tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-269708242008-05-09T13:17:55.356-05:00Travels With My CatJamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comBlogger103125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-4593835588242309482007-06-26T22:02:00.000-05:002007-06-27T15:12:34.785-05:00Funny Ha-HaI sent an email tonight to everyone who I have met travelling (obviously only those whose email address I have), ie, a lot of people, just to say "hi" and that my trip (or "adventure" as some like to call them) is coming to an end. <a href="http://flickr.com/search/?q=yvonne&w=77788903%40N00">Yvonne</a> pointed out what a funny joke I had made, titling the email "The End Is Neigh". Hmmm<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/635349275/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1040/635349275_5df7bd08fc_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="Posadas Los Alamos Brochure" align="right" /></a>Lots of travellers end their journey with the treat of a stay at a luxury hotel. I had no such plans, but Thursday Jordi and I are off to Calafate, where the famous Moreno Glacier (lots of facts and figures <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perito_Moreno_Glacier">here</a>) ends in spectacular style. We shall be staying in spectacular style, at the four star Posadas Los Alamos. It will be the plushest hotel I have stayed in on this trip. Ok, ever. I am really looking forward to a big, non-saggy bed, with thick light duvet and hot showers at any time of day in the warm on-suit bathroom. So forgive me if you don't hear from me until I'm home on Thursday.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-3577560452503710572007-06-22T00:54:00.000-05:002007-06-27T15:14:04.637-05:00BJ's Cyber CafeThis story hinges on a common feature of men's toilets that might need an explanation for all those girlies out there. You have urinals right? Troughs and individual urinals. More often than not the individuals are set too close together, at best making it awkward to pee next to somebody, at worse making it practically impossible to fit two bodies around two urinals, this usually occurs in a corner where two urinals will point at one person standing there. What are they expecting? Siamese twins? One urinal to break, leaving the backup? A man with two penises? Anyway...<br /><br />So after a bit of an internet sesh I needed a wee and made a trip to the toilet. There were two urinals in a corner, as explained above, and a man using one, so I decided to wait. But the man said "pase, pase", I'm not sure how to translate that*, but you get the idea. So I go in and decide, no, really, I cannot fit into that space, even skinny old me, so I tell him I'll wait. He finishes, goes to wash his hands and repeats "pase, pase" so I pase and start the serious business of peeing. He talks to me a bit, I don't really catch what he says, but I figure he's cursing the people who are thinking of the Siamese twins, so I nod and laugh in agreement. The guy comes back to the other urinal and starts unzipping himself. This is when I figure something is up. I was right, there's not enough room, he might as well use my urinal. He's looking over, I swear it. Not really that phased I finish and do my myself up. He goes for my groin. This is when I start saying "no". I wash my hands. He apologises, and explains that he likes to... and here he made a very explicit gesture with his hand and his mouth, now if he'd just said that from the start...<br /><br />In other news my flight is a week Tuesday. I really don't want to leave Buenos Aires :'( My current fantasy is that I will find a company in the UK who will pay me half what I was getting in London but will let me work from here.<br /><br />*Update: Jodi says that "pase" translates to "come in", I replied that you wouldn't say that in English, it would sound a bit weird, but then I suppose maybe it sounds weird in Spanish too, and warning bells should have been ringing from the start :)Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-19805046556522494722007-06-13T15:07:00.000-05:002007-06-17T15:14:19.875-05:00Drunk TomA couple of weeks ago I noticed a new guy in our hostel, it was around midday, I was just having breakfast, he was just having a couple of beers. I didn't think much of it, people do that sort of thing in hostels, though it's a little dangerous in Argentina as you often don't stop drinking until the next day. Later we met and he turned out to be a nice young American thinking about getting a flat in Buenos Aires. That evening I came back to find that he was still drinking, though holding it together quite well, just going a little slow, though later he lost the ability to string a sentence together, and later still made a female friend of mine a little uncomfortable.<br />The next day I went down for breakfast at about the same time to find the same scene, Tom drank a couple of beers while I was eating my breakfast. This is when I first started to suspect that there might be a problem. Things continued in this vein for a week until one day he came to our room saying that he had to leave as there were no spare beds, I went down to reception as I hadn't booked a bed in advance either. The receptionists gave me a bed on condition that I didn't tell Tom. Apparently Tom was being subtly chucked out of the hostel for breaking some stuff and attempting to punch someone, I'd only ever seen him as a peaceful drunk. After he'd gone I felt a bit guilty that I didn't try to offer him any help. But not that guilty, he returned to the bar one evening and I remembered how awkward things could get.<br />Skip ahead to yesterday evening, I and four friends were eating at a restaurant a couple of blocks from our hostel when Tom walks in. Slowly. He comes over to our table and attempts a conversation but we couldn't really make out what he wanted to say apart from "should I leave?" and "should I eat here?" We weren't really sure of the answers to these questions. Eventually he sat by himself at another table and the waiter came over to apologise, I told him not to worry, we knew him. During our meal Tom repeatedly tried to engage in conversation, in vein, once apologising, for what we weren't sure. After a while he started to pace a couple of times and the waiter came over and told me that he needed to go to the loo but couldn't make it on his own, the toilets being down a spiral staircase. I got up to help him, but as I got up I could see that I was too late and sat down again. Tom got up leaving his books and jacket and left the restaurant. The waiter wanted us to pay for his bottle of wine. We refused.<br />This morning I went to find Tom to tell him where his stuff was and offer him help. He didn't take me up on the help, though I'm not sure what I could do. He told me that it's happened a couple of times, he's been half way through a book and lost it. I wondered if he really thought the book had caused him to lose his temper. It took two people to explain to me that he meant he'd lost the book and not lost his temper.<br />So that's my (attempted) good dead for the day, now where are some kittens I can kill?