Thursday, November 24, 2011

Travelogue#1: Quito Ecuador

September 16,  2011


Hola mis amigos!!

Well for some of you that don't know I decided to do a 7 month trip down to South America starting in Ecuador. Since I won't be working in the oilfields for awhile (next April) I thought I would have a little adventure down in South America, learn some spanish, get into shape and a few other things.

I got a flight to Ecuador with Continental airlines and was surprised with how cheap they are. No free meals on that 4+ hour flight to Houston except for food for sale and no free movies or TV watching where they have a credit card you can swipe in front of the seat in front of you for $5.99 for 2 hours of viewing or $7.99 if your flight is longer. Just nickel and diming the passengers and I didn't see one passenger exchange money on that flight. Not only that but they charged me $45 for my second suitcase which I was unaware of since my travel agent (flight center) said only on the flight back in Peru would they charge $50 for the second suitcase but I should have read the fine print myself instead of relying on them. Don't think it would have changed anything though. They gave a chinsey little meal on the Houston to Quito flight which was 5 hours long.

There was a huge line up at customs in Quito with different flights arriving at the same time. I had made prior arrangements from my hotel to have a guy pick me up at the airport where they would wave a sign with my name on it when I left customs but I didn't see any sign that had my name on it and I waited around for 20 minutes checking different signs but no sign saying "Kevin". So I left the building where taxi drivers and touts were directing me to their taxis and mini vans and I just went with one who didn't speak a word of english as he grabbed my luggage without asking and then I found out he only knew one word of english which was "Tip!". A tip for moving my bags 20 feet.

I don't trust anyone in these types of countries since I know us white folks (Gringos) are seen only as walking ATM machines so I pretended I didn't understand his english but then gave him $1US and he didn't seem pleased (I guess the rich Americans are use to giving him $5US+ for little effort. This type of behaviour is what instills in them the idea that Gringos are walking ATM machines and why we have to pay white man tax everywhere.

There were some older Americans in this mini van I took and I guess after talking with them they were all in Quito for some religious conference and they all knew each other even though they were all from different places in the US like Pennsylvania, seattle, Texas, etc... Their hotel had made transportation arrangements for them so it was all a done deal but none of these drivers spoke a word of english and no matter what I said they nodded indicating they would take me there even if I said I wanted to go to the planet "pop tart" they would say "no problemo, we will get you there". Not very reassuring! Anyhow, after talking to these religious Americans I thought going with them into downtown Quito can't be that bad as I at least closer to my destination and if the driver tried to play a money game with me at the last minute (which they do) like it cost $30US I would just laugh and walk away since my pre arranged taxi was $12US just for me. Well he took us to the Hilton hotel which didn't look very luxurious as they do in the states and I went into the hotel to speak with a bilingual hotel worker who told the driver where I wanted to go which was just 5 minutes away and he took me there.

I was amazed while we drove into Quito from the airport at what a shit hole Quito is. I just saw slums on the way in with no lights on and no one on the street. Not a single person at 11:40pm and it was like a ghost town. My first impressions was shock and I was kicking myself that I didn't just get a round trip ticket to Costa Rica as I had originally planned. I thought if this is Ecuador there is no way I will last even 3 months here, not to mention 6 months on my tourist visa.

Well he dropped me off at my budget hotel of $12.50US per night (typical Kevster special) and he buzzed the metal door and spoke in spanish where it seemed everything was OK so I gave the guy $10US and he said "Yeah amigo!!" and I proceeded through the metal door after being buzzed in and walking down a walled 3 foot wide alley in the pitch black for 50 feet until I came to a big metal door that looked like the door to Jabba the Huts palace from the movie "The return of the Jedi". It was a huge metal door and it was pitch black in this narrow alley where I couldn't see anything with no lights on so being at this locked big metal door I said somewhat loudly "Hola!! Hola!!" and then held my breath for the next 5 minutes as I intently listened for any movement inside the building and there was NONE!! At that point a premonition quickly flashed into my mind where they failed to pick me up at the airport (they must have forgot) and probably failed to remember that I was arriving at midnight (probably forgot again and fell asleep) and my imagination told me I would probably be sleeping in this small dark alley until morning when they woke up and at that realization I began to panick and screamed out "FUCKING HOLA!!!!!". Just in case spanish speakers don't understand what I just said, that means open the fuckin door NOW!!!!!!

I was having what George Canstanzas father off of the sitcom Seinfeld calls a "Serenity now!" moment. Relieving stress. So after saying that I held my breath again to listen in the silence of any movement inside the building and there was NONE! At that time I heard my driver revving up his mini van probably getting ready to head back to the airport so I dropped my luggage and sprinted the 50 feet in the narrow pitch black alley to get to the first entrance door and I sprinted so fast that Ben Johnson would have had a hard time keeping up and just as I arrived at the original first door to open it to wave down the driver someone shouted from the other big metal door that they were there so I returned as he led me through the big metal door and as we began to ascend the stairs he reached for my luggage to help and knowing how they operate by moving my suitcases 10 feet and then expecting a tip I said I was fine and we would probably get there faster if I carried them. It seemed like a good plan at the time but I didn't realize I would be going up 5 flights of stairs to reach the $12.50US penthouse suite at which time I thought if he carried my bags that definitely would have been worth a tip.

