Wanderlust: Santa Cruz to Amboró

Hi guys!
I hope everyone is very very well, and I wish you all a very Happy Thanksgiving! Hopefully everyone out there is happily stuffing themselves full of great food and falling into turkey-induced comas in front of a football game. In fact, if you are reading this, which means that you are not feasting, sleeping, drooling, or lazing about, and it is currently Thanksgiving, I order you to get off the computer and engage in one or more of the above activities immediately. Thank you.
As usual, before I get to rambling, I have a couple of quite notices. First, I have been informed of a growing interest in my little blog from a number of people who I have not met yet in person, and I would like to say Thank You to all such persons for their interest, I am extremely flattered. Second, some confusion regarding the photos imbedded in the blog has arisen. I would like to clarify that these are NOT my photos, but were plucked from the web like so many copywrited cherries, and you can view the photos in their natural internet habitat by clicking on them. My own photos will be posted once I get home and develop them. Lastly, a continuing thank you to all those who valiantly keep reading and to all the emails I have gotten, love ´em all. Enough of that, lets get crackin´. The adventure begins in...
SANTA CRUZ
I arrived in Santa Cruz bleary-eyed, cranky, and close to insane, as my 10 hour night-bus from Trinidad was predictably trying. A number of laws exist for long-distance buses here. For example, each bus must contain at least one screaming child, one ponderously overweight man with poor hygene, and one group of at least 6 hyperactive, thirteen-year-old girls that have decided to treat the bus as a sleepover. The huge man is required to sit next to me and take up most of my personal space, and is also required to release whatever gasses his body is producing at the moment in the loudest way possible, and directly at me. The girls are required to sit in a protective giggling bubble around my seat, and to kick my chair, abruptly recline theirs and smack my knees (if they are in front of me), shout continuously to the others to maintain complete realtime contact with one another, and to maintain a constant vigil on me by peeking through any crack of space between my seat and theirs and shrieking with excitement every time I open my bloodshot eyes and ¨spot¨ them, in spite of their clever hiding strategy. The baby must sit directly outside the teeny-bopper perimeter, and must scream without pause for sleep, food, or breath for the full duration. My window is also required to be welded shut to prevent me from diluting fat-guy gasses or from attempting to crawl out onto the roof to get some sleep.
So as I stumbled out of the bus and met my blurry universe, I made my way to a man shouting at me in a friendly manner to get in his yellow car (a taxi?). He then took me to some place that he said had beds (a hotel?), where a nice old lady took some of my money (the owner? a begger? a mugger? Hillary Clinton? impossible to tell.). After a shower and enough sleep to get a grasp on that slippery thing called reality, I stuffed all of my stinky, pulsating, possibly sentient field cloths into a bag and trudged off to the nearest laundrimat. My conversation with the lady there went like this:¨I would like these clothes washed, please.¨
¨HAHAHAHHAHA (snort) HAHAHAHAHA!!!!!¨
¨Seriously.¨
¨Oh.¨ She warily eyed me as she sifted through the pile. ¨What color were these socks?¨
¨White.¨ More wary staring. Her response was slow and careful.
¨And what color would you like them to be when I am done?¨
¨White.¨ She stared at me. I didn´t say anything. She looked down at the pile, then back at me.
¨Kind of white?¨ I offered.
She grunted and told me to get out and come back tomorrow, when my laundry would be done, or at least subdued enough that it wouldn´t bite me when I tried to put it on. Sounded fair.
I left her poking at my pile with a meterstick, presumably to determine its abilities, and took off to run errands around town. I hung out in the central plaza and had lunch with a young guy that came up to me to ask for help with his English homework. I met quite a few travelors as well, and had dinner and a deep discussion about life, the universe, and everything (42) with some Australian guys in an Irish pub on the square. The next day, I gathered myself up, picked up my laundry from a very surly laundry lady, and hopped into a collective taxi to the small town of Buena Vista, the gateway to Amboró National Park.
BUENA VISTA AND AMBORÓ
Buena Vista is a sleepy jungle town two hours northwest of Santa Cruz, and sits at the edge of the Andean foothills and Amboró. The central plaza features another Irish Pub (owned by the same guy that owns the one in Santa Cruz we found out. He let us swim in his pool) in a expresso-stand style kiosk, flowering trees, and the scariest damn public telephone I have ever seen. The booth was shaped as a 15 foot tall snarling Jaguar with fangs and claws bared standing on its hind legs, with the actual phone attatched to what would have been its waist. This gave the impression that, when someone actually used the phone, an enormous posessed Jaguar was about to tear to pieces some poor idiot who was foolishly grasping the cat´s Private Area and holding it thoughtfully to their ear.