<br /><br />In other news Jordi is famous after appearing on TV at a competition to see who can do the most convincing rolly-polly. She appears at 1:25 <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=201jfRaK4Xg">here</a>.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-37925564155365377432007-06-11T23:13:00.000-05:002007-06-12T14:26:42.817-05:00A First Time For Everything<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/542681418/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1362/542681418_82cea14793_t.jpg" width="75" height="100" alt="In Colour" align="left"/></a>I've never been too quick in certain situations, so when I noticed Jordi shrinking away from two guys walking towards us I didn't think much of it. I began to think more of it when they started asking for money, but I still attempted the ostrich defence thinking that they were probably just begging and walked between them, Jordi was less sure. When one started to hold her jacket I kind of pulled her on in an attempt to get her to keep walking, I managed a "que pasa?" (as Jordi pointed out recently, my favourite Spanish phrase. Actually my only Spanish phrase) she got out her purse and gave them some notes (about 20 pesos, £3) and they ran off. I wonder what would have become of me if Jordi had taken her bus and not walked me home. I might have lost all the money that would have gone to the tattooist if my skin had healed better and he'd been able to finish my tattoo.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-38547184961347203012007-06-09T16:53:00.000-05:002007-06-09T17:28:45.411-05:00Smooth OperatorThere seems to be something about the Argentinean phone system which is conducive to wrong numbers (there is some weirdness with mobile numbers changing depending on where you are in the country and whether you want to call or text, it is a big country, but then the population isn't that high), I've even been told that people keep chatting to wrong numbers on occasion in the hope of securing a date. So I wasn't that surprised to get a text a day or so after getting my own mobile asking after Gaby. What is surprising is that these text messages haven't stopped. (It has occurred to me that this might be one of Jordi's friends, but it seems a little long winded for a practical joke.)<br /><br />Thursday<br /><br />HOW'S IT GOING GABY?<br /><br />I'm not Gaby, I'm Jamie.<br /><br />I HAVE THIS NUMBER AS GABY'S<br /><br />(In English) Stop shouting, Gaby is not here!<br /><br />Wednesday<br /><br />Hello Skinny-Girl! How are you? I need a favour...<br />(Flaco/Flaca is a nickname for a skinny boy/girl)<br /><br />I am not Skinny-Girl, I am Skinny-Boy.<br /><br />Sorry, you know what? I would like to communicate with gabriela, you don't know her?<br /><br />Is she pretty?<br /><br />You don't know the number? I am a girl? I don't know...<br /><br />Thursday<br /><br />HOW'S IT GOING GABY?<br /><br />Saturday<br /><br />HOW ARE YOU GABY? I REALLY LIKE YOU A LOT!!<br /><br />(The term "te quiero" is quite difficult to translate, it kinda means "I love you", but it's quite loose and means different things when you say it to a friend, a family member or a (potential) boyfriend/girlfriend, "Te quiero pero no te amo", "I love you but I don't <strong>love</strong> you" is famous.)<br /><br />Thanks, but I am not Gaby<br /><br />SO WHO ARE YOU?<br /><br />I am Jamie.<br /><br />TBCJamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-18340109074839026652007-05-31T12:30:00.000-05:002007-05-31T12:51:10.961-05:00Does He Take Sugar?<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/521764200/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/215/521764200_189f9fec9d_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="Folklorica" align="right" /></a>Now don't get me wrong, my Spanish is pretty bad, but after a month in fucked-up-Portuguese speaking Brazil having to struggle through the simplest restaurant request, I'd forgotten how much Spanish I actually knew. Yesterday I went to get my hair cut, it was the first date I've ever been on at a hairdressers, but anyway, I couldn't really get much of what he (the hairdresser, not my date, who was female :P ) was saying, though he still complimented me on my Spanish, and then later that evening I was chatting to a guy on a bus and really got everything that he said, I was pretty pleased with myself, I think I am beginning to see why people like learning languages.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-9303545519447096382007-05-26T10:42:00.000-05:002007-05-26T23:30:35.395-05:00Back In BA. Again.<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/513530310/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/221/513530310_2910c6b37c_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="Welcome Home" align="left" /></a>At the risk of sounding like a pretentious knobber, comng back to Buenos Aires really felt like coming home. Mexico was my favourite holidaying place (sorry Sonia, Colombia comes a close second) but Argentina is the place that I'd emigrate to. They just know how to do things right, from the buses, food and wine, to the food and wine on the buses. The mosquitoes really know how to bite. My hand and wrist have swollen due to a couple of nasty ones. It's strange as it's so cold here, and I wasn't bothered this much even in the Colombian jungle.<br /><br />Last night as I was walking home I witnessed a tramp having a wank in a large, glass fronted, very well lit ATM cubical.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-61918801695995491862007-05-20T10:22:00.000-05:002007-05-20T12:18:29.356-05:00Review 2007<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/487071926/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/186/487071926_a3fb55153f_t.jpg" width="100" height="33" alt="Rio De Janeiro" align="left"/></a>I watched City of God the other night. I can assure you that that is not the Rio that I saw. The Rio I saw seemed like Brighton compared to the Rio of the film. Just with lots of high rises, and the beach was a little bigger and better. But I suppose even Brighton has its Whitehawk.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/504706515/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/196/504706515_dc70dbea70_t.jpg" width="67" height="100" alt="Japan" align="right" /></a>I read Memoirs Of A Geisha the other night. What a confusing book, on the cover it says it's a novel, and then before it starts it has a note from the translator saying how it was dictated to him by the Geisha herself, and then at the end, in the acknowledgments it says it's a complete work of fiction. Anyway, I'm sure it's all very clever, but I really don't want my book to seem like it's been written by an amateur. At the age of six she was told she was a clever girl for saying that her dad's head looked like an egg. She seems to have taken this to heart and has made sure she uses at least six clever metaphors (ok, allegories, whatever) per page.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-32887558708052801332007-05-12T20:28:00.000-05:002007-05-17T16:32:06.027-05:00Tips For Travellers II<ol start=4><li><p>(Correction) Of course Swiss follow the type of their language. Germans are nice, I like them. French are strange. Always. Italians have that <a href="http://blog.kitten-x.com/2007/04/food-and-drink-minus-drink.html">food complex</a>.