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5:49 PM

Inca Trail fail


That have been prescribed antibiotics and other drugs back in Puno I took that I all set for the Inca Trail after days rest in our hotel. Silly me! That night I started stretching to my spinach ravioli from the previous night and Diddley Squitting more. God was terrible. My roommate has a look at me, woke up to about 6. 30 pm and crashed a doctor to summon. After a full examination, they broke the bad news for me that I needed to off to the hospital back in Cusco at the expense of the test, drip, drugs, and so on must be rushed.

Suffered altitude sickness at all when compared to the rest of the Group of headache symptoms, expected vomiting etc. seemed it that it me, who don't get to do the hike, but for very different reasons, to! I was soooo excluded. I am a girl of the heart mountain and trekking is my big deal, so the best bit of the journey was Miss heart break. Not that I felt some sense do except lie in bed crap in all fit!

So, following two days, on my own

in a room of me in this small hospital in Cusco, speaking nurses surrounded by Spanish. Very shockingly not to know what was going on with me and have all of these drugs in me pumped about a drop in my arm. The doctor as he was fortunately do speak English could explained that I was not just a viral infection, but a parasitic to why the antibiotics all except deleted had not. What bad luck!

So I had to sit there waiting for the drugs to work. The doctor kindly lent me his laptop so I was able, with a few friends on Facebook chat-that I feel less lonely and isolated made. But it was really terrible, especially as the day came, when I started the trek with my group should have!

I had a couple of visits by the local representatives from the adventure company was nice and reassuring. He sorted me out with nights and back to my group to Machu Pichu in only a few days can see train tickets to me. I was finally released from the hospital and settled hotels back in Cusco I used was my group had.

Now, had I a few days in Cusco I wait to waste, to meet with my friends. Not something that I, as Understandabley was looking forward would they all pumped and excited just completed the Trek. Big false smiles are needed I think!


Part of the journey: remain calmer!
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12:45 PM

Who would have thought....

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I was in, exhausted when I woke up knowing that our flight hours away home... Was I relieved? Perhaps. I wanted to go home? No. I I enjoyed every day and moment I had in Greece... but always felt that this trip would be incomplete if we don't go and see Athens... too bad it was bought not part of the package Greece we... because I constantly try, my friend a day to stay in Athens, it was simply not possible... So today was the day that I offer Adéu to this beautiful country and hop in a Looonngg home ride....

How we met with our group to find out which bus to the airport... very concerned one look back booth guide directly reserves us... Initially they apologized and went on... Honestly, I was half asleep... but as soon as I heard 'Flight delay' my brain woke up immediately... I was not sure, to the time when I would be excited or would I fear it... Who may get stuck for hours right in airport? Our flight was delayed anyways

leave at 11 am leaves the level we must now start at 11 am...

Then... the unthinkable almost my wish happen... its one heard in the sky... Our guide said, to compensate for the inconvenience, we booked a hotel for the day directly in the Centre of Athens, where we have free lunch and dinner and to ensure that only, we are comfortable and well rested to the (bus) to the airport to pick us up. I had a second Flash... try, the fatigue shake way... and I was wondering... hear this right? OMG... This is Sweeeeettt....!

So how happy for us to get hooked up were not with a hotel... but of course we expect much... unless it was only for the day... As we dropped off and checked into our hotel... It was beyond the expectations... the hotel was very clean, modernize... and was just beautiful! What else can we require right?... But the point was... I was willing to pay extra $$ easy, even for a day in Athens remain even though my friend would deny always... but here we are...! In Athens! Literally just for a day!

Given

that we exhausted were... my friend wanted to sleep and rest... and this time I have a point this rare opportunity, if we don't go and explore this city... If we ever the! So fortunately I could motivate enough they get up out of bed and start position out on the road...

Now... at the time were we in Athens...... they'd by some financial problems it was protests goes... and sometimes it is violent... so, I just, which will in mind... but I had no fear, what happened, me...... all could get at this time, which was in my head was... Go and explore...

As we walked through the streets... it was... but not Pretesters to busy and the city itself has stationed on the other hand us with their bulls everywhere from one point in their main roads with big guns certainly feel... I think anyone who would want confusion with this right?

Only bad thing I of Athens is... seriously... Some say taxi drivers are just too damn lazy!... so we a few taxi drivers asked... parked on the side of the

on the road... what seemed as patient Custimers wait... Why is that one had passenger of them his feet in the window and roughly say "no go and look for another!"... such as that was the end of it... we have decided to explore the city on foot... So far, there had been a very happy day with the exception for this CAB meeting...

On our journey to find that met Acropolis... we agreed this man in the street, to the Acropolis take us foot, because he, the ways and means anyways head... I mean... OMG... this day was only getting better and better....

As we our way into the Acropolis... navigate get on the top was no easy task by the way... There are too many stairs under the scorching hot so... and not even a bottle of cold water does the trick...

But I have to say... any hard work pays off... The Acropolis... see, are right in front of the Parthenon... took my breath... I looked at history me... were the pillars beautifully.... it was kept intact, as if I was back in the history...

As the day ended with

a good food... we finally said goodbye to Greece... and I have to say... I will definitely return to this beautiful country... 62 Photo (s): 21 displayed: additional photos: «back 1 2 3 next» 62 photo (s): 21 displayed: additional photos: «back 1 2 3 next»
Part of the journey: Greek Islands and Turkey
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9:26 AM

Ring of Kerry


«««Europe» Ireland» County Kerry» Portmagee
18. April 2011 by Rod and Gill

18 Monday 18 aril 2011

Today we have out of Kerry - the longest of the five peninsulas jutting the ring into the Atlantic Ocean from the South West of Ireland.
We on the way from Kenmore, our first stop was white beach of a beautiful Sandy Bay of Castlecove. The dog enjoyed the sea and the rock pools - the sea was white attractive green and sand.
We have the Ballinskellings scenic drive if, that this follows the coast finally through the Coonanaspig pass and climb the decent to Portmagee. At the foot of the pass, we parked and went to the Kerry cliffs - for views over the Islands and the huge cliffs.
Further on we took the narrow road, which winds up in the shadow of which the Macgillycuddy's reeks, Ballaghbeema gap with its magnificent view over the uninhabited landscape on then and back to the base via molls gap and women's vVew (Killarney Lakes)
A long journey but a good day and again blue skies and lots of sunshine.


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4:27 AM

Omega jungle lodge horseback riding and mountain biking


What fun we have had days!

We have done also Horeseback to rafting, horse riding and mountain biking!

HORSE

Yesterday, we ride for the riding. I was sure take an allergy pill, before we seem the horses, as I very allergic against them and without a pill to swell.

