March 5, 2007

Poor little pinata!




After all those adventures - its back to rafting, kayaking, chicken-chasing dogs and fiestas. Stay tuned for further excitement!

Taxco



Once all the girls said goodbye to each other I took another couple days to visit the colonial town of Taxco (2.5 hours from Mexico City). This is a silver-lover's heaven! Here you can buy silver in bulk and by weight. I picked up quite a few pieces with the plan to sell them in the yoga studio when I return... however its hard when I picked out everything that I would want to wear myself! Plus the girls here in Jalcomulco have also had a go at it... so hopefully I return with something!

Mexico City





After island life... it was off to big city Mexico! Spent a couple days here exploring the city by subway- we visited Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Trotsky's houses/museums, as well as various different neighbourhoods and markets.

Isla Contoy




We did a day trip to "Isla Contoy National Park" from Isla Mujeres... took us about 1 hour by boat and we took turns getting completed drenched on these rides! The island is a bird santuary for thousands of migrant birds (many from Canada). It was truly a paradise - only a certain number of people allowed on the island each day and only about 5 people actually live there. We saw loads of birds, iguanas, hermit crabs as well as marine life while snorkeling like manta rays and barracudas (which we also ate for lunch!).

Isla Mujeres

Isla Mujeres is a 7km long island off the coast of Cancun... used to be a bit of a "backpackers cancun" meaning it was cheaper and not so ostentatious as Cancun. I was there for a fantastic couple of weeks two years ago. The island is still beautiful but a lot of the beach has been washed away after last year's hurricane and there seemed to be a lot more old white guys wearing white socks and sandals than I remember from last time! Nonetheless, the girls and I managed to have a great time!

Beautiful Tulum!

some wildlife, our swing bar, the cabanas... oh and a naked bum


Grand Cenote

Off to the beach!

..
So after a week of kayaking... it was time to RELAX! So off I went by bus (20hrs...) from Veracruz to Cancun. There I met up with Denise (new friend from the kayaking week), and Anne and Jill (on vacation from Ottawa).... We had an amazing couple weeks! First Tulum (beautiful beaches- although we someone booked into cabanas at the nudist beach!) A lot of naked dads playing soccer with their kids...

This photo is from our biking to day to search for a Cenote (underwater caves that you snorkel in...)

March 4, 2007

The group

Waterfalling!


This was the grand finale of our trip - 25ft waterfall! I managed to stay upright for this run... but the second one was a little less graceful! But it was awesome nonetheless!

Casa Esprit

February 28, 2007

Jalcomulco


So here I am back in Jalcomulco Mexico. I was here 2 years ago with Esprit Rafting for a month or so... its such a great little village. From here we run weeklong kayaking, rafting and multi-sport trips. I arrived in Jalcomulco around the 15th of January and will be staying here until our convoy of vehicles makes its way back to Canada sometime around the end of March! I'll post a bunch more pictures soon. This is a view of the river looking upstream... the little black dog is "Big Ears" a new adoptee and the purple guy is going to be smashed to smithereens at a fiesta this weekend!

April 1, 2006

The Inka Trail



Well here I am - still in Cuzco- Peru! Just thought I would squeeze in one more update before I get home. Just arrived back from a 4-day trek along the Inka Trail to the world famous Macchu Picchu Ruins. The trek turned out to be quite challenging! I joined a group of 14 people from Ireland, USA, Slovenia, England, Argentina and Canada and we walked and walked and walked our way to Macchu Picchu. The weather wasn´t as bad as it could have been during this rainy season- we had a mix of rain and sun throughout the week. Unfortunately there was just a bit too much rain on the last couple of days and landslides prevented us from taking the traditional route through the sungate into the ruins. Instead we walked down the mountain and followed the train tracks into the town of Aguas Calientes where we had to take the bus up to the ruins... a little anti-climatic! Nonetheless the highlight for me wasn´t the actual ruins, but just surviving the hike itself! At first I thought the infinite climb upwards was going to kill me... but then I discovered the pain of descending thousands of stairs! My calves were rock-hard by day 3 making every step all the more interesting! However- so glad I did it... and thank-god for gortex.