<br /><li><p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/500133565/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/188/500133565_33fd4cf9fe_t.jpg" width="100" height="50" alt="Jamie's A Knobber" align="right" /></a>Don't be a knobber. No one likes knobbers. No one cares how many countries you've been to, or how long you've been travelling. And you're just going to get knocked out of the water by that quiet guy in the corner who's just waiting for you to ask the tired and tested traveller questions that everyone else got bored with years ago. And no, two weeks is not long enough to "do" India. <br /><li><p>Don't get complacent. After a week in Rio, several of which were spent on the beach (taking, as advised, the absolute minimum), I was feeling pretty relaxed, but that's just when they strike! I left Tatiane on the beach to go and get my book. While at the hostel I decided to pick up my mp3 player and some water too. Little did I know that a crime wave was about to hit Rio! I returned to the beach. It took me a while to notice that something was missing. Tatiane was still there, as was the sarong that she was lying on. But my nearly empty bottle of suncream! Where was it? Gone! The swine! I bought some more and kept a careful eye on that, and my mp3 player.<br /><li><p>Don't (necessarily) trust the locals. Arriving at my latest port of call, I asked the guy sitting next to me about getting the ferry to my next port of call, Ilha Grande. He told me I would have to get another bus for about 4 hours and then change again. I wondered how the hell the Lying Planet could have got it <strong>so</strong> wrong. It hadn't, he had confused islands.<br /><li><p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/hendry/499280932/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/207/499280932_e850b226a0_t_d.jpg" alt="Bling" align="right" width="100" height="75" /></a>Buy stuff. Most of my regrets of this trip arise from not buying things. From the freakiest winking Jesus pictures in Ipiales (if you go there, please buy me one) and the second armadillo that was all of £5 to the stolen pair of classic Ray Bans, the only sunglasses I have ever liked, I wish I'd bought them all.<br /><li><p>If the weather seems consistently bad try getting up earlier. It may be really beautiful, intensely sunny beach weather in the mornings and then always get cloudy around 1pm, just as you're getting up. (See Rio)<br /><li><p>Don't show me your photo milliseconds after you've taken it. I know what it looks like, I can still see it, right in front of me. And I don't care how good your camera is on paper or what genius artistic skill you might have, that 3" LCD screen really can't add anything to the incredible panorama before me.<br /></ol>Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-9010925637931562922007-05-09T15:05:00.000-05:002007-05-09T15:46:26.562-05:00Famous Last WordsIt's pissing it down. Until Friday apparently. I wish I'd wasted my time on the beach yesterday instead of using it wisely.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-13695414011072137912007-05-07T15:14:00.000-05:002007-05-08T17:01:31.910-05:00At The Copa, Copacabana<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/487071926/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/186/487071926_a3fb55153f_t.jpg" width="100" height="33" alt="Rio De Janeiro" align="left"/></a>I know I'm not supposed to brag about how amazing stuff is, and being the stereotypical reserved Englishman that I am, it's usually not difficult. But Rio is great. I'm not much of a beach person, but I had a lovely day at the beach today. I managed to stay in the sea longer than three seconds and even did some body surfing. And have been leaking water from my nose since. In fact as I bought a sandwich a stream of water escaped from my nose and landed on the counter. The proprietor look suitably disgusted. Then at dinner I just managed to avoid spraying two of my fellow eating companions with nostril water.<br /><br />Brazilian men are so unsubtle at staring at women. I end up watching the men watching the women, it's so entertaining. Mind you, there is, ahem, a lot to look at :)Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-39125757508872837682007-05-04T12:25:00.000-05:002007-05-12T20:28:31.192-05:00Tips For Travellers<ol><li><p>Avoid taxis. The trouble is, sometimes you don't know where you are, and you don't know where you're going. You're vulnerable, and want a nice safe warm taxi. But taking a taxi will make it worse, you won't learn anything by taking a taxi. Apart from maybe the wisdom of my words. And they will rip you off, sometimes blatantly, sometimes subtly. In Cholula Christian and I asked about the bar district and were advised to take a taxi. The taxi went around the houses and the fare seemed fair (sorry). Our taxi back only needed to drive about four blocks. Really, we could have walked thanks. If we'd only known the direction. And so it was that I arrived in Rio and headed for the bus stop, despite the Lying Planet's dire warnings about how dodgy the area was. And did I get mugged? No, I got onto the waiting bus, followed the journey on my map, learnt the layout of the city and saved myself about $15 in the process.*<br /><br /><li><p>An observation rather than a tip, hotels and hostels <strong>always</strong> have pros and cons. Even the cheapo shit ones have good points (usually the price) and even the expensive hotels have bad points (usually the price). For example, I may be staying at one of the plushest places I've stayed at so far. I have a six bed dorm to myself, an on-suite bathroom and, get this, an on-suite kitchen! And by Brazilian standards it's cheap. But the trouble is, there's no one here. So I am hanging out at the more expensive and crappy, but popular, place down the road and sleeping and eating my breakfasts here in solitary luxury.<br /><br /><li><p>Caipirinhas are strong! I went to my first Brazilian party last night. It was much like other parties in other parts of the world, except that as the night wore on more and more of the men started to take their T-shirts off in order to exhibit their breast like pecs to the women. The funny thing was though that it ended up being extremely gay as the women thinned out and the guys began hanging round in groups admiring and preening each other. Anyway, I only had about four caipirinhas and I think I am still drunk. 12 hours later.<br /><br /><li><p>The Swiss are nice. I think they are my second favourite nationality after the Germans. And it seems really easy to dislike your own countrymen, but maybe that's just because I am British ;)<br /></ol><p>* Although of course there was the time with Maddy when our bus skirted the outskirts, we got off way too late, got another bus back into town and still had to get a taxi to where we were going. We could have saved money by just taking a taxi in the first place.