Sunday, February 12, 2012

200 mosquito bites, and counting….

Ciudad Perdida (Lost City)

Day 1 - A New Adventure

And the adventure would start mighty early.  The day before I had gotten some new roommates, 2 Irish girls.  That night, the girls didn’t make it back to the room, and had talked about going fishing at 6am the next day.  Sure enough, 5:40am rolls around, and one of the girls alarm is going off, super loud, locked inside her locker…

Instead of lying there, suffering, I just got up and went down stairs to read.  I ended up falling asleep, waking up with just enough time to get my stuff packed, my big backpack stored at my hostel, and get a little breakfast before my 8:30am ride picked me up.

Our group consisted of 11 brave souls heading into the jungle, however the real trouble was getting all eleven, plus a driver, into a tiny Land Cruiser.  It was a tight squeeze, but quickly became real friendly with my fellow travelers: 3 from the UK (London, Dublin, Scotland), 2 Germans, 4 Dutch, 1 Norwegian, and I rounded out the group as the lone American.  Everyone spoke really good English, a nice change of pace.

Three hours in the jeep, half of which was insane off-roading, had everyone feeling stiff right before the hike.  We all had lunch together and were becoming fast friends.  Lunch was sandwiches, except they gave us tons of bread, very little ham, and even less cheese.  So more accurately, lunch was bread.

The hike today was only about 8kms, but it felt a lot further than that.  It started pretty flat with a couple stream crossings and with a great swimming hole where lots of little fish hungout in the water right around you.  Then the trail turned uphill, and I got super sweaty, like through my shirt sweaty.  We stopped for oranges and watermelon along the way.

I was so hungry I thought I’d die that night, dinner was amazing, piles of rice, chicken in pineapple tropical sauce.  And because we were traveling with half girls, I got lots more to eat!

I was absolutely exhausted and went to bed quite early while the ruckus group was still drinking beer and building a pyramid.

Day 2 – The Heat & Hunger

Three members of our group disappeared last night, they had to get up super early this morning and hike all day, as they were doing the whole hike in 4 days, so the 2 Germans and the Dutchman were gone.

Today was another sweet day, a big climb in the morning, with a large decent in the afternoon, and oranges and pineapples for snacks.  We were all delighted by today’s swimming hole, cooler water, but surrounded by warm sunny rocks, big open area to swim, with several rocks of varying height to jump.

We also saw the natives (Koguis), where they have their ceremonies and weddings, and one of the huts they live in.  It’s just weird to think that there are people that still live off the land like this, no technology, just cloth for clothing, rubber boots for shoes, the kids still run around barefoot.

At the ceremony place, a child walk right up to our group and we gave him candy, then he ran off.  It’s just crazy to image being in their world, and slowly enter ours.  It sometimes is hard to say which way is better way of life… I paid money to come out and experience this life, I’d never wanted to pay to go to work.

We just a huge delicious lunch at the end of our second day of hiking, soup (which at first I was like, ’Soup?! Are you kidding? I’m starving!!’) which ended up being incredibly filling and satisfying.  So much so that our entire group and the rest of the camp just passed out for about an hour.

This trail is pretty tough, but not in the traditional hiking sense.  It is pretty steep, and we seem to always be either climbing straight up or going straight down.  For me though, the toughest part of this trip (the whole trip really) is food.  I just feel so hungry all the time.  For the hike, it just makes it so you struggle towards the end of each day, and then get a huge food coma after you eat.  You are only fed three times a day, so if you miss it or don’t each enough, tough, and you go hungry.  The heat is another beast, the sun, heat, and humidity all combine in a sweltering combination.  It just makes hiking that much tougher.

I’ve been getting eaten to shit by the sand flies, the mosquitoes are manageable, but the sand flies are way smaller and there are way more of them.  I also found a tick on me today.

We had diner again as a group, this time by candle light.  We learned about the local’s tradition of using crushed up snail shells and coca leaves, mixed with saliva, to build a large circle around their crushing device.  When the boy is 17 he starts, when he turns 18 he’s finished and takes a wife.  I was again exhausted, and with no electricity, it was again an early night.

Day 3 – Finding a Groove

Ladies and gentleman, this is what traveling is all about.  After just another incredible day hiking around the jungle, it’s now late afternoon, just been fed a delicious pasta lunch, lounging in a hammock, overlooking a pleasant river, that fills the air with a consistent relaxing melody.  It’s these moments that I’ll always remember, cherish, and make life truly special.

As the days wear on, we continue to get deeper into the jungle, more treacherous, and more dangerous.

We crossed a bridge supported by big cables, that had only been constructed and in use for 2 weeks – I believe that’s called a guinea pig.  We also crossed another bridge that appeared to have been constructed that day.