He showed me the room and it was exactly like the pictures on their website. This young guy Carlos didn't speak a word of english as he said "Manana, manana" and I said "Si, si, manana" meaning I would pay for the room in the morning since it was midnight and he could go back to sleep. The room was a typical Kevinder special but I was comfortable and got value for my money haha. It had hot water and a private bathroom and even an extra bunk bed if I wanted to bring in some friends haha.

I got up at 10am and heading down where a spanish woman greeted me on the 4th floor on my way down to reception where she guided me down. They knew who I was and I met Jose who speaks very good english and he was the one I was emailing with before making arrangements. They have a spanish school here where they teach people spanish 1 on 1 for $6 an hour. Listening in the morning I could tell they were good classes and all the instructors are qualified and have degrees and certificates to teach spanish. If they were located in Cuenca I would probably join. I was told even with a 6 month tourist visa that I would still need to obtain a CENSO card within 30 days of arriving in Ecuador and not having one would cause problems and big fines from what I researched. Even the Ecuador consulate said it was a money grab of $10US but everyone needs to get it.

So to see Quito I decided to walk to the CENSO CARD place after Jose gave me a map and instructions on how to get there (Which was the directions of the Ecuador embassy guy in Vancouver and was out dated info). I got to the area after a 45 minute walk and asked a nearby security guard the address and he pointed me in another direction and as I was walking in the other direction my instincts told me to get a second opinion since I don't trust any of them even if they mean well. Well I walked in the direction I was told and then decide to ask another security guard since I have heard you can get 10 different answers with one specific question and I had just shown them the address in spanish that the Ecuador consulate had given me and the second security guard pointed me in a different direction since I knew I was at the right intersection and could tell by the look in his eye that he actually KNEW! (When they pause and scratch their head is when you have to doubt their info).

So I took his advice and went his way and found it and knocked on the door since there were many spanish people in there but the door was locked and no one wanted to get up and I saw a different entrance through the windows and tried to get there but it was impossible to get there from both sides of the building. Sure, I felt like shaking the locked glass door and shouting out another "Fuckin HOLA!!!!" but I wasn't that desperate yet and didn't think these people had anything to do with CENSO cards by the look on their faces. There was no way of reaching the back door which looked like the regular entrance I came back to the front and just pressed my nose up against the glass peering in at them with that "I am a lost gringo" look on my face and I stared at each one in the eyes for a moment before looking at the next Ecuadorian as they seemed puzzled by my behaviour and a young fellow came over and unlocked the door to see what I wanted. I told him I wanted a CENSO CARD for Ecuador and he took me to the vacant office next door which had a sign in spanish saying that they had moved to a different location and I thanked him and told him I could read spanish but not verbal spanish.

So I walked back the way I came and realized the new office was actually quite close to where my hotel was and of course didn't think anyone would speak english in this government office (I mean that would make it too damn easy for Gringos). The fact that no one speaks english here makes it a perfect place to learn spanish as it forces you into SPANISH IMMERSION immediately. I have some CDs that I bought that I believe are much better than the Rosetta Stone and other language teaching CDs and it is VISUAL LINKS SPANISH which is my type of learning with visual demonstrations.

Anyhow I find the new CENSO CARD building and am waiting in line at the information desk. As I am now only 2 people away from the front desk clerk and think that she can't speak english I glance around to see any white faces and see a young white woman behind me and ask her if she speaks spanish and she nods her head to say no that she doesn't speak english and then her Ecuadorian boyfriend behind her tries to be helpful and in broken engish says "can you speak dutch?" and I graciously say "Muchas gracious" and indicate that any of his efforts on my behalf will not help me in the least LOL! To my surprise the desk clerk speaks english and takes my passport and gives me a waiting number of R60 and that I have to now wait to be called up. As I am waiting a really nice Ecuadorian man comes up to me after I have been sitting 10 minutes and is talking in spanish and I know he is trying to help me by showing his card and I show him my card and he tells me it is my turn to go up as it just turns to R60. I go up not knowing which booth out of 7 booths to go to and the first woman just shrugs her shoulders with a blank stare in her eyes which is not helping me in the least and then I go to the next clerk and they start speaking in spanish and none of them speaks a word of english (I am sorry but if it is a government office that deals with foreigners and wants money from us they should all be bilingual). Anyhow he is trying to tell me that I need to photocopy my passport and other documents that are inside of it and being from a 1st world country that is efficient at handling these sorts of problems I am surprised they want $10US on this money grab yet don't have a photocopier to do what they ask from everyone and the task is put on me to complete it by finding a photocopier so I can jump through all their hoops and pay them $10US for something I don't believe I should even have to get after paying $230US for a 6 month visa!