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-86242402187506363122007-05-02T20:50:00.000-05:002007-05-03T18:36:48.384-05:00Sorry What?Man, Portuguese is one fucked up language. It sounds like a mixture of Spanish/German/Norwegian. All spoken with an egg in the mouth. Actually I know why it is, they nasalate loads of their vowels. "No" is "náo", which sounds like our "now" said mostly through the nose. But it's not just that, get this, they number their days, "Saturday" and "Sunday" are the same as in Spanish, but then they have "Second-Day", "Third-Day"... you get the picture. And "hello" is our "oi". I just cannot bring myself to greet people with "oi". Although I was just helped to face my phobia when the receptionist got me to shout after someone leaving. "Oi" I shouted, "oi, oi!" And they say their "d"s as we say our "g"s. And their "r"s are our "h"s, which does make talking about Batman's side kick quite amusing. "But why are you, a Brazilian, referencing an old English children's TV character who is a horse?"Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-73251994741338049502007-04-27T17:20:00.001-05:002007-04-28T10:54:53.344-05:00Brutal BureaucracyThroughout my travels I have stumbled across monumental bureaucracy. Usually it doesn't effect me too much, what do I mind if they have to fill in and stamp three bus tickets three times for our 30 minute journey? And if it avoids corruption then I guess it's a good thing. But occasionally it frustrates one to screaming point. This might end up being a very long boring story.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/461875008/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/247/461875008_4c1c3a5583_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="Pressie For Daddy" align="left"/></a>So in Oaxaca I posted three things, two large envelopes at 300g each and a wooden armadillo for my dad, which I packed in a box, wrote his name address on and took to the post office. The only trouble I had was with the cost, a total of about £30, over double the total cost of the presents I was sending (the usual ratio), and since they only had small value stamps I had to cover half of each parcel and letter with stamps and my saliva. Now we get to Puebla, a couple of hours away from Oaxaca, I have two boxes to send. It was difficult enough packing them, it made me realise how helpful everyone had been in Oaxaca. So I get to the post office and the guy tells me the boxes need to be wrapped in manila and tied up with string. WTF? So I go across the road to the papelaria for the third time and ask the moody old woman who wouldn't give me any boxes, and ignored me so much the second time that I nearly walked out without paying for the two sheets of paper, but she tells me that I need to get the post office to check them before wrapping them, I try to explain that they just sent me over, but she wouldn't have it so I return to the post office, they send me straight out again, I guess because I practically packed the parcels in front of them and they didn't see any hint of drugs or arms. So the moody old woman wraps my parcels and asks me to address them. After I've addressed the first one she tells me that I need to put my return address on it. Now I haven't left enough space and I can't really see the point, it's not like I have an address in Mexico, and if they can't find one address in Steyning how are they going to find mine? So I tell her that the address <strong>is</strong> my address. She huffs and puffs. Eventually she finishes both packages and I return to the post office. The guy is finally satisfied and weighs up the two parcels at 400g and 800g, which for some reason <strong>only</strong> costs £10, less than the presents cost! <br /><br />So if you do get something from me, be very grateful, and if you don't then it's either been eaten up by customs, or I just lost the will to live before I finished posting it.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-67911134655788571072007-04-25T15:29:00.000-05:002007-04-27T17:02:28.422-05:00Odds And Ends<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/471515508/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/207/471515508_f9b1277303_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="Oh Bye Then" align="left"/></a>Well Maddy got off ok, and has arrived safely home. I'm glad to say that in the last few days in Mexico she really managed to begin living the Mexican life, with such choice quotes as:<br /><br />"Is that a cockroach, or is there an elephant stuck to the ceiling?"<br /><br />"Jamie that man just full-on groped my arse."<br /><br />Of course I went looking for said man, to show him how western democratic justice works, but unfortunately he'd managed to escape me after I wondered slowly in the wrong direction, shaking with fear at the thought of finding him.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/472506282/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/213/472506282_aa8afad0a2_t.jpg" width="100" height="75" alt="I Was Here Too" align="right"/></a>If you've been checking my photos recently you may have noticed that a strange Machu Picchu-like structure has cropped up in the middle on Mexico City. Well actually no it hasn't, I just uploaded Diego's photos from the Inca Trail. So that's that mystery solved, now we just have to work out how they got all those stones up there and so perfectly shaped without the use of wheels, metal tools or animals.<br /><br />A blast from the past of a different jungle trip came in the following form from a fellow Lost City trekker:<blockquote>i find myself in a weird mood in this current circumstances, kind of summering up my trip and looking back at things in a nostalgic manner; from meeting up with jamie kitson i can say i learnt this short, yet very true line that i found myself thinking about over and over again - "if it`s worth doing, than it`s worth doing well".</blockquote><p>It's odd what you leave people with, I don't even remember saying it to him, mostly I asked him what the army was like and tried to keep off the subject of politics. He's Israeli.<br /><br />Something I meant to mention about Colombia and all of America in general is this road system. The block system. It might be logical and easy to navigate, but it isn't half boring! Colombia though, decided that it wasn't boring enough and numbered the roads. Calling the north-south roads "Races" for some reason. But then Bogota decided that this was <strong>too</strong> boring and decided to renumber a whole sector meaning that lots of buildings now have two addresses on them, one crossed out in red.<br /><br />UPDATE - So the phrase "if it's worth doing, it's worth doing well" was being applied to drinking, most of the guys were drinking warm rum with warm coke, and I couldn't stand it, I went out and bought a giant bag of ice and a giant bag of limes. If it's worth drinking, it's worth drinking well. And I hope I didn't cause any offence with the Israeli comment, I've liked every Israeli I've ever met.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-86154892119468506962007-04-22T16:19:00.000-05:002007-04-23T14:25:52.425-05:00Food And Drink. Minus The Drink.