Silvia (the German manufacturer) was one the leaders, as also Allan (Ireland) and Lindsay (Canada) as well as a Honduran man, I didn't get the name that was break of their new baby horses on his first mark in one, horse riding. "Nugget" got a pretty golden horse named Walt and I got a brown with white feet "Pata Blana" (foot white) called.

It was a few hours on the road from the hotel by several small villages. We then back to its ownership to horseback riding going the home of a wealthy local man who came along with us (apparently not by standard) and so could achieved. What has he a beautiful property! It was so beautiful, the wind is blowing and riding on beautiful paths with trees and plants have covered.

We rested for lunch (picnic) at the side of a small swimming hole on the River. So peaceful. The water was pretty cool but after he felt great in the Sun.

It was back then in the way and back to the hotel. We were SO sore that Walt thought cycling today would we not in the position, the saddles and I. We have... but only just. Not sure I can go now:

We then lazed in the pool and slept in the hammocks... again.

Mountain biking

Well, we woke up yesterday with sore butts from the saddle but determined journey, it was on this bike also. You have been to scrounge for helmets and finally found 4 of them for those of us riding (minus the Honduran Guide named "Roca", which was only his Ballcap). You tried, provide with a rafting helmet you me flaps at first, a bit like a hockey helmet but then found a helmet, the as a similar I had looked saw, when I about 6 - was large and round no form or style. haha

We met with father and son (14 years) from Toronto called Chris and Mike. Nice pair.

Before we even on the bike, it in the pickup truck for over an hour ride the mountain up and past several villages. The fact that there over an hour in the truck, I knew us, that we were for a long drive.

We have at the top (quite exactly as far as you may be in the vehicle can go) on the mountain and began our journey. It was a little scary at first, as a few years already since I was on a bike, which was not stationary, plus the steep downhill start and unpaved roads had the brakes grab me pretty hard.

I believe that was the scariest part of it, which were the streets often gravel and down quickly I always introduce myself, slides and balance lose then sliding - through the gravel track with my body... fortunately not done.

Most of the ride was down to fairly easy was. There were many battles level surfaces and a few above. The hardest was about halfway through our trip. The Hill is huge and so we went all the way through the winding streets. Probably took the 30-45 minutes in itself. I do not know it. You lose time out here without a clock.

We at a beautiful swimming for another picnic lunch on the ground to stop. This one had a much larger swimming pool and a pretty small swim through some rocks over a small waterfall. SO update me after I felt like was I dying in the heat. I also swore that I never again would drive a horse and bike in a row! My butt was killing me!

It was then about another 25 minutes back to the hotel. The whole ride was apparently 23-26 km!

First thing I did was once we were back in the pool jump. Walt grabbed a hammock and not yet been moved. Haha.

Plan is for the afternoon by the pool and relax in the hammock again. It is then off Comayagua tomorrow early. We will see if we the power to make the carpets this year. I really want to help, but I'm not sure whether I consider me a durchgemachten can be. We will see.

Safely enjoy our vacation. Hope all is well with everyone at home.


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7:51 PM

My weekend in Puerto Rico


North America
20 April 2011 , of mpat213

I spent five perfect days in San Juan. Old San Juan is beautiful. I could have spent only me, all the streets and explore the shops and galleries days. Here are my old San Juan highlights:
Snorkeling with Owen on a beach in San Juan. It was Owen's first time. He received his mask and snorkel on and moved, before we could get our equipment OwYunqun. We saw many cool small fish. Owen favorite was the long skinny pipe fish we saw food.
El Yunque rain forest hiking. We saw beautiful trees, birds and insects. Owen went two of the three miles. He led our group to a beautiful waterfall, where we have to jump and swim.
Our wedding in the El Convento. We had a good night. We were so overwhelmed by all the love and support we had from our friends and family, who not only attended, but the cards sent and good wishes to those.

Sorry images will be added later.


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4:09 PM

Monthdelayed entry from Luderitzst. Helena transit

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Africa » Namibia » Luderitz
March 6th 2011 by suzsemo, Vietnam and other locales

