BootsnAll Travel Network



Archive for the 'Ecuador' Category

« Home

Scary mime and sheep guts

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

Celebrating our newfound freedom that evening, we headed to the Queen Vic for a good old fashioned pub quiz. I am pleased to say we lost, pitifully. We then proceeded to get absolutely smashed around the bars of Quito with some lads from Manchester in South America for the Copa America. Interestingly turned out that I went to school with one of their cousins in Guernsey, small world huh!

Needless to say we did not make the 7am bus to Saquasilli to the visit the indigenous market town there. What we actually did was fall out of bed at about 12:00 and eventually make a 2pm bus to Lacatunga, a larger town just of Saquasilli where we intended to stay the night before starting the Quilotoa loop the following day. (At this point could I apologise for the spelling of these Ecuadorian towns, I don’t have my guide book with me to check). We had driven through Lacatunga before on the way back from Baños and didn’t think that mush of it, but actually when we started exploring it was really quite nice. Small cobbled streets, a large interesting market and a big sunny, leafy plaza in the north of the town. We wiled away a lazy afternoon here sitting in the sun and watching a very smartly dressed band mime their performance to a camcorder and a small group of mocking on lookers. They did at least have the decency to look embarrassed! It was a very strange phenomena, at first we thought they might be filming a music video but the video camera looked like it cam out of a Christmas cracker and the miming was terrible, although the dance moves were good… very odd!

Unfortunately, Lacatunga seemed to have a shortage of places to eat and whilst we did find a good Italian, we ended up eating there three times since there seemed to be little else. Fortunately for us our hotel had a 10pm curfew so it was exactly as if we could paint the town red anyway.

The following morning we fared slightly better with busses and managed to catch the first bus to Chugchulan at 10am. The bus journey was four hours of dusty, stuffy, smelly bumpy road through some of the most beautiful scenery we had seen in Ecuador so far. My favorite thing about Ecuador is how green it is, and this journey was no exception. We wound our way up and down valleys, admittedly on knife edge roads, through lush green hills and tiny villages, all the time overshadowed by two enormous snowcapped mountains. At one point we also saw a still smoking volcano, far more impressive than the one in Bolivia, it really was pretty cool. Throughout the trip we were also treated to the music videos of Los Puntos, a particularly horrific Peruvian band whose total repertoire was frighteningly similar and whose videos had been filmed in bulk on, you guessed it, a camcorder out of a cracker. Suddenly the actions of the Latacunga band were becoming frighteningly clear. A small mercy being that they had had the self respect not to chose the same tasseled leather as Los Puntos. Seriously I will never think about at Cusco Airport (the set of their multiple videos) in the same way again. Never the less were weren’t sorry to fall out of the bus at Chugchulan and arrive at Mama Hilda’s. A really nice hostel with hammocks, a bar and a spectacular view of the valley below. Initially we set out to explore the village; however 20 seconds later and we had reached the other side of the square and were out of the other side, so really there was nothing to do but kick back in a hammock for the afternoon and relax. Bliss.

Since there was nothing to do in the village the hostel provided dinner in the evening and we chatted for a while to our fellow travelers. The interesting thing about Ecuador is the kind of people traveling there. There are far more holiday makers and far fewer “travelers”. As a result Paul and I appear very worldly and well traveled and can feel mildly superior for a short time, I hate to say we did indulge in this for a short time over dinner with a perfectly nice Flemish couple who were being escorted around Ecuador for two weeks by a tour guide – pah guides! After dinner we were entertained by all of the little girls in the village who changed their grubby tracksuits and Shrek T-shirts for traditional local dress and danced around the maypole for us. It was lovely to watch, the colors of their costumes and the maypole ribbons were really lovely and they were all such good dances and I don’t think any were older than eight. Ahh, it brought back my Maypole dancing days on the Oxspring village green, although I was glad they didn’t ask me to share that experience and join in! No wait, they did, at the end of the performance, we were all on our feet joining in, you could hear the men’s backs giving out as they bent to dancing with the girls.

