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Tag Archive for 'green'

Cycling alongside Lago Titicaca

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  • german

We were not in partying mood when we had arrived at the Titicaca lake. No sleep for days and always taking care for the equipment that lay in the bus luggage compartment unprotected. The landscape had changed a lot: The green had gone, the steep mountains had gone. Only hills left; the brown landscape and the blue sky. Altiplano now, 3800 m altitude,  almost unrecognizable. The highest peak in Germany, we would be on the top now but here felt almost like riding along a coast.

First we had to ride along the Lago Grande northern part of the lake, later on along the Lago Pequeño which together form this 190 km long lake on 3,812 m.

dancing latin america

Still a lot of indigenous people living here, almost only indigenous people to be correct. I didn’t closely observe the cultural differences between this part of Peru and the one we had just left with the bus. One thing probably was that here they didn’t shoot any longer at festivals, there was still music, of course, a loft of music indeed. Music everywhere as the cycling observer should find out during the exhausting altiplano ride ahead.

With the bulls

Almost all buildings here are made from adobe, but the roofs are a lot more sophisticated than what we had seen at Cordillera Blanca. The atmosphere had changed as well: Warm, totally dry days, non-stop sun from above and a seemingly less clear air. The smell was a different one, especially when coming close to the big lake which slowly passed by to the left.

Adobe houses, Lago Titicaca

Flat roads, often pretty straight for many kilometers. High speed riding compared to what we had experienced the weeks before. I put more pressure into the tires to ride more efficiently. In parts the road got really wonderful with almost no traffic or wide shoulders, but in other parts we also had dangerous sand on the road and simultaneous overtaking maneuvers.

Riding dry countryside

There were plenty of slinging opportunities when stopping for a lunch break at the lake as you can see below. And the skills got more and more sophisticated, but still we missed everything you could miss, sometimes even the water :-)

Nice bike

The weather was nice and my father was cooking, so what better could I do than a small portrait shoot of the recumbent bike in the midday sun, in front of the blue lake and the blue sky.

Look into my eyes

Yes, I think these quad Seoul P4 LED light installation makes the recumbent bike look more cute, like C3PO from Star Wars.

Greenpeace bags detail view

The control center of the recumbent bike of my father. At the back the green GREENPEACE Ortlieb panniers, the mattress you sit on, the tiny little red bell on the left side of the handlebars together with the rear hydraulic rim brake. Now switching over to the right side you can see the Rohloff Speedhub shifter on the top of the handlebar, then the hydraulic front brake with some protection on the bottom.

In the center you find the rear suspension element and below the rack for the little panniers. The black teflon tubes tell the chain where to go and the small black wheel redirects the chain when the suspension element gets compressed.

SMGT portrait

Now here you can see the Forumslader black box with the 6V and 9-20V output, with the black shifter for the light and another tiny shifter for ON/OFF. There’s a steel feather inside the front fork for trouble free suspension, with the drawback of being really heavy and not very sensitive.

Titicaca lake Peru

When they were not dancing you could often see the local people hang around with their sheep or goats making for nice countryside-culture pictures and a lot of communication opportunities. Always very communicative and not letting you go whithout throwing a thousand questions at you :-)

Titicaca campsite

The camping like the people was wonderfully pleasant here. Often the locals told us where we could camp and so we found this nice spot about 30 vertical meters above the road leading along the Lago Titicaca. Nice mornings, nice days, nice evenings and no concerns about bad weather any longer.

Titicaca lake surfing

Turning our heads to the left we could always spot this massive mountain range behind the lake.

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New Zealand

Some call it “pedalers’ paradise”, but to get that you have to leave the main roads! One big question when cycling in New Zealand is, how to divide the time between the two countries and when you do not have a lot, whether to visit the North Island at all.
I had 2.5 months, so I decided the first 1.5 months exploring the South Island and the one month left in the north.

There are two small books, “pedalers’ paradise”, one for the north and one for the south. I got both of them from my friend Olly in Adelaide, the chief desorganizer of the Beijing to Paris 2007 Carfree Rally, born in Kiwi country. They are written in a very basic way but contain all the necessary information and are easily obtainable in book and map shops throughout New Zealand as I have seen while I was there. Additionally there is a good book about mountain biking in New Zealand which I had bought a copy of, nice for the occasional off-road ride and for contacting land-owners who’s country you’ll be crossing.