March 20, 2006

Boliva and Peru at Last

This (photo-free) posting is being written in Cuzco, Peru. Jen and I will spend our last week or so together here. Jen is squeezing in a 2-day Inca Trail before flying home from Lima and I´ve just booked on to the full 4-day hike departing on the 27th. After which I get to look forward to endless bus rides back to Santiago where I´ll fly home on April 5th.

Bolivia was cool... mainly because it was soooooooooooo cheap! Jen and I went a little crazy shopping in the La Paz before heading to Cococabana on Lake Titicaca.

It´s nice to be able to chill out in one place for awhile- and Cuzco is a great (and cheap) place to do it. I won´t likely post too much more on this blog since its no fun without the photos! Thanks for reading and see some of you back in Canada soon enough!

Besos,

Katie

Into the DESERT...



Our last stop in Chile was San Pedro de Atacama... a small village in the desert. The bus rides around this time were getting more and more uncomfortable and the view of endless desert plains a little tiring. Nonetheless - San Pedro was a really cool stopover.

The highlight for me was an evening of Sandboarding - basically snowboarding on giant sand dunes. The drawbacks include the lack of a ski lift, sand in every crevice of your body and clothing... as well as sand in the zoom lens of my camera! So unfortunately... no more photos for this blog!

We also did a ridiculous tour to some geysers at 4am one morning. Yah okay, so water boiling up from a mysterious underground source in the middle of the desert is really cool... but getting up at 4am in the freeeeeezing cold and suffering from altitude sickness (we were over 4000m) is not going down as a highlight on this blog! And no photos to prove I was there...

Where´s the Beach?


So it was a bit of a let down to discover that Chile is NOT in fact the best place to go for BEACHES!!! Ya they have a lot of coast line... but the water is freeeeeeezing and well I guess we didn´t come at the right time of year because every supposed beach resort we turned up in... were pretty much ghost towns.

After Mendoza we checked out Valparaiso - a bit run down but cute at the same time if you can imagine. We did spend one day on the beach... venturing only far enough into the ocean to wash the watermelon juice off our legs.

After Valparaiso we tried for another beach town called La Serena... much cuter but even less of the beach scene! It did have a random Japonese garden that manged to occupy our time for a good 45 minutes or so...

Around this time we were just dying to get out of Chile! But one more stop... the desert!

An uphill climb in Mendoza



From Mendoza Jen and I decided to do some training four our upcoming Inca Trail...

So off we went on a hike through the desert - beautiful scenery... check it out! We saw a lot of cacti and random prickly bushes that left us with some scratches for souvenirs. Jen was a little nervous on the downhill descents but lucky for our 19 year old guide, she got to hold his hand the whole time!

After the hike we (almost) did a 20 meter rappell... by almost I mean I did the rapell and Jen just tried on the harness for looks - but she looked really good!

March 6, 2006

Mendoza Wine Festival


We arrived in Mendoza, Argentina in time for the last 2 days of the yearly wine festival. Attached photo is of the huge concert-dance-show thingy they put on the last night. Very elaborate dancing and costumes... the photo doesn´t do it justice.

The amphitheatre was packed with 30,000 people- pretty insane!!! Unfortunately, they didn´t actually serve any wine at this concert- what´s up with that??

Waiting, waiting, waiting


A familiar picture... we spent a lot of time on buses lately and this is an example of what waiting with a kayaker named Forrest who feels the need to travel with a kayak paddle, a crash pad for climbing, a yoga mat and numerous other bags of miscellaneous kayaking gear throughout South America. Luckily, he is also a massage therapist and has been able to help heal our aching necks!

Volcano-mania!


Next stop on the Jen and Katie (and Forrest for now) tour was Pucon, Chile... yup we crossed back into Chile - I´m running out of space in my passport for all these stamps!

Before Pucon we had a small layover in Osorno where we had to camp out on the lawn (more like area where the drunks go to pee) by the bus station while we waited for our next bus. We left Forrest to guard our bags with his swiss army knife while we went on a search for coffees. Our memories of Osorno will always be stale donuts, gay dogs, pregnant ladies with toddlers in tow and an extremely unpleasant park by the bus station (at least it didn´t rain).

Pucon is a small adventure town with the wonderful happenstance of being surrounded by volcanoes... at least two of them are active... plus every other hill seemed be described as dormant volcanoe- not to worry- nothing erupted while we were there (it would have been in the news-duh!)