The following morning, Paul the slave driver that he is, insisted that we catch the 4am bus to Laguna Quilatoa. Admittedly the only other option was a 3am bus, but we could have hitched!! Anyway, I duly dragged myself out of bed and onto the stinking bus at 4am, with the promise that it would at least be light by the time we arrived at the lake. An hour and a half later we fought our way off the bus past the sacks, women and chickens, none of whom were willing to move out of the way, and out onto the DARK road in the middle of know where at 5:30am. Now I wanted to see the lake too, but not in the dark. But we made our way up to the viewing point above the lake, which is in an old volcano crater by the way, and tried to make ourselves warmish and wait for the sun to come up. Now, I hate to admit this, and don’t tell Paul, but it was beautiful watching the sun come up over the mountains, and it was lovely to be there on our own in the peace and quiet, maybe the 4am bus was worth it.

At about 6:30 just as it was getting light and we started to think about walking down the crater to the lake, we were joined by a local guy who asked if we were planning to walk down to the lake and if we needed a guide. Whilst we assured him that we were confident we could follow a direct path for 400m to the bottom, we did ask about the possibility of hiring horses to come back up, it is a pretty sheer slope and apparently horse is the best way to do it. Well, he hurried off to ask his friend, who returned a few minutes later with arrangements for horses and the offer of a cup of tea. Well I readily accepted as it was cold and still not quite light enough to start our descent, and of course still bloody early! We followed this guy back to his house/café where we were seated in front of the fire and given hot tea whilst he continued to work on his paintings in the corner. Only then did we notice that in the double bed in the corner of the same room, his wife was still asleep!! Well, I bet she was thrilled to see us, and whilst he was keen to explain to us that they were speaking to each other in Quecha, I bet she would have had a few choice words to say to us in any language. Needles to say we necked our tea and made our excuses as fast as was polite, not before we had had to buy some of his paintings however – jammy operator, guilt trip us by waking up his wife at 6:30am then ask us why we don’t like his work – what could we do!?

Anyway, we eventually wandered down to the lake at about 7:00am, and it was lovely and peaceful and a very nice walk. But I was glad we had horses back up, it was really steep and sandy and we had already arranged with another local a lift to Zumbahua to the local market in his truck at 8:30. I was glad we had hired horses that it, until we say the donkeys that arrived to carry us back up. I swear we thought we would flatten them just by sitting on them, never mind asking them to carry us 400m up a vertical slope! That said my affection for the beast was slightly lessened after sitting on their incredibly boney unsaddles spine for 45 minutes – John Wayne is not the word for it! But with much huffing, puffing and flatulence (my God I did not know mules had wind like that) we eventually made it to the top and were bundled into the back of the truck well before 8:30 and arrived at the market by 9:00. This was proving to be a busy morning. The market was nothing like Otovalo, not that we expected it to be, it was totally a local market with just a couple of gringos walking around. There was a whole area devoted to clothes and shoes, and the usual mounds of fruit and veg as well as the women cooking a number of unappetizing dishes around the side. There was also a huge livestock market making up about half the size of the market area. Now, I would like to think that I’m not too much of a squeamish person and that I am getting used to animals in this country – for example the women next to me on the bus on the way to Chugchulan was carrying a number of live chickens in a small paper bag on he lap – but the animal market was too much for me. There were chickens being wrung left right and centre, cows’ heads just lying on the side of the road and sheep having their thoughts slit into buckets right in front of their mates.

So, following our early start we were back on the bus to Lacatunga by about 10:30 and back in the hotel having the most thorough shower ever by about 13:00. That afternoon it was lunch at the Italian again and a lazy chilling out in the park before a TV movie and munchies in the evening. In our defense, the owner of the hotel had asked how late we were going out as she was leaving her mother in charge and we didn’t have the heart to keep her up late – honest! Paul also had other worried on his mind, that afternoon he had taken some washing to the launderette but unfortunately they couldn’t do it in time for the next morning, but no fear, a toothless old lady carrying a bag of rubbish and wearing her slippers overheard Paul’s dilemma and offered to do his washing by the next morning, a strange offer which of course he accepted. Fortunately, this rather odd judgment proved not to be too bad and the worst that happened was that he was hideously overcharged and collected the following morning a bag of still wet washing. Still, his underwear gave Olga (the washing lady’s name) and her husband a good laugh, apparently this is not the sort of underwear worn by respectable Ecuadorian men – the mind boggles!

