grin, "we get to talk to them about Jesus. That´s the most important part. Because he´s coming very soon."

I didn´t really know what else to do but nodd and mumble, "Ohh." I still managed to keep a smile on my face. Unaffected by my awkward reply, the lady reached into her carry-on bag and pulled out a grey booklet. "It´s about the 10 commandments, you may want to read it, if you like."

"Oh, wow, thanks." I mean, what else was I supposed to say or do? So I took the booklet from her, she wished me great travels and a God Bless You, and I hopped off the bus. Only to realize, it was FREEZING. The good news was my bag that appeared on the conveyor belt after waiting 40 minutes empty-handed. Immigration and customs went smoothly as well, completed in under 20 minutes, what a record! I found Mario, the taxi guy from my hostel, holding up a sign with my last name scribbled on it, and we headed towards the hostel where I am now.

Lima is like suburban Taiwan. Lots of billboards, not many illuminated signs like in Tokyo, and even coming from Tokyo I felt that it was a very large city. We drove straight for a long time, until we veered right to turn onto the street on which my hostel was located. So in some respects, I suppose it was kind of like driving through a very urban version of Calgary. Granted, it was 2am by the time we got to the hostel, so my impressions are kind of limited. Perhaps this morning I will get a better view.

And it is still freezing. I slept for an hour and a half, and woke up shivering like I had just been retrieved from the Arctic Ocean. I tried to stay in my bed for at least another half an hour, but couldn´t, and decided to take a shower, warm up, and update my blog. In another hour and a half I am off on my plane to Cuzco, which is probably going to be as cold, if not colder, than Lima. Fantastic. You know, traveling across the equator in one summer is a bit of a pain, because you have to carry winter and summer clothes. And I didn´t really bring that many winter clothes.

Oh well.
Read more!

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Good god!

Oh my god it's August!
Oh my god I've only got four days left!

That is all.
Read more!