Anyhow I go back to the english speaking clerk and just bud to the front of the long line since there is no way in hell I am waiting another 30 minutes just to endure more of their ineptness and after I explain to her what he told me at the booth she apologizes for not telling me this originally and explains that I have to go out and get photocopies of my passport on various pages even though I have the originals of everything they want but it is still up to me to get the photocopies for them because they are too cheap to buy a photocopier and prefer wasting everyones time in the waiting room to jump through all these hoops. I have to bite my tongue and refrain from a good old fashion "FUCKIN HOLA" nervous break down routine. And on top of that I have to go find a specific bank (Banco International) and deposit the $10US fee and get a receipt from them (since the Ecuador government no longer trusts any of there employees to take cash since the Vancouver consulate had warned me about them pocketing the money themselves and over charging gringos). So I leave and said what a waste of 4 hours. And they wonder why they aren't a first world country. THEY LACK EFFICIENCY!!!!! They are not paid much so their is no incentive to think and make a better system.

So I go back to my hotel and talk to Jose and he says no problem and gets one of his staff to take my passport and photocopy what they want and even gives me a special folder listed on the instructions in spanish that is required of each applicant for a censo card. I told the english speaking woman that it says on the tourist visa that people "should" get a censo card on my tourist visa and that means it is not mandatory and even the Vancouver Ecuador consulate said I should get it just in case I don't have my passport on me if asked by police but she tells me I can't leave Ecuador without a Censo card which basically just registers your visa in some data base and I have heard people getting fine $200US for not having one after 30 days upon entry. FUCKIN HOLA I say to that!!

Well I will be doing this on Thurdays now. Their traffic walk signs are not very clear here. I saw a digital white man very faintly at the cross walk and thought it was OK to walk and as I was halfway across the street, cars the digital white man disappeared and all the cars started moving not caring I was still walking. Over here a pedestrian doesn't have the right of way. They will simply run you down and not care. No one stops for pedestrians and Ecuadorian pedestrians run for their lives when vehicles are approaching. Quito is very similar to Mexico City but not as slumy. During the day Quito is much nicer than what I saw from the way in from the Airport on Tuesday night. Some pedestrian signs give you the seconds you have to cross (like 40 seconds and counting down) and shows a man slowly walking with his legs moving and when you are down to 5 seconds left the little white digital mans legs start moving quicking from a slow walk to a fast sprint meaning you better be off the road in 5 seconds or you are going to be road kill! I sure don't like to put down another country or culture coming from a 1st world country where things are run efficiently but everywhere you look you just roll your eyes that this society doesn't understand efficiency even though they have other countries to learn from. They love their horns and honk at everything that moves. It is just part of their culture here.

Earlier in the day I was hunting for the Censo card office and wanted a coffee and saw a Dunkin Donuts shop in a newer looking modern commerical building and thought yeah that would be a good pit stop for a coffee and boston cream donut. I told the woman "Cafe con leche Y Boston Cream". Well she grabbed a small styrofoam cup and before she got to the coffee dispenser I said "No! quiero un cafe grande por favor" meaning I want the big cup for the coffee and she shook her head  and said "no" firmly where I knew at that moment I was dealing with a coffee nazi. I am like.... "OK then...proceed". I had to go along with it because I really needed caffeine and could see her saying "You want coffee?? NO COFFEE FOR YOU!! NEXT!". I guess I was thinking the Boston cream would be like they are in Canada but it was actually quite gross. Ecuador is one of the biggest producers of Cocoa which makes chocolate but this Boston cream tasted cheap and horrible and the chocolate on top was the worst part of it. That was definitely $2.50US down the tube even though the small coffee was OK. For the next couple hours I could still taste that terrible Boston cream in my mouth and it put me off of food for the rest of the day. I certainly don't want to come across as the ugly American but there are just so many things to complain about here.

After all this BS running around and getting nowhere I decided to check out a Super Maxi store and do some food shopping since none of the local restaurants seemed to satisfy and I didn't see much I could pick up that didn't require cooking so I settled on some cheese since it looked like the cheese back home and saw some liqueur that was "Creme de cacao" (Cream of chocolate liqueur) for only $10US and looked for milk in this big super market and only saw a 4 liter thing of milk (leche) which I didn't want to pack back to my hotel and didn't want to refrigerate it and wanted just enough for a liqueur and cheese party by myself up on the patio outside of my room so the only smaller one was "leche de soy" (Soy milk). So I was going to make brown cows with liqueur and soy milk. I tried the soy and didn't like it as a milk substitute but it worked with the liqueur to make my brown cows as I sat down on my 5th floor $12.50US penthouse balcony over looking the slums of Quito as I relaxed and sipped my liqueur drink and reflected on the fact that I was so happy that I wasn't born here LOL!

I haven't even been here for 24hours and I just want to bitch and wine. I am going to give it a few days in Quito and then get a bus ticket to Cuenca Ecuador which has always been my main destination for Ecuador.

Today (Thursday) I returned to the CENSO card place and left my passport with them and have to pick it up on Friday morning. Went to McDonalds for a coffee since you can always rely on Micky D's for good coffee. I noticed the Mcdonalds security guard packing a pistol in his holster.

Looking at purchasing a bus ticket out to Cuenca for either Friday night or Saturday night since it leaves at 10pm every night. I don't really have much of an itinerary plan but just winging it as I go and staying at places I like or moving onto another city. I am going to give Ecuador at least a month and if I get tired of it I will just move onto Peru and maybe check out Bolivia and Chile and then get a ticket to Costa Rica before returning to Canada in April.