The day we went to prison…

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

Wednesday 4th July and my first American Independence day celebrations, in Quito women’s prison.

After hearing about the prison visits from an Irish couple we met in Patagonia who had been studying in Quito, we had decided to visit before we even arrived in Ecuador. The visits are organised by the South American Explorers club, an organisation in Quito which helps travelers with information in South America (the clue really is in the name). Anyway, they organise visits twice a week to the prison to visit the foreign women who are being held there, acting as a surrogate family since these have no other support in Ecuador. So, clutching our plastic bags full of tampons and soap off we trundled to the prison to bring solace to the poor souls repenting there.

Most of the women in the prison are there for drug offences, in the case of the local women it is largely selling the drugs, in the case of the foreign women they are all there for trafficking, with an average sentence time of 8 years, regardless of quantity. Once in the prison however, unlike western goals (or so I understand), the women have to provide everything themselves. They have to pay rent for the very bed they sleep in as well as providing their own clothes, toiletries and everything else they need to live. They also prefer to buy and prepare their own food rather than eat that provided by the prison. The Ecuadorian women are therefore supported with all they need by their families who are able to visit frequently. The foreign girls however don’t have this option, that’s why the visits from SAE are so important to them, that’s why we needed to take so many tampons – you know how important that is girls, and we can all nip down to Boots.

Anyway, when we arrived, loaded up with pizza and pie for the 4th July celebrations, we were searched by the guards and stamped to show that we weren’t prisoners and should be allowed to leave at the end of the afternoon, man I didn’t rub that thing off for four days just in case there was any confusion! The prison itself was packed, full of the female prisoners milling around with their families and other visitors. I felt hugely uncomfortable as we were stared at as obvious gringos, walking through the hall towards the room at the end of the wing where the foreign residents had gathered for some privacy. The prison gives its residents a relative amount of freedom I guess, they are aloud to roam anywhere in the prison during the day and are locked in their wings at 6pm and their rooms at 10pm. However, privacy is a luxury they definitely do not have. There are people everywhere, sitting around, talking, eating and yelling at kids. The noise is deafening the place is pretty dirty and the smell is pretty awful. This is particularly true of the rougher wing where those more violent inmates and those who cannot afford the rent are housed. Whilst this area of the prison is open and accessible to everyone it definitely had a more threatening feel to it, not somewhere I could spend eight years. The foreign girls however are “fortunate” to be in a slightly better area of the prison where conditions are less crowded and they are able to keep the areas cleaner and in better condition. That said most women sleep in groups of four in rooms no larger that a double bed with one bed stacked on top of each other. As well as the four women, more often than not the room is also shared with children.

This was definitely the most tragic and most depressing element of the visit, for those women with children who are sent to prison, without support from the outside to look after them, they are forced to bring their children into prison with them. This means these kids share the same single bunk bed as their mother (because of course no-one can afford more rent for a second bed), they don’t go to school because its expensive and very few women can afford to send them, and they grow up knowing only the confines of prison walls. The oldest children there are around nine or ten, but the tragic thing is the number, I think there are around 150 children currently living in the prison with various levels of permanency.

We spent about two hours in the prison with the girls in total, between pizza and pie they told us their stories and gave us a tour around. Despite the confines of the physical prison they do have a surprising amount of freedom. There were a number of food outlets selling pizza, chips, etc, all run by the prisoners to make some money to support themselves. There were also a number of small shops, a library and several sewing rooms where the women make and maintain their clothes. For those with no income our support from outsider this is a way for them to make some extra money to survive. There is also a sadly unused schoolroom.

