Friday, October 1, 2010

Monkeys or cakes


Due to start my cake course on 1st October I had a few weeks to spare. And all I could think about was the monkeys. And so when Vicky at La Senda Verde emailed me and said they were desperately in need of volunteers I booked my flights within an hour!
The journey was long. Three flights and about 24 hours long. In fact longer than that, as I managed to miss my connection in Miami due to rain and a five hour delay. But this meant a day in Miami with Gio's brother and family so it turned out pretty nicely.

Next day I landed in La Paz and started my return journey to La Senda Verde in the 'Las Yungas' valleys. The landscape on the journey was more beautiful than I remembered, and when I finally crossed the bridge to the refuge the beauty, and the excitement of being back were both overwhelming.

The view from the minivan out of La Paz.


The next day a group of school children arrived for a two night camping trip. All of their luggage proved to be just too tempting for Wara who was in heaven searching their luggage.

Then a couple of days later I was enlisted to babysit. Not the kids, a monkey! I had to babysit the new red howler monkey, Lokoto (3 months old) for the night. He spent the majority of it asleep in my tshirt! Not your everday task!

Oh the adorable Lokoto. Although try getting a monkeys tail in to a nappy when he doesn't want it!

Baby Chocolate - one of the newest spider monkeys. A very shy little monkey who every new and then would love to hang from the trees and pull your hair!

Me, Sambo, and Camelo - everyone seems to want my water container!

Nina (the spider monkey) says hello to the new Lion monkey - yes very small for a lion...

One of the many lovely cuddles from Nina - and one of the many reasons I will be back!

Marcelo - as always covered in monkeys. A true inspiration.

Vicky - even more of an inspiration, running the refuge, the hotel, charity work and teaching. Every animal from the monkeys and her beloved bear to the tortoises are treated like her children.

Lunch for the baby capuchin monkeys - on my lap, in my hair - over my face...

Mmmmmm pineapple, I got a little jealous of the monkey's diet after a while!

Wara found her way in to my bed at 5am - apparently I had a warm foot. I couldn't complain - it's not often you get a monkey stealing your covers. Unless you count Gio...

The usual suspects waiting outside of my room, Limon and Jimmy (the squirrel monkey)

Elvis - looking cute but actually nibbling my hand!

Oh the cuddles with Trufa (baby spider monkey)

The adorable Limon and Borris in their usual spot on my bedroom floor.

Mr Biggles - my first encounter with a hiccuping bird. He liked to crawl up the back of your chair at breakfast and then sit on your shoulder waiting for his breakfast. Every time that first hiccup would make me jump!

Kantuta the Coati, making herself comfy. In fact at one point she was so heavily asleep she dribbled!
Frijole, posing.
New addition, Sam the Toucan, giving me the eye

Wara - just double checking the doors, as always. She wants to be inside and causing trouble at all times!

The birds still preferred walking to flying! Lots of time is spent trying to look after the birds, especially the ones still in cages - any ideas for entertainment will be appreciated. My next plan is to send them mirrors! Vicky is hoping to buy them a radio too!


The view out of the window of the taxi on my way back to La Paz - typical beautiful Bolivian countryside. I am sure I will be back. I don't know how or when. In the mean time I plan to help from afar be it trying to raise funds to help this amazing cause or sending anything out that might help. But for now it's cakes and not monkeys until I find a way of combining the two for a job!!

Saturday, August 21, 2010

And all of a sudden...

...it was all over.

Gio and I booked our trip around South America July 30th 2009 and as you can only book tickets a year in advance our return flights were booked for a year later. The plan was to move them. But we never did for one reason or another. Indecision of course being a large one!
And so, all of a sudden, we had just two days left before it was home time.

We used our time to take in some more of the fantastics sights in BA, including the MALBA (museum of Latin American modern art) which was great. We also enjoyed meandering around the Palermo neighbourhood shopping till we dropped. Oh and, of course, we went out for a couple of last minute absolutely delicious steaks.

With the clock ticking we started to reminisce about our 10.something months away. Things we had achieved and favourite moments.

We have slept in 76 different beds. Only 2 of those would make you question our sanity!

Two of the worst offenders:

Volunteering in Ecuador


Deepest, coldest Bolivia

We have been on 53 bus journeys. Having completed almost all of our travel by bus (plus one best forgotten boat to Colombia, flights to Galapagos and the sail boat whilst there)
We travelled approx. 11249 Kms through central and south america.

We enjoyed the sights of 8 different countries (okay Brazil was just one big watery sight), and of course enjoyed many many many cakes in each one.
Best cakes:

Gio's triple layer dulce de leche cake


And then there are the favourite moments:

A breathtaking walk in Galapagos


Amazing animal moments - too many to list but here are a few:
The sealions on Galapagos
Feeding the calves in Ecuador - and them crazily sucking my wellies for milk!!

The ubiquitous llama (or Alpaca)

Oh and those monkey moments!!
...and the whales of course, oh the amazing whales.
In Colombia our time with the kids, especially Vanessa showing us her tiny home with a great big smile:

The amazing beaches along the way
Panama - Bocas del Toro, Wizard beach

Galapagos

Some amazing food:

Yummy piggy in the market in Cuenca, Ecuador
the delicioius Tamales in an amazing setting in Bolivia

of course the steak.....
There were some less appealing meals of course - our first arepa in Colombia:

Coffee in Colombia

And finally, the mind blowing South Bolivia landscapes


What next? Watch this space......

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Water, water all around....


Our final sightseeing excursion for Argentina was up to Puerto Iguazu and the very famous water falls. Apparently when Eleanor Roosevelt saw Iguazu she exclaimed oh "Poor Nigara"! Although we had not seen Niagra falls we had certainly heard of them and yet somehow before embarking on this trip we hadn't had heard anything of the phenomenon that is the Iguazu Falls. However throughout the whole of south america fellow travellers had all said the same - amazing - and so we headed off on a nice little 17 hour bus journey to see for ourselves.

Unfortunately we weren't able to get seats on super duper first class for this mega journey, but we went for the next best thing. Which apparently in this bus companies eyes meant booze! Whisky before dinner, wine and beer during dinner and 'champagne' afterwards! The journey went by surprisingly quickly! But we decided perhaps we needed a day or two with a little less drink, especially when we arrived bright and not very sparkly Sunday morning.

After a quick freshen up we headed out for the first view of the falls. Iguazu falls border Brazil and Argentina and so you can 'pop' across to Brazil for the afternoon to see the falls from their side. We felt like fish out of water in Brazil, suddenly we couldn't understand the language!

Our first view of the falls in Brazil
Getting a bit soggy when you get closer

The falls are epic - 2.7 kilometers across!
The falls were indeed amazing, absolutley huge and very loud. But it wasn't until we visited them the next day from Argentina that we really were blown away.





Definitely worth the long, long journey. We had never seen anything like them before in our lives.



The amazing birdlife around the falls

On the journey to the falls the changing colours of the landscape were amazing. Lush greens to bright reds:



We managed to get a last minute monkey fix at a local refuge!