As usual, you are all my virtual tourists riding in my backpack.


Hasta la vista baby!
Kevin

Quito Ecuador

Here is some cheap Quito real estate which is on a 60 degree slope. Any of these little vacation homes interest you?

Quito Ecuador

This is in the old town of Quito. Spanish colonial buildings are common in most spanish countries from Mexico on down to the Argentina.

Quito Ecuador

The old town section of Quito.

Quito Ecuador

Newer area of Quito.

Quito Ecuador

Newer part of Quito. Quito is nestled in the Mountains which surrounds it and is at around 9,000 feet above sea level.

Quito Ecuador

A cathedral in the old town section of Quito.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Travelogue#2: Quito & Cuenca Ecuador

September 21, 2006


Well I had dropped my passport off to get my Ecuadorian Censo card on Thursday and was told to come back "Manana" (tomorrow) to pick it up so the next day (Friday) I came back and waited in line only to find out from the same guy (After he checked on its status) that it is not ready yet and now I have to come back on "Lunes" (Monday). I was hoping to get my passport on Friday morning so I could take an overnight bus to Cuenca but it looks like I will have to spend another few days in Quito.

Unlike being in Tibet at the high altitude and experiencing altitude sickness I haven't experience that here in Quito which is around 9000 feet above sea level but I have noticed that my lunges have to work over-time to get the same amount of oxygen. At night I have experienced a shortness of breath which can be a bit difficult as I have to breath a little more often than usual. Most of the time we don't have to think above breathing since it is automatic but these places that are at a high altitude you have to consciously focus on your breath so you don't run out of oxygen and have to start breathing quickly to get your breath back. Quito is cold in the morning and at night due to being so high up in the mountains. It is colder here at night than it is in western Canada at night right now.

Met a guy named Mark in my hotel and he is from UK and had had been living in Japan for 10 years and now works online translating websites from english into Japanese and he has been traveling around South America for almost a year now and looking for a place to settle and will be off to Colombia next. Sounds like he has been to most of the South American countries and hasn't found a suitable one yet. After talking to him I have decided to not stay in Cuenca for too long (As I had originally planned) but to continue on down to Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, and Chile and then back to Peru. I think I will change my airline ticket for an earlier flight back to Canada (Maybe by Christmas time). Just enough time to see a lot of South America without settling anywhere too long. If I stay anywhere too long I become restless since I have an attention span of a gold fish and I am getting a little bored of Quito after only a few days. I have walked all around and even up to the mountain sides where all the cheap real estate is located that is on a 70 degree slope. Walking up the steep slopes and with less oxygen up here takes a lot out of you.

The wireless internet has been down for a couple days as a cable crew outside has cut down all the telephones lines on the block. One thing that I have noticed that all these spanish speaking countries have in common is that coffee it not that popular here even though they grow it and everytime I ask for cafe they always give me cheap fine powdered instant coffee with a cup of hot water. Don't even bother asking them for milk or cream with your coffee because they will all just shake their heads "No". So now I just go to McDonalds in the morning and order lattes since they only serve black coffee with "equal" packets (IE Aspartame AKA Rat poison). Nestle and Nescafe seem to have a monopoly on the coffee market down here along with their other products stocked in the local stores since it is the only brand I ever see. It has been 10 years since I went throughout Mexico and parts of Central America but it is all relatively the same everywhere (Construction is the same with cinder blocks, rebar and cement, instant coffee is everywhere, internet connection is never up all the time, etc..). With the internet down I am glad that I have my external hard drive with me that has over 1100 movies and music on it.

The bus system is very cheap here and it is usually on average $1 for every 1 hour of travel time.  It really pours here in South America and the thunder and lightning is something else. I keep trying to remind myself to buy a rain jacket or an umbrella but the only time I seem to remember is when it starts pouring down rain and I still have a 20 minute walk to get home.


CUENCA:
Well I got the 10pm overnight bus from Quito to Cuenca. It is a 10 hour bus ride. After the first hour on the bus I was extremely cold and had to rub my hands over my legs to warm them up with body heat from the palms of my hands since my luggage was down below and I have only my laptop and a bag with me.

After that first hour on the bus I looked around and saw everyone with a grey blanket and had thought they were supplied by the Panamericana bus company but when I looked around I couldn't see any. It was at this point that I realized everyone came prepared for the typical cold 10 hour bus ride to Cuenca and unfortunately I didn't get the memo that it was a "bring your own blanket" type of event (BYOB). Well after a few hours of being extremely cold and uncomfortable I looked around to see everyone was bundled inside their warm wool blankets and sleeping while the white Gringo was freezing and I didn't think I could take another 7 hours of this bus ride. The worst thing you can do is look at your watch every 5 minutes hoping that an hour had passed. Looking at your watch every 5 minutes and freezing in discomfort makes for a very loooooooong bus ride. This was just a typical "Fucking HOLA!!" moment haha.