We stayed in a nice hostel- out of the way but nice since no one else seemed to know it existed... features included a yappy dog, ample space for Forrest to practice yoga, a slightly bitchy lady who was perpetually sweeping the floors and indisceranable address down a dirt road.

We spent our 24 hours in Pucon on a quick tour of beautiful rivers with pool drop waterfalls and a visit to the famous Pucon Termas (hot springs). Jen would like to add ¨those were hot- those hot springs- make sure you mention that...¨

On the Road Again...


After crossing the Chilean-Argentinian border for the 6th? time I managed to meet up with my friend Jen Lynch in beautiful Bariloche. The meeting occurred after many many (perhaps slightly confusing) emails. Jen managed to get herself from the bustling metropolis of Buenos Aires with nothing more that sheer willpower and a pocket dictionary. At first she was slightly unnerved when I told her it was a mere 22 hour bus ride to meet me in Bariloche... but as you can see from her smiling photo- she was more than happy to make the sacrifice. (Actually she has been describing the bus trip as ´surprisingly pleasant´¨- ¨Via Bariloche all the way... I can´t say enough good things about them¨ were her exact words.

A few days of eating gigantic steaks and drinking fantastic wine while surrounded by mountains is enough to make anyone forget a 22 hour bus ride (and the other small matter of lost luggage). Yaaaa Argentina!

Goodbye Futa


After sea-kayaking it was time to say goodbye to my little home in Futa. It was a fantistic month and a half in a beautiful location with a lot of great people (All the Esprit kids, new friends from ExChile and other Futa randoms -you know who you are!!!).

My last night there turned out to be on the night of a big Futa party (turns out it was not thrown in my honour... but I can pretend). A huge group of us went to an Asado (BBQ) at a nearby campground (Asado as it turns out really means meat meat meat and wine wine wine- no veggies that night!) Afterwards we went to a community hall type place where the entire town showed up for dancing and a bit more vino... a great way to end my stay.

I was sad to go but it was time (plus the weather was starting to turn yucky... I hear its still raining right now.)

The photo is of my little casa... my room was in the attic - top window.

Andes to Ocean




After hanging out in Futa for another few weeks I finally got back to being active.... the small issue of a dislocated shoulder put my kayaking practice on the back burner for a little while!!!

These photos are from a 5 day sea-kayaking trip I took with some clients, a friend from Futa (Anni) and our guide and friend Brian. The trip began at the base of the Futaleufu River (yaaa current) then into Lake Yelcho, followed by another river (yaaaa current again) and finally ending in the Pacific Ocean near a small town called Chaiten.

The weather on the first day was absolutely terrible, cold and rainy but luckily with a tail-wind. But after that it was nothing but smooth sailing and gorgeous scenery and we maintained the tail-wind the entire trip so the paddling part wasn´t too gruesome! (my shoulder survived.) :)

January 28, 2006

Eagle Rock, Futaleufu



Futa-licious



This is the paradise that I'm living in now... Futaleufu, Chile in the Patagonia. My first week was spent with the Esprit group, running rivers (sit-on-top kayaking, rafting the infamous Futaleufu River-HUGE STUFF and Azul and Espolon rivers) as well as a bunch of hiking - I would almost say I'm getting in shape!

The past while I've been helping out "Expediciones Chile" a sister company to Esprit Rafting... I'm not officially working but have been helping out in exchange for meals and trips... The owner Chris Spelius is a world-renowned olympic kayaker... and he is helping me to learn my whitewater kayaking roll... he's an amazing teacher. www.exchile.com

Plan on staying here for awhile longer, have a room in a house with some of the other staff. Not much to do in the town but the area offers tons of activities. They call this area "the greatest playground on earth"... I'm off to play some more!

El Bolson


The group waiting around before we caught a bus and crossed into Chile... not the most efficient group for packing light! Second photo is the famous hippie craft market in El Bolson, Argentina. Picked up some styling wool legwarmers...

The Manso River



We had a great Esprit group travelling together and a wild ride on the Manso River... some of the group kayaked and the others rafted. One rapid called the "scrambled egg" managed to dump a few of us into the river - me included! Photos are the camp site, the van ride and a bunch of the gang!