<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/468855904/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/191/468855904_fbeb849ef1_t.jpg" width="67" height="100" alt="Doll's Church" align="left"/></a>Maddy and I went to an Italian restaurant last night. It reminded me how irritating Italians can be on the subject of food. They seem to think that they're God's gift to the human palate. Well no! You're not! Italian food is boring! The first mouthful may be the most delicious thing you've ever tasted in your life, but then every other mouthful is exactly the same. I want some variety here people! And if you try to explain this to them they smile at you in this condescending way and say "But darling, you've never had <strong>proper</strong> Italian food." That's right, I've never been anywhere near Italy. No wait. I have. Twice. And you know what? I can't even <strong>remember</strong> the food! That's how good it was. (Actually I do remember the pizza that was like a biscuit with some cheese on top. Great!) And the other thing they say to you is "But darling, you're English, you wouldn't know good food if it bit you on the tongue." That's right, you lived in Britain for twenty years and you never even found an Italian or Indian that you liked? "But darling, that's not British cooking." Right, every single dinner you ate in that twenty years was cooked by a foreign chef. And those aren't national dishes you're eating, those are British variations on a theme. My mum cooks great lasagna and spaghetti bolognese (fuck off Adam:), but the only thing that's even vaguely Italian is the pasta, and where was that produced? Italy?<br /><br />So the good news is that after eating the whole bread basket and my so-so cannelloni I have decided that I have finally got my hunger back after a bit of a nasty illness. My previous worse ever illness was in Laos, when I awoke at 3am with a sudden onset of Explosive Bowel Syndrome and fell unconscious against the wash bowl (see Mum, I've learnt that one!) on my first visit to the loo. But it got better after that, and only lasted about 12 hours. Statistically this last bout was 2-4 times worse. By Thursday night I was visiting the toilet frequently and after exiting the toilet to wash my hands on one such venture I suddenly felt very weak and giddy and awoke to find myself unconscious on the floor of the shower room. I then had to sit down half way up the short flight of stairs and then collapsed again once in our room, and had to crawl into bed. Maddy asked me why I didn't wake her, I'd thought about asking her to pass the bin in case I was sick, but what else could she have done. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/468889203/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/204/468889203_af09778555_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="Rainbow Of Beetles" align="right"/></a>So today it was Maddy's turn, she started feeling a bit bad after her spaghetti bolognese (yes Adam, with meat). I only realised how bad she looked today after I'd marched her to the bus stop and we were already on our bus to Taxco. I said that we could stay in Cuernavaca, but stoic as ever she said she'd see how she felt after she'd eaten. She ate, and ate a little more at my prodding, about half a slice of toast in all, and then was sick all over her feet once we left the restaurant. we could make out little pieces of spaghetti. I knew it, not just boring but poisoned too! Maybe they heard me. Anyway, we came right back to Cuernavaca.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-999650112047536812007-04-18T14:13:00.000-05:002007-04-18T15:27:27.220-05:00Food And Drink. Minus The Food.Wondering why we were still drinking Coronas which we could be drinking anywhere in the world I decided that since we were in the state of Michoacan I'd order a Michelada, which turned out to be a Bloody Mary made with beer (Corona) and of course limes and chilies and had salt around the rim. I am now addicted to the stuff!<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/464354334/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/179/464354334_0e8a16e58a_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="The View From Our Room" align="left"/></a>Maddy and I arrived at Mazunte on the Oaxaca coast <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/464361853/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/222/464361853_3c64ee2934_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="Our Romantic Room" align="right" /></a>last night, we checked in to our room over looking the beach while it was dark and were rewarded with a beautiful, paradyllic some might say, view when we awoke this morning.<br /><br />No, we didn't feel any hint of the <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6551687.stm">earthquake</a>.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-59593247002123712902007-04-09T14:05:00.000-05:002007-04-12T20:25:06.322-05:00Expectations<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/457111384/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/172/457111384_48d2502b83_t.jpg" width="100" height="67" alt="There She Blows" align="left"/></a>I wasn't expecting Mexico to be so calm and tranquil. Don't get me wrong, there's been plenty of craziness, not least in Jerez, where they seem to think that mixing horses, fireworks and alcohol (for both the horses and the people on the horses, and the bystanders of course) makes for a jolly good time. Actually I have to agree with them on that one :) And then there was the march of silence (I think) which was silent apart from a drum beat and very occasional trumpet calls, and consisted of an incredibly long march of people mostly dressed in KKK-like robes carrying Jesuses in various conditions of pain and distress, <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/457098478/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/188/457098478_aa668c1f4f_t.jpg" width="67" height="100" alt="Cross" align="right"/></a>enclosed by the longest rope in the world. But over all Mexico seems a pretty relaxed place, especially Guadalajara, a place which I cannot pronounce if I am reading its name. I've also been quite surprised at the openly gay community here, I think even in Brighton you don't get the openly affectionate gay scene that you get here, but then I guess if your straight scene is open enough to have people groping each other in parks all over the place then it only follows.