I was talking to a Dutch girl today, Sonne.  The guide was a little ways in front, and after he passed (but before me) this huge snake launched out in front from my left across the trail, and disappeared into the brush on the right.  It was crazy! It was mostly black with a red or orange stripe on top.  I couldn’t be 100% sure, but it looked an awful lot like the one our guide warmed us about, in my broken Spanish I understood – dangerous (peligrosa), don’t stop to take pictures, just move along.

The rest of the day was great, another nice swimming hole with super clean water.

My body is getting used to the food, not nearly as hungry – breakfast of eggs, toast, and fruit was very filling today.  But the bites are terrible, itchy, relentless… I can’t stop scratching them.

Finished up the day playing asshole, then werewolves, which is basically mafia, had a nice dinner, and then chilled out. It’s been nice the last few days to really get to know the group.

Day 4 – The Lost City

Today was the lost city, but it didn’t start off that great.  We got up at 6am for breakfast and got on the road early.

I was told that there were 5 stream crossings on the way up, so 10 total, so I just blew into the first river crossing in my shoes.  As it turns out, that would be the first and only water crossing so I had wet shoes all day.  And my camera battery died on the first photo opp of the day.  I had 2 other batteries with, but they were in my pack, back at camp, blast!

The lost city trail ends with a 300m climb up to 1200m, and with 1200 steps.  After that we were eager to sit down at the top, and have a history lesson –

The people lived there from 500-1600 AD, but when the Spanish arrived at Santa Marta, killing and enslaving the people, the tribe got scared and retreated higher into the mountains.  They went so high (4000m) they eventually died, leaving their city and wealth untouched.

The city was discovered in 1973, the first to find it gathered all the gold they could find and took it back to town, talked of the treasure, and it brought out a ton of thieves.  They would ultimately destroy 80% of the original structures digging for gold.  Also the homes were all build out of wood, so the only remains today are the stones.

Eventually the police stepped in, to stop the digging and destruction, but police corruption allowed it to continue.  One day, when all the treasure had been unburied, all the police officers except the captain went down for a swim in the river.  The captain took the opportunity to kill all the cops, thieves, and locals, and stole all the treasure, disappearing forever.

Today, the Koguis are the ancestors of the original Ciudad Perdida tribe.  However, the ones living close to town are beginning to use money and trade, which is started to ruin their culture. 

Tours have been coming since 1983.  In 2000, a group of 8 tourists were taken hostage by gorillas and demanded that a prisoner be released.  Three months later the prison and hostages were released with no one being harmed.  That is why today there is military atop the ruins with large guns.

There used to be cocaine production along the trail, it wasn’t officially part of the hike, but all the guides knew about it, and tourists could pay a few extra pesos and check it out.  About 10 months ago, the president of Colombia went on the tour and learned about the drug production, and shut it down :(

After the history lesson, we spent another hours at the top before heading down the mountain, being careful not to fall and break something.  Unfortunately there was a Slovakian couple that was not so lucky, or the woman for that matter, as she fell on the way down the stairs and broke her arm.  She had to wear a sling the rest of the way down the mountain, it did not look fun.

We stopped at camp 3 for lunch, rice and sausage, and got some quality time with a hammock while my socks and shoes were able to dry in the hot sun.

There was a clear shift going on today, maybe the waking up early or the extra miles, but we were all a bit quieter on the decent at the end of the day.  At camp 2 we stopped for the night, I finally had a shower, and then read until it was dark.  We got to have one last group dinner, with a side of sorrow, as it would be the last big family dinner of the trip.

As the candles were again beginning to burn low, everyone was tired but no one wanted to leave the table, to say goodbye to that little part of the trip, and our lives.  We all exchanged emails and agreed to meet up again soon, possibly for dinner or carnival next week.  Then we retired for the evening.

Day 5 - The Finale

The day was actually quite nice, we had to get up and eat breakfast for the first time without the others, which was sad.  The hike itself was nice, but also long and full of downhill switchbacks on tired legs and aching knees.

We didn’t talk too much on the walk back, I was already thinking about the next few days of the trip.  I tried to stay in the moment, but couldn’t.

We got snacks back at camp one, before the huge decent to the end.  The celebratory beers and Champaign were mighty tasty, along with the fish and fried bananas.

Jesus (our guide) was a funny guy, big fat belly (seemed strange for a guide whose job it is to walk).  He only spoke Spanish but luckily Anna was nearly fluent and could translate everything.  The best though was when he’d yell for Anna to tell the group to ‘vamos’ or ‘desayuno’ words anyone traveling in South America for more than a minute know by heart.

But when we got back to town, Jesus’ appearance made a ton of sense, he was literally chugging beers and double fisting.  I couldn’t decide if he was an alcoholic, or if in his little Colombian brain we were really that annoying.

The worst part came when we got back into the jeep, and perform the whole off-roading fiasco all over again.

The last interesting things I noticed – much of the driving takes place out in the country, and I hadn’t noticed many (if any) gas stations along the way.  But how silly of me, the dude holding up the hose is actually a gas station, and he’ll siphon gas into your car, if the price is right…

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