Wiley
Adventurer
Earthquakes, Andes, Volcanoes, and more.....
So, after spending 2 years driving around Latin America while living out of my Van, I returned to the workforce to be reminded it sucks. I needed desperate relief, so last year I took a 3 week vacation to Thailand (A Tale of Highs and Low-Sides: My 3 Week Motorcycle Adventure in Northern Thailand), but I felt Thailand was just too easy. This year there is no wussing out, it's back to Latin America, Ecuador to be exact.
Looking for a lot more of this, somewhere in the Andes between Mindo and Otavalo
I arrived in Ecuador worn out. Stayed at work till 10:30 the night before leaving to make sure that everything was done, then I was up all night packing cause I am a procrastinator. Next thing I know I am on 3 hours sleep and jumping on a bus to make my way to the Tijuana border hauling a big *** luggage full of moto gear. Flying out of Mexico was cheaper and gave me an extra day in Ecuador schedule wise, but in hindsight I won't do it again, its just too easy to fly out of SD. Figured I would sleep on the plane and be set as it's an overnight flight from Mex City to Quito, but of course I can't sleep. I arrive in Quite at 6 am, can't check into the hostel until noon, so leave my bags and walk around for a few hours in a comatose, wondering why the F I cannot breath, and keep breaking into a sweat even though there is a nice crisp cool breeze in the air... might have something to do with going from sea level to 9,350 feet in altitude.
Trying to fit this:
Into this. Everything fit in here and a small backpack, aside from helmet. Jacket and pants are on the bottom.
If you didn't know, Quito is the highest populated city in the world, sitting alongside a Volcano factory, which equates to some amazing riding. It is also the most unaltered of any UNESCO site, and while there is a KFC in centro historico, Quito still has a great old city feel to it overall. I decided to spend the 1st 2 days exploring the city and letting myself acclimate before picking up the bike. i didn't get any headaches or feel sick, but I did feel off, and had no appetite for 3 days or so, glad I made the decision as I enjoyed my time in Quito.
View from hilltop, Central Quito.
View from Hostel, even better
Inglesia de San Fransisco
I stayed in between the Historic Center, and the more modern area, think its called plaza foch, this area and the surrounding streets are where you can find the touristy stuff. If your not sure if your in the vicinity of Plaza Foch, but see a couple McDonalds, a Burger King, a KFC, and other gringo joints, rest assured that's the place. Anyway, it was perfect as I was far enough from the modern area while still having access. I was able to walk all over the place and be back on the streets of Latin America where I think I belong, but in reality probably don't haha. Unfortunately Quito has a minor problem with theft and pick pocketing so you do need to use some caution when out and about, but most Ecuadorians read my blog so already knew not to mess with this gringo, but the rest of you should keep this in the back of your mind.
These senoras whipped me up a delicious treat, I think there was butter inside the pancake thing....Inside!!
Inside!
The night before picking up the bike I decide I would go to bed early so was just relaxing in bed at the hostel when it started. I had been pretty sure I was the only one in the room, what the hell is the guy above my bunk doing jumping all around? A couple seconds go by and I realize, oh, it's an earthquake......oh, I am on the 5th floor of an old *** building built in the 1600's, and it's an earthquake. I just stay where I am and see what happens, I dont think running for the creaky stairs is the right play, but I am not sure what I should really do here, the floor literally springs as you walk without and earthquake taking place. I live in San Diego now, and have felt a few quakes over 4.0, but our buildings are new, and the quakes were never that close, so they have always been fun. Well, this was a 4.7, and only 7 miles away from the city, but I admit, it was still fun. As long as no one is getting hurt and nothing getting damaged I love them, The fact that everything can shake like that just amazes me. There have been a larger than normal amount of quakes here in Quito the past year I am told, so most residents went outside in fear of aftershocks, now in hindsight that would have been the right play. This guy just called it a night and went to bed, but what a great way to kick off the trip.
Street in Quito
People are out in full force
No stranger around here, you all know them, I rented from Freedom Bike Rental in Ecuador...contrary to my comments above this portion of this trip couldn't be easier. Stopped by the shop, grabbed the Suzuki DR200 I reserved, was given some tire irons, spare tires, air compressor, and a cell phone....hey, I wanted this to be difficult! Left the shop headed for Mindo, an easy ride, only to realize my GPS Ecuador map was still on my computer, not my GPS. There is the challenge I was looking for. Decided to wing it, had an afternoon ride out of Quito, looping around Quito, and deciding to go back to Quito...only problem Quito is ********** Huge. All I know is I am now in South Quito, know idea what that means , but the city runs north to south so I just made my way north following the flow of traffic figuring I would get back to the centro, which I did eventually.
