I arrived in Kodiak yesterday and Lindsey met me at the airport. She showed me around some of the main places on the island. It is quite small. There is only 100 miles of road on the island all put together. We went for a hike at Fort Abercrombie which was pretty interesting. Apparently there were multiple military installments here from back in World War II.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Saturday, February 15, 2014
USA
Back in the US now, waiting in San Francisco for my connection to Seattle, I actually really lucked out here they were able to bump me up to an earlier flight with my checked bag and put me in an exit row, and waived the fee for all this. This morning I just barely made my flight in Lima by 5 minutes, every time I think for sure I have seen the extent of how slow a process can be my trip managed to surprise me, hah. Lima was a good two days at the end of my trip. I spent a fair amount of time hanging around with friends, one from University who is living there and her flat mates, the guy I met while traveling with whom I stayed, and a French couple I met in Huanchaco who I really enjoy chatting with. I also managed to squeeze some surfing in and find a few souvenirs.
I will be going through my pictures over the next week or two and putting some more up. I leave for Kodiak AK on Wednesday, and who knows perhaps there will be interesting things to write about or photograph up there. I'm planning to keep up the Spanish studies using duoloingo.com, flash cards from various vocab lists of medical, idioms, and phrase lists online, possibly a few lessons over skype, and also trading e-mails or chatting with some of my traveling friends who speak fluent Spanish but want to improve English.
I will be going through my pictures over the next week or two and putting some more up. I leave for Kodiak AK on Wednesday, and who knows perhaps there will be interesting things to write about or photograph up there. I'm planning to keep up the Spanish studies using duoloingo.com, flash cards from various vocab lists of medical, idioms, and phrase lists online, possibly a few lessons over skype, and also trading e-mails or chatting with some of my traveling friends who speak fluent Spanish but want to improve English.
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Santa Cruz and Lima
I arrived in Lima at 5 this morning. I will stay with a friend from here I met while in Huanchaco. Ive just been hanging around the park here at the viewpoint over the sea, where ironically I have found the best wifi of the entire trip, by at least 10-20x. I will meet up with one of my university friends in the next day or two to possibly do some surfing and see different parts of Lima, then fly home Saturday morning.
I went on the Santa Cruz hike through the Andes, specifically the Cordillera Blanca (White Range), which was quite beautiful, though I do think the Cascades are far more spectacular. The group consisted of 11 people and it was very fun to hike with them. Possibly in part because the guide company messed up so many things it was best just to joke about it. But I did survive and saw some beautiful mountains. Myself and 3 germans returned on the third day instead of the fourth, which introduced another layer of complexity the company had said would be fine but apparently was not equipped to handle. In any case, we went to the agency after returning to Huaraz and managed to procure a reimbursement for 1 day, which shocked me. The hike was great though, the first day is spent going up up up a hill which "tiene mucho caido" (is very steep). It was not too physically demanding, but was simply slow going having only arrived at 10,000 feet from sea level 24 hours prior. We hiked into a mountain pass which opened into a valley with a river where we made camp. Luckily the rain didnt hit until after we had made camp, which is pretty unusual for this time of year. The next day we continued to hike through the valley to a teal milky glacial lake into which I led the swimming charge. Then we went across a flood plane with a multitude of little rivers we had to hop-scotch across, searching long and hard for possible routes. Then we continued up to a glacial lake, with the glacier sliding down into the bowl. It was pretty amazing, and while there I saw/heard three avalanches. Hiking back we found some large boulders and some of us practiced climbing. With my reach I was the only one to succeed on the route, much to the local guide's chagrin. Then the rain hit as we hiked another couple hours, everyone being thoroughly drenched. I really should have seen this coming that when the Peruvian lady where I made the booking told me they have "all the gear you need included" and "the equipment is excellent", she meant that they would give me a smelly old sleeping bag and leaky tent. After already having paid, the size 48 hiking boots I was promised were proven to not exist, so there I was walking through the downpour in my mesh running shoes, oops. At this next campsite we were literally invaded and attacked by cows. There were 4 surrounding my small shared tent when I tried to go to bed, 2 with their heads (and horns) lowered right at the entrance eating the grass. I was able to scare them off by beating my poncho at them for just long enough to sneak inside. In the night a couple times they ran into our tent and tripped over the fly lines, pulling them out, worsening an already less-than-water-tight situation, haha. We could hear them running through the camp and simply hoped not to be trampled. The next day those of us leaving woke up at 3 in the morning to begin the hike back, the guide disappeared after about 100 yards and we ended up needing to take a taxi when the arranged transport never showed. But as I said, we made it, and afterall it was a pretty fun adventure.
Ive been importing all my photos (here's a tip, if ever you take a water-tight camera, such as the GoPro, to 14,000 feet, leave the case cracked open before you descend back to sea level) and will be attempting to sort them and post some more in the next week or two.