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/452798464/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/174/452798464_dba5f4cb3e_t.jpg" width="75" height="100" alt="Black And White" align="left" /></a>When Maddy arrived she said three things, that I am thin (I've always been thin!), that I am brown (I've never been brown!) and that everyone at home thinks that I am having so much fun that I will never come home, well fear not, I am actually quite looking forward to it, but not quite enough to move my flight :)<br /><br />Another thing that Maddy said was "I fancy cooking tonight." I was flabbergasted, well, surprised. I've been loving the food here, it's so good and so different. The food's been good everywhere really, but here it's really different from European food, goat stew for breakfast with tortillas and limes, sheep cooked in cactus leaves in a hole in the ground with tortillas and limes for lunch and then... actually we've mostly been having a very large late lunch and not much else. With tortillas and limes. In the UK I've often thought what a genius combination beer and limes is, but it's just a default really, <strong>everything</strong> comes with limes, and chili, and you can get your beer with chili too, it's just way too salty for me. Anyway, the point is I found myself wracking my brains trying to remember how Johanna did her <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/johannaebeling/349171352/in/datetaken/">blue cheese sauce</a> this evening, after Maddy's spag-bol (though Adam always swears you can't call it spag-bol if there's no meat in it) last night. I can't usually be bothered to cook in hostels, it's too frustrating and you usually don't really save much money. And so it was. Our bill came to 200 pesos when two can eat well on 150 pesos, though as Maddy pointed out, that doesn't include chocolate, which after the steak was the second most expensive item on the receipt. Honestly, we come to the land of chocolate and she buys Cadbury's!<br /><br />Again, you might like to have a look at <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/7385544@N02/">Maddy's photos</a> so that you can get a load of my ugly mug/beautiful face.<br /><br />Talking of photos, <a href="http://www.getjealous.com/getjealous.php?action=showimage&image_id=1768766&go=harryharste">this</a> was recently brought to my attention :)Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-8934906325549228752007-04-01T20:35:00.000-05:002007-04-04T18:47:57.118-05:00Go To ColombiaForget everything you think you know and go to Colombia. It's the most fantastic place. I think it's the only place I'd really like to revisit (apart from Huacachina of course) and the only place I really regretted having to leave. Though that's unfair to Argentina as I spent four months there and am going back, so I don't have to wish for it. Anyway, back to Colombia... Probably the friendliest place I've been, the most paradyllic, the most varied. Though that's unfair to Ecuador, which I hear is also very varied, but I didn't exactly make the most of it, staying for just a week. Back to Colombia... The land of fruits... and... and... the classic jam and cheese combo! What else was there Sonia? Oh just go!<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/444892059/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/244/444892059_60f067799f_t.jpg" width="75" height="100" alt="Maddy!" align="left" /></a>I think I am beginning to understand how parents feel, well I don't think "understand" is the right word, as I have all these irrational fears, starting with a very anxious two and a half hour wait at the airport (I knew her plane had been delayed) and continuing when she didn't eat any dinner, little breakfast and then left virtually all her lunch (very unusual for a Kitson/Johnstone/Bowers) so I was very relieved when she ate all her dinner and said she might have a 3rd pancake for breakfast and reported solid pooing afterwards. I managed to allow her to make her own mistake of not putting on enough sun cream despite the clouds (Sarah, I <strong>did</strong> advise her, but she insisted she'd be ok. She has very pink, slightly painful arms today).<br /><br />Her pictures are <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/7385544@N02/">here</a>.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-36359932237446840122007-03-31T13:01:00.000-05:002007-04-02T15:45:51.562-05:00Heaven Is Hell<blockquote>Jamie, I know you are going to get cross with me but please write as I am getting a bit concerned having not heard from you for several days.<br />Worried of Steyning</blockquote><p>I told her I was going to the beach, but I guess maybe I didn't explain that you have to get on the bus for an hour and then walk for three hours to get there so it's not really worth it for just an afternoon. In fact I stayed there two nights rather than the one I had been planning, and no, I didn't find a satellite. Or a dish.<br /><br />So I am sorry if I haven't been replying to your emails (hello Johanna, Jordi, Martin, Rob, etc), but after the six days in the jungle I had about an hour on the internet and then I went to the beach.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/443695688/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/169/443695688_1aff035d08_t.jpg" width="100" height="56" alt="IMG_1038" align="left"/></a>Paradyllic may not be a word, but if it was I think it would sum up Tayrona National Park perfectly. I'm not sure what else I can say about it, the jungle reaches the sand, coconut trees abound, the coast is the Caribbean so the sea is warm and blue and swarming with pretty little fishes, I went snorkeling properly for the first time in my life. And because it's so difficult to get to it isn't even that touristy.<br /><br />Having said how difficult it is to be down here, and even more so in the park, I managed to find a way, I read the last quarter or so of Catch-22. An amazing book. Read it!<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/443679999/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/180/443679999_d27da960cc_t.jpg" width="100" height="75" alt="Ingredients" align="right"/></a>Entering the park was an interesting experience. I was with a friend who will remain anonymous (for reasons which will become clear). Beforehand we went to buy some supplies, including a bottle of rum and some Pepsi. Unknown to us alcohol is not allowed into the park, despite the fact that you can buy it once you're there. So we didn't go to any lengths to hide our bottle of rum, and I think that's what might have made up the policeman's mind to search us, after standing by for a few minutes while we waited for a non-existent bus. Walking into his office it slowly dawned on me what was going on, and I wondered, slightly panicked, if said friend had his weed and cocaine on him. The policeman began by asking us if we had any cannabis, my friend rather longwindedly explained that he'd given up smoking 2 months ago. The policeman chose my friend's bag first, it occurred to me afterwards that I should have put my bag forward first, but my mind is not so quick in these situations. I was standing, watching, my arms crossed, interested to see what would appear from the bag. My friend strolled nonchalantly around the office, occasionally peering out, probably watching for some interesting species of bird (he's a birdwatcher, and that's why he's remaining anonymous). Eventually a bag of weed appeared from the bag, followed shortly by a pipe and some cocaine. This is where I began to relax, it wasn't a game of chance any more, Schrödinger's cat was dead. The policeman asked if there was any more, my friend replied in the negative. The policeman went on to find another bag of weed. No, it wasn't planted. Then the policeman turned to my bag. He wasn't interested in my Valium, but did have a quick sniff of my powdered milk, I didn't make any jokes about being English. What happened next is a bit of a mystery, along with the policeman there was a park ranger in attendance, who for some reason seemed to wield more power than the policeman, and they both started to ask us if we still wanted to enter the park. I thought that I must be misunderstanding the simple sentence, then pictured the police waiting for us as we exited the park. But no, they confiscated the stuff (insisting that we come back for the rum, despite my protestations that they keep it), made my friend sign a statement, the point of which seems to be that he won't do the same <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/443678204/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/170/443678204_b6a1028f9a_t.jpg" width="100" height="75" alt="The Final Product" align="left"/></a>thing again, and we were free to go, they didn't even want a bribe. Another funny thing, throughout our ordeal the policeman was sweating, more and more, towards the end it was dripping off his face, as if it were he that had just been found with several illicit substances in Colombia.