Saturday, 22 March 2008

Into Honduras and Back to Mexico

Some more pictures, and mostly in the right order!

First one is of a volcano - you go and see it when it gets dark as sometimes you can see the glow of the lava just a little bit below you, but when I was there too much stuff was coming out and we had to wear gas masks as it´s pretty toxic - sulphuric acid and lots of other noxious fumes.

It last erupted in 2002, so definitely regarded as active.

I spent a few days in Granada working out what to do next. It´s a good time of year to see whale sharks at Utila, one of the Bay Islands in the Carribean off Honduras.

It really wasn´t realistic to cycle there in the time available so I rode a little hop of about 40km to Minagua, the capital of Nicaragua, where I took the bus to San Pedro Sula (12hrs) and then the next day another one to Ceiba on the coast nr the islands. Due to a big storm - very high winds and torrential rain the ferry wasn´t running so I splashed out $50 on the plane there.

Unfortunately I didn´t get to see any whale sharks which was a big disappointment. But I did a PADI rescue diver course - which was very good. Lots of dive schools in Utila so prices are cheap. Training was quite hard work as you spend a lot of time in the water in scuba gear doing various exercises and practising different scenarios. Then when you´d finished for the day you´d pack your kit away and sit down for a rest.

Pnly thing was there would then be a scream from the water and the instructor had fallen off the quay. "Help, Help, I´m drowning, I can´t swim". So off you´d go again, going through the steps you´d been taught and sort out how to rescue him. So then you´re in the water giving him a floatation aid, and there´s another scream from the next quay. The Canadian guy also doing the course has now fallen in. "Help, Help, I´m drowning". So you go to try and help him, but he´s panicking so he makes a grab for you to try and drown you too. (You´ve stayed out of reach for this very reason). So finally you´ve calmed him down and trying to work out what to do to svae him, when the instructor starts screaming again "Help, Help, I´ve been bitten by a shark".

Oh dear oh dear - this never ending crisis is a bit like being back at work!

As part of the course you also have to do an "Emergency First Responder" course as well, where you learn what to do with people who have been injured in an accident or had a heart attack or similar. You learn about checking airways, giving cardiopulmary massage and so on. Also giving oxygen and using a defibrillator. I think you have to do it as part of a driving test in some European countries which seems quite a good idea.

On the last day we had some luck to make up for the whale sharks when we ended up with about 100 spinner dolphins around the boat so got to see them jumping out of the water and living up to their name and also went in the water and saw them hurtling around beneath us whistling to each other! Around the quays I saw this eagle ray one night.

So after this there was another storm when I wanted to leave so I had to get another plane, but this time it was going back to San Pedro. From there I again flew up to Mexico and did a 5 day intensive yoga class. This started at 5am so I had to get up at 4.30 to walk down the beach to the school. Lovely under the moon and the stars.

First was an hour mediation (or the development of compassion) where the Yogi would give some instruction and some readings from Hindu philosophy, then an hour of an Indian breathing technique. After breakfast (fruit and nuts) three hours of physical yoga, doing a lot of work to do with increasing mobility of the vertabrae in the spine. Very hard work, but very rewarding and Briggitte was a super teacher.

I stayed at the other end of the beach, but most of the 14 people stayed at the school as well. On the last day I discovered that under the veneer of calm, anger was rising and rebellion was brewing.. Yep coffee was banned until after the morning´s work was completed. But people were not happy, and on the penultimate day one hardened criminal snook out and bought a cafe con leche at the local cafe.

Probably from the spirits, Brigitte found out about it, but didn´t know who the culprit was. "Don´t worry" she said, "This is a very small town and secrets don´t last long here"!

Pretty much coming to the end of the trip now. Had thought about riding down to Guatamala City, but think I might rest a little now. It´s been quite tough really, and now it´s Santa Semana here (Easter in English!). Big thing in these Catholic countries and lots of people come out of the cities to the beach. Fortunately Mexico has a lot of beaches.

My cabana here is lovely, so everything can be manyana for a few days!

Thanks to the people who have added to the David Shepherd thing, I´ve got some other promises so we should be able to get it up a little higher!

My heart goes out to Sylvia, friend of the family who is now very ill. I´ve still got the book you gave me a couple of years back "100 Great Trips". Done some of them, but a few more to go one day I hope. Hope you get a chance to see these pictures.

Chris

























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Friday, 22 February 2008

Into Nicaragua

Hi again

First thing is I have set up a page on http://www.justgiving.com/froggyridesagain
to see if I can raise a bit of dosh for charity.

Please have a look and .... if you can.


































































































































So we´ve crossed over the border into Nicaragua (agwa it´s pronounced at the end over here - and it is their country!).

In Costa Rica I did some diving, but failed in my mission to see Bull sharks, apparently not the right time of year and also the visibilty was terrible. Where the vis improved it was due to currents which were freezing. That´s not on at all!

Met a couple of Austrians, 2roadrunners-on-tour is their blog, who started in June last year at Anchorage, Alaska and are aiming to get all the way down to the tip of South Argentina. They were looking forward to getting further south as it would be a little cooler.

Spent some time at the lovely beach spot of Montezuma, chilled out hippy style spot. Lovely beaches, lovely swimming, all in lovely. One night there went to a nearby town where there was a fair. Some of the guys went on a spinning shaking, twisting platform which would be so banned in UK, Health and Safety people would be aghast. The Costa Rican guys had a whale of a time on it though!