The traffic in New Zealand can be deadly as I’ve heard several times … a lot of cyclists are dying on the roads every year, so try to avoid traffic, maybe wear a reflector west and some cyclists even prefer to ride with a little mirror attached to their helmet so they can keep an eye on the traffic from behind and get off the road in emergencies. My main strategy was to avoid the busy streets as much as possible and it was fine.
So equipped with these information you can set out to explore the two islands and enjoy the wonderful countryside of New Zealand. Camp on the DoC (Department of Conservation) camp sites, they are cheap and can be found in many places. Wild camping was possible for me as I had been traveling in a small, green tent, but there’s a lot of barb wire and sometimes it’s quite tricky to find a campsite. Whenever I’ve asked a farmer or a local they were extremely friendly and nobody ever said “no” when I asked to camp on one of their fields - instead they invited me in to sleep in their guest bed!

Going off-road into the gravel you often find DoC huts which I’ve only used once, but which can be a great thing after a long and cold day on a bike. They work with a ticket system where you have to buy the tickets before or get a season pass if you intend to stay more often (it’s more economic when staying more than 10 times as I’ve been told).
The main season, New Zealand summer, can be very crowded with cyclists, but I somehow arrived too late for that and didn’t get to see the cyclist masses others have told me from. Instead the weather got a bit worse in places, but I didn’t even get any of the 14 000 mm rain on the West Coast of the South Island.
The East Cape on the North Island was also a remarkably nice ride with very little traffic, and Rotorua is definitely the MTB el Dorado of New Zealand, you can hire bikes there.

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Day 487 to 499 (2008-08-23 to 09-04): From Quito to the Peruvian border in La Balsa

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Leaving Quito provided an even greater drama for my father and me. We started with fresh power in our legs and the further we got south the more glimpses could we get from the nearby Cotopaxi volcano.

Recumbent touring cyclist escaping Quito to the south by you.

For my dad the departure was a pure nightmare: dirty city, even dirtier traffic and almost no opportunities to visit restrooms. The streets were filled with cars, many busses and trucks that let us back in dark black congestion clouds and all the head aches their honking caused - I suffered at least as much!
Eventually we escaped somehow after this Quito ordeal and dropped down 200 meters in altitude, all on paved road. The traffic jam to our left advanced at almost the same speed as we did on the tiny little shoulder the road provided. At a turn off towards Cotopaxi I was of two minds for a short time as the imagination of following this traffic for the rest of the day didn’t provide that a nice outlook compared to climbing up empty dirt roads, approaching the 4000 m mark towards this volcano. But we had only shortly talked about that option and dad was already programed to suffer under and survive the traffic, to not give up.

IMG_4330 by you.

So we climbed up another pass for an hour or two, and fled some heavy rain showers under the roof of a fuel station. Afterwards a long downhill brought us to the Ambato city where a good Chinese restaurant relieved our hunger.
“Quito, Quito, Quito!”, that’s what woke me up the next morning, together with non-stop barking of neighboring dogs. A bus driver or his assistant promoted the Quito bus for all to hear even though for me let alone the thought of returning to that big and congested metropolis caused a strong feeling to get even further away, fast!
So we started out, climbing up through Ambato city, a long, 1.5 hours ride, passing a really chaotic market and always watching out for the volcano east, a very active one that caused a lot of people in a nearby town called Baños to flee.

DSC01945 by you.

We should maybe have had a closer look into our maps because in the west a big volcano, 6310 m high Volcano Chimborazo, was hiding behind grey grey clouds and we could have taken a different route coming closer to this massive mountain from Mocha. So we passed Riobamba quickly, definitely the town with the most garbage beside the road, a total shithole, and camped some kilometers later on a hill beside the road. I had cooled out way too much and was happy about the early end of our cycling day and that I could jump into the sleeping bag two hours earlier.

small chanel for irrigation, Ecuador, looks like Panama Channel by you.

Dad on the other hand had a lot of spare energy - I don’t know which black hole shared with him that evening. But the results he brought home (into the tent) were more than I could have wished for: wonderful pictures of the magnificent Chimborazo volcano in orange evening clouds which I unfortunately didn’t get to see with my own eyes at all.

Ecuador, ice sale on the street, little village near Quito by you.

The following morning kept a bad surprise for us: After cycling for two hours we went to a small restaurant and ordered a desayuno (breakfast) just without meat. But instead of just serving us the plate all the guests at the neighboring tables got, we got every ingredient, the rice, the egg and vegetables on a single plate. I already thought that they were playing a game on us and was proofed right when we asked for the “la quenta” (bill): for four portions of rice, tiny ones, they charged 2 US dollars … that’s almost twice the price you have to pay for a typical 2 course lunch (almuerzo) or breakfast including a fresh juice. So from now on we were alarmed again and ensured ourselves to always ask for what they’ll charge before ordering - not that we were greedy but we just want to pay the fair price, everywhere, not the “gringo”-price.

Touring cyclist and hard working Ecuadorian farmer woman by you.

working hard with their hands, Ecuadorian farmers near Riobamba by you.