<br /><br />btw, I found out how you distinguish between a policeman and an army man, quite simple and obvious really, policemen wear plain green uniforms while army men wear camouflage.<br /><br />The last thing that my friend said to me as I left the park was some advice on getting the bus from Santa Marta to Cartagena: "If someone comes out to meet you and tells you that the bus is leaving now, don't take it, it will do the four hour journey in six and won't be direct. Get a bus from a reputable firm such as Expresso Brazilia." Now, I heard what he said. I listened. I understood. But the guy swore it would only be four hours, and that it was direct. We reached the half way point in two hours, and I was thinking, phew, this will be ok. How wrong I was. After another few minutes the bus stopped and the conductor got out to have a fist fight with a man with some large boxes. I guess he just didn't like the size of them. The police came and decided that the size wasn't so bad. We continued. We stopped. The conductor explained that the bus couldn't continue for another hour, but there was one across the street that we wouldn't have to pay for that was leaving immediately. We crossed the street. We didn't have to pay. It left immediately. Turned a couple of corners and stopped. For an hour. Several Expresso Brazilia buses passed is. We got going. This bus did 0-60 in... no it didn't even do 60 kph. We got stopped by the police. Twice. Several more Expresso Brazilia buses passed us. Total travel time: about six hours.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/443748976/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/203/443748976_5850f25bc8_t.jpg" width="100" height="75" alt="Roof Top" align="right" /></a>I do like travelling alone, but occasionally I do wish for some female company, of the more-than-just-friends variety. Cartagena is a beautiful beautiful city. One of the most romantic cities I think I have visited. I ate dinner the first night I was there in this beautiful square, surrounded by colonial buildings, the Caribbean night air so warm, alone, but not unhappy :)<br /><br />Another point of view of our trip to Villa De Leyva, including some pictures of me! is <a href="http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Colombia/Villa-de-Leyva/blog-141026.html">here</a>.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-87865823935031918032007-03-27T18:33:00.000-05:002007-03-31T13:05:55.989-05:00Lost City 1 - Machu Picchu 0<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/440968210/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/176/440968210_d69817f365_t.jpg" width="100" height="56" alt="That Lost City Not In Full" align="left" /></a>If I had to chose between Machu Picchu and Ciudad Perdida I would chose Ciudad Perdida. Machu Picchu is like an outdoor museum, with a fine green carpet. And there's no mystery to it, you can go up the first hill and see it all, and it's so perfect! Like a model. Just like the photos. Just like <strong>all</strong> the photos! And by 11:00 there's <strong>so</strong> many people there, the world and his dog, his middle aged fat American neighbour and all 60 of his French school children are there. Ciudad Perdida on the other hand is mysterious, you can never see it all, and you can never work out how big it is. And there's no one else there, just you and the 10 or so guys you've just spend three days getting there with. Not that the three days getting there were well spent, the six days of short walks could have been reduced easily to 5 days trekking, or even four days without a stay at the city. Which is another thing, you get to sleep there, which doesn't sound like much, but it really added to the whole trip.<br /><br />A friend of mine in Valparaiso declared that he was depressed one day, and continued "what kind of fucking bastard gets depressed while he's spending a few months on the coast of Chile?" I felt a bit down after getting back today, I had that feeling like when you get back from holiday and think, oh, so this is real life. I know that's ridiculous, but anyway, after having a shower and stepping out the door into the warmth and sun to go to our local drug dealer/brothel for a milk shake (this guy does everything!:) I realised how difficult it is to stay down for even a minute here.<br /><br />I had a couple of enquiries about subscribing to this blog (no really). You have to use a 3rd party <a href="http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&sa=X&oi=spell&resnum=0&ct=result&cd=1&q=subscribe+rss+email&spell=1">rss to email</a> service. I chose one arbitrarily and have added a <a href="http://www.rssfwd.com/rssfwd/preview?return_to=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rssfwd.com%2F&pre=true&url=http%3A%2F%2Fblog.kitten-x.com%2Ffeeds%2Fposts%2Fdefault">link</a> to the left.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-72352889473007950802007-03-21T19:29:00.000-05:002007-03-22T09:24:18.950-05:00It Ain't Half Hot Mum<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/429815666/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/167/429815666_2ab7db4c3c_t.jpg" width="100" height="75" alt="Colombian" align="left"/></a>I am on the Caribbean coast. It's hot. I am going to the jungle for 6 days to trek to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciudad_Perdida">The Lost City</a>. Yes, very Indiana Jones. So far every time I have said I will be away I have managed to find a computer somewhere. So knowing my luck I will bump into a villager with a satellite or something :) Chau for now.<br /><br />Of course a satellite would be of no use, I meant a dish.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-8728255564307261262007-03-17T10:32:00.000-05:002007-03-17T10:42:01.192-05:00ExodusI think this is going to take a bit of explaining, but let me first say that I have nothing against hippy Porteños per se, there's just so damn many of them.