There wasn't a lot of leg room for me and at one point my knee accidentally rammed up against the seat in front of me where some old spanish woman leaped up instantly from her seat and looked back at me and said something in spanish. I think when she looked into my eyes that she realized I didn't feel an ounce of sympathy for her considering she had a warm wool blanket and I didn't! I think I got a bit of satisfaction realizing that she had probably been sleeping until my knee crashing into her back seat woke her up (Misery loves company!!). I was actually feeling a bit jealous as I saw those people sleeping snug as a bug with their warm wool blankets and I had to spend each waking second rubbing my legs and arms with the palms of my hand to stay somewhat warm. Going to sleep wasn't an option.

Anyhow I got to Cuenca just before 8am and got a taxi ride into town and found a place on the main drag run by a woman named "Esmeralda". Since I didn't sleep the previous night I slept 4-5 hours during the day. Cuenca is a nice looking city with cobblestone roads, beautiful cathedrals and a river that runs through it.

It is Wednesday today so will be checking out Cuenca all day today and doing a lot of walking.

Adios Amigos!
Kevin

Quito Ecuador

Street performers are quite common here in Quito. They usually do their tricks while traffic has stopped at a red light and then before the light turns green they walk around to get spare change from the drivers.

Quito Ecuador

Stone streets in the old town of Quito.

Quito Ecuador

This was that long narrow alley way that was pitch black at 11:40pm on September 13th when the driver dropped me off and at the end of this alley to your right is the big Jabba the hut metal door where I desperately shouted my "FUCKEN HOLAS" which didn't seem to penetrate the big metal door to alert the sleeping occupants inside of my late arrival.

Quito Ecuador

I climbed on the side of one of the mountains and took this picture of Quito. It is vast and stretches over to the right and other mountain tops.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Travelogue#3: Cuenca Ecuador

September 24, 2011

Buenos dias mis amigos!


...and a big round of "fucken holas" for everyone!


Well since my last travelogue entry I had just gotten off the "bus from hell" (Or more appropriately the bus from a Siberian Gulag) and am now in Cuenca. I found a place by the river (which runs through the center of Cuenca) and to my surprise it was only $7US a night and "Esmeralda" who runs the place said I could pay whenever I leave (Very trusting of her). I am seeing many more gringos in this city especially where I am located. I didn't do alot on my first day as I was still recovering from the bus ride and sleep deprivation so I slept most of the day and walked around a bit in the evening on Wednesday and saw some nice Cathedrals and then slept again and got up on Thursday morning to walk around the town to get a feel for it.


I had first heard of Cuenca Ecuador 2 years ago the way most people do which was through my free online subscription to "International living" which has online ads everywhere advertising to retirees that they can retire in Cuenca Ecuador for $600 per month in relative comfort (As us Gringos are accustomed to). So it is a great place if you have a limited CPP of $1100 or so and want to make the most of your limited monthly pension or if you are just a lazy cheapskate like myself and don't like to work all year round in the oilfields then you can work one month in the oilfields and live like a king for the other 11 months in Cuenca.


So on Thursday morning I get up and stroll down to this cafe called "Coffeetree" which is 2 blocks down the same street where I am staying at and I had noticed this place as the taxi driver was taking me to my hotel. I intuitively knew that this place had what I wanted which was Americano cafe with cream. I need my coffee in the morning so the neurons in my brain begin to start firing and then I can think! I ordered an Americano cafe con leche and would naturally order another one ("otro americano cafe por favor!") as I finally found what I wanted since Quito. My spanish is very limited and they have male and female words (like most of the other languages except english) where you have to get them right and they put there adjectives AFTER the noun they are describing. So instead of saying "the green house" you would say "the house green" or "La casa verde". But they understand you when you get those things mixed up and know what you are talking about. There is a usual 12% tax on everything and even service taxes for the waiters etc...


When I was in Quito there was a place one block away from me that had filtered coffee and the old guy who ran the joint would start conversing with me in spanish (being friendly) which I don't speak as I sipped my coffee but I would just put on my best Eddie Murphy grin and say "Si, Si" (Although I don't know what I was saying "Yes" to) and it didn't take him long to realize this one sided conversation was going nowhere LOL!).


Cuenca is definitely a jewel for architecture with some fantastic cathedrals and stone buildings everywhere. My dream house has always been a stone brick exterior (much like the 13th century gothic cathedrals in Europe) and a marble interior and Cuenca has all that material here and probably pretty cheap too since I walked by an advertisement for a new townhouse development for $43,000US that had this stone brick exterior. So I could probably build my own little castle here on the cheap.


Ecuador has high tariffs on many imports and to buy a new imported car will be double the price in Ecuador. I notice this in the grocery store where even though the super market is big they don't carry a lot and the prices are similar to North America. I had read that grapes in Chile cost pennies since many are grown there and because of transportation costs to get them to Canada is where the mark up is from but the grapes in Ecuador are the same price as Canada! I thought instead of spending $5 on coffee every morning that I would just buy a coffee maker (so essentially cutting out the middle man) and I looked around and saw a normal looking one for $50 where I could get a similar one back home for $15-20. Sometimes I do miss those cheap chinese goods sold at Walmart back home.


Just a little tid bit about getting an Ecuadorian permanent residency here is all you need is proof of a pension from your country that can support yourself or buy $25,000US in real estate or Ecuadorian government bonds. There are a few other ways but these are the most common with expats.