Now we cycled a long almost flat stretch, I would almost call it a tiny high plateau, towards Cuenca, the next bigger city heading southwards. But heavy winds slowed us down and also cooled down our bodies.

typical almuerzo (lunch) meal in Ecuador by you.

old woman eating lunch in a small road side restaurant, Colombia by you.

We had to put on more layers of clothes, I put on another long arm jersey and Elmar prepared similarly for the coming downhill that brought us after a few villages with a few smaller ascents in between to El Tambo, the village where a lot of tours to nearby Ingapirca ruin depart from.

guinea pigs in cages, wanna have one for dinner? (in Peru) by you.

But cycling long distances on a daily basis is not peanuts, so instead of planing an early morning trip to the ruins the coming day we relaxed for a few more hours and started out towards Azogues and Cuenca. What made cycling and life even harder for my dad these days was the loss of his sunglasses and only a short time afterwards the intrusion of a small particle into one of his eyes. He couldn’t get that small beast out for 3 days in a row and cycling got more dangerous, the nights less reviving and therefore life much harder.

Iglesia (church) in the evening, close to Pasto, Colombia by you.

big fiesta in a little village near Loja, many people sitting above each other by you.

Actually we didn’t intend to cycle into the city of Cuenca at all - there was no necessity and whenever you can avoid heavy city traffic that easily by just following the main road it’s probably the best choice for (touring) cyclists. But we arrived far too late, passing a hospital close to the city center at dusk. I told my father jokingly that we could spend the night in the hospital, they should have a few spare rooms, when my father answered that he prefers not to spend the night in a hospital and prefers not to be injured or ill. Just half a minute later a tiny field of gravel, almost not visible for the human eye in these low light situation, appeared in front of a roundabout and Elmar rode into it and fell down to the left, lying in the middle of the road while a few cars were approaching from behind at a rapid speed. I reacted quickly and tried to get all the attention of the cars by waving my hands and almost screamed to my father to get off the road.

IMG_4420 by you.

So now we seriously thought about a room in the hospital or at least a small spot to camp on the fresh mowed lawn. But when we met the security guards no they didn’t negotiate with us at all, not even after dad told them the whole story of our tour. Sometimes it’s helpful to talk with people to minimize the distance and remove hurdles, but in this situation the man in charge didn’t move the breadth of a hair!
The exhaustion was big and this evening we were pretty discouraged. It’s these situations when you’re really happy to find another person who saves your confidence into the people of a country and we didn’t only find one who helped us to find the hotels in town but also the really friendly hotel staff and later on the fast working waiter and friendly people in the El Paraiso vegetarian restaurant.

Restaurante Vegetariano El Paraiso, Cuenca, Ecuador by you.

Exiting from Cuenca I put on Rage Against the Machine … usually this kind of music is not my thing on the bike, much too aggressive and fast, but in this situation it just fits! I can’t stand the cars, the noise and congestion they create, the danger they put myself into and I also want to minimize the other distractions (people trying to get our attention, especially the attention from my father on the recumbent bike). So with “Freedom”, “Take the power back” and “Know your enemy” I managed to bring us out of town fast and alive.

Recumbent cyclist in the hilly and forested Ecuadorian countryside, 40 km from Cuenca by you.

We consciously enjoyed the riding in the green countryside outside of this big city again, the fresh air, the nice road following a valley towards the south of Ecuador. Climbing up to 3400 m I realized that today was not Elmar’s day - he still had the small particle in his eye and I was worried. When he started pushing the bike I knew we should call it a day pretty soon. My kilometer counter showed a total distance of 33 999 km when I pitched the tent next to a not finished brick house using some of the bricks to fix the tent. In this situations it’s not a luxury any more but provides real health benefits when you can prepare a warm tea in the evening, something that helps your body to regain the lost warmth and tranquilizes the mind somehow, too.

_MG_4441 by you.

Little Ecuadorian girl, pretty shy by you.

Cycling further towards Loja we came across a new street building technique of the Ecuadorians: blocks of concrete, half the width of the street and maybe 5 or 6 m in length. In the core they had steel bars that also dangerously stood out at the side. In some cases the concrete was quite fresh and the road workers put on massive rocks to prevent vehicles from driving on the blocks. Well, for the two of us this had quite some benefits traffic wise: Sometimes the road was closed for traffic for hours and locals already made a business of that, selling their goods to the waiting car drivers, to the waiting rich. But as cyclist you can pass and you can also use the blocks with stone on them.

recumbent cyclist on the road in Ecuador, new asphalt road constructed with stones on it to prevent car drivers by you.