March 8, 2011 Tuesday night, half way between luderitz and st. Helena (1300 miles between, about 670 there)
So for recap:
Feb 10th – arrived cape town
Feb 11th – moved on board
Feb 23rd – left cape town for luderitz, 8-12 watch
Foggy, cold, damp passage
Feb 27th – arrived to luderitz in fog
2 days off in luderitz,
Worked a day
March 3rd – left for st. Helena
March 5th – traded time
March 6th – dogged watches to change from 8-12 watch to 12-4 watch
I am writing this entry en route to St. Helena, the island where Napoleon was exiled. I have learned that there is no airport there making the only way to/from is via ship. I am steadily getting acclimated to life on board. We work 4 hours on and have 8 hours off. Surprisingly, switching to the 12-4 has not gone as difficult as expected. I was originally on the 8-12 watch (working 8am-12pm and 8pm-12am) which has the most “normal” sleep hours. Now my schedule is going kinda as follows:
I get off watch a little after 4am (this watch will include any combination of following: an hour on helm (steering the ship), an hour on lookout (on the focsle head looking out for other ships, changing weather patterns, cloud formations for oncoming squalls, and sea life including flying fish, tuna, dolphins and various sea birds). Lookout is also known as “self-reflection time”. This hour is followed up by a ship check to make sure there are no fires a brewing, faucets left on or leaking in the bilges. The watches also include any sail handling that needs to be done, and make coffee and hot water for the next oncoming watch (the galley fitted with a 19th century oven also gets fresh water via a hand-pump). I then sleep from a little after 4 until about 9:30 or so (breakfast is served at 7:30 and 8am), will get a tea and some kind of snack and hang out on the aloha deck (at the stern of the ship) to wake up a little. Then, I’ll work on any of the projects I have going at the moment (just finished my sheath for my rig today, also working on a ditty bag which is a hand-sewn canvas bag of tools. All of the skills that are needed to learn how to make/sew a sail are required to complete the bag. Right now, I’m just starting with sewing seams into the canvas using a “palm” to help push the large needle thru the thick material and reading for the workshop-courses we are taking. I’m taking a rigging course this week and reading all about line, rope, knots, splices, seizings, etc – I’m really liking it. Then lunch is served at 11:30: today we had some kind of a curry dish, yummy, I don’t know how our cook pulls it off like he does at sea. Then, we report to muster before our watch at 11:50am. We begin our watch which again will include any combination of the following: an hour on the helm, an hour on lookout followed by a ship check, sail handling: today, I got to go aloft to loose the main royal staysail before setting her; we also have our stunc’ls set which is very exciting. Otherwise, we report to the bos’un for ship’s work: sanding, priming, painting, rust busting, core sealing, chipping, whipping fraying rope ends which was all interrupted by sail handling: we set the fore and aft sails during our watch including the outer jib, mizzen topmast stays’l, main topmast, tagallant and royal stays’ls. I also did the final ship check at the end of our watch. Muster again at 3:50pm. Then report to the rigging class (there are 4 classes going on that are being rotated over the course of the next 4 weeks). Today we learned how to repair a ratline and got to practice doing a ratline seizing. The class lasts an hour and a half which gives us some down time before the 6pm dinner bell: tonight we had ribs,cole slaw and homemade bacon cheddar buns. After dinner, I worked a little bit on my projects. Finally, took some pics at sunset and here I am. I’ll head to bed a little later tonight at around 8:30pm to get a few hours sleep before my 11:30pm wake up before needing to report to muster at 11:50pm.
So, how is it? Well, it is definitely getting better. I think Sunday was a turning point for me: we are heading towards warmer sunnier waters so seeing the sun again had a big effect, and the watch change surprisingly made a very positive effect as it just gives a little shake up to the groups and therefore the dynamics. I’m finally over my sea-queeziness. I wasn’t really “sick” persay, but queezy, headachy and tired and generally unmotivated. Looking back, there has been a whole lot of new things to get used to in the last several weeks: a new home, new clothes (borrowing work clothes from other shipmates), new language (kinda feels like I’m in PT school again, learning all the new terminology and language to even express things like “avast!” “that’s well” “let it render” “hands to the braces!” “ease port haul starboard!”, new food, new people and living mates, and steep learning curve to the new schedule and expectations, skills, rules to which I have over 40 people to help orient me which can be a bit overwhelming at times. Things I enjoy: going aloft for any reason or no reason at all, helming – I especially enjoyed doing it last night with a clear sky where I actually used the stars to help guide/steer me, seeing the sea life: dolphins, flying fish, glowing jelly fish, whales, bioluminescence; any sail handelling (especially when it requires going aloft), learning rigging skills. It’s amazing how effective and simple wrapping and tying lines and ropes can be at getting jobs done. The rigging of this entire vessel has been more or less done by hand and can be repaired and is repaired by hand all along the way. Living on board at sea, I am learning that it is a constant effort against rust, chaffe and mildew. So the repainting, sail handling and taking care of things in organizing them, cleaning and arranging is a constant source of work. But, there is comfort in these simple repetitive tasks that you know you will be doing over again in a very short amount of time (I think a week had only passed between me varnishing the bridge rail and observing 2 shipmates re-sanding and varnishing it).
The dynamics between the shipmates is an interesting sociological study. Everyone has their quarks, humors, edges and soft spots and life aboard is more or less a constant bouncing off of each other sometimes softly, only slipping past each other, sometimes colliding and on rare occasions leaving minor bruises (figuratively or literally).
Which brings my next observation: life aboard is also dangerous! The floor is never still: constantly moving and sometimes in unpredictable ways, it’s often wet as the sea is constantly washing over the deck, the lighting isn’t always ideal as lights are not used at night (standard rule), so when absolutely needed like when doing a ship check you can use a red head lamp covered by a hand to soften it. Groping thru darkness to get to various places on deck and down below is commonplace and I’m hoping might become easier as I get to know the ship better in the dark. Checking the engine room bilges at night freaks me out after hearing about the engine room “ghost story” – of course. And then there’s the water boiling in the galley (barefoot of course) which is precarious with a rolling ship, chemicals that are worked with in the pain locker – again more dangerous to control with a rolling ship, and then there’s the standard dangerous dealing with lines and pins under strain, hauling on one of the headsail downhauls on the focs’le head is also particularly challenging because of the difficulty in balance without holding on as the ship is rolling and heaving aft on a line. Luckily I haven’t seriously hurt myself and I hope to keep it that way: constant vigilance needs to be heeded. There are plenty of moments that I have experienced a pause and awe of what our ancestors have endured during the age of sail in the mid 1800’s for the conditions they were in were much more difficult than us. Like, I may only shower a couple times a week but have hot water when I do. And, the marine head might need to be hand pumped, but it’s better than no head at all. The bunks are on the small side but still spacious to theirs. The food is waaayyyy better hands down (thank God for Donald), our hours are better: they often worked 4 on 4 off – I don’t know how they sustained that schedule bcz this is no walk in the park, we have refridgeration on board and a genie that runs from 6am-12pm to charge the batteries even though we are still very consciencious of our energy usage (shouldn’t we all be, tho?) water gets turned off during hand washing, teeth brushing, face washing and even mid shower to salvage resources and not let it all go running down the drain when not directly being used, but again, we could and maybe should do this anyway.
I’m also learning more about the weather, wind, and wave patterns – that there are patterns for one and I notice my body noticing and sensing when things are changing and shifting (which is super important while helming).
Well, that’s all for now. Gotta turn in to get a few hours of shut eye before my midnight watch.


Part of the trip: Vietnam and other locales
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9:07 AM

Bolivia

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The journey to Bolivia...

We travelled by bus continuously from Friday 9pm until midday on Sunday when we finally arrived in La Paz - an epic journey! On Friday night we got an overnight bus from Cordoba to Salta, northern Argentina. Little did we know an entire sports team of fit young men was on the bus with us who were very rowdy and loud, sprawling into the aisles. Also I had a stroke of very bad luck with my chair which barely reclined at all, whilst the guy in front of me had his chair fully reclined which left me sitting very uncomfortably for the whole night and barely able to sleep at all. It was especially fun trying to navigate past all the guys with their legs and arms sprawled out in the aisle while the bus jerked around. One moment in particular was hilarious when Jo was trying to get out of her seat while the guy in front simultaneously was reclining his seat she kept bobbing up and down. Fun times!
The next day we took a 7 hour bus which took us from Salta to the border with Bolivia. This bus was much more pleasurable

as they showed some really good films like 50 First Dates lol. However, neither of us could relax properly since therewas a great looming unknown which was the rest of our journey - crossing the border with little clue of where we were going or what we were doing. I was reluctant to leave the bus for once. Luckily a group of 4 English guys were in the same position as us and we all crossed the border, which was actually very easy.

Since an hour or so before arriving at the border it already had felt like we had left Argentina and entered Bolivia, the poorest country in South America. Suddenly the people, buildings and landscape totally changed. The people changed from European-Spanish looking to indigenous Andes people, of whom the women were often to be seen wearing traditional clothing. The buildings were more rundown, the roads dustier and the landscape soon changed. The views from the bus were incredible - mountains and rivers.
Crossing the border consisted of getting a stamp of departure from Argentinian migration and then crossing a bridge and getting a stamp of entry in Bolivia. We had finally made it to Bolivia!!

After getting off the bus we were all struck immediately by the change in altitude. Our chests felt quite tight and it was a bit difficult to breathe. This did not bode well for the Inca trail!

