Friday, October 26, 2007

A Colombian Cycling Tale

Rodrigo
Nevado de Huila?
Rio Magdelena

You are my brother, blood of my blood. This is your house; we wait for you. Message from military to FARC
Rice fields
Rice capital of Colombia

Mocoa to Pasto


Sure glad he's on my side!
Travel without worries....your army is on the hi-way


Steve, Lucho and Wilfredo
Maria and Ramon, welcoming dad.
Safer on a bike
Mocoa to Pasto




Soaked to the bone, surrounded by densely forested mountains streaming with waterfalls, the rumble of thunder amplified between close peaks,and hardly a soul around -- it is in this special place in southern Colombia where I feel the enormity of the natural world and become an insignificant speck of dust . . . a very wet one at the moment.
I'm half way between tropical rain forest and Andean cloud forest,half way up the eastern cordillera, half way between 500m and 3000m,but mostly half way on a road between somewhere and nowhere – my favorite road on the planet -- with a contented, yet half-mad grin on my face, thoroughly enjoying the warm wetness of the tropical storm.
Like many folks, I can, even when I bicycle, bore myself with the routine of daily life by traveling the same road over and over again, be it to work or for recreation. What I really prefer is to see something new around every corner. Yet Heraclitus said, "You can never step in the same river twice": and so, after repeated travels along the Mocoa-Pasto road, the last time still feels like the first time, a rare phenomenon in life.
Having bicycled the graveled, hairpin, cliffhanging road downhill onfive different occasions, the crazy idea of actually cycling up the mountain somehow took root in my brain. The logical, pessimistic left hemisphere argued it would be too much pain and suffering, while the dreamy, consequence-blind right hemisphere wondered if the impossiblewere perhaps possible.I at least had to give it a go.
The opportunity came during a mid term break in October when Maria, with baby Ramon in tow, would be spending some time with her family in Pasto. I hopped on my bike and a few days later (along with Rodrigo, a 21 year-old architecture student)cycled from Bogota to Saldana (205km), past Neiva to Campoalegre(160km), up to Pitalito (160km) and then down to Mocoa in theAmazonian department of Putumayo (140km). At that point, Rod had to catch an overnight, 12-hour bus ride in order to write an exam at university the following morning.
5am the next morning, I found myself alone, still dog-tired after pedaling 665km in only 4 days, gazing up the mountain and thinking…."the bus, the bus….take the bus you silly fool." But then that old right-brain kicked in and I knew I'd suffer serious regret if I didn't at least attempt it, so…..pedal, grunt, sweat, drink, and repeat the same sequence for ten hours in the saddle.
And so with that half crazed grin on my face, the rain having stopped for a while, I arrived at the top of the last climb to find the welcoming sight of the small town of Sibundoy nestled down in a deep valley bottom and bathed in the sun's last rays of the day. With no cell phone contact all day, I was pleasantly surprised to see Maria, Ramon, and brother-in-law Modesto come bouncing up the road in his little Suzuki 4WD to meet me.
Whew! I'm still not sure how I pulled that one off…even my usually reliable bike computer had gone mad, the pedaling time-function flashing on and off, unable to show enough digits to indicate that I'd cycled over ten hours!
After a day's rest at the local hot springs, all that was left was the 70km ride to Pasto. This time I was accompanied by a couple of old cycling buddies, Wilfredo and Lucho, who had come out to join me on the last leg and to kick my sorry butt up two more long climbs. Bogota to Pasto; 820km in 6 days.
From the seat of my rusting bike, this aging carcass has experienced many countries, roads, and faces over the years, but this neglected chunk of rain forest and mountain is the one magical place that keepsdrawing me back even though it always makes me feel smaller and more insignificant that anywhere else I know. Perhaps the magic is in the views down to the flat, five thousand kilometers of seemingly unendingAmazon basin; perhaps in the thickly vegetated mountains, hiding inthe ever-present, swirling mists; perhaps in the eerie lack ofpopulation, with no more that ten or so buildings along the central part of the road. All this suffering for just a brief, passing glimpse of creation, a glimpse that lets me dip my tire into the same river twice and savor the experience as if it were the first time.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Colombia: Bottom to top on two wheels

Local Pasto Newspaper
Adios!

Would you like some more bread with your sugar Paul?