In Loja I wanted to put some time into writing a new posting, putting pictures online and updating some parts of the website. That’s what I wanted. But the Ecuadorian system somehow didn’t want me to: 3 hours of work in the morning resulted in 10 uploaded pictures! And then the connection got lost, not only in one internet cafe but in the whole town - damn! So me, too, I had to slow down, get used to the South American speed. But in a way it’s pretty frustrating: You want to do your work well, you want to keep your family, friends and all the other readers updated but there are these constant problems with the quality of service in terms of hardware and also in terms of connection quality. And back then I didn’t even know that it could get worse!
Probably with a more powerful machine in the cycling panniers I could do 90% of the work offline, but so I’m limited to writing on the laptop and backing up the photos. But I and my father, too, told myself to keep cool, DON’T PANIC and that made vida en America Latina survivable for me.

Street in Podocarpas National Park leading down to Palanda, Ecuador by you.

sugar cane carrying donkey by you.

What looked like an easy 2 days ride along a river revealed itself as a continuous up and down with often 10% steep climbs on a pretty bad dirt road: The way to Zumba and border village La Balsa. One of the big disadvantages of only having the information from a 1 to 4 million map and the often even worse information from locals who seldom travel or don’t travel at all and if they travel, they take a ride in a car or bus and have no idea about distance whatsoever.

recumbent cyclist crossing a creek successfully by you.

One of the highlights in this pretty empty part was the meeting with a French archeologist in Palanda in the evening. We were surprised to see a blond and long haired man in the hostel we just negotiated the price with the owner. He also seemed to be happy to see a foreigner and immediately told us that we had the choice between two hostels, one worse than the other. But this had the benefit that the owners don’t ask you whether you want a room with cat or without.

6 USD room in Palanda, Ecuador by you.

French archeologist with kidding with Ecuadorian friends (they are much bigger than the French) by you.

So we decided to stay at the same place he stayed and he filled our evenings with sometimes eye opening and sometimes almost unbelievable stories about how the social system here works, where the money that makes some 50 times as rich as others comes from, that we’re riding along the main drugs smuggling route from Ecuador to Peru and even harder stuff.
Where did he know all that from? He’s been living here for more than 3 years, a total survivor mentality and adventurer of a special kind, paid by France or Europe to survive in a sometimes quite masochistic way, I guess. They must have called him the French Indiana Jones in a recent newspaper article and in town he’s the biggest employer, paying his workers about twice the normal rate: 10 US $ per day.
But he was not the only very motivating thing in this hostel: We found the following picture hanging above the toilet bowl pretty motivating - that´s how you do it! :-)

instructions what to do on the Ecuadorian toilet by you.

In parts the last part of the road towards Zumba got even worse: Freshly evened road surface with sometimes big rocks and other times deep loose soil your tires can perfectly sink into only topped by gradients with 15 and more percent in corners. The quality factor of these roads was really low but therefore the adventure factor really high! And come on, that’s what we’ve set out for, right?

Wooden huts on the road side near Palanda, Ecuador by you.

-) by you.

Our archeologist friend predicted a 5 hours ride of 50 km and what did my bike computer display in the evening: 48,6 km with 5:04 hours of riding time. Damn, how could he predict that precise, definitely the winner of all the information according distance and travel time so far!

Typical road side shop with glass shelves in Ecuador - you find similar ones with the same great variety in China and Tibet by you.

In the evening the next story almost unthinkable except in these parts of the world: In almost all the tiny roadside shops you can buy pasta. But in the restaurants you can never buy pasta! And even the plates listed in the menu are not available … the most heard answer these days: “no hay” (I don’t have it). So our new strategy: Buy in the shops, bring to the restaurants. We gave them spaghetti, tomatoes, onions and garlic and explained in detail how they should prepare it. The woman took the stuff and disappeared in the kitchen. Then a long time passed, probably an hour or more and the first woman left the kitchen, then the restaurant and only two minutes later the other woman followed. Who can be left in the kitchen, I asked my father. Then I went to check: All the ingredients still in their plastic bags lying on the table. First try unsuccessful!

Small restaurant in Zumba, Ecuador by you.

But we didn’t give up that easily but went around town asking other restaurants to cook for us. One of the women we asked replied that, yes, it’s possible for her to master this extremely demanding job of cooking spaghetti with a tomato sauce for us but that she closes her little restaurant at 9 p.m. and that it’s already 8:30 p.m., so, no, she won’t cook it for us this evening but we could come back the following noon of course.
Impossible! We ended up cooking the stuff in front of our room, the last meal in Ecuador. At least we didn’t get sick or diarrhea from this evening’s food - I already had it from the dinner in a Palanda restaurant.

Gringos have to inscribe themselves into the guestbook by you.

Gringos have to inscribe themselves into the guestbook by you.

(entry in the guestbook: Gringos!)

360 deg panorama of La Bolsa border bridge, Ecuador Peru border by you.