I went on the Santa Cruz hike through the Andes, specifically the Cordillera Blanca (White Range), which was quite beautiful, though I do think the Cascades are far more spectacular. The group consisted of 11 people and it was very fun to hike with them. Possibly in part because the guide company messed up so many things it was best just to joke about it. But I did survive and saw some beautiful mountains. Myself and 3 germans returned on the third day instead of the fourth, which introduced another layer of complexity the company had said would be fine but apparently was not equipped to handle. In any case, we went to the agency after returning to Huaraz and managed to procure a reimbursement for 1 day, which shocked me. The hike was great though, the first day is spent going up up up a hill which "tiene mucho caido" (is very steep). It was not too physically demanding, but was simply slow going having only arrived at 10,000 feet from sea level 24 hours prior. We hiked into a mountain pass which opened into a valley with a river where we made camp. Luckily the rain didnt hit until after we had made camp, which is pretty unusual for this time of year. The next day we continued to hike through the valley to a teal milky glacial lake into which I led the swimming charge. Then we went across a flood plane with a multitude of little rivers we had to hop-scotch across, searching long and hard for possible routes. Then we continued up to a glacial lake, with the glacier sliding down into the bowl. It was pretty amazing, and while there I saw/heard three avalanches. Hiking back we found some large boulders and some of us practiced climbing. With my reach I was the only one to succeed on the route, much to the local guide's chagrin. Then the rain hit as we hiked another couple hours, everyone being thoroughly drenched. I really should have seen this coming that when the Peruvian lady where I made the booking told me they have "all the gear you need included" and "the equipment is excellent", she meant that they would give me a smelly old sleeping bag and leaky tent. After already having paid, the size 48 hiking boots I was promised were proven to not exist, so there I was walking through the downpour in my mesh running shoes, oops. At this next campsite we were literally invaded and attacked by cows. There were 4 surrounding my small shared tent when I tried to go to bed, 2 with their heads (and horns) lowered right at the entrance eating the grass. I was able to scare them off by beating my poncho at them for just long enough to sneak inside. In the night a couple times they ran into our tent and tripped over the fly lines, pulling them out, worsening an already less-than-water-tight situation, haha. We could hear them running through the camp and simply hoped not to be trampled. The next day those of us leaving woke up at 3 in the morning to begin the hike back, the guide disappeared after about 100 yards and we ended up needing to take a taxi when the arranged transport never showed. But as I said, we made it, and afterall it was a pretty fun adventure.
Ive been importing all my photos (here's a tip, if ever you take a water-tight camera, such as the GoPro, to 14,000 feet, leave the case cracked open before you descend back to sea level) and will be attempting to sort them and post some more in the next week or two.
Sunday, February 9, 2014
Huaraz and the Mountains
Im in Huaraz now and will be leaving tomorrow morning for a 3 day mountain trek through the Andes here. Its called the Santa Cruz trek, and supposed to be pretty amazing. I get back late Wednesday and will take a night bus to Lima that night to spend 2 days there before flying home.
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Update from Huanchaco
Ive been around Huanchaco for a bit now and thought Id write an update. Nothing particularly exciting has been going on, its been a nice little vacation here on the beach. I really enjoy the ceviche here, I have it most days. Ive been continuing to practice surfing most days, though on the second day I was stung by a malagua (jellyfish) which turned out to not be too much of a problem. I have been continuing spanish lessons here with a couple different teachers and have found a way to make flashcards out of all the previous notes I typed up which has been very helpful. The hostel I have moved to is right across the street from the beach and has quite a nice atmosphere mainly catering to backpackers; I am meeting many travelers mostly from all over Europe. I am the only North American that has been here for the last week or so, so myself and the one British fellow are the local experts on English when any of the Europeans encounter an English phrase they do not understand the nuances of, which is kind of an interesting experience to describe what distinguishes one phrase from another, such as why someone "making a call" has a slight contextual difference than "making a decision". Once it gets out that I am studying medicine I keep getting asked for medical advice about GI problems and even to extract the sea urchin spines from one German fellows foot, hah. I had planned to go to some of the local pyramids with a group arranged from the hostel but when I woke up I was told it had been canceled ... the Peruvians can be quite a flaky people at times.
Youll have to excuse the odd pictures, I have been using the GoPro camera and the pictures it takes are a bit distorted into a round shape.
Heres a picture from the room in the new hostel I moved to, I have been liking it mostly,
They had some kind of festival with a parade that went through the night, and below you can see a picture of a "Castle" which is just a big wooden structure they build with fireworks attached all over.
Some pictures from the beach.
I booked a bus ticket to Huaraz for this Saturday. Its up in the mountains and is supposed to have some great treks. I am not sure if I will do a multi-day trek or not yet. I think I will plan to return to Lima either this next Thursday or Friday, then fly home Saturday.
Youll have to excuse the odd pictures, I have been using the GoPro camera and the pictures it takes are a bit distorted into a round shape.
Heres a picture from the room in the new hostel I moved to, I have been liking it mostly,
They had some kind of festival with a parade that went through the night, and below you can see a picture of a "Castle" which is just a big wooden structure they build with fireworks attached all over.
Some pictures from the beach.
In order to fit in here I have had to adopt some of the local surfer attire, much like Keanu Reeves in Point Break, a film one of the other traveles here insisted I watch.
I booked a bus ticket to Huaraz for this Saturday. Its up in the mountains and is supposed to have some great treks. I am not sure if I will do a multi-day trek or not yet. I think I will plan to return to Lima either this next Thursday or Friday, then fly home Saturday.
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