Mexico to Brazil

januari - augusti 2024
We are currently travelling from Mexico City through Central America and South America to Rio de Janeiro in Brazil by August Läs mer

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Kategorier
Backpacking, Buss, Par, Kultur, Dykning, Vandring, Natur, Fotgrafering, Självinsikt, Vildmark
  • 55,2kantal resta kilometer
Transportmedel
  • Flyg31,4kkilometer
  • Buss10,4kkilometer
  • Bil6 453kilometer
  • 4x43 104kilometer
  • Motorbåt708kilometer
  • Gående492kilometer
  • Tåg322kilometer
  • Färja121kilometer
  • Vandring114kilometer
  • Helikopter80kilometer
  • Tuk Tuk60kilometer
  • Cykel38kilometer
  • Paddling/Roddning9kilometer
  • Cable car6kilometer
  • Segling5kilometer
  • Häst5kilometer
  • Motorcykel4kilometer
  • Husbil-kilometer
  • Husvagn-kilometer
  • Simning-kilometer
  • Husbåt-kilometer
  • Kryssningsfartyg-kilometer
  • Skidåkning-kilometer
  • Lifta med-kilometer
  • Barfota-kilometer
  • 144fotavtryck
  • 239dagar
  • 2,0kfoton
  • 1,0kgilla-markeringar
  • Goodbye Panama, Hello Colombia

    1 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

    We celebrated our last night in Central America with a meal out at a nice restaurant, this is also just over half way in our adventure.

    Today we headed to the airport and flew to Colombia and South America for the first time. We have a few days here to explore the city of Cartegena. Will share more soon.Läs mer

  • Cartagena Old Town

    1–4 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    We are now in Cartagena in northern Colombia.

    Established by the Spanish in 16th century this was the city where gold was gathered before being exported to Spain. It had to be very fortified to protect from pirates and privateers including our own Frances Drake who captured and sacked the city at one point.

    Colombia is a bit more gritty and lively than Panama. We have to watch for pick pockets and over aggressive traders but it is so full of energy and a lovely buzz and friendliness too. The street food is tasty too.
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  • Getsemani

    2 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    Previously a very poor part of the city Getsemani (after the biblical location) hosted a street art convention in 2017 and suddenly became a place of interest to visit. Rapidly artists and hipster coffee shops and bars gathered and it is now a tourist hotspot.

    This is an Afro-Caribbean area so the art is influenced by that. Lots of colour and energy to this place. Love it!
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  • San Felipe Fort

    2 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    Cartegena was a dominant trading town particularly a place where gold was collected from elsewhere before being exported.

    This quickly attracted pirates (of the Caribbean). Interesting pirates don’t mean Jack Sparrow type characters here but the most famous is Sir Frances Drake who captured the city in 1586 and was going to burn it down but accepted a ransom payment of 10 million pesos.

    Having had enough of this the Spanish built huge fortifications - 13km of city walls and this fort - San Felipe. It took about 200 years to complete and was finished just in time for the Spanish to get kicked out of Colombia!

    On another note a lot of tourists come to Colombia for dubious motives and a lot of Venezuelan women have been trafficked here for the sex industry. We have seen various dubious establishments on our walks. But when I (Michael) went for a short walk alone at lunchtime to get some food (whilst Helen was on cooking course) I was offered a “massage” 7 times. We have also been offered drugs several times. Quite seedy and sad for what is otherwise a beautiful city.
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  • Colombian cooking

    3 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

    A new continent seemed a good opportunity to learn more about local food. So today I (Helen) took a cooking class in Cartagena. Colombian food doesn’t have the same profile as Mexican or Peruvian food does so I was interested to learn more.

    The menu today was:

    Arepas - these are common in Colombia (as well as neighbouring Venezuela and Ecuador) and are made from corn dough, often stuffed. We had two fillings, one with avocado, similar to guacamole (but no chilli) the other a chicken mix. Apparently chilli is not commonly added when cooking in Colombia but would be added at the table as part of a salsa/sauce.

    Patacones - these are double fried plantains (green plantains so not very sweet) which were served with garlic shrimp. We had a similar dish in Costa Rica called Tostones.

    Fish cooked on a barbecue in Bijao leaves served with a pepper and tomato sauce and yuca purée and yuca crisps.

    Dessert - ripe plantains (yellow) this time, cooked in picaro. This is a sugar product which is dark like muscovado sugar or treacle. To balance the sweetness it was served with lulo sorbet. Lulo is a fruit which I had never heard of. It has a sharp, citrusy flavour a bit like a mix of passion fruit and lime but is a member of the tomato family.
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  • Diving Tayrona National Park

    6–11 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

    So we moved 5 hours along the Colombian coast to the Tayrona National Park where we have been diving again. The village is fairly basic (no hard roads, no mains water) but the people are friendly and the diving great and very cheap.

    I (Michael) completed an underwater photography course as a module of my journey from Advanced to Master Diver (the highest qualification in recreational diving). As well as learning a new camera and all the issues of photographing under and through water -there is much less colour and light and often poor visibility, I was also learning a lot about diving control - staying in the same place despite a current - to get in focus shots. Of course it is also vital not to touch the marine life (lest you harm it or it harm you!) but to get as close as you can to get the shot.

    It is such a privilege to enter this underwater world that most people never see. Enjoy our highlights reel of video footage along with a video of me photographing Lion-fish trying to stay still in the current, get close to photograph without touching (they are highly poisonous).