With these sensational experiences we headed towards the border crossing to Peru in La Balsa and were really happy to not have any more of these experiences before leaving the country - there’s a healthy amount of everything and for us this amount had been more than fulfilled already. So after a bit more than two weeks in the country we didn’t loose a tear crossing the massive concrete bridge to Peru, but of course only after getting our departure stamp from the Ecuadorian immigration first and chatting with two French women, coming from the Peruvian side. Elmar almost crossed the border without the departure stamp from the Ecuadorians, I had to call him back from the bridge. The French girls also forgot to get the stamp and later came back to the Peru immigration office :-)

recumbent cyclist meeting two French backpackers at the border crossing Ecuador to Peru by you.

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Day 478 to 481 (2008-08-14 to 17): Colombia: Popayan, Pasto, Ipiales through a dry valley

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Eating vegetarian menu (almuerzo) in Popayan, Colombia por Velaia (ParisPeking).

Favourite cafe in Popayan. They were serving baked stuff and cakes but no cafe or hot water! And the bill was always (whatever we took) 7700 Pesos! por Velaia (ParisPeking).

Spending half the time of our 3 days stay in Popayan in front of ancient and slow computers with even slower connections and on the other hand watching “dolphin fast” Michael Phelps win one gold medal after the other at the Olympic Games 2008 (Juegos Olimpicos), we got enough and were ready to leave town.

The scenery south of Popayan was pretty hilly with a lot of green beside the road and we met quite some work-out road cyclists on our way towards Pasto. Half the day had passed when we began a final downhill in the muggy heat of the early afternoon. At the end we arrived in a dry and brown valley where the road started the hilly up and down we’ve already had more than enough from again. Elmar found a really nice campsite with a magnificent view over the dry valley and the mountain ranges to the east and west - the only drawback being the 10 minute walk through thorny terrain on a rocky single trail - a nice downhill ride with the mountain bike the next morning though! From the tiny little hill we could watch remote flashes illuminate the sky and thereby showing the silhouettes of the surrounding mountains - a truely impressive spectacle and nice reward after a day long ride on our bikes, covering almost 130 km distance and 1800 m gain in altitude.

Only 1.5 liters of water were left in our bottles the following morning and our map didn’t show a village for quite a distance to come. So we rationed the water and did our best to keep evaporation from breath and sweat as small as possible. But by the time we had arrived at tiny settlement with an even more tiny shop both of us had dry throats and we were angry about the engineers building all the ups and downs into the road - freaks! PONY Malta is a kind of beer without alcohol but a lot of sugar (corresponding to Maltin in Venezuela, if I remember correct); compared to the other soft drinks available it’s probably the one with most nutritional value. We couldn’t get a freshly prepared natural juice, but I told my father the German equivalent to the admittedly ‘not so vegetarian’ phrase “a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush” and he had to agree.

_MG_3750 por Velaia (ParisPeking).

One and a half hours later, after a extended noon break with a lot of “limonada” (lemonade) and mountains of rice with salad, we found ourselves in a steep and hefty uphill, crawling up the steep road together with massive trucks and other vehicles.

_MG_3757 por Velaia (ParisPeking).

Taking the frontal portrait of my Dad on the recumbent bike fighting against the mountain caused quite some pain as I rammed a 3 cm long thorn into the soft flesh of my left palm (the flesh below the little finger). And I was lucky to not break the thorn when removing it - I’ve been told that little parts like the tip of a thorn or some glass sliver can wander your body for years and even cause death.

_MG_3773 por Velaia (ParisPeking).

As the scenery was not the most taking we were happy about every distraction we could find beside the road: One thing that caught our attention were the few roosters that had leashes attached to their feet. Probably these birds are a special breed for cock fights that are very popular in South America (even though we haven’t seen one yet).

When stopping for a freshly prepared orange juice we found a few puppies in really bad shape, only bones and skin almost. And even though they supposedly must have had hard pain in their stomaches the curiosity about the moving camera in front of their eyes still prevailed and so I got this wonderful shot documenting the triumph of curiosity:

_MG_3786 por Velaia (ParisPeking).

After a long day of mainly cycling uphill we arrived at a fuel station with restaurant and motel just in time - Elmar had already suggested to pitch the tent somewhere beside the road and to go without dinner, but my stomach doubted that was a good idea; besides the doubts of my stomach we couldn’t make out a proper spot beside the road anyway. And with almost 8 hours riding time, little food and more than 2100 altimeters gained I surely don’t exaggerate by saying that our hunger couldn’t get much bigger.

_MG_3797 por Velaia (ParisPeking).

Then the other day we cycled through Pasto. We didn’t consider stopping a good idea but continued straight through towards Ipiales - if I remember correct we’ve been in town sometime during the weekend and the traffic on the roads to and from the city were packed!

drinking 1.75 liters of strawberries yoghurt near Pasto, Colombia by you.