<br /><br />Every year, around January time, the time of the summer holidays in Argentina, an exodus occurs. From Buenos Aires hordes of hippy Porteños stream from their homelands further north, for... actually I don't know what for, but that's what they do. It's probably a spiritual thing, man. Of course the further north you come, away from their natural habitat, the thinner their numbers become. At Humauaca, one of the northern most towns in Argentina, you could have given a blind man a bullet and he could not have failed to kill at least three, and maim several others. Heading up through Bolivia there were still a disappointing amount, the streets of Copacabana were lined with them and their hand made wares and Dan was attacked mercilessly by one in a bar in Cochabamba, and was forced to part with a far wad of his money for two worthless (and very badly colour coordinated) bracelets after some merciless flirting. By the time I met Dan again in Ecuador we thought we had lost them, but in an Italian restaurant in Cuenca a three piece turned up, in suspiciously short trousers, our Porteño radars started pinging, and sure enough, they were from Beunos Aires.<br /><br />Porteños can be spotted easily enough by their Inca/Israeli/Porteño trousers (notice I use the American "pants" in the video) which are baggy, striped and always too short, at least one in a group will always have a guitar, usually in an Inca case, if it's out of the case it is usually playing Redemption Song, a couple in the group will usually be juggling, badly and most of the group will have at least one dread lock, often with some sort of thread and bead attachment.<br /><br />Anyway, the point is that I tracked down some of these hippy Porteños as shockingly far north as Colombia, see my videos, Porteño Hunter, <a href="http://video.google.co.uk/url?docid=-5057595746044787068&esrc=gvmf&ev=v&q=source:18123624014389623118&vidurl=http://video.google.co.uk/videoplay%3Fdocid%3D-5057595746044787068&usg=AL29H22ATRu42ABP4vQ3RZscw8wsZ1UnQw">Part I</a> and <a href="http://video.google.co.uk/url?docid=915506247257461250&esrc=gvmf&ev=v&q=source:18123624014389623118&vidurl=http://video.google.co.uk/videoplay%3Fdocid%3D915506247257461250&usg=AL29H23QfrNlfvdq96gWYFajXzaOuZ27tQ">Part II</a>. Their call is very quiet, perhaps to avoid attracting predators, so you'll have to turn your sound right up.<br /><br />I spoke too soon about the insurance, they are saying that I am under insured. The truth is that their suppliers are ripping them off, and I have not hesitated in telling them so. You could actually buy all the equipment for £200 less than I insured it for, money that would be the insurance company's saving.<br /><br />I am off today to the holiday home of some Colombians that I met in Valparaiso so again, don't worry if I'm late in responding to emails, I haven't been captured by guerrillas. Maybe.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-51253202392740861012007-03-15T15:11:00.000-05:002007-03-16T16:19:31.542-05:00Regrets, I Have A FewSomeone asked me if I have any regrets yesterday, just as I was having a look at <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/horatio_duke/with/421515572/">Dan's photos of Haucachina</a>, which I skipped to fly straight from Cusco to Lima. There's that, staying in Santa Cruz for all of a week and not getting my camera out fast enough yesterday when a man on a horse and cart past me. In the cart was an exercise bike. Aaaaagh!<br /><br />You know you're on a good bus when both of the reading lights work, the trouble is, when the air conditioning works on buses in South America they tend to set it to -10° and so I woke up at 2:30am hungry for warmth. I went to the toilet, the back of the bus (near the engine) was lovely and warm but I decided I could not spend the rest of the journey in the loo. I discovered that I could sleep if I put my blanket (why oh why do they put the air conditioning on so low <strong>and</strong> give you a blanket?) over my face and head. I guess it's all the fault of my short hair. The other problem with my journey last night was that we arrived on time. At 5am. I took another taxi around various hostels and hotels until I eventually decided to walk. Bogota can't be <strong>that</strong> dangerous, I didn't get mugged or even threatened.<br /><br />Bogota seems to be a really nice place, it reminds me of some of the good bits of London, but maybe that's just the weather, yep, it's grey, cool and wet.<br /><br />So the first thing I did, once I'd slept for a total of about 12 hours (what is wrong with me?), was to visit the local travel agent to find out about flights. My initial plan was to see if I could get a cheap ticket to take me from Bogota to Mexico to Cuba to Guatemala to Brazil. Ok, Brazil's a big place, I'm talking Sao Paulo or Rio de Genaro. So first off, a one way to Mexico from Bogota is $600, but a return is $700. Ok, whatever. To fly between Cuba and Guatemala I have to go via Panama for some reason. I realise that I haven't really got time to "do" Cuba anyway, so we leave that out. To fly between Guatemala and Brazil I have to fly via Miami (WTF?!) I then ask about international flights from Cartagena, which is on the north coast of Colombia, which would not only be more convenient to me as it would mean I could just go one way through Colombia, but is also closer to Mexico. There aren't any international flights from Cartagena, but it turns out it <strong>is</strong> the cheapest option. And here is that cheapest option: Cartagena to Bogota to Mexico City, my first destination, then a month later Mexico City to Santiago (Chile!) to Sao Paulo, my second destination. Now I'm sure there's some logic to this somewhere along the line, but I certainly can't see it.Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26970824.post-46440793117695464972007-03-13T19:30:00.000-05:002007-03-13T21:58:21.529-05:00James Cunt<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/420538700/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/161/420538700_c0fe7097f5_t.jpg" width="100" height="75" alt="Tinker Tailor" align="left"/></a>Being ill really sucks when you're travelling alone (or "independently" as some prefer). You have to go out and get things yourself, like dinner. But at least I am reminded of how lucky I've been to stay so healthy. <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamiekitson/420548027/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/178/420548027_8aded1c715_t.jpg" width="100" height="75" alt="Fried Banana" align="right"/></a>I find it weird too how you don't like to eat when you're ill, I always feel so much better once I have, why, when your body surely needs it most, would your brain tell you to reject nutrition? (btw, I think it was the meal between the two pictured that got me.)<br /><br />So anyway, I eat, feel a bit better, come to this internet cafe, and then hear "You're beautiful..." and throw up! Thanks, NAAAAWT!<br /><br />(No, I didn't really... omg, they've just put on the Celine Deon one that goes to that film where Leonardo DiCaprio dies, thank fuck!)<br /><br />(OMG it's the panpipes version, with added sea effects.)<br /><br />(OK, we now have a live Sting cover band, in Spanish.)Jamiehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05267476427017660642noreply@blogger.com