Might be the presidential palace, does Ecuador have a president, I could be making that up.
The next day I have my maps, and the weather is looking good, so it's off to Mindo, a sleepy town located on the western slopes of the mighty Andes mountains, and according to Wiki one of the most heavily tourist-ed places in Ecuador, with tubing canyoning, bird watching, hmm, no mention of motorcycles, this place can't be that great. The area here is known as a cloud forest, whatever that means, so it was no surprise I ended up riding in rain and fog high in the mountains. I arrive in the early afternoon wet and cold, but figure I might as well ride a little more so after doing a lap of the town on the bike scoping out some places to stay with parking, I head up a dirt road I see at the back of town to try and kill an hour or so....hmm, I knew they left the motorcycle part out accidentally. The road was nothing special, but being on dirt, surrounded by lush green mountains while getting rained on, yes this is why I am here.
Mindo is dead on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday... ok I was only there Monday
After playtime on the dirt road I make my way back to Mindo, which again, is a sleepy town. Nothing I saw on a Monday night would indicate this is on the tourist map aside from the numerous hostels and several pizzarias in this small town. I only saw about 6 or 7 small groups of gingos if that. Thats ok though, its tranquil here, and I like that, plus it was cool but not cold, and I like that as well. I lay in my hammock watching the rain for an hour or so just listening to it and the birds Once it stops raining I am free and walk around the small town for hours, literally doing laps up and down the main street and the few side streets, crazy yes, I am not giving gringos a good name, but I was bored, and hoping something, somewhere in this small town would happen, eventually. Every restaurant was empty, aside from the occasional gringo couple in this pizzeria or that one, which were otherwise empty. I eventually gave in to the woman selling chicken and bananas on a stick on the street, the timeless classic chicken-bananabobs. I don't play favorites though, so also snagged some carne with mayonnaise, and some corn with cheese. That was the highlight of my evening, so eventually I went to bed. Its beautiful there though, and there is some great hiking and birdwatching, but I am here for the riding, so these are just stop overs for me.
The timeless classic Chicken-Bananabob
Meat, and Corn
The next day I make my way towards Otavalo, famous for it's Saturday market, of course it is Wednesday, but that is supposed to be the second best day to get a taste. Well, that little Suzuki 200 is sloooow, and I stop to take pictures, and I take dirt roads when i can, so we will see what the Thursday market looks like haha. I arrived in Otavalo around 6:30, grabbed a hostel and headed down to catch the end of the market, ti find the market closes at 7, just as I arrive. Oh well, the days ride was amazing, and exactly why I am here, you've seen 1 market you've seen them all, I am only here for the food anyway.
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
My 1st water crossing, does this count?
Half of my day might have been on dirt, the other portions on some great asphalt, some on decent asphalt with lots of dirt/rocks/boulders/sink holes, and even parts of the Inca trail I believe, literally a bit of everything. The views were great, and today I managed to stay dry, always a plus. I decided to stop by the Laguna Cuicocha for a photo on the way, a beautiful crater lake located just outside Otavalo. I arrived late in the afternoon and had no intention on hiking, but you can hike the rim in about 4 hours, so I have decided to stay an extra day to do the hike, before heading south to Banos the following day. Turns out this is a good decision for several reasons, as when I arrive at the hotel a couple guys in a car are pointing and saying something, but I cannot hear them. Not sure if they are trying to get my attention or the car behind me as they point behind me. I pull over to take a look, and when they pull up realize they are telling me my tire is low on air. No problem, at least I am here and not miles up in the middle of nowhere, I had to park in a parking area separate from the hotel, so rather than change it out myself I am going full gringo and paying the guy to do it tomorrow, just need to find, the guy. Now, there is a flat tire scam that goes on at time in parts of latin america, I don't think this was the case, the guys letting me know came from the 1 way road crossing the 1 way road I was on so there was no way they were involved, and I hadn't left my bike in awhile, I think it was just a fluke picking up a nail outside Otavalo.
