Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Last night in Mantanita

Tomorrow is a translation day   
I move from one place to another.  
I try and put appropriate attention to getting to the right place.  
So far it's worked out. 
The Guayaquil bus terminal was probably the most challenging with its size and mostly indigenous clientele.  
That is to say it wasn't geared towards gringos.  The last week I've used my Spanish more often.  
I still suck.  But I'm trying and that comes through.   And  probably picking up more than I realize now.    
My back is finally complaining about the beds I've been on. This most recent the softest.   

Tomorrow I've hired a driver to show up at 730 for a sometimes four hour ride to Guayaquil airport. 
My plane is at 140 so I've built in time for things to fall to shit and still make flight.  Not the same without Edie's precision.   More of a blunt instrument than an elegant ballet.  
I do have "junior" picking me up at the airport and taking me to his dad's hotel.  The place exudes charm so I'm excited to spend 2 nights there outside of Quito.  
Airport is an hour outside of town and a wreck nearly made
Me miss my flight to Cuenca. So I'll chill tomorrow night.  Then Friday is wide open so I may hire junior to take me to the craft market.  
First thing Saturday morning I'll be headed to Mexico City then LA then pdx.  Wake up in Ecuador.  Lunch in Mexico and dinner in LA before pdx just prior to midnight.    Sunday I wake up in my own bed for the first time in four weeks.      

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Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Tuesday in Montanita

Tuesday.  On the beach.  At Shanka beach bar.   
Went into town as usual    Chatted with my friend who owns the pipe shop.  He was interested in the pot legislation in the states.  
We talked about doing business here in Mantanita.  To my eyes it looks overbuilt from a business standpoint 
But labor costs are lower so the amount of customers its takes to keep a pace open differs here.  
Also it's seasonal. 
Through dumb chance I am here for the best weather and the fewest crowds.  
In January this place is packed with Europeans.  
So I guess it's a bit like Christmas shopping for US retailers.  (Or summer for Yogurt Shack).  You make enough profit at one time of year to let you stay open the rest.    

Reflection time.  It seems
Forever ago that I
Landed in Quito.   I'm glad I journaled and took as many photos as I did because of such a crowded palate of images.   Experience.  People.  
I can hope this trip helped me
See through the viewfinder 
Rather than the mirror.  

Never was that more acute than this morning when the first thing that popped up was the unasked for photo from exactly two years ago. 
It was a view of Frizzel campground.  Last time the parker four were there together.  
That annual event took place this weekend. My son in NYC and his dad somewhere on the beaches of South America.   
No matter how fond they are
We can't go back to where we've been.  We can only dream new dreams
Maybe better dreams
Before the last revolving circle ends.   

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Monday, July 13, 2015

What day is it?

So it's Monday but I've lost track of how many days I've been on the road.   On the bus into town I sat  next to Jennie Devine.
No shit that's her name.
Ecuadorean but spent time in U.S.
She said
You will get lost in Montanita
I said.  It's not that big
She said that's not what she meant.
Now I understand

Having lunch at Ibiza
You know you made a good impression when you've been here only three days and the staff calls you by your name
Or the name you've been given by your smokin hot 7th grade Spanish teacher.
Gregorio
Seems to fit

A little more so since I've not found my comb for a week.
I feel a little bit like James Bond at the beach at the start of Skyfall.

After lunch I'll head back to beach and watch the waves.  Today I'll sit under an umbrella
Yesterday I pulled the dumb gringo stunt.
It was heavy overcast
Damit.   How many times did I read how much uv comes through the clouds when you are on equator.
Felt sick last night.  Hydrated and went to bed early.  Woke up still a bit out of it but have shaken it off.  

Friday, July 10, 2015

Adios V

July 10
Loja airport. 

Nice and new.  Beautiful setting. Of course in the Andes you have to look hard for someplace flat enough for a runway.  
Quite the ride from Vilcabamba. Up and down the mountains and windy roads. I count among my blessings that I don't get car sick. 

Yesterday and today at Madre Tiera people were coming in for a conference on a controversial medical treatment known as MSS.  Seems it has an almost cult like following among those with interest in alternative alternative Medicine.  
I haven't had time to Google it but part of it seems to involve taking a tincture of a bleach like liquid.  Supposed to heal a number of ailments.  
The leader of this group looks like Danny Divito on vacation. Even better he comes with a Don Corlione whisper speech.  
He told me that he is always hounded by CNN and other news outlets.  I didn't see any there.  
They also operate under the mantle of being a church so they can take their medicine as a sacrament without running a foul of the law.  
I spoke to a woman from Arizona who said she has been to another one of these seminars and wanted to see what was new. 

It's been three weeks on the road now.  Two hour taxi to Loja.  Then a 45 minute flight to Guayaquil. Largest city in equador and its major port.  
After spending the night there I'll find a bus for a two hour ride up to Montanita for my first beach experience here.    