The city is mostly flat unlike Quito with its steep hills and Cuenca has nice cobble stone streets that have about 1 1/2" of mortar in between the stone bricks. There are palm trees here and Cuenca is also in the Andes mountains so I am still up at a high altitude similar to Quito. The more I walked around Cuenca the more I really like this city. The buildings are really nice with red tiled roofs and if they can't afford those red tiled roofs they have a red tin roof that looks similar. They use brick or stucco for the exterior of their homes.


One of my goals as I stated in my original travel entry was that I planned to lose some weight and get my old body back (back when I was a boxer). As a minimum I want to lose 10lbs per month so should reach my 200lb weight goal by the end of the year. I usually have my 3 cups of coffee in the morning as my morning ritual and drink a couple 1 liter ice teas during the day and a chicken wrap in the evening along with all the walking I am doing should do the trick. My weight has been yo-yoing for the past 6 years so I am hoping I can fit into those 32" jeans at some point. I am down 12lbs in 9 days so something is working.


I went to CoffeeTree cafe on Thursday morning and met Boyd who is a 33 year old from Holland who has been exploring Ecuador for a few months now. He took a cargo boat from Holland across the Atlantic ocean and through the Panama canal and down along the Pacific coast and arrived at the port of Guayaquil which took over a month voyage. He had basically sold his business and house in Holland and "cashed out" to come to Ecuador and is looking at getting a permanent residency to stay here. He had told me that when he was in Quito he was carrying around his expensive $4000 camera around his shoulders in the old town of Quito when a man approached him indicating that his camera was dirty (which the man probably did) and so Boyd took off his camera from his shoulders and was figuring out how this happened and as his attention was directed elsewhere another man grabbed his camera and ran off and the first man had told him not to chase the man because there were police across the street that could help him (This is what accomplices usually do). He has insurance for it but the Ecuadorian police would be my last option and I would be chasing that fucker at full speed (235lbs of blubber coming at ya!) until I grabbed him by the hair and pulled him down and then pulled out a can of "WHOOP ASS" (But that is just how the Kevster operates in these 3rd world countries and I don't recommend that type of action for most people).


We checked our guide books and decided to do a day trip to an inca ruin site called Ingapira a couple hours north of Cuenca for tomorrow morning and just do it ourselves without joining a tour group and save $30. At coffeetree cafe I would order an americano cafe con leche and would only use 10% of the milk they gave me and when I asked for another the young woman would grab the milk which was 90% full and come out with another small container of milk that was 100% full. I didn't understand this thought process so everytime I would ask for another coffee and she would reach for the milk/cream again so I would put my hand over it so she couldn't take it. This is the type of inefficiency I am trying to straighten out down here. Also I gave the waitress $20US to pay for my 3 coffees and she short changes me $10US. So I say "viente dollares??" to quickly remind her that I had given her $20US and not $10US so she quickly apologizes and gives me back the correct change. Nice try baby! Sure I was born at night but it wasn't LAST NIGHT!!


After coffee I went to a few spanish schools to check them out for their costs and schedules (the more flexible the better) and have decided to go with Simon Bolivar spanish school since I had heard good things about them from other Canadians down here and their prices and schedules were the best. I will probably start my first class on Monday for 2 hours a day to see how I like it.


Friday morning Boyd and I met up for coffee since we both live near the same intersection and then grabbed a cab to the Bus station and from there took a 2 hour bus to the "Ingapira" to see the Incan ruins. We were told when we bought our bus tickets if we wanted to purchase a return ticket and that the bus returns at 1pm and 3:45pm so of course we wanted the later bus to give us plenty of time to explore the ruins and sites. Once the bus stopped in Ingapira the bus driver tells us that he will leave at 1:10pm and there is no 3:45pm bus (Great, they tell us this once we are there). Well there were some pissed off gringos (about 7 of us) saying we didn't plan to spend 5 hours on a bus to see the ruins for 1 1/2 hours! Anyhow, it turned out the ruins weren't that big after all and we had a guide to explain the history of it to us and did it in 40 minutes so we probably would have been taking the 1pm bus back anyhow.


At Ingapira it was originally a site founded by the Canari tribe along with the Incans who took over around 1470AD as they took over the region. All these ancients around the world seem to have rooms that light up by the sun during the winter and summer solstices. And there was a pyramid of the sun which was built by the Incas with their incredible stone masonry skills that did not require mortar since the rock stones were perfectly carved to fit perfectly. The Incas had elites who ruled over the peasant population and got their taxes from everyone and every Inca citizen had to give 3 months of labour per year to the "state" by helping to build the Incan road systems and infrastructure to building their society. They built their stone buildings with no mortar where the stones were so perfectly cut that a piece of paper couldn't fit in between the stones. Our guide at an Inca site told us they heated their stones so they could cut them perfectly to fit into each block.

The place I have been at has had the most unreliable internet where it takes an hour trying to get on and you get 20 minutes of internet before you have problems again so I have decided to leave on Saturday morning and have found a better place that is just 50 feet away and has reliable internet connection. I was originally going into Boyds place to rent a room (since he said he got good internet reception there) and a young woman met me at the door and I asked for "un habitacion" (A room) so she took me across the street (I found that kind of weird but oh well) and showed me a nicer place for $8 per night with good internet connection.