At a dairy shop close to a dairy product factory we bought a 1.75 liter bottle of yoghurt with strawberries (con fresa) and gulped it down like hungry wolves together with 2 pieces of cheese cake - yum-yum! And as we sat there drinking our glasses full of the creamy liquid I suddenly spotted a truck with massive gas tank rolling downhill 50 meters in front of us. I couldn’t make out the driver but one or two seconds later 4 or 5 men running after the ruck! AND this strange group headed straight towards a fuel station at ever increasing speed … wow, stuff for a Hollywood movie, I tell you! Now, what about the outcome you might ask. Well, that one was not too Hollywood like: One of the men made it and stopped the massive vehicle just before the fuel pump and the road just behind.

We camped not far from that spectacular incident 200 m away from the road on grazing land and would have had a wonderful view on the nearby volcano if not for the clouds.

IMG_3885 by Velaia (ParisPeking).

The following morning held a nice reward for the previous day’s long uphill suffering: A 1400 m altitude drop down to 1800 m above zero, what a ride! The adrenaline from this fast race had to hold for the rest of the day because from now on we had to climb up slowly again, back to 2900 m, the town of Ipiales.

Half an hour’s ride before reaching our target we met Caro and Marcos, two Argentinian cyclists on their way around the world. We talked and exchanged information for about 15 minutes and then wished each other a “bien viaje”. Check out their website under www.mundoapedal.com (probably Spanish only).

These two have been the first touring cyclists we’ve met in all South America so far. But that should change the same evening! We stayed in a cheap backpacker hostel and by pure coincidence two Scottish touring cyclists, Nick and Vicky happened to spend the night in the same hostel. They had been on the road for a long time and suggested a nice route close to the Bolivian Chilean border - 5 days almost no people but wonderful scenery.

_MG_3910 por Velaia (ParisPeking).

Ipiales is a border town between Colombia and Peru, so before leaving we checked the Lonely Planet South America guide for information on the border crossing, possible departure taxes and so on. But this time no departure tax, only the usual stamps and visa at the border - that scores second after the “no borders”-policy in Europe on my list of preferred border crossing procedures.

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Day 462 to 467 (2008-07-29 to 08-03): Tunja to and in Bogota

Watch my Colombia Slideshow with all pics till Popayan on flickr

Hunza Hotel, Tunja, hotel room, Colombia by you.

Because we had a few more things to do this morning, including the final lines of an article for the website, the sorting and downloading of the pictures to the iBook (over USB 1.1!) and because we hadn’t seen anything of the city center yet, including some of the most beautifully decorated churches of Colombia, we decided to use the room all the time till 2 pm.
Additionally there was the breakfast buffet and we used all the endurance from cycling to gulp down almost everything they had on the buffet and to keep the 4 people in the kitchen employed (there were only 2 other guests in the restaurant that morning).
An interesting feature of the elevator in the Hunza Hotel was, that one could push a small button and it was locked! So for about 20 minutes one of the two elevators was ours as there were not a lot of guests and the staff didn’t get the old needle printer going to print us our receipt - Elmar fixed the printer within 2 or 3 minutes! We put all our Ortlieb bags inside so there was just enough space for two more people, our private elevator - almost like in the Borat movie when Borat enters the elevator and tells the hotel employee that he won’t take a smaller room :-)

IMG_2800 by you.

If time can pass slowly, then the rest of the day on the bike it definitely did so! Dark clouds, a lot of up and down with nothing special, just the usual green and brown fields, and the heavy traffic made time pass at snail speed today. Two or three times we had to flee from rain and we didn’t really get into cycling today. After every stop the legs were heavy again and just as we got going the next “rain interruption” came over us.
On top of that we got a brown-slippery two kilometers stretch at the end of today’s ride. I escaped from that with brown dots all over my face and clothes and the usually green panniers also got a brown touch in this 3 minute downhill beside the roadwork.
Lucky us that we got accepted in a small posada that evening - but on the other hand the bed turned out to be way too soft and when we got up early the next morning I felt even worse than the evening before! That’s the time when you need a one or two hours lasting massage, like my colleagues at the Tour de France get it every evening - I guess I should slightly adjust my profession :-) And yet another day along the packed 55 road towards Bogota. Not a pleasure to ride here at all and the high peaks of the Andes I had imagined, the snow covered ones and the dry brown altiplanos (high plateaus), the large almost empty areas, where are they? Instead we get a lot of green, wet and populated places with traffic and bad weather … after yet another day of that mess I was really happy when we turned left in Sesquile to take a less frequented alternative route into Bogota.

Lake near Bogota (Guatavita Lago), Colombia by you.

This road first brought us through a tiny village where we could stock up for dinner and then lead to a lake, the Guatavita Laguna. This man made lake is about 10 km long and we found a nice spot after about 2 km, just 15 m beside the road behind trees and bushes and right above the lake.