We made our way to the bus station and were bombarded by people trying to get us onto certain buses. We had been planning to go to the salt flats in Uyuruni but discovered that there wasn´t a bus until the following morning. We just didn´t have the time to hang around waiting so we decided to go straight to La Paz and hopped on an overnight bus. The fact that we were now in Bolivia became startingly obvious. The waiting room at the bus station was like a run down village hall, dirty floor and broken chairs. We had our first taste of Bolivian public toilets, which ridiculously you have to pay for, even though they are flooded, do not flush, have no paper, soap or water. We made our way to the platform to get our bus very dubious about what the condition of the bus would be. I think we were both quite impressed that it was a large

coach not a ramshackle little bus, and our luggage was loaded on securely. Our driver didn´t appear to be drunk, which we had been told was an issue in Bolivia, although I think that is more on public buses (apparently a while ago bus drivers were demonstrating against the law to prevent them from drink-driving!!). We were struck by how smiley and friendly the Bolivian people were we didn´t feel at all threatened or uneasy, even on the bus where we were the only foreigners.

A little girl got on the bus selling empanadas, she was so sweet we decided to buy some off her. I made the somewhat foolish decision to believe that the queso empanadas didn´t contain any meat, half way through I found a morsel of meat, great! Through the night several children got on the bus or were waiting at stops to sell us food or drinks, it was really sad. On entering Bolivia in the migration office I saw a poster that said "Recuerden los niños no son objetos, no les pueden vender" (Remember, children are not objects to be sold) - not very promising.

I was fascinated by the women´s dress -

most of them were wearing traditional clothing - huge, long skirts, thick jumpers, bowler hats or wooly hats perched on top of their heads, hair in long black plaits down their backs. In contrast the men all worse much more western clothing, trousers and jackets. Everyone was loaded up with thick alpaca blankets in bright colours. It wasn´t very cold and we were still in our Argentinian attire so we wondered why they were so well equipped. We later discoverd why as the temperatures plummeted, and the window near us was broken and we only had thin scarves to keep us warm, we were so cold we could not sleep. In fact it was probably one of the worst nights of my life. There were no lights on the bus so as soon as we got on the bus at 7pm we were forced to sit in total darkness. The broken window let huge quantities of dust enter the bus, at one point I wondered seriously if it was possible to die from suffocating on dust. The roads were absolutely terrible, and what followed was hours and hours of being literally thrown around in our seats, fearing that the bus would go over the cliff edges or tip over. The bus must have been driven by an absolute madman, you would have to be drive the bus along those roads! Also there was no toilet on the bus and in the entire 14 hour journey we only stopped once.

We finally got our first view of La Paz from above at El Alto and it was amazing - thousands of buildings clinging onto the valley sides - the sheer magnitude was incredible and the backdrop of the moutains and blue sky was very impressive.

La Paz

Arriving in La Paz was a shock. Coming from the wealth of Argentina to one of the poorest areas of South America was daunting to say the least - driving from the bus station to our hostel we saw terribly rundown buildings that people lived in, homeless children running around in bare feet, and women struggling up hills in their traditional clothes carrying their babies in sacks on their backs. It was unlike anything we had ever seen before; so dirty and noisy, but what really struck us was how perfectly happy everyone seemed despite everything. Nobody whistled or stared at

us like they had done in other places, instead everyone smiled, said "Hola" and went about their business. For that reason we really took a liking to La Paz!

Our hostel, we discovered, was right next to San Pedro prison, which alarmed us even more when we were told that there was no key for our room as the last occupants had lost it! So we then had to make the difficult choice as to whether to leave our valuables in the room or take them out onto the hectic streets of La Paz. We decided upon the latter and ventured out for some food, trying to avoid getting run over by the crazy drivers who seemed to have no awareness of anything that was going on around them! The food we found was very different from what we had been expecting, and surprisingly good! Rachael had been told that she would find nothing to eat except rice and beans, being vegetarian, but we actually had some of the best food of the whole trip in La Paz! Granted none of it was particularly Bolivian... twice we went to a fantastic Mexican restaurant and had burritos and margaritas, and

another night we found a nice Italian restaurant called Sol y Luna.

Our favourite thing about La Paz was the famous Witches Market, which was just up the road from where we were staying. It is run by Bolivian women who sell all sorts of traditional things - hand woven clothes, bags, food and the most horrifying thing, llama foetuses which are supposed to have magical powers to bring you good luck. We did not buy one! We spent the best part of two days in the market...it was just so different from anything we had seen before and we really loved it! Plus the prices were incredibly cheap, not only at the market but throughout the whole of La Paz and it was strange to suddenly feel like a wealthy person.

Lake Titicaca

After La Paz we decided to leave the city and go to Copacabana, the little town on the Bolivian side of Lake Titicaca, the highest navigable lake in the world. After our several margaritas the night before we were both feeling a little under the weather, so getting up for our 8am bus was not ideal. Luckily we met 3 really nice English girls on the bus who we ended up staying with at Lake Titicaca. Me and Jo had already booked ourselves into an eco-lodge overlooking the lake which we had read about and the girls decided to join us. Once arriving in Copacabana we all got a taxi which took us out of the town, along the lake wh ich was beautiful and arrived at the ecolodge which was a series of cabins in a rambling garden. It was so peaceful and picturesque, and clean, which was a delight after the hectic craziness of La Paz, similar to arriving in Paraty the little beach town after Rio. We all went for lunch at a restaurant overlooking the lake, and we tried trout caught in the lake. It was so delicious!

The next day we decided to do a day trip to Isla del Sol, an island in the lake. The lake is so huge, and the boat which took us there so rubbish, that it was a 2 hour journey to arrive there. Despite the tedious journey it was well worth it. The island was nothing like I could have imagined Bolivia to be. It was a beautiful hot sunny day and the island was absolutely beautiful. It reminded me of the Greek islands. The beaches were white and sandy, we were very jealous of people lieing around sunbathing. We had come to explore the island however, so bought a map and set off on our trek which would take us from the North to the South of the island. The locals seemed to be living a simple life of farming. We walked past many fields where locals, including women, were tending their crops (potatoes, quino and sweetcorn), and saw many animals such as pigs, sheeps, cows and alpacas. We made it to the rocas sagradas, sacred Inca rocks, where we stopped for lunch. From this high point you could see the water below and around the island it was so beatiful. There was the option to get the boat around to the South of the island but me and Jo were feeling adventerous, so together with a friend we trekked across the island. The woman at the ecolodge had informed us it was an easy walk, quite flat. I´m not sure what she was talking about as it was a demanding walk up and down hill with steep slopes, which at such a high altitude was not too fun! The landscape and views were incredible and it was such a rewarding day.