Laguna Cuicocha
Otavalo
Otavalo
Otavalo
So, after spending 2 years driving around Latin America while living out of my Van, I returned to the workforce to be reminded it sucks. I needed desperate relief, so last year I took a 3 week vacation to Thailand (A Tale of Highs and Low-Sides: My 3 Week Motorcycle Adventure in Northern Thailand), but I felt Thailand was just too easy. This year there is no wussing out, it's back to Latin America, Ecuador to be exact.
Looking for a lot more of this, somewhere in the Andes between Mindo and Otavalo
I arrived in Ecuador worn out. Stayed at work till 10:30 the night before leaving to make sure that everything was done, then I was up all night packing cause I am a procrastinator. Next thing I know I am on 3 hours sleep and jumping on a bus to make my way to the Tijuana border hauling a big *** luggage full of moto gear. Flying out of Mexico was cheaper and gave me an extra day in Ecuador schedule wise, but in hindsight I won't do it again, its just too easy to fly out of SD. Figured I would sleep on the plane and be set as it's an overnight flight from Mex City to Quito, but of course I can't sleep. I arrive in Quite at 6 am, can't check into the hostel until noon, so leave my bags and walk around for a few hours in a comatose, wondering why the F I cannot breath, and keep breaking into a sweat even though there is a nice crisp cool breeze in the air... might have something to do with going from sea level to 9,350 feet in altitude.
Trying to fit this:
Into this. Everything fit in here and a small backpack, aside from helmet. Jacket and pants are on the bottom.
If you didn't know, Quito is the highest populated city in the world, sitting alongside a Volcano factory, which equates to some amazing riding. It is also the most unaltered of any UNESCO site, and while there is a KFC in centro historico, Quito still has a great old city feel to it overall. I decided to spend the 1st 2 days exploring the city and letting myself acclimate before picking up the bike. i didn't get any headaches or feel sick, but I did feel off, and had no appetite for 3 days or so, glad I made the decision as I enjoyed my time in Quito.
View from hilltop, Central Quito.
View from Hostel, even better
Inglesia de San Fransisco
I stayed in between the Historic Center, and the more modern area, think its called plaza foch, this area and the surrounding streets are where you can find the touristy stuff. If your not sure if your in the vicinity of Plaza Foch, but see a couple McDonalds, a Burger King, a KFC, and other gringo joints, rest assured that's the place. Anyway, it was perfect as I was far enough from the modern area while still having access. I was able to walk all over the place and be back on the streets of Latin America where I think I belong, but in reality probably don't haha. Unfortunately Quito has a minor problem with theft and pick pocketing so you do need to use some caution when out and about, but most Ecuadorians read my blog so already knew not to mess with this gringo, but the rest of you should keep this in the back of your mind.
These senoras whipped me up a delicious treat, I think there was butter inside the pancake thing....Inside!!
Inside!
The night before picking up the bike I decide I would go to bed early so was just relaxing in bed at the hostel when it started. I had been pretty sure I was the only one in the room, what the hell is the guy above my bunk doing jumping all around? A couple seconds go by and I realize, oh, it's an earthquake......oh, I am on the 5th floor of an old *** building built in the 1600's, and it's an earthquake. I just stay where I am and see what happens, I dont think running for the creaky stairs is the right play, but I am not sure what I should really do here, the floor literally springs as you walk without and earthquake taking place. I live in San Diego now, and have felt a few quakes over 4.0, but our buildings are new, and the quakes were never that close, so they have always been fun. Well, this was a 4.7, and only 7 miles away from the city, but I admit, it was still fun. As long as no one is getting hurt and nothing getting damaged I love them, The fact that everything can shake like that just amazes me. There have been a larger than normal amount of quakes here in Quito the past year I am told, so most residents went outside in fear of aftershocks, now in hindsight that would have been the right play. This guy just called it a night and went to bed, but what a great way to kick off the trip.
Street in Quito
People are out in full force
No stranger around here, you all know them, I rented from Freedom Bike Rental in Ecuador...contrary to my comments above this portion of this trip couldn't be easier. Stopped by the shop, grabbed the Suzuki DR200 I reserved, was given some tire irons, spare tires, air compressor, and a cell phone....hey, I wanted this to be difficult! Left the shop headed for Mindo, an easy ride, only to realize my GPS Ecuador map was still on my computer, not my GPS. There is the challenge I was looking for. Decided to wing it, had an afternoon ride out of Quito, looping around Quito, and deciding to go back to Quito...only problem Quito is ********** Huge. All I know is I am now in South Quito, know idea what that means , but the city runs north to south so I just made my way north following the flow of traffic figuring I would get back to the centro, which I did eventually.