DSC01659 by you.

Now Elmar went for a photo shooting session down to beach - and got some quite interesting results with real educative value (see above) - while I pitched the tent and prepared everything for dinner, a three course meal starting with a nice champignon creme soup followed by a pasta course with tomato sauce and a dessert of bollitas, strongly spiced and golf ball sized round globes.

Bogota city view panorama, Colombia by you.

Then came the final day to Bogota and as usual the last stage looks a lot easier than it actually turns out to be. I knew that cities are a serious stress factor if you’re on a heavy loaded bike, especially if there’s a lot of traffic and if you have to take a lot of care for your luggage. With light bikes you can move a lot easier through traffic and the crowds on the bike lane, you can cycle up and down the pedestrian bridges and don’t have to lift the bike up and down the sidewalks. But to make things worse we only arrived in the city at 3 pm. First we had to cycle along the lake, cross a small mountain range into another valley and finally climb up another 300 or 400 height meters to reach the north eastern outskirts of Bogota.

A normal sight in Bogota, and in fact also in minor towns or villages in Colombia, are camouflaged soldiers walking through the streets or protecting special places. They often carry a machine gun in their hands. And I guess they’re not there for no reason!

Luckily we didn’t have to cycle to the southern part of town, the part where the poor often live in slums. Instead we cycled to the home of CouchSurfer Mauricio close to the shopping center Grand Estacion and the central university. On the way we got to see a lot of scary things, the scariest being a rasta cyclist with long hair doing a wheely non-stop besides us on the narrow cycling path, then standing up on the handlebars of his bicycle, surfing the bike through the crowded streets of Bogota! Totally crazy but extremely entertaining for us :-)

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After crossing a railway line we had circumnavigated the place from three sides before we finally found the right address and Stefan, also CouchSurfer and good friend of Mauricio, received us at the entrance and greeted us with a “Na, wie geht’s?”. He told us that he’s come from Vienna for half a year to Bogota to improve his Spanish and study and teach German at the nearby university.

Che Square, Central Bogota Public University, Colombia by you.

Together with Mauricio and Stefan we had a really pleasant time in Bogota. Stefan often prepared delicious meals in the evenings and without him only half the entries on our TODO list would have been finished at the end of our stay in the capital. He knew how to get around town and his Spanish skills helped a lot!

We didn’t only go for a visit to the old city center, to the place where Bogota was founded, but also went outdoor clothes shopping to the northern parts of town and partying till midnight in the city center.

And Mauricio didn’t only prepare magical fruit juices (jugos naturales) but also gave some lessons in Salsa dancing!

Bogota early morning panorama, Colombia by you.

On sundays more than 100 km of Bogota’s roads are closed for motorized traffic and pedestrians, skaters and cyclists take over the street. There are small shops where you can buy food and drinks, there are big public dancing lessons on public places and ramps for stunt skaters are put into place to make it attractive for young and old to go out. Together with my father I set out to enjoy big part of my birthday on the road with thousands of other cyclists - it couldn’t have been any better, just the right timing! A wonderful big birthday party for a cycling nut like me :-)

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Day 458 to 461 (2008-07-25 to 28): Cycling from Malaga to Tunja

Malaga airport, Colombia by you.

So after spending 2 hours on the Plaza in Malaga, enjoying the friendly and communicative people and deeply breathing the atmosphere of this small town in the mountains we got going again, starting into a long downhill, passing SAN JOSE DE MIRANDA after five minutes and descending faster and faster on a steep road towards Tipacoque. But not too fast! Elmar’s break pads had been through and we had to stop and exchange them - you don’t wanna go into a steep downhill on a pretty bad road with no power on the brakes!

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The countryside changed dramatically again, descending down from the green fields and green trees into a valley where cacti grow and people dry tobacco plant leaves. Down in the valley on 1200 m altitude it’s hot, there are no trees but bushes and a lot of brown soil.

In Tipacoque we had a short lunch dinner and tried to sit out the heat in the restaurant and make it less wearying by drinking a lot of cold drinks.

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But we hadn’t been in the valley to stay: just after the village we cycled on a bridge leading over a small river. In the corner after the bridge there was a fat layer of dust on the road, 5 to 10 centimeters at times. This reminded me a lot of the situations in parts of Kyrgyzstan and Tibet, only the color was a bit more brownish, not the same gray I had a year ago in the Pamirs and on the Tibetan plateau.

Climbing up the western side of the valley we got a few nice views, especially when suddenly (after one hour of climbing of course) a vertical wall appeared falling down 200 m into the valley. We continued a bit further along this wall to our left and found a nice spot to pitch the tent, just 50 meters away from the vertical drop on a part of a previous version of the road we’d been on. But we were not alone: A friendly farmer, his wife and friend and a dozen cows were curious about the strangers with the strange bike and watched us pitch the tent and cook dinner.