We decided to try chewing the coca leaf as it is supposed to alleviate the symptoms of altitude sickness, stop hunger and increase alertedness etc. It involved chewing coca leaves gently then moving them to the side of your mouth and after 5 minutes putting some ash in with the leaves and gently moving it around in your mouth. The leaves tasted very bitter, and after a while made your tongue a bit numb. After a while I grew accustomed to the taste but then the ash was horribly sweet and produced lots of juice so after a few minutes I had to spit it all out. Unfortunately Jo had a stronger reaction and vomitted hers up on the sacred island. I'm not sure how effective the coca leaves were but that was probably down to us. We had to rush quite a bit as the boat to take us back to the mainland left at 3.40pm, and as it was we ended up running very late and having to rush down the Inca steps without taking in the view. When we arrived the boat had left but luckily there was another one a few minutes later.

The next morning me and Jo had a well-deserved lie in probably the first of the whole trip, we went to breakfast in our pijamas then went back to bed! We had a very lazy day for the rest of the day as we were feeling the effects of our high-altitude trek the day before. We hoped our bodies would acclimatise to the altitude before the Inca trail! The main effect I found was that I was absolutely exhausted all the time.
The rest of our time at Lake Titicaca passed very pleasantly, it was a relaxing couple of days and we were sad to leave the eco-lodge which was so peaceful. Sadly the girls left us a day before we left, we decided to stay the night near the bus station as we had an early bus to catch the next morning. An old man had invited us off the street to see his hostel but it all seemed a bit dodgy, so we went to another hostel where we had noticed lots of travellers staying. We managed to get a private twin room for a ridiculously low price which even included breakfast the next morning. The guy who showed us around was a boy of about 15 (there were many children doing adult jobs in Bolivia) and he made us promise to pretend we had paid less than we had, we assumed he would be keeping the rest. It all seemed a bit dodgy! We took our valuables out with us when we left the room to go and get dinner. Once we got back we realised that our curtains were totally see through, and since our room faced the street we had to get changed in the dark to avoid exposing ourselves to the whole street! The next morning we got the bus to Cuzco, Peru!


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6:01 AM

France Pyrenees, Provence


Hi all

April 5 Tuesday. Bonjour Français.
Only a stone's throw across the border in France we beat the Côte de Vermeille and our Web site at Argelès de Mer. We again a trip in Andorra skiing as had delayed but not enough information with us.

It was strange that we traveled a few miles in France had and yet it seemed so much green and clear as Spain. There were not many people around on the site as it was still early season so for 2 very we hot days the outdoor swimming pool, all to us had. Wednesday was market day in Argelès old town, so we are in danger and took a look around the place. Ran a pretty old town with a mix of Catalan and French influences and also an eccentric old English women, an English book shop. Many of the Catalan beret carriers this area to and they were more friendly when we met that in Spain, nodded and Bonjour, said.

Thursday 7 Although most of our journey so far off the coast we had decided that a drive in the country to Carcassone would pay. Once clear of Perpignan

We left the main streets of the route de Cathars by the robust wine-growing areas follow landscape of the département of Aude. The walled city of Carcassonne is now a UNESCO World Heritage site and is steeped in history. From the oldest tracks in the sixth century BC by the Romans, Visigoths, Franks, and many other rulers the city had seen many battles, while once stunning 'Cité' it supplements in DIS repair, but fell back a century to its current state with some new black tiled turret... We stayed longer a beautiful afternoon hiking around the buildings and walls, learn the history of the site spent and up to the Pyrenees, it is definitely to reconsider a place and we would have views overlooking South this time had local campsite open, but it was not so tea time we decided to go back to the coast and Cap d ' Agde.

Cap d'Agde is a seaside resort in nearby Montpellier, it; s on a headland consisting of all complex from several beaches around a central Marina, there are plenty of entertainment and activities on offer. Our campsite was a short walk from the

Beach of Rochelongue and 5 minutes by bicycle from the main centre. As the forecast for the weekend was ended 5 days stay and make the most. The days he spent either from the van just chill out in the Sun or by bicycle along the coast paths or on the beach in the shallow waters ball play. There were 32 degrees on the Wknd as the Temps hit many of the locals of.

Tuesday 12 leaving the Côte d ' Améthyste and heading inland over Montpellier we entered the National Park of the Camargue. The Park is on low lying wetlands around the Rhône Delta where it discharges the Mediterranean Sea. On both sides of the street fish pool shallow our way towards St Gilles waters with birds as we made. An other campsite, which had opened it so again only for the season was a late to an another quiet pool almost on us as we took the afternoon dip.
Wednesday. We took the van next to the National Park and parked up on a nature reserve. She had to foot/horseback riding and cycle paths to some housing/wet-lands and a lake. How was my bike now

We went to the scrap heap over the Lake and through some channels. Read info boards (in French) about this area, it seems, is that the Camargue is fighting bulls and a unique generation of white horses famous for it. As we through the reserve we strolled they both saw first hand, we also more pink flamingos, giant dragons saw fly and even muskrats in the channels.

Thursday 14 as I was disappointed so far with my many attempts to get a little art culture in this trip (I'm trying, educate these children!) The perfect place seemed Arles to remedy. We found arrival in Arles the assigned spot for RV parking a travel fair adopted by, the city for the upcoming Ferias (running Bull Festival), so after fuel/food and a new bike for me we parked near the city centre and went in looking after the tourist information. We picked up a map and route Guide and a set on 2 trails around the city. A path was, some of the places to see where Vincent van Gogh painted his 200 pictures during life in Arles between 1888

and in 1889, was the other way to see impressive Roman buildings during the reign of Julius Caesar.
First we saw sites were van Gogh works as courtyard of the Hospital of Arles, Cafe terrace in the night and starry night over the Rhone where painted. The city has put up info boards at these locations the a replica of the artwork, and if it was painted. It was in Arles, that his ear during a TIFF with Gauguin cut off and then voluntarily an asylum. Where he spent painting many other works of art almost 2 years. Did you know that he was only 37 when he is shot back in Paris and that he sold only a painting while he was still alive?
Our next trail has us on the almost intact Roman amphitheatre, in the first century was built home chariot racing and relevant shows, it is currently under major restoration work. Close to the Roman Theatre antique is still in good condition and is used today for playing as it was back in the days of the Romans.

In the evening, we were now Provence in leave Arles. We entered the regional park

where did we find embedded Alpilles our campsite under steep cliffs on the edge of a town called Orgone. The Vallée Heureuse, the we now in the were is very popular with climbers and when we went on a long hike around the selected studies we saw up beginners and advanced way groups of school children on the faces on 200 foot sheer faces. Our Trek took us deep in the Eastern woodlands Alpilles before we arrived after a large loop on a vantage point which saw North of Avignon, and South to Marseille. Once a Roman Fortress now here, the a 19 State century Abbey is in it is. We sat and looked way National Park East of the River Durance towards our next place off in the distance in the Luberon.

