Saturday, July 30, 2022

We invite you to join us in Bolivia!


 We are now living in Sky Hacienda and it is wonderful to be able to enjoy it as our home. We have also created an urbanisation on the land surrounding us with a number of plots of land for sale all with amazing views towards the Andean mountain range in front of us. 

Our families and friends are very envious of our all year round average temperature of 25C/77F and the incredibly cheap cost of living in Bolivia. We are re-publishing our website skyhacienda.com shortly with all the information necessary to live and work in Bolivia.


Sunday, January 25, 2009

CANOA


What to do in Ecuador post Christmas? Having visited the jungle and the mountains, it was time to hit the beach.



Situated on the north coast of Ecuador, Canoa is a surfer's paradise and also home to local fishermen who brave the waves to keep the local restaurants stocked with fish.


We stayed in a hostal made entirely of bamboo and other exotic woods, with hammocks slung under palapas and tables cut from massive trees on which to place our cuba libres (rum and coke).



We chilled under canvas sunshades on the beach and then jumped in the warm water to get shaken up by the waves.

Sunsets were special!





CUENCA FIREWORKS

Cuenca's residents love a good firework display, but it's like nothing you would experience in the developed world.



First a tall bamboo and coloured paper structure loaded with connecting tubes of gunpower are placed as close as possible to a historic building.



Then the people surge forward as the tubes of gunpowder on the lower section of the structure are lit.




The structure shakes and whines with the strain of the energy being released as the gunpowder
tubes explore in an upward direction.


At the same time jets of fire shoot out from the sides, hurling bits of burning bamboo into the crowd who retreat screaming to a safer location.

By the time the structure is fully lit it is like being in the middle of a war zone, with rockets hurling into the sky and spraying burning debris on the ground below.




My thanks to Ed for braving the war zone to shoot the photos
and not hiding behind pillars like the rest of us.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

CHRISTMAS EVE PARADE, CUENCA

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Cuenca is famous for it's children's parade on Christmas Eve and we were thrilled to have a front row view as the parade passed through the street in front of our apartment. However, we were soon down on the street ourselves, taking photos, applauding the children and dancing to the bands as they passed.


The parade started at 10 am and it was already a scorching hot day. Every child in the city and from other parts of Ecuador were dressed up - there were vehicle after vehicle containing traditional nativity scenes, with Marys, Josephs, wise men, shepherds and the cutest angels.



There were indigenous groups dressed in their best traditional costumes, miniature spanish ladies in beautiful gowns mounted on horses.


























The procession culminated in the cathedral in Parque Calderon some 6 hours later, with offerings of roasted pig, guinea pig and strangely dressed chickens decorated with fruits and vegetables that had been transported around the city on horses and vehicles.
















Impossible to adequately describe in words, so enjoy the photos!



THE INCA RUINS OF INGAPIRCA


Situated a couple of hours by bus north of Cuenca, the Inca ruins at Ingapirca (meaning Wall of the Inca) are the largest in Ecuador. The site was sacred to the Canari indigenous people who lived there for centuries before being conquered by the Incas. Rather gratifyingly, the descendents of the Canari people now operate the site, thus reclaiming their land.


The settlement was built late in the 15th century as the Inca empire expanded from Peru into Ecuador. Ingapirca was probably a stopping off point on the roay Inca route from Cuzco, Peru to Quito, Ecuador and features an eliptical platform known as the Temple of the Sun used for religious and ceremonial purposes as well as a possible solar observatory.


Unlike Machu Pichu in Peru, which was hidden from the world until its discovery, Ingapirca was exposed and therefore well known, resulting in the removal over centuries of many of the dressed stones that formed the walls of this settlement. But there are still some beautiful examples of this finely crafted stonework, as well as examples of trapezoidal archways and niches that are hallmarks of Inca construction.

CAJAS NATIONAL PARK



Cajas National Park is situated 30k from Cuenca and most of the 228 sq km of parkland is between an altitude of 4000 and 4500m. It never snows there, but it can be pretty cold and the bleak, moor-like landscape reflects the colder climate. There are more than 200 lakes in the park and it is a beautiful location for hiking, trout fishing and rough camping.






We visited for just a day to hike and take photos, and on our way back stopped at a trout farm where the adjacent restaurant owner kindly lit a fire whilst we waited for him to catch the fish for our supper.

A RUMBLE IN THE JUNGLE

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Katy and I headed north east to Puyo by bus on a rocky dirt road that was cut out of
the jungle.
In Puyo we found a beautiful hostal with wooden cabins installed in the garden with hammocks for chilling in outside on the balcony.









We didn't have enough time to have a full jungle experience, so settled for a one day trip. Our guide Louis drove us to a spot where a local threw his net into a pond and caught our fish for lunch. We then headed alongside the river which was muddy and swollen from heavy rain the previous day and night to where a dug out canoe was waiting for us. These canoes are very unstable at the best of times, and we carefully got in and set off downstream, with our boatsman navigating the canoe from one side to another to slow down our speed in the fast moving river.

We got out further down the river and walked up a steep path to the top of a mountain where we were able to see a panoramic view of the jungle and the river. Katy also tried her hand at playing Jane on the rope swing.




After a tasty fish lunch we set off through the jungle alongside a stream toward a waterfall,
where Katy and I took the plunge and had the best power shower of our lives!













Our last visit was to a local indigenous community who were two days into a four day fiesta, celebrating nature and the end of a hunting trip. Huge quantities of chicha, a traditional drink made from maize and fermented by the women with spit had already been consumed when we arrived, and many of the inhabitants could barely stand up. It was considered impolite to refuse the chicha which was aggressively and constantly poured into the mouth by women, but luckily i was at the tail end of a month 'on the wagon' after a blood test had shown my liver was not as healthy as it could be. So I got our guide to explain that i couldn't drink the chicha for health reasons.











The chief of the village welcomed us with bowls of chicken and vegetable broth and when we had finished he invited me to dance. He was quite a sight, dressed in full camoflage with a colourful headdress, but I kept a straight face and did my best. We had walked a long way that day and I was quite relieved to sit down, only to be pulled onto my feet again to dance with the medicine man. After that there were a string of men who also insisted Katy and I danced with them, many of them covered in vomit from the vast amounts of chicha they had consumed.

Suddenly I realised that Louis, our guide, was beginning to look the worst for wear and gently guided him outside, reminding him that he had to drive us back to town!



We left the villagers to their continuing fiesta and returned carefully to Puyo.