    Tomorrow we head to Minca and the highest coastal mountain range in the world (5775m) for some amazing bird watching. We had hoped to dive in Ecuador but the political situation currently means visiting the coast is not possible so we probably will not dive again on this trip. But lots of South America to see above the water!
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  • Santa Marta Mountains

    10–14 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    Minca is a town at 600m in the foothills of the Santa Marta mountains (highest peak snow capped at 5575m). The town itself is a bit edgy with the police station literally next door to one of the many shops advertising drugs to backpackers!

    We were here for birding however and we spent three wonderful days getting up early (3.30am one day) to see so many wonderful birds -70 lifers in fact. This area is famous for endemics (birds found nowhere else on earth outside this small isolated mountain range) and we saw 17 of them. Probably the best birding of the trip so far. You can see and read more at www.wildscot.blog

    We travelled to 2600m by 4x4 with a fantastic driver (needed for the rutted roads and river crossings) and incredibly skilled bird guide Cristian.

    We are taking the advice from the US state department and avoiding the long and risky bus journeys here in Colombia (both for armed robbery and mudslides as it is the rainy season). So tonight we fly a short flight into the Andes (saving 22 hour bus) for some more birding and travel through the famous coffee region of Colombia.
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  • High Andes

    15–20 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

    Sorry if we have been quiet the last few days we have just been experiencing the most intense period of birding of the trip so far. From low coffee plantations (1,400m) to high paramo (4,138m - highest of trip so far). We have pretty much been birding dawn to dusk. Exhausting but amazing.

    Colombia is an amazing country. Gritty and difficult in some ways but wonderful in all that count. We teamed up with a couple who have started a local guiding business called Pablo (driver and logistics) and Luz (bird guide).

    We saw over 140 new birds of which 18 were endemics (found nowhere else). The hummingbirds were special as we say the hummingbird with longest tail another with the longest bill, one of the largest and the smallest, also the hummingbird with the coolest name “Shining Sunbeam”. Seeing about 30 hummers attack a 1.4m Parrot Snake was cool too.

    There will be much more in my blog when I finish editing over 4000 photos! Trip total now 876 birds. The main bird logging tool for birders globally is eBird and of the 820,000 users we are now ranked 160th for most worldwide sightings in 2024!

    Now we are in Medellin and about to start another week of Spanish School
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  • Comuna 13, Medellin

    21 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    Comuna13 is a district of Medellin, a city of 4 million in Columbia. It is famous for two reasons. First it was one of the most dangerous places on earth. Second, it managed to turn this around and is now safe.

    We have just taken a 3 hour walking tour with a local lady who grew up and lives here and I will share some of what she told us. Here (like El Salvador) is a place where the history is very recent.

    When drug cartel lord Pablo Escabar ruled this part of Colombia he offered a 2 million pesos reward for anyone who killed a police officer (£400) in this part of town so the police abandoned it. He was killed in the city in 1993 but this didn’t end their problems.

    Comuna13 instead became a battle ground between far right paramilitaries and the dominant left wing (FARC) guerrillas. The guerrillas held the comuna as their territory until 2002.

    At this point the government military sided with the paramilitary groups to cleanse Comuna13. During Operation Orion which involved 1500 soldiers supported by Black Hawk helicopter gunships. Over 3000 people were killed in 4 days.

    As the people were beginning to go without food and water they all took sheets from their house and climbed onto their roofs to say enough was enough and the action was stopped. The Guerilla’s hold on Comuna13 was weakened but not broken,

    In 2011 outdoor escalators were built providing access into the comuna for the first time. This enabled people to access work opportunities instead of climbing the equivalent of 28 stories each day.

    A peace deal was also signed in 2011 but in the years that followed ex-guerrilla members who returned to their homes often disappeared. It later became clear that they had been kidnapped and killed by the government supported paramilitaries with an estimated 3-4,000 victims buried in a mass grave outside the Comuna between 2011 and 2016.

    In 2016 another peace deal was signed and this time it was mostly honoured by both sides.

    The local community also started using street art to brighten up the community, and as a form of political protest but ultimately this served to attract tourists. The first walking tours began in 2017 and involved armed guards and paying for protection from the local mafia.

    Quickly business began to grow to provide the tourists with drinks, food, souvenirs etc. For the last 7 years a virtuous circle has helped turn the comuna around - with art leading to tourists leading to money in businesses leading to more art. Today companies such as Coke and Amazon are now even paying for product placement in the art, as photos are shared via social media around the world. See if you can spot one from Coke in my photos to prove the point.

    At the end of the tour a lightning storm hit so we took refuge in the guide’s home who offered us food. After the storm finished we returned to our accommodation via escalator, bus, and the very modern metro.
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  • Medellin

    22 maj 2024, Colombia ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

    We just did a walking tour of Medellin the second largest city in Colombia. The photos mostly cover the variety of what we saw.

    This isn’t a pretty city - the main style of architecture is brutalism (ugly concrete basically). But this is a city with a huge positive energy as it comes out of a period of tremendous conflict when it was “the most dangerous city on earth”.

    This is a city and country of contradictions.

    You can get an Uber but you have to sit in the front otherwise the police will stop you for a bribe.

    You can check into a nice airbnb but the room will have a card telling you bringing minors back to your room for sex is illegal. (Foreigners come here for this sadly).

    You can get cash from a cash point but you might need to step over an unconscious homeless person to do so.

    The second oldest church in town is the meeting point at night for prostitution. Makes confession easy in the morning apparently.

    The safest districts for tourists are controlled by the mafia who ensure the tourists are safe but charge protection from the businesses that serve them.

    The country has a terrible and recent history of violence but the people are super friendly and welcoming.

    We have been studying Spanish here but I (Michael) have been a bit unwell with stomach upset so missed some classes. On Saturday we move on to Bogotá the capital.
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