Saturday 16. After 2 days in Orgone, we made the short trip East in the Luberon. The Luberon is in the area of Vaucluse in the Provence and stereotypes, roles, it is quite full of Provence countryside, stony villages, rugged slopes and when in bloom endless fields of lavender. It is what you would image of Provence. Our website has been in the vicinity

Cadenet and although it does not really heard the famous towns of the area it was still a very nice place. Perched on a rocky limestone which looked even cave houses it has occupied South after the Durance in the direction of Pertuis and Aix-en-Provence. We 2 days spent and made the most of the site, which had a Lake & Beach, a swimming pool and proximity to the River Durance was, he had many things open as the bar now, that the French on Easter holidays were.

Monday 18 April. We had quite a few long drive us as we preceded back to the coast so it up early and turn off SE towards who was Côte d ' Azur.

Take all care.

Neil Dan & Harry
x


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10:17 PM

Easter Road trip


«««Oceania and Australia» Australia» Queensland» Charleville
April 15th 2011 of the Mieran-s

This year along with Brianna's best fiend grace and our new caravan "Winnie", we decided an extended Easter holiday, and some of the Central Western Queensland.
The first day saw us a total of 620 km of the longest leg of the journey to do at home to Charleville from the House to 5. We had planned, to always Charleville Cosmos Centre go visit stargazing, but due to the rain that was canceled. The next morning we awoke one morning cold and rainy. As we gaze not star in the evening go the Cosmos Centre could morning visit before we today. The Centre is worth a visit with interactive map and one informative film and talk about our solar system, Sophie loved, that she got to keep different types of meteorites.
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12:17 PM

Sleepless in Lancaster


You have to bear with me because I wrote this blog on paper attempting to keep from falling asleep on the train in Lancaster to 20 + hours without sleep.

I got it!!

After 22 hours of international travel a Sunrise see a sunset of (b)AND(b) from the same airplane window change aircraft in a snow-covered land, which is covered in lava, not, an Icelandic woman is friends with a girl, in which I could express its name incorrectly several times, is a cranky Lady in the immigration, "as an unemployed person like you each travel?" asked, with the London underground for an hour, and catch a 3-hour train through the English countryside I (i)finally(i) got to see the beautiful face of Allie Friese. Was not eyes sore, a sight for?

Let me tell you, travel is much more stress if you go somewhere else (or several other places) to get where you actually have to go. Someone should hurry up and invent a teleport machine already!

I waited for hours and minutes, without sleep to put on the train, which was finally to me take in Lancaster. When he moved from Euston station I breathed a serious sigh of relief... for approximately lasted 12 seconds before it sunk, Nick and my whole trip will be as follows.

Oh boy...

On the plus side, the weather is sunny and in the 1970's, the English countryside is beautiful, and did I mention that I was in Europe. ;) I will try, attach pictures later. I apologize for not just now including, but the train was to quickly move. In the near future, detail, the part of England, is the I in very green after area of yellow flowers with field. There are sheep and their lambs in all other areas are, and it seems that each city had to Rob a brick factory to build all of the houses.

Allie looks good. So far, is our plan to rest for a day, then tomorrow we will spend the day Manchester. We will meet on Friday to Edinburgh, Scotland with a few friends to pull off, and then we will see, how things go from there. I have only for next Wednesday morning Nick at the Airport pick, to Dublin.

I hope it is here that the weather at home half is so beautiful! XX

Laura


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8:33 AM

Canberra


««Oceania and Australia» Australia» New South Wales
21 April 2011 , of Mirijoh
64 Photo (s): 21 displayed: additional photos: «back 1 2 3 4 next»
Canberra capital of Australia. Beautiful city with amazing night vision; )
Also, the Parliament, the museums and galleries are quietly impressive! 64 Photo (s): 21 displayed: additional photos: «back 1 2 3 4 next» 64 photo (s): 21 displayed: additional photos: «back 1 2 3 4 next»

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1:49 AM

Desert city

Hi, Jodhpur not was sorry for the lack of updates here, the most amazing experience. Rhian for 2 days it ill was and there's not much, it go to the Fort except (the amazing!) We left it on a bus for Jaisalmer, 6 hours on a half decent coach who got as the trip more fully went on to the point of collapse bound! It was fun, buying fried snacks through the window to the guy to us of Enrique Inglesias (Enreek..) and pop music in the General chat. He was heading to Jaisalmer on a job for the Indian air force!

Nevertheless we came in to 4 pm and before we were even off the bus we were addressed always tuk tuk drivers and hoteliers, but we had not booked already decided overnight, but we were not to tell them the! Our hotel, the desert Moon, was only 10-minute walk from the city in a very quiet and we were welcomed by the host, who gave us a good room and a welcome Chai. We not hanging around the hotel a long time and decided to go for a walk in Jasialmer.
Jaisalmer is an oasis in the thar desert, 50 miles from Pakistan, it is surrounded on all sides by hundreds of wind turbines, with narrow streets a very old town, friendly people, lots of shops for Rhian in search and the heat is intense! It is a different heat, what we have seen so far, it is untergerührt 40 degrees but no pollution that makes it more tolerable in a strange way. Proper hot.

We went to the old sandstone Fort on the second day, it literally looks like a sandcastle. We went to the Fort Museum (student prices, good times!) and wandered around with our oh so cool audio guide headsets on. We were only there for a reason, the view from the top. And it was spectacular! We could absolutely miles to that below city saw us as small compared to what we have seen so far on the journey. on one side of the streets and Havelis (artfully built houses of the rich), the other, barren desert with only a few cows to break the view of sand.
We liked many here, very relaxed, no-one to noise (apart from the motorcycle rider in the center of the city continually honking). We one additional night stay arranged in a way, so that we... could Safari a camel experience!

Our hotel ran their own Safari trip, so for the hassle-free aspect, we went for it. A jeep drive to stop at Bara Bagh, the cemetery for the Mararajahs of the region for a quick look from the Sam sand dunes. We stopped at a small outpost and our camels, Laki and Michael Jackson, and their owners and our tour guide Ali. After a small battle to get them (they are massive!) we set dunes a hike through the desert on foot on dry land of scrub and sand. It was absolutely amazing! After 2 hours, we have our camp, where our driver had made Jeep camp beds and hot Chai for us. We settled down and just took in the incredible surroundings, where we us in had found! We had food, in pitch dark lol, and then down under night sleeping star for a Amzing charged no sound to disturb us,. I have never anywhere as quiet!

We came back in the morning and spent the day just chillen and our 14 hours (!) Bus travel to Udaipur for 3 quid booked! :) We are really starting to embedded in this journey was now, although our Hindi does not yet exist lol. There are still a hell of a long way!
Hope you all good

G & R X.


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9:07 PM

Day 7-Boston


«Oceania and Australia» Australia
20 April 2011 , of Timandmel

Today we have a whole day in Boston and we get to go the historic freedom trail. Then we are off to do some research on our own.