It was here that I met three other travelors, a couple of Australians named Mark and Susan, and a British girl named Maria, who were heading to Amboró as well, and I joined up with them. After a night in Buena Vista, we headed off into the park for a couple of nights with
our soft-spoken guide, Hernán. He is a birder too, and we had a great time babbling away about birdy stuff as we hiked, and he helped me get my eyes on some very cool birds. We bounced along the old dirt road to the park in beat-up old jeep, stopping at a small field station at the end of the road. From there, we backpacked into the park for a few more hours until we reached our campsite, a patch of sand underneath an overhanging rock face on the side of a rolling mountain stream. We spent the rest of our time hiking among the towering rainforest and soaring cliffs, hiking into waterfalls and just tromping around the area in search of wildlife.
our soft-spoken guide, Hernán. He is a birder too, and we had a great time babbling away about birdy stuff as we hiked, and he helped me get my eyes on some very cool birds. We bounced along the old dirt road to the park in beat-up old jeep, stopping at a small field station at the end of the road. From there, we backpacked into the park for a few more hours until we reached our campsite, a patch of sand underneath an overhanging rock face on the side of a rolling mountain stream. We spent the rest of our time hiking among the towering rainforest and soaring cliffs, hiking into waterfalls and just tromping around the area in search of wildlife. After our days in the park, we headed back to Buena Vista for the night, and took off on another bus for Santa Cruz. The bus was ancient and crowded, but we passed the time by guessing where the bus´s strong aroma had come from, and by watching Mark teach the kids on the bus The Chicken Dance. The next few days in Santa Cruz were unbelievably lazy, as our main activities included going to the All-you-can-eat buffet on the corner, sleeping, swimming in the pool at our hostel, watching some occasional TV when it worked, and wandering around the city. We went to a music bar one night, and saw a really great Bolivian group play blues-inspired Clapton-esque music, but that was as adventurous as we got. It was great.
But eventually, we had to drag ourselves away and get back to our travelling, so we went and bought our bus tickets, and went our separate ways. The relationships you form backpacking around are completely unique, you meet, become good friends, and say goodbye within a few days, but you feel like you´ve known them forever, its like a friendship on fast-forward. Anyway, we all said goodbye and got on our respective busses, mine taking me to Cochabamba, where I am currently writing from. Cool city, I´ll talk about it in the next post, in a few days. And now for a very special edition of...
THE BEASTIE REPORT
The curse has been broken...
MAMMALS: Panthera onca, the Jaguar, know here as ¨Tigre¨ (tiger). As we were trudging out of the park, Hernán stopped dead in his tracks suddenly, causing everyone else to smush together accordian-style. I looked beyond him just in time to see a flash of movement, a low-slung body with rippling golden, spotted fur stalking through the trail with liquid grace and power. The shape vanished into the growth at the side of the trail, and reemerged through a gap in the undergrowth further in. The outline of the animal moved slightly, and as it hit a patch of light, shadows gave way to a huge head with bulging jaw muscles, and a pair of eyes that cut through you and lock you in place, eyes that only cats posess. A flicker of gold and black, and it vanished, melting into the impenetrable forest. Hernán hadn´t moved at all, but his eyes were shining with the same excitement and reverence that I felt pounding in my head, and he breathed one, whispering word. ¨Tigre...¨Also seen were a troop of 30 or more Spider Monkeys, Howler Monkeys, and a handful of squirrels.
REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS: Poisin arrow frogs (Phyllobates), toads, tree frogs, and a very pretty False Coral Snake
INSECTS: An endless parade of outlandishly patterned and colored butterflies, and a huge firefly that could make not only the characteristic lime green light, but also a flame-orange flash from its abdomen.
FISH: I am not sure what they are, but the river was full of some Sucker-like fish, and one species that unfailingly bolted out of hiding to bite everyone directly in the nipple, and then turn and bolt back into hiding. I have absolutely no idea why they do this, but it makes swimming an
interesting activity.
interesting activity.BIRDS: Not a whole lot of new stuff, but some very cool ones, Oilbird, Southern Nightengale-Wren, Military Macaw, Channel-billed Toucan, and the unbelievable Paradise Tanager (photo -->).
I´ll try to add some photos to this post later, my computer here is being stupid at the moment. Until next time, you stay classy, Planet Earth. Happy Travels...
-Chris
Cochabamba, Bolivia



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