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Just in time to watch us bring down the tent the next morning the friendly old farmer came back from the nearby village. In many other nations, especially the western developed countries it’d be unimaginable to just take off one or two hours from work, but down here in South America life goes at a different pace with obviously different priorities - an observation we’ve made several times now. If people are interested they just interrupt their work for a while, watch us pass, shout a few questions (mostly “de donde van” and “de donde son ustedes” - they want to know where we’re from, like the “atcudda” that still echos through my head from passing Uzbekistan) and wave as a small thank you for the change in their probably often quite monotone workday. The policemen change their schedule to see us cycle by a second and sometimes even a third time and car drivers stop, turn around or even follow us at a slow speed.

Evening campsite on the way to Tunja, Colombia by you.

One especially for my father on the recumbent extremely annoying thing is the continuous usage of their horns to draw our attention towards them. But I have to admit that I’m impressed by the endurance with which my father still explains everything to every interested person in detail: Maybe it was similar with me but by the time I had arrived in China my patience had gone down extremely and the only things I continued explaining to the Uyghur, Tibetans, Chinese and Mongolians were the strange pedals and the “san” (three) headlights. I wonder whether that’ll change during the next few months of cycling. The way Elmar holds out his left hand while cycling reminds me a lot to the pope in his special “Papamobil” when taking a bath in the masses :-)

Sitting in a small cafe at the morning a young neighbor boy had birthday and got a big present: a bicycle! The only problem was they couldn’t find a pump … so I had to help out with my small one and inflate the tires. But something still didn’t work out and two soldiers sitting nearby took part in getting the bike going - at the end 8 or 10 people stood around and participated in getting the bike going!

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To refill our water reserves we bought a “5 litros bolsa de agua” - yes, true, they are selling their water, juices and sometimes even milk in bags. Water comes in 300 or 350 ml and 5 l bags and milk in 450 or 900 ml bags. Later on in Soata we bought a lot of fruits for refilling our energy storage on the road and filled up a last time in Susacon, now on 2600 m altitude already.

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(election advertisement between cacti)

But the day was not over yet! We heard loud bangs from the mountain in front of us and pessimists could have thought the FARC, the major guerilla group in Colombia, would attack - far away from that! A group of men were throwing hand sized metal cups towards a target, namely a box aligned in a 45 degree angle and filled with mud. In the center of the mud there was some kind of explosive that caused the bang when hit.

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The day ended on 3400 m altitude in a wide valley. We put the tent on a green field next to a farmer house and hoped for a reviving night. But it was not that easy! One of the dogs of the family we camped beside was totally upset with us pitching the tent in his empire and when we’d just finished dinner and writing diaries the dog approached us barking with no end. When he came to close I got up and threw a massive stone after him. But that only brought temporary relief and only 5 minutes later he came even closer to the tent. Elmar was right when he said to me that he might bit the tent and damage it thereby, so I got up a second time and swore to myself that this time I would do the job right. So I chased the beast for 10 minutes in the wet and cold night, throwing all the stones I could get in my hand. I was so angry about this monster stealing my sleep that I fired the stones after him like from a machine gun. Finally when he had fled several times around the house and decided that that wouldn’t increase the distance between the two of us he ran away and I could only see the reflections from my LED headlight in his eyes - not a K.O. but I was definitely the winner! Silence.

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Unbelievable! Just 2 hours after starting the next day another beast declared war with us, but I still had some of the totally “unbuddhis” dog-hate from last nights devil in my heart and already 3 spare stones in my pockets. I managed to land all three stones in the dog, a 3 - 0 win, strike!

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Somehow we had the 150 000 city of Tunja as a unspoken target, but we didn’t know what’s been in front of us: 1400 altimeters with an unending up and down, 70 km of road works and extremely crazy drivers, dark congestion clouds from factories beside the road and as if that was not enough my father hit the wall (”Hungerast” in German) and we had to do a quick “cookie recharge” beside the road as there was no restaurant for miles and miles! The altimeter didn’t show 1400 altimeters but 46 4000! And that was only after it had hit the 99 999 altimeters 10 minutes before arriving at the restaurant - the reason for that: almost empty batteries of the VDO MC1.0 caused the altimeter to disfunction.

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Half an hour after dark we eventually made it into the city center and inspected two hotels. Dad decided to stay in the Hunza hotel and I was absolutely fine with that decision: a 4 star hotel with warm water like from a waterfall, almost like a water massage! The room was big and we had a nice view on the western part of the city. And breakfast was included, so we had something to dream from during the long night :-)

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And we ordered a vegetarian family pizza, bigger than my father, together with 1.65 l of pepsi to the room and wolfed more than two thirds of it down within an hour - what a filling experience.

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