Carlos Alberto....brother in law
Paul Dumont....world cyclist

Near Medellin




Lots of beautifully shaded Colombian roads

Mud volcano near Cartagena
Buga pequena
Fried plantain

Rio Cauca



The goal! Cartagena

Cartagena
Botero Sculpture Cartagena
Steak and Patacon




Buenos Dias!Another fine bike ride has come to and end here in Santa Marta,Colombia; one that I´d been dreaming of doing for the last 12 yearssince my first visit to this amazing country. The idea for this trip,aside from getting to know more about Colombia, was to "join some ofthe dots" in my goal to cycle the entire length of Latin America, fromTijuana to Tierra Del Fuego. All that I am missing now is Argentina!
The 3 of us set off from Maria´s hometown of Pasto in southernColombia on July 15th. For my brother in law, Carlos, it was his 1sttime cycle touring and with a new bike and 2 saddlebags, his goal wasto reach Cali, 400km north, which he did. Paul Dumont, a 63 year oldBelgian cyclist, who I met through a friend in Dubai, had the goal of making it to Medellin, some 870km from Pasto. He did that and more,making it all the way to Cartagena with a little help from Steve´sstyle of riding; up at 5am, ride every day and rest on the down hills:)14 days and 1500kms later on Aug 28th, we arrived in Cartagena. Paulstayed a few days and flew back to Belgium to do a tour of Poland andinto Russia. I took a rest day, exploring the historic centre andthen carried on through Barranquilla and Santa Marta in 2 days.
Some notes:-Congrats to Carlos on his 1st tour. I hope he is inspired to do moreafter his butt heals :)
-Paul, a retired engineer, has done 346,000kms through 51 countries,which I can´t even begin to fathom! He has also cycled through everytown in Belgium (5800) and 57 cities of over 1 million people....so Colombia was just a drop in the bucket for him. An excellent travel companion who fuels himself every morning with a few cups of coffeeand handfuls of sugar; likes to stay in the best hotel in town and who will ride until dark if necessary.
-An incredible range of climatic zones; from the spring like Vancouver type weather at 3000m to the dripping humidity of Cartagena and alongthe Caribbean coast.
-The amazing lush green vegetation from start to end with passionfruit, tangerines, papaya and many other strange and wonderful fruit in season.
-Excellent hi ways, with a lot of new pavement, wide shoulders and courteous truck drivers.
-No security issues; plenty of military and hi-way police checkpoints,and we were never asked to show ID.
Met a number of cyclists en route:
-2 Brits cycling from TDF to Cartagena. wwwsouthamericacycle.co.uk
-A Frenchman cycling around the world having done 28,000 of hisintended 48,000kms. http://www.unautretour.com/ ....in French and English.
-A deaf, mute Ecuadorian kid on a 1 speed, with a note asking formonetary assistance on route.
-A Colombian with a mid size dog on the back, cycling from Medellin toPasto and back.
-A Brit on a Tandem! Cycling from Alaska to TDF, picking up riders tohelp him along the way. wwwtakeaseat.org"Cada loco con su tema!"
-Flat tires? Paul 0, Carlos 0, Steve 9 Much to the amusement of mycompanions!
-And of course, friendly people offering us cold water or fruit andstopping to chat or riding along on their bike, scooter, motorcycle orcar and chatting!
We arrived in Bogota last night. I´ll be teaching year 3 and Mariawill teach PE part time, both at the same British school in Bogota.http://www.cgb.edu.co/
Next tours:-
More in Colombia....so much more to explore!
-Venezuela next door
-Indian Himalaya - July 2008LMK if you´re interested.
Next tour will include some rest days :).....didn´t I say that after East Africa? :)

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Cycling from Istanbul to Greece, Bulgaria and back


http://www.wwwalk.org/FrameSet_an.html
Check out his website. Jean, from Montreal, has been walking around the world for 8 years....to promote "Peace and non-violence for the children of the world". He has two more years to go.






















Damned if I remember how to say hello in Turkish, Greek or Bulgarian! Howdy.
Mom didn't want to take Ramon to Alexandria or Istanbul for a hotelholiday and dad needed his endorphin fix, so I left Maria to deal withthe offspring, as is only right and just; someone's got to maintaintradition and teach them what a million years of obligation are allabout :) (That ought to get few replies!)
After a delayed flight and no sleep, I headed straight out of theIstanbul airport and 70 kms down the road, I ran into Jean Beliveaufrom Montreal who has been pushing a baby jogger (sans bambino) aroundthe world since 2000 and plans to finish in the year 2112! He walksabout 30km a day and just passed the 40,000km mark. I've beensubscribing to his quarterly email update for the last couple ofyears, but hadn't realized that I would be crossing paths with him!Check out wwwalk.org to see his route or contribute to his charitykids fund.
Two days riding got me to the Greek border, where I pedaled upwardsinto the Evros mountains, amidst the continuous ringing of churchbells during the Easter weekend.
Two days later and I crossed into Bulgaria. More quiet roads andplenty of ghost towns, as the younger generation seemed to have fledto greener pastures upon Bulgaria's recent entry into the EU.
Three days through Bulgaria got me to the Black Sea, back into Turkey,down to the Bosphorus and back to Istanbul. Courteous drivers, coolearly spring weather, great wild camping and warm hospitality (freemeals and lodging) all helped dad to recharge his batteries. 1100kmsin 10 days and only 3 flats.
Upon return, it took Ramon a full minute of curious looks before hesmiled and recognized his dad! Now guess who's turn it is to do thenightly feedings! What was that bit about teaching obligation? :)
Check jpeg titles on photos for brief explanations.
Steve