Might be the presidential palace, does Ecuador have a president, I could be making that up.
The next day I have my maps, and the weather is looking good, so it's off to Mindo, a sleepy town located on the western slopes of the mighty Andes mountains, and according to Wiki one of the most heavily tourist-ed places in Ecuador, with tubing canyoning, bird watching, hmm, no mention of motorcycles, this place can't be that great. The area here is known as a cloud forest, whatever that means, so it was no surprise I ended up riding in rain and fog high in the mountains. I arrive in the early afternoon wet and cold, but figure I might as well ride a little more so after doing a lap of the town on the bike scoping out some places to stay with parking, I head up a dirt road I see at the back of town to try and kill an hour or so....hmm, I knew they left the motorcycle part out accidentally. The road was nothing special, but being on dirt, surrounded by lush green mountains while getting rained on, yes this is why I am here.
Mindo is dead on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday... ok I was only there Monday
After playtime on the dirt road I make my way back to Mindo, which again, is a sleepy town. Nothing I saw on a Monday night would indicate this is on the tourist map aside from the numerous hostels and several pizzarias in this small town. I only saw about 6 or 7 small groups of gingos if that. Thats ok though, its tranquil here, and I like that, plus it was cool but not cold, and I like that as well. I lay in my hammock watching the rain for an hour or so just listening to it and the birds Once it stops raining I am free and walk around the small town for hours, literally doing laps up and down the main street and the few side streets, crazy yes, I am not giving gringos a good name, but I was bored, and hoping something, somewhere in this small town would happen, eventually. Every restaurant was empty, aside from the occasional gringo couple in this pizzeria or that one, which were otherwise empty. I eventually gave in to the woman selling chicken and bananas on a stick on the street, the timeless classic chicken-bananabobs. I don't play favorites though, so also snagged some carne with mayonnaise, and some corn with cheese. That was the highlight of my evening, so eventually I went to bed. Its beautiful there though, and there is some great hiking and birdwatching, but I am here for the riding, so these are just stop overs for me.
The timeless classic Chicken-Bananabob
Meat, and Corn
The next day I make my way towards Otavalo, famous for it's Saturday market, of course it is Wednesday, but that is supposed to be the second best day to get a taste. Well, that little Suzuki 200 is sloooow, and I stop to take pictures, and I take dirt roads when i can, so we will see what the Thursday market looks like haha. I arrived in Otavalo around 6:30, grabbed a hostel and headed down to catch the end of the market, ti find the market closes at 7, just as I arrive. Oh well, the days ride was amazing, and exactly why I am here, you've seen 1 market you've seen them all, I am only here for the food anyway.
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
Mindo to Octavalo
My 1st water crossing, does this count?
Half of my day might have been on dirt, the other portions on some great asphalt, some on decent asphalt with lots of dirt/rocks/boulders/sink holes, and even parts of the Inca trail I believe, literally a bit of everything. The views were great, and today I managed to stay dry, always a plus. I decided to stop by the Laguna Cuicocha for a photo on the way, a beautiful crater lake located just outside Otavalo. I arrived late in the afternoon and had no intention on hiking, but you can hike the rim in about 4 hours, so I have decided to stay an extra day to do the hike, before heading south to Banos the following day. Turns out this is a good decision for several reasons, as when I arrive at the hotel a couple guys in a car are pointing and saying something, but I cannot hear them. Not sure if they are trying to get my attention or the car behind me as they point behind me. I pull over to take a look, and when they pull up realize they are telling me my tire is low on air. No problem, at least I am here and not miles up in the middle of nowhere, I had to park in a parking area separate from the hotel, so rather than change it out myself I am going full gringo and paying the guy to do it tomorrow, just need to find, the guy. Now, there is a flat tire scam that goes on at time in parts of latin america, I don't think this was the case, the guys letting me know came from the 1 way road crossing the 1 way road I was on so there was no way they were involved, and I hadn't left my bike in awhile, I think it was just a fluke picking up a nail outside Otavalo.
Laguna Cuicocha
Otavalo
Otavalo
Otavalo