Saw some more crocs from a bridge, one guy´s hat got blown off - he didn´t seem too keen to retrieve it though!

The crossing into Nicaragua took three hours queuing in passport control, not easy in the mill of people trying to hang onto the bike. Further not helped by the computer for the queue I was in crashing when I was 8 from the front, had to go to the back of another queue.

First stop here was at Isla Omatepe, beautiful island in Lake Nicaragua made up of two volcanoes, on of them a very volcanesque near perfect cone. Cycled all the way round it one day, apart from 5km where a pickup offered me a lift - the road had deteriated to volcanic rubble. The girls in the back were really friendly - they have such lovely natural smiles it warms your heart.

I´ve now got to Granada, very pretty colonial city built by the Spanish. Had a nice meal looking out over the central square and cathedral.

Tonight it´s planning where we are going next, I want to get to Utila, an island in the Carribean off Hoduras, where there is a chance at this time of year to see whale sharks. But it´s quite a distance and I´ve got to work out if it´s realistic to ride it all.

Now the plannig will be tomorrow - it has taken 4 hours to do this post and the Justging thing!

Pura Vida

Chris


































Saturday, 2 February 2008

Into Costa Rica

So another bunch of photos in the wrong order - I'm having a lot of trouble trying to adjust the layout, and it's Saturday night, so cerveza calls!

I've now crossed over the border to Costa Rica and headed to Corcovado National Park, according to National Geographic, 'One of the most biologically intense places on the planet'.

It is situated in the Osa peninsular, the most Southern one in CR on the Pacific side. On the way I went down the most scary descent ever / see the pic of the hairpin bends. Basically straight down the side of a cliff.

I joined a guided trek for three days into the park - this involved a 20km trek in and out, and other hikes on the middle day. The 3 Canadians also on the trip rested the middle day. In some ways sensible, but yours truly wasn't missing anything, so the trek out was a bit of a nightmare.
The trek includes about 6km on the beach, which is very hard going and crossing rivers, one of them well over my waist with the pack on my head!.

Saw crocs, went kayaking and achieved another goal - scarlet macaws. Hopefully even the most ralcalcitrant ornithologist among you will be able to spot which photos they are. Also saw all four types of monkey - howler, squirrel, white faced cappuchin and spider. The noise the howler monkeys make is amazing and they start at 4am!

The second evening a chap was sitting on the steps to the ranger station eating a bowl of pasta when a large , 5 inches maybe, scorpion ran out from a gap and grapped a bug between his feet and ran back again. To say he was a bit put out would be understating things!

I'm now heading up the Pacific coast and have met another cyclist going the other way! Guy from Seattle is taking a year to ride down from Mexico to as far as he can get, possibly Chille. Though he spent 6 months teaching English in El Salvador.

There's a lovely waterfall just near the hostle here which you can slide down, but I had a couple of probs climbing up - though got there in the end.

All the best

Chris





























Thursday, 17 January 2008

Ever Onwards


Greetings again, this time from Guadalupe, underneath Volcan Baru, the highest mtn in Panama.

Two days ago, a guy from the UK arrived here took a walk up the road and saw this ocelot, people have been here a month and not seen one. Grr! Grr! Not only that it hung around and posed for photos!

Nr here is the Amistad Park, and co-operative area between Panama and Costa Rica - basically a huge area of rain forest. Had a couple of hikes - wondeful - and have seen some quetzals, though my piccies need cropping b4 I can stick em up here.

The quetzal is a beautiful bird, green and red with the male having very long tail feathers. It is a symbol of freedom here in Central America, and was one of the goals of my trip.

Again the pictures are in the wrong order, so apologies for that.

Over christmas I stayed at Santa Catalina, I surfer spot - I managed to catch a few waves one day, and on xmas day itself I went diving and saw a large shoal of juvenile rays and a load of barracuda.

A lot of the children got kites for presents and were having great fun running up and down the road.

In the afternnons it generally started raining, and raining tropically - in minutes paths would become small rivers. All my clothes, which isn't a lot were dampo and smelling. My books which got wet during a ride through three hours of rain were going mouldy... Still a bad day at the beach ... :-)

Spent new year on small island named Boca Brava, really great place with a relaxed atmosphere - plus one or two cuba libres on New Years Eve with dancing and Panamanian music. Howler monkeys on this island, but difficult to get good photos of them.

Had some problems with the bicycle - the chain broke twice, so the folks help have some new bits DHLed out here and hopefully we'll be all right now.

While waiting for the parcel, I took some Spanish lessons in Boquete, the other side of this mtn, but I've got a bit more to do b4 I can speak like a native! As I stayed a there a while got to meet a few people - nice English couple heading for Equador on a 6 month sabatical started in Mexico I think.

Back in David I went out on a day trip to some hot springs with a Dutch girl on her gap year before medical school - she'd spent some time in Guatamala and Honduras doing volunteer work and was heading for Equador and the Galapagos. Made me laugh - she knew the Dutch expression "You know how the cow caught the rabbit", but didn't know the answer which is "It stood behind a hedge and made a sound like a lettuce".

I'm a bit fitter now, think I've done around 750km, but still finding it hard going. Up in the mtns it is cool, but getting up is tough. Down it is flatter, but much, much hotter!

Next hop is over to Costa Rica and to a park on the pacific coast, hopefully to see Scarlet Macaws and more :-)

Hope all is Ok in Ingleterra - it is raining here at the mo, so reminds me of home!

All the best Chris