This was the first place I saw and took it but if you wanted to live here permanently and you shopped around and if you have someone that speaks spanish you could get a new house for $250 per month. As International living magazine has claimed you can live down here for $600 per month and their is a Canadian family living down here with a total budget of $900 per month and their new house is $260 per month.


So now with a good internet connection at my new place today (Saturday) I have checked out this blog site and found the spanish word for languages which is "Idiomas" and pressed on that and switched the blog to english so now I have taken the time to figure this blog stuff out and have posted some pictures.


Hasta luego!
Kevin

Cuenca Ecuador

Apparently this is funny.

Cuenca Ecuador

I took this picture on a bridge over the main river that runs through Cuenca.

Cuenca Ecuador

Here is the river that flows through central Cuenca.

Cuenca Ecuador

Just the typical architecture you see throughout Cuenca.

Cuenca Ecuador

This was the very first picture I took in Cuenca as I walked around on my first day. This is a little square with a nice Cathedral and cobble stone roads.  

Monday, November 21, 2011

Travelogue#4: Cuenca Ecuador

September 25, 2011

I wasn't going to add anything today but all the stores are closed on Sundays with not a lot to do so I thought I would kill some time and write another entry.


This whole internet blogging thing is new to me since I am used to sharing these emails privately with friends and family back home (Who get my humour) but I am enjoying this blogging and I should have done this on my Asian trip 5 years ago which would have been fun. Yesterday (Saturday) was the first time I created this blog since I wanted to put everything up myself and not have someone do it for me back home and just added the previous emails.


So yesterday after checking these blog features out you can press a button "audience" that shows you who visits your site at different time periods and yesteday within 3 hours of creating my blog I had 18 hits and surprisingly only 3 of them were from Canada and 11 of them were from Ecuador (Most Ecuadorians don't speak english so probably english speaking expats who reside here) and it shows a map of the world and it shades in the countries that have visited your site. 3 from Canada, 1 from the USA, 1 from Germany and 13 from Ecuador. 17 of those 18 people used INTERNET EXPLORER where 1 person used FIREFOX and all 18 of 18 use WINDOWS operating system. Useful stats eh? This blogging is getting exciting folks!!


Yesterday I walked down to this big market down the road after I checked into my new place and created my blog I went to check it out. I have never seen that many fruits and vegetables in one place. It was like a 2 story hockey arena full of stalls. I went to the second floor and they have stalls where they serve you a plateful of food. I had a coke and a plate of food (pig, rice, potatoes and some other stuff I couldn't identify and didn't eat) for $2US.


On another note, the financial markets had a blood bath this week. A big drop in the stock market forced many over leveraged hedgefunds to sell their precious metals positions (where they had profits) to cover their margins (losses) in the stock market (which is usually done through computerized trading programs and not actual humans selling their position) which makes these meltdowns happen quick and visciously like it did in 2008 with the liquidity crisis.


Silver which has had steady support around $40oz since June drop 25% to $30oz within 48 hours because of this and gold had been slowly selling off since its recent high of $1920oz and then a quick $100oz drop within the last 2 trading days going into the weekend. I am expecting this metals correction to be a short one over the next month or so before it recovers to the upside again since nothing has changed fundamentally for Gold and Silver since sooner or later "smart money" will be giving up on the world fiat currencies around the world (since they are going into the US Dollar right now and driving it up) and put their money into the only real currency with a 5000 year monetary history which is gold and silver. Also people buying big quantities of physical silver to take advantage of this drop in price are having a hard time getting physical possession of silver right now which just shows you that the electronic gold/silver market are one thing but the physical gold/silver market is the REAL MARKET since it is the actual physical commodity (and not just electronic digits).

 The internet at the place I am at is better than the last place but there are times where it says "Connected with limited access" which basically means NO ACCESS! I have been having some problems with my laptop for some reason and can't seem to download more pictures from my camera but worst case situation I can have them burned to a CD at some local shop and then have them posted to the site.


Although I planned a 7 month trip there is a very good chance I will just stay in Cuenca for a couple more weeks and take some spanish lessons before moving on to Vilcabamba and then moving onto Peru. I am thinking I might come back to Canada by the end of the year (November or December). Staying in one place for too long has always been hard for me.

Ingapirca (Incan ruins) 2 hours north of Cuenca

 This is the Incan site of Ingapirca. On the right hand side you can see the Incan road. This Incan road starts in Cuzco Peru and comes through here and ends in Quito Ecuador. The Canari tribe were the original settlers here until the Incas took over in 1470AD and built that big structure at the back. On top are rooms that light up by the sun on summer and winter solstices much like all the other ancient sites around the world.

 The Incan road.


