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Kicking Back at the Beach |
Sorry for the delay in posting. We’ve been busy the past
week and a half; but I have all those stories here. We have been in Ecuador for
about three months. We have been taking our time making our apartment into a
home, complete with house plants, paintings, furniture, and even lime and
orange trees. All the while, some of our other more adventurous collegues have
been touring the country on their weekends and seeing some of the sites. We
decided that now we were comfortable with our home, it was time to take some
adventures.
Another couple friends of ours were feeling the same way,
and with a long weekend coming up, booked a sweet beach house on Air B&B.
It was a big house on the beach and a total of 10 teachers, three dogs, and a
few bags of snacks were shortly on the way.
Due to our current lack of a car (may change soon, stay
posted) we had to figure out alternate transportation. Shannon rode with our
friends Adrian and Ashley and their new puppy and I rode with our friends Betsy
and Roman, along with Howie and their dog, Lucy. To say the ride was uneventful
would be about as big of a lie as I could tell.
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Small Shanty Town |
One thing that you need to know about Ecuador is they have
the WORST drivers in the world. I am not trying to make some sort of hyperbole
saturated statement. They do not pay attention to speed limits, lanes, traffic
lights, or passing regulations. In the city it’s fairly common and relatively
easy to navigate if you’ve ever driven in NJ or NY before. The proper mindset
is, if they don’t want to crash, they’ll yield to me. This is how EVERYONE
acts, so if you drive passively or defensively, you literally won’t go
anywhere. Well, that’s just in the city. In the countryside, it is much worse.
Ecuador as a country is about the size of Nevada, yet it takes a long time to
get from Quito to anywhere due to the elevation. There are many winding
mountain roads. On said mountain roads, there are very seldom any stretches of
straight road for more than 50 feet so obviously there is no passing. That
obvious statement is wrong. People in the countryside of Ecuador drive as if a
normal one lane each direction road is a two lane highway. I saw countless
people drive over 80mph over hairpin turns and pass each other as they are in
oncoming traffic going around mountain bends. It is a very nerve-wracking and
dangerous experience, but it is common place among Ecuadorian drivers.
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People Selling Produce and Goods Along the Roads |
I would be doing you a disservice if I didn't tell you about
some of the things we saw along the drive. We saw a few mountain cattle. I’ve
heard of mountain goats, but never mountain cattle but these things got pretty
high up on the sides of very steep mountains to graze. We also saw some sweet donkeys just roaming
the mountains randomly, and at least a dozen very formidable looking Ecuadorian
men stalking the streets with 3 foot machetes. We saw some beautiful rain
forests and jungles. Also, while this may be unbelievable, we ran into some
signs on the road that were advertising land for sale that cost $1.50 per
square meter. Now before you go investing, this is in a super rural area of the
jungle with no electricity, running water, or signs of civilization for hours;
but if that’s your cup of tea, I can verify it’s a real thing. One of the
things that struck me along the way is the great disparity of wealth between
Quito and the rural areas. Quito is a sprawling city and by no means does it
exude wealth in the way of a Dubai or Tokyo. It just seems like an average run
of the mill South American city. There are cars, restaurants, and some poor
seedy areas. The rural areas surrounding Quito are poor. I’m talking the kind
of poverty where nearly every house is made of spare sheet metal, straw, mud,
and if you’re lucky, a segment of chain link fence. It was a side of Ecuador
that I had known about, but seeing it was really a revelation for me. It made
me appreciate everything I have even more than I already do.
The driver of my car, Roman was able to luckily navigate
these crazy drivers and shanty towns and deliver us to Same, the beach town
where we were going within the projected 7 hours it was supposed to take. We
decided since we were the first ones there, we would pick up some food for
everyone and stopped at a little pizza place along the road. It was a nice
setup. After a 7 hour drive, I obviously had to use the bathroom and they had a
nice little walled in outside bathroom much like you’d see at a public pool. I
started going to the bathroom, and to my absolute surprise and if I’m being
honest momentary terror, a bright green and yellow frog the size of a fist
crawled out of the bottom of the toilet and jumped onto the rim of the toilet.
I repeat, a frog the size of a fist crawled out of the area where things are
flushed. I quickly finished and retreated out of there realizing that the
plumbing over the weekend might get a little suspect.
You'd have to ask Shannon for specifics about her ride, but I gather that it was slightly less pleasant, with a puppy getting car sick in the backseat with her about 7 times.
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The Living Room |
When we got to the house, we found some of our friends
already there and we got settled into a nice night of hanging out on the giant
terrace overlooking the beach. It was great. The house had enough space to
accommodate 10 people and 3 dogs and it cost us $75 for each person for the
whole weekend. It was a sweet deal.