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

A closer look at el cento. Vilcabamba

How many times have I said we don't see things as they are
We see them as we are.  
Probably what's going on with Vilcabamba 
It's a mismatch between the last several weeks in large cities and my own clueless expectations 
It is a magical setting 
And maybe that is the point. In Quito and Cuenca, life came
At you. Big. Noisy. 
In V it just is.  
Like a Norman Rockwell image of men just sitting outside a barber shop and watching seemingly nothing happen.  
So goes the moments here.  

It's perhaps a little like Master Doug taught us about photography 
Wait for the tree to tell you how it wants to be photographed 

Here you have to wait to see life unfold at a pace you are not used to.  

It's buzz is that it's the valley of longevity.   Maybe or maybe those ancient looking gringos are really really old. 

Sitting at an outside table having coffee and a brownie that the waitress convinced me dipped well in coffee. 

A Dutch woman sits down next to me and asks if I mind she smokes.  Usually I do but I was eager to engage a local.  She looked 60.  Slender.  Had a unique Dutch/English accent. Said she was a landscape designer but made bad choices in Amsterdam.  Visited here and never left.  

We talked about gringos with lots of money coming here and building huge houses.  
There was sustain in her voice but an acknowledgment that rich gringos are the only ones willing to pay to design landscapes.   

She moved along and I finished my brownie and coffee   The waitress takes my plate and I've been sitting here for maybe 20 minutes.  
I watch people come and go.  
There is a couple talking to a street vendor.  They've been trying out maracas.  For at least ten minutes.  Listening to the sound.  I never realized how each one has a different sound.   Even pitch is different.  I may need to come back tomorrow and try some myself.     

Day 18. The zen of nothing

Yesterday may go down in the books as the art of doing nothing.
I got up about 8 AM and went down for breakfast to the main lodge. After a relaxing breakfast of eggs homemade bread, and fruit salad, I headed back for a shower before the start of my three hour spa.

This sweet brown eyed lady who was going to guide me through my spa apparently spoke no English. And my form of Spanish didn't seem to register with her. So we spent the next three hoursgesturing and giggling as we tried to figure out what came next.

So she took me to a room with bathrobes and said to me, Todo.  

As I stripped down naked, I hoped that this was truly what she meant. It was.

We then began with a 45 minute facial. It was my first real facial and I really loved it. Then it was off to the steam room. It took longer than it should for me to understand that I was to go into the steam room a total of three times and each time I emerged she would hose me down with cold water. Very cold water. 
This took almost an hour though frankly I lost track of time.  

Next it was time for the sea salt scrub. I began by laying down on a massage table and had a generous quantity of some sort of Oil poured all over my body. Then I felt big globs of sea salt being placed around my body. And for the next half hour that was scrubbed all over my skin. Then she flipped me over and we did the other side. Then she motioned for me to stand up. I looked myself over and I looked like some sort of lubricated snowman.  
We moved to another room with a shallow bathtub and she brought in a big ceramic pot filled with warm mud. She then motioned for me to cover myself with this mud, which I did. However she wasn't satisfied she said "mas. Todo"
I guess I didn't take it on thick enough. So I used about two more quarts of mud to cover my entire body. This seem to satisfy her and she smiled and said Bueno.  Then she motioned for me to stay put for what seemed like a half an hour until the mud pretty much dried. Then she filled up the bathtub and I scrubbed the mud off. I have to admit there was a child like sense of joy of playing in this mud and rubbing it all over me. Next to the shower and my spa treatment was over. It had in fact been three hours. I marveled at how I completely lost track of time.
It was now about 1230 so I headed down to the lodge and decided to treat myself to a cheeseburger and French fries. My first American indulgence in more than two weeks here in Ecuador. It was pretty good.  Next it was nap time. After about an hour I got up and came out and laid in my Hamic. Did some reading and did some writing. Went down to the lodge and completed my final travel plans to the coast. And then it was time for dinner. A wonderful Italian feast last night and some more great Argentina wine.  
Conversation then for an hour with some local dudes who were spending a couple of months in south America. And then back to my room for some reading and time to call it a day. 

Monday, July 6, 2015

Day 16

Day 16.   Vilcabamba

Spent the day in downtown V.  It's Downtown is about the same as Canby.  Like most cities here it grew up around a church and town square.   It's just all in miniature.  

The big buzz about this place was the presence of lots of potheads who have made this their home.  

Not so much.  I think Portland has a higher density.  

It is an interesting collection of folks tho.  There are some folks who were pretty successful in their careers and moved here. 

I met a few of them at a coffee shop this morning. One fellow is intent on acquiring Spanish fluency.  He spoke with some
Disdain of gringos who come here and don't bother to learn the language.  I ran into one of those in Cuenca.  

Who am I to judge.  I can understand it takes more work to learn a language and in Cuenca and even to some
Extent here in V a person can get by with limited or no Spanish. Still it seems like
learning the language is a sign of respect for your host country. It also opens up more opportunities to engage locals.  

For now I'm back on the patio of my bungalow and back in my hammock and looking out
Into the big green valley ringed with sharp mountain peaks.  

I can see coming back here.  But I can also see myself visiting a different South American country each year.  After all there is a huge continent where I poorly speak the language.  

Tomorrow I am staying onsite for a three hour spa session.  I went for the whole thing except the colonic.  I need
To save something for my next trip.