On an aside I've just discovered that another girl, is to do this tour with us, o away - so hopefully we can meet LY life and hour, before we head:)


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11:15 AM

India, where you do not hold hands but can piss anywhere...

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This may be a disappointment for some of you, but this blog is brought to you by Sting Productions and today we will be helped by the letter M and the number 7! I usually assist with bloggy but this time I’m having to write the darn thing, partly cos Kat is still upset that no one commented on the last bloggy, but mainly because she’s far too busy writing texts to her new girlfriend to write anything else……….

At the end of the previous bloggy we promised you that we would be ‘working’ on the Indian girls…..well I think we tempted fate a little!! So, literally an hour after posting bloggy I decide that after the last few hard days lazing on the beach I owe it to myself to get a massage……………according to our bible (the Lonely Planet) Kerala is famous for its Ayurvedic treatment and massage programs……..

Random, but whilst on the subject of the lonely planet they have just released their latest edition for England……describing it as a place obsessed with the ‘celebrity’ culture, has a volatile economy, and that Dover is now basically a shithole! What concerns me most about this is the fact that the same organisation describes India using words like majestic, vibrant, colourful……………..which when you can’t breath through your mouth in this country because of the smell of piss, there is rubbish everywhere, literally EVERYWHERE, and men see nothing in-appropriate about Thomas the Tanking over you in the middle of the day on public transport, you start wondering just how bad England must be for such a negative description!

Anyways, back to the massage thing, the book does advise to be careful as every man in the state claims to be a ‘trained Ayurvedic masseuse’ – which, is why alarm bells start ringing when random men walking along the beach who look like they haven’t showered in days explain that they are a ‘trained masseuse’ offering you a ‘very cheap massage’…………tempting but NO! Anyways, after finding a proper and certified place – well it had a sign saying so, and it was really hot so I couldn’t be arsed to walk any further – they advised they could fit me in for the full body massage now and introduced me to this sweet, and tiny, Indian lady called Sunita (no I’m not making this shit up). We go into this little room, which I can only describe as a spruced up bamboo hut with a plastic table in the centre, some candles and a shower room (without a door) at the back! Sunita put on some nice relaxing music………………… Now That’s What I Call Bollywood 21………..and then told me in her broken English (accompanied by international sign language) to take off my top............... I did………..then my shorts……………. I did……………..then my bikini top………….I did (after slight hesitation)…………… then my bikini bottoms………. I did after convincing myself that she would give me a towel at least…………….she didn’t!!

So, there I am, standing as naked as the day I was born, with no towel, in-front of an Indian women whilst Bollywood hits blared out once again wondering how the hell I had got myself into a situation such as this! After the unsuccessful towel idea I thought laying on the table would be the next best thing (I can’t really explain why, or my thought process at this time…….maybe it was something to do with gravity, who knows), but this idea was also quickly shot down when she told me to sit on a stool as she was going to start with my head. The only thing worse than standing as naked as the day I was born in front of an Indian women, whilst Bollywood hits blare out, is sitting on a stool as naked as the day I was born in front of an Indian women giving me a head massage, whilst Bollywood hits blare out! After rubbing oil all in my hair Sunita finally allowed me to lay on the bed – THANK GOD! I’m still not sure I’m really ready to talk about the next 50 minutes but I will say this, in India, a full body massage means a FULL body massage!

After returning from my ‘massage’ Kat was a little concerned about my wellbeing, as well as the fact that what had just happened may, in Indian law, mean that we were now married, so she ordered us a beer to help calm my nerves! As we have already explained, beer is difficult to get in India and with no butler to run to the black market for us we ordered from the ‘secret menu’ at the bar we were in. Normally to hide the fact that people are drinking beer they give it to you in a Tea Pot, which we thought was pretty cool, but they had run out of T-Pots, so we just had to hide the bottles under the table. We shortly discovered that hiding beer is a talent that neither Kat nor I possess and before I’d had even enough to get an India man drunk the police turned up, searched the bar, found our hidden (badly) beer, shouted something at us that we couldn’t understand and confiscated it! FFS INDIA!!

It was around this point that we decided to just get to Goa as quick as we could – for those of you who don’t know anything about Goa its full of cultural experiences, beautiful green fields, stunning beaches and majestic sunsets – we couldn’t care less about these however and only wanted to go for the alcohol, parties and girls, which is ironic considering the events that unfolded in Goa! We headed up the coast to Kolam where we cruised through the Kerala backwaters for the day to Alleppey. We then got a train to Fort Kochin where I asked a tuktuk man to take us to the fort – it was when the guy seemed totally confused that Kat had to explain to me that the place is just called Fort Kochin and there isn’t an actual fort so instead he took us on a tour of the sights– he took us to the oldest church in India, then a pashmina shop owned by his uncle, then the dutch cemetery, then a jewellery shop owned by his sister, then the docks, then a curtain shop owned by his wifes brother, then a ginger making factory, then a handicrafts shopowned by his goats uncles, sister’s cousin……..!!

After Kochin we got a train to Mangalore, stayed overnight to watch the cricket (England got trashed so I won’t say anything more about it), before getting the 1pm train to Goa. We got to the train about half hour early and found our seats (I know this is very organised for us two but if you don’t you have to sit on the roof – although sitting on the roof may have prevented what happened next……..).

We were just sitting there looking out the window, minding our own business, observing the joy of Indian culture. When we suddenly became aware of an Indian man standing a few feet away. We innocently looked at him….. we wondered what he was doing standing so close… it looked like he was wanking….how odd….. surely not…. Oh no wait…. he was!! Shouting followed and large amounts of swearing on our part ensured the man quickly vanished. Leaving us to ponder the actual “joy of Indian culture”….

We arrived at Palolem beach in Goa and soon found some nice huts to stay in – I say nice, they were wonky, wooden shacks on the most unstable stilts ever with holes in the walls – but they were overlooking the beach and cost 2 quid a night so we didn’t complain! It wasn’t until I was sat on the loo and got the fright of my life when a pig stuck its head through a hole in the floor that we realised just how bad they were – it was at this point that Kat asked in a concerned manner “What the hell is that noise in there’, I tried to explain it wasn’t me it was the pig but i'm not sure she believed me! Palolem beach itself is amazing, one of the nicest beaches in Goa, its in its own little cove with restaurants and bars planted along the sands and unlike Varkala, you can go in the sea without much risk of drowning! After a day lazing on the beach we headed into a bar to enjoy a nice beer as the sun went down, it was here we met Nikos, an American guy who worked at the bar – I say work, he basically just sits out the front every night drinking trying to get as many people to join as possible! Well, we obviously had to help him with this and soon we were joined by some Dutch girls whose names I can’t recall now - Helga and Heidi maybe - then a Dutch guy (Bjorn), then three more English people who were staying at the same beach huts as us, then a few more people whose nationality I could not remember if you paid me……..maybe it was because Kat and I were unfriendly and didn’t ask or maybe it was because we’d just finished a 3 hour long drinking game and didn’t know where we were even from anymore, who knows! Now the rest of the night is a bit of a blur, so much so that I only remember 2 thoughts…. Firstly… that I had lost my flip flops….. and secondly when I thought it wouldn’t be the worst idea I had ever had to sleep with Nikos…………a man!!!………..and it wouldn’t have been had the beach huts not been attached to the stilts with very small pieces of string! For those of you wondering about now why Kat didn’t try and stop me………well your’ll have to ask her that one……..! She was however waiting for me on our porch as I stumbled back at Midday minus my flip flops and gay card, which if anyone finds btw could you please return to me!