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View from the Terrace |
The next day, we spent just about all of our time on the
beach, in the pool, or swimming in the Pacific. Interesting side note, I had
never seen the Pacific before this trip. The owner of the house who was renting
it out to us was very accommodating and showed up shortly after we woke up with
about 15 lbs of Mahi Mahi for us that was freshly caught that morning. In the
afternoon, he arranged for his empleada to come to the house and fry it up
fresh for us along with some freshly fried plantain chips.
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Hanging Out at the Beach House |
We were ecstatic.
Fresh seafood, no need to leave the beach, and delivery included! When he came
back at lunch time to check on us, we started to get a little weirded out. He
asked us if we had everything we needed, and then cracked open a beer and sat
with us as we were hanging out. It was starting to seem like he was renting out
his house to make friends and we were just there to rent his house. We politely
hinted at him leaving and he lingered for another half hour or so before
getting out.
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Beach Day, Ecuador Style |
Shannon, Adrian, Ashley and I took the dogs for a nice walk
down the beach and about a mile or so down the beach, we found a great
restaurant that had a nice little patio overlooking the beach and ordered some
more fresh seafood. Shannon and I split a nice fried whole fish, which was
another first for me and it was fantastic! We picked the bones clean and after
eating and drinking our fill, paid our $8 or so and got out of there to spend
some more time on the beach.
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Selling Goods for All Saint's Day |
The next day was much of the same. The starting to get
creepy landlord was there when we woke up. He delivered 15 lbs of marlin and 15
lbs of shrimp for us and then lingered a bit too long. We left, hoping he’d be
gone when we got back. We walked to the same restaurant for breakfast and had
fresh rolls, eggs, fresh juice, coffee, and plantains for $4 each and spent the
rest of the day on the beach. This day marked the aforementioned All Saints Day
and our beach house was about a half block away from a cemetery. We were able
to witness some of the traditions from the beach at a respectable distance of
course. There were food stands, and flowers being sold on the side of the
street and many people shared a meal with their departed loved ones.
When we went back to the house for lunch, we found that the
empleada was there finishing up on two batches of fresh ceviche, one shrimp and
marlin mixed, and one just marlin. It was absolutely out of this world.
After a nice lunch of ceviche, we went back down to the
beach where the weather was again perfect and went swimming. We were at a part
of the beach where at knee level, the sand gave way to large flat rocks the
size and shape of a couch cushion. I miss-stepped and slipped on one as a wave
was coming in and cut the side of my foot pretty deeply on the side of another
rock. A little salt water and sitting down and I was find.
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Fire on the Hill! |
We all awoke from beach naps to the sound and smell of a campfire and noticed that the woods on top of the hill near us was on fire. It started out as a small plume of smoke and evolved into a full blown forest fire. The local fire fighters and military were called in to fight it and after a good couple of hours of hard work, they got it under control.
On our way back to the house to get ready for dinner, we saw the landlord again. It was getting really weird. He was just hanging out, and this time we directly told him he was being inappropriate and we wanted some privacy to hang out with our friends. He didn't get the hint and stayed another hour and a half...
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99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall |
That night we went for a walk and found another delicious
seafood restaurant on the beach which had a pretty neat interior. There were
bottles hanging everywhere and it was dimly lit, mostly with candles. After
some waiting (Ecuadorian time…) we had some Pescado Encocada delivered and ate
our fill yet again. Pescado Encocada is a coastal Ecuadorian tradition of a
coconut cream based sauce with fresh fish or shrimp and it was perfection.
When we got back to the house, all of the water was shut off. We weren't sure if that was good 'ole Ecuadorian plumbing or if there were more sinister things afoot. Some of us theorized that the creepy landlord shut off the water in order to have us call him for help. This idea was given some legitimacy when one of our group went outside to smoke a cigarette and found the landlord asleep in his car outside of the house. It was very creepy.
The morning that we were leaving, Shannon and I asked
everyone if they wanted to go back to the breakfast place before we hit the
road and some of our friends met us there while the rest said they would catch
up later. On our way back down the beach to the house, we saw them and they
told us that on their way to the restaurant they were watching their dog play
in the surf and two teenage boys came up behind them with kitchen knives and
robbed them. They took $20, a cell phone, and a necklace from them. It was a
disappointing, yet strong reminder to us all that while paradise can be found
within pockets of a poverty stricken country, even paradise itself carries some
risk with it.
We made our way back shortly after that and along the way we
could smell the cacao being fermented and roasted. It was heavenly. Imagine, a
while village that always smelled of chocolate. We of course stopped to by some
fresh fruit, vegetables, and chocolate and made our way back to Quito after
another 7 hours of dodging maniacs and holding on as we went around the winding
roads of Ecuador.