Check out that masonry work eh? They would heat the stones to carve them to the same size to fit perfectly into place without the use of mortar. 
Typical street in Cuenca.
A Cathedral in Cuenca

Cuenca Photos


 Some condos with a stone brick exterior for $43,000US. You won´t need the bank for a mortgage with this place.
 Churches everywhere!
 Here is the Gringo Tree cafe where I get my ¨Cafe americano con leche".
This is an Inca ruin in Cuenca. Not very big. You are seeing about 70% of the whole Incan ruins in this picture.
Modern Cuenca with newer buildings.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

New web blog info

September 26, 2011

AudienceRefresh 2011 Sep 19 19:00 – 2011 Sep 26 18:00
Now
Day
Week
Month
All time
Pageviews by Countries
Ecuador
25
Canada
18
Russia
12
United States
3
Switzerland
1
Germany
1
Pageviews by Browsers
Internet Explorer
51 (85%)
Firefox
4 (6%)
Opera
3 (5%)
Chrome
1 (1%)
Mobile Safari
1 (1%)
Pageviews by Operating Systems
Windows
56 (93%)
Macintosh
3 (5%)
Android
1 (1%)

This is the page that gives you the stats from internet traffic visiting your site. Not a lot of hits yet but it has only been 3 days. Soon all those countries will turn dark green in colour as they visit my site more often. Russia is in 3rd place and kicking ass right now as it makes its way to #1. Go Russia!!

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Spanish classes in Cuenca

September 26, 2006

Que tal mis amigos?


Started taking 2 hours of spanish class in the evenings at the Simon Bolivar spanish school (http://www.bolivar2.com/). My first class was this evening and my spanish teacher is Jose and he is very good at teaching spanish. He basically asked me if I had anything special in mind that I would like to learn in spanish and I basically said to put sentences together so working with pronouns, verbs, adjectives and all those other things that form sentences since I can memorize all the nouns myself on my own time. In spanish "V" is pronounced like a "B". I always thought it was just certain words but he says all words with a "V" are pronounced "ba". Studying spanish on my own has helped a lot and these lessons are just reconfirming my pronounciations etc... I do 2 hours per day in the evening and it is doing the trick. They have free salsa dancing lessons right after my spanish classes so I may check them out.


Talking to a New Zealander in my hotel today and he said everyone he has talked to traveling in Ecuador has had something bad happen to them with mostly robberies and theft. He said he talked to a woman the previous night and she was held at knife point by 2 guys and they wanted everything as they jabbed the knife into her body. I can't wait until it is my turn!!! PICK ME! PICK ME!! We are told to always watch our bags on the buses since people slash them open quietly with a knife and take the contents without the owners suspecting anything. When it comes to traveling all this stuff is par for course in every 3rd world country has those people that specialize in robbing tourists. AWARENESS is the name of the game when traveling and using common sense. I have caught a couple pick pocketers in my travels.


So I am either going to spend another week or two here in Cuenca before moving on. After Cuenca I will probably go to Loja which is about a 5 hour bus ride south and then to Vilcabamba which is an hour south of Loja. From Vilcabamba I will go to Zumba and then cross into Peru. In Peru I will go to Chachapoyas, then Cajamarca, then Trujillo, then head down the Pacific coast to Lima and then make my way out to Cuzco and check out Machu Picchu and the Incan Vilcabamba and then Lake Titacaca before heading into Bolivia. From there I may head down into Argentina and over to Chile. I am just going on feel right now and move on after I start to get a little restless.


Chao!

Photos of Cuenca Ecuador





 This is what Cuenca looks like on a Sunday when everything is closed. The place is a ghost town with hardly any traffic on the streets. All the metal doors of the shops are dropped and business is closed for the day.

Photos of Cuenca Ecuador


 These park squares are all around Cuenca.
I saw this guy today juggling 3 machetes hoping to pick up some spare change from the drivers who are waiting for the light to turn green.

Cuenca Ecuador

This is that big market I had mentioned that was the size on an ice arena. Down below to your right is just a huge market full of fresh fruit and vegetables and up top is raw meats like fish, chicken, and red meat for sale and also on top on the other half are little eateries (See pictures below).
 There is a whole bunch of these booths where they serve you a plateful of food (Rice, beans, salad, potatoes, chicken, fish, pig etc.. for under $2 with tables to the right to eat at.
 This was just a part section of a whole area where each booth serves the cooked pig that is on display on their counters.
 I don't know how to say 1/2lb in spanish so just came up to this booth and said "Una libra de hornado" (One pound of pig). She thought I was taking it to go but I said no I would be sitting down to eat the whole thing here since I was pretty darn hungry and having a late breakfast at 11:30am. She raised her eyebrows indicating "Really?". I didn't know how much one pound of pig was until the plate was handed to me. It was $5US for a cooked pound of pig. I was surprised to see them use their hands to handle your food and she grabbed a handful of this salad looking stuff and dipped it into some sauce submerging her whole hand in the process before throwing it onto my plate. The sanitary police obviously don't monitor this area.
 So this is what one pound of pig looks like. I ate half of it and then indicated to the woman that I will get this "to go" and have her wrap it for me. She laughed and shook her head indicating "Yeah I thought you couldn't eat it all".
 A miracle in Cuenca! This guy was floating on thin air with nothing supporting his feet and he would shake his feet and arms to prove it! I gave him a buck since I like to see people being resourceful and innovative in making a living that way instead of begging or looking for handouts. I still haven't figured it out though LOL!
I could fill this whole blog site with Cuenca cathedrals and churches since they are everywhere and certainly add to the character of this beautiful city.