The majority of the next day consisted of us dying on our porch with Kat bursting into fits of laughter every ten mins, still unable to quite comprehend the events of the night before. The next few days we spent relaxing, sunbathing, drinking, getting ridiculously stoned with the English guys from the other hut….and praying for a period asap!!... OK, so as I write this an Indian man on the train has just asked Kat whether she would like his baby…………..and not wanting (or knowing) how to politely decline, she now has a baby….an Indian baby – great, we discussed a travelling pet, not a travelling baby!! oh no wait, panic over, they just want to take pictures of her with the baby….(silly people, clearly they have no idea how unphotogenic she is).. I’d like to say the baby is cute but its Indian………now everyone is taking photo’s, not just the family, and now the baby’s crying, great! Talking of photo’s, this is probably just a more subtle way of getting photo’s of western girls, which seems to be a favourite pastime of Indian men, and boys…..along with staring. Literally, everywhere you go, they just stare at you, and they don’t try and hide it or even look away when you stare back at them – we’ve tried smiling at them – not a great idea, they then think you like them, so we tried frowning at them, they think you like them, asking them why they are staring, they think you like them, and finally telling them to fuck off but still, they think you like them. If the staring isn’t enough they also try and take photos of you on their phones, regardless of what we are doing; sleeping on trains/buses, queuing for the toilet, eating curry, holding Indian babies etc….!Some at least try and be subtle and pretend they are taking a photo of something next to you and slowly turn further and further till the camera is blatantly pointing straight at you, others just stick the camera in your face and take a photo and don’t seem to be even slightly put off when we turn, frown or look away! We went to the gateway of India in Mumbai yesterday, and suddenly all camera’s were on us and not the famous ‘gate’….or whatever it was!

Anyways, back to Goa. Now, for those of you who haven’t been crossing off the number of days on a calendar since we both departed from your lives, its 80!! That’s 1920 hours, or 115’200 minutes, or six million nine hundred and twelve thousand seconds that Kat and I have spent together so it won’t come as a big surprise that we are starting to run out of intelligent and thought provoking things to discuss; economy, check, dealth penalty, check, the war, check, incest, check!! Admittedly we ran out of things to discuss about an hour into the flight out, but we’ve amused ourselves since with more trivial things like shag, marry, kill etc! Now, maybe it was the dodgy Indian water or maybe it was the spliffs but the question game reached a whole new level sat on our porch in Palolem for days on end. Initially it was ones like what colour would you be (Me blue, Kat yellow), what number (Me 6, Kat 7), what letter (Me M (I love m), Kat O), what texture (Me can’t remember, Kat the feel of a sony laptop cover), what country (not visit, actually be……we both chose Canada…..(surprised it wasn’t Sweden actually –least then we’d have Swedish girls inside us), what animal (both birds, just so we could fly). Now, I’m not really sure how but this progressed onto, if you were stuck in a lift with the 7 of your closest friendsand you had to kill and eat one of them to survive, who would you pick? …..(er, swiftly moving on). It was then that Kat came up with possibly THE best question in the world EVER…….Which would you choose, to have every girl in the world fall in love with you but you never fall in love with any of them for the rest of your life or you only ever fall in love with one person but they, and only this one person, are also in love with you…………………

We got stuck in Goa a little longer than first anticipated but eventually we got a train toHampi, which is just basically full of rocks. We decided to hire a pedal bike to visit them all, but 50 metres up the road we were mobbed by loads of children who climbed into our baskets and by the time we’d cycled up and down the road enough times so each child could have a go we were knackered so abandoned them and went by boat. So imagine the scene, us, one small bamboo basket, two 10 year old boys, one paddle, and a mobile phone blaring out Bad (btw, all Indian’s think if you speak English, you love Michael Jackson…..!). This one seemed to be going much better than our previous bamboo boat experience until I enquired what was moving in the water not far away……..Small child: ‘croocodie”, Me “sorry, didn’t quite catch that”, Small child “crocodile”, Me (jokingly) “crocodile”, Small child “yes”, Kat: “WHAT”…..! I explained to Kat as she was scrambling out the boat that he must be joking as I was sure that there were no crocodiles in the rivers of Hampi!! I’m pretty sure she would have believed me as well if we hadn’t turned the cornerand walked into a sign saying ‘Beware, Crocodiles’. Talking of animals, India is full of them, not just the usual like dogs and kats, and the obvious like rats and cockroaches, but ones that I really wasn’t expecting! Goats and cows roam the streets……we had to find another tuktuk once as a family of goats had apparently got there first…….and the other day we were in a restaurant in Hampi when a cow walked in……….he was a veggie though so he left pretty quickly! Then to top if all off, when we arrived in Mumbai we were waiting at the traffic lights, I look to the side of us, and a cow is stood there also waiting for the lights to go green…..WTF!!

We had to book two sleeper buses from Hampi to Mumbai, taking a total of 48 hours, which would have been fine, had I not got a bout of Delhi belly on the day we left…….THANK FUCK for Imodium, although its worked a little too well and I haven’t been able to go since, that was a week ago…... Now, Indian sleeper buses are slightly different from the ones in Southeast Asia, you don’t get your own ‘chair’ that goes back into a bed, its just a very small double mattress with some manky curtains for privacy that don’t fit all the way across. Travelling as a pair, this isn’t too bad as we just spent the night spooning with an agreement to swap little/big spoon every hour, it’s the women travelling on their own who are paired up with an Indian man that I feel sorry for!

Anyways, the first one wasn’t too bad as we got the back area, which is a row of 5 beds. We shared with 3 American guys (no, I didn’t sleep with any of them…..!) who started on the spliffs as soon as we started moving………never thought I’d ever sleep so well on an Indian sleeper bus…..until we hit a pothole and all 5 of us were catapulted in the air, smashing our heads on the above bunk! The second one however was not as good, no Americans, no spliffs, and Kat woke up in the night to find an India man standing next to our bunk staring at us….bad times!

We finally arrived in Mumbai stinking and looking like death, although apparently not bad enough to put the India men off taking our photo……………


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