There are 14 foreign national women in prison at the moment, all for trafficking. All will admit they did it and all are pretty damn repentant. Many stories are tragic, often involving blackmail and manipulative boyfriends, although all admitted they took responsibility for their actions and weren’t looking to play the innocent. Once particular girl was forced to traffic when people she thought were here friends took away her baby daughter and blackmailed her. Another had a very well paid job and luxury lifestyle on cruise ships but fell into a bag crowd, became an addict and her boyfriend groomed her for six months to become a set up bust so that a larger amount of drugs could be trafficked on the same flight. This same woman has a seven year old daughter at home and she spends most of her time wondering how she is going to explain an eight year absence. But it’s not all doom and gloom, this same woman was keen to tell us exactly how the experience has turned her life around. She has come off drugs and whilst not forcing it upon us she explained that she had found Christianity and that helped her to cope. She was also taking care of two small because their mother couldn’t (although the circumstances of this were a little hazy), no small feat when you have to scrape together the cash just to support yourself from day to day. Of course the women are depressed and angry and homesick from time to time, but most try to make the best of each day, laugh at themselves and their situations and just get through it as best they can. When we met them the women were all insanely upbeat and over the top, they were actually all a little odd, but I guess that’s what gets them through. I think Paul was particularly intimidated, a tall blond haired blue eyed man caused quite a stir, amongst the foreigners and Ecuadorians alike.

When we came to leave we left the women the toiletries and other gifts we had brought for them and we were also asked for some money, just to help them out a bit. They didn’t ask for much, only some change each, less than a dollar, but by the end of the visit we were all happy to give them more. Not because we thought they were all wrongly accused and innocent women and not particularly because they had told us all sob stories of their children at home; I think we all just wanted to help them because they were helping themselves. They were all remorseful and they were making the best of the worst situation. They were very different from the Ecuadorian residents; they didn’t bribe the guards and join in the drinking, parties and drug taking that the guards allowed for the Ecuadorian prisoners, although the guards did provide them illegally with cell phones, charges and credit etc. Mainly they just wanted to keep their heads down and get out. More importantly I guess, we wanted to help because we were so happy to be free, so happy to show our purple stamp and walk out of those doors into the sunshine and be able to go wherever the hell we wanted.

Lazy days in Baños

Saturday, July 7th, 2007
Well, lazy days for me at least. The following morning Tucky got up early and went White water rafting. Still feeling shitty and full of cold, I spent the morning in bed watching trash cable TV, I then treated myself ... [Continue reading this entry]

Our latest entertaining journey…

Monday, July 2nd, 2007
Yesterday morning we left Quito and headed down south to Baños, to enjoy the relaxing thermal springs and some fresh air. The bus journey down there takes about 3.5hours under normal circumstances but yesterday that was not to be.... We managed ... [Continue reading this entry]

Otovalo Market and so much shopping!

Monday, July 2nd, 2007
Saturday morning we took a two hour bus north of Quito to Otovalo to visit one of the most famous markets in South America. It was great, it was huge and colourful and really pretty reasonable, but I´m still not ... [Continue reading this entry]

Mitad del Mundo

Monday, July 2nd, 2007
Friday we visited Mitad del Mundo, the ecuator line just north of Quito. Despite the Lonely Planets helpful directions to the direct pink bus that would take us there, it took over two hours and several blue busses before we ... [Continue reading this entry]

Quito

Monday, July 2nd, 2007
We spent the next day in Quito exploring the old town and visiting the city museum. It was interesting enough except that nothing was signed either in English or Spanish so we had to guess what a lot of the ... [Continue reading this entry]

New country, but still at bloody altitude!

Monday, July 2nd, 2007
Wednesday 27th June, we flew from La Paz to Quito via Lima. Disembarking the plane in Lima the weather was cold and grey and we almost thought we had landed back in London by accident! I just hope the weather ... [Continue reading this entry]