Showing posts with label Ecuador. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecuador. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Brass Band



Did I mention the brass band? Yep, they had a brass band play a few numbers. It was either a police brass band or a transit police band, don't remember which. Ecuadorians do like their ceremonies! This is the only swim meet with a live brass brand that I can recall in my entire life. The Ecuadorians certainly know how to make things special!

The Swim Meet


This trip to Ecuador was a Swim Team Trip (Davis Aquatic Masters), so naturally, at some point, we had to compete. In fact, we had two competitive swims on this trip, a pool meet in Guayaquil and an open water swim in the Galapagos! The first open water swim ever in the Galapagos!

Our host was an Ecuadorian swim team located in Guayaquil. Our swim coach was a peace corp volunteer in Ecuador back in the 1960s and his job was to coach young ecuadorians. The fruit of his labor, adult swimmers, hosted us and put on the swim meet.

We were not very wide awake when we arrived at the swimming pool. The lack of decent coffee (Ecuadorians, like many Latin Americans, love their instant Nescafe. Good, freshly brewed coffee was difficult to find in Ecuador) was taking its toll. All of us could have used a double shot expresso. As could the Ecuadorians since they were not moving very fast either. The meet was suppose to start at 9 a.m. but didn’t start until almost 11:00.

Lonely Beach


Because it was winter and a weekday, there were few people at the beach except for the swim team, and many things were not open. This didn't deter the ubiquitous sellers of trinkets. Their prices were low and I bought an anklet and a few other trinkets for gifts. They loved me, but then their affection was easy to come by! I was struck by the fact that many of their pendants were carved pictures of Che Guevera.

A day at the Beach


We spent an afternoon in the Beach resort town of Salinas, several hours south of Guayaquil. June is a winter month in Ecuador and the weather at the beach was overcast and not very warm. We had lunch first, before hitting the beach, at a Cerviche place, which was rather overwhelmed by the size our our group. While waiting for cerveza, we took pictures of each other. On the right is a picture of my lane mate Rick, me, my roommate Ulrike and swim pal Tony. This was taken by Tony’s wife Cathi. My hair was still wet from rinsing all the aloe vera out of it. The beer was good and our table of 5 finished off something like 7 quarts before the ceviche arrived, but then Ulrike is German and she does like her beer!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

massage


After soaking the requisite 20 minutes we went back to the massage building to get our massages. The massage could be either mud or aloe vera. After seeing one of my roommates covered with mud (see picture left), I quickly changed my mind and chose an Aloe vera gel massage, as did everyone else! One person said she felt as if she was being massaged with snot. It was gelatinous but I still think it was better than the mud. For adult over the age of 60, the admission fee was waived and the cost for the medicinal massage was $4. Another advantage to aging!

Banos San Vicente


One day we skipped swim workout and went on a trip to the beach. On the way we stopped at a thermal spa, one that featured mud baths, mud messages and thermal pools. Before we could get a massage, we had to soak for 20 minutes in the hot mineral springs. We were supposed to be silent but obviously we weren’t.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Friendly People




When we went places in our buses, citizens would wave at us. At first I thought they
were being sarcastic, but I eventually realized they were happy to see tourists in their
city. This happened even in Guayaquil, Ecuador's biggest city.One day we stopped
for lunch (take-out sandwiches we were going to eat on the bus) and the buses parked next to a
school. When the lunch bell rang, the kids came out and were excited to see the tourist buses.
Jane, an elementary teacher, who speaks Spanish andmy room mate Claudia talked to the children and the kids were very delighted by the attention.

The kids were very interested in us and our cameras. One girl (the heavy girl in the picture on the right) insisted I take a picture of her and her friends. After I took their pictures, they gathered around to look at the pictures in the LCD. They were delighted with the results. They were polite yet confident.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Guayaquil


Santiago de Guayaquil is the largest and most populous city in Ecuador, with a population of over 2 1/2 million. It is also the main port and industrial city. It is a gritty town of modest charms and it was obvious that it doesn’t receive many tourists. It had an unattractive architecture style common
to much of Latin American where the ground floors are shops that have a steel roll-down door when it is closed. These ground-floor stores had no windows. The people, however, are nice.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Ecuador 2008



It was a lovely summer evening, still light at 8:00 p.m., when we departed Davis from Civic Center Pool in two rented school buses. Yes, seriously, rented school buses! Granted, it was cheap and for cheap we got a bumpy ride, without air conditioning to the Oakland airport. The line was very long and we had a lengthy wait in line at Grupo TACA airlines, the airline of Latin American. We nicknamed it “Taco airlines.” We were 3 hours early and we still barely made the plane (Coach Rick, pictured, counted heads as we found our seats in the airplane). Airline managed to demonstrate all the maddening disorganization that cliches attribute to Latin America. It took two clerks to process each ticket and the printout for each ticket was approximately 5 feet long (seriously). It was so long because the plane puddled-jumped its way thru central America and our luggage needed tags for the various stops and plane changes (Costa Rica, Nicaragua, El Salavador and finally Ecuador, landing first in Quito and then in our destination city of Guayaquil). Most of us managed to sleep after the plane took off at 1:30 a.m., at least until we reached central America.