Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Last Trip Information Delay
Sorry everything was so late from the last trip. I arrived home starting being sick and had to start teaching immediately. I slept through the first weekend before I started considering working on the material. Then I got tied up in being busy elsewhere as well.
Peru Christmas 2014 Day 15
We woke up kind of latish. We stayed around the house for
the morning and then had to get ready and went to Donna and Edwin’s house for
lunch. I was still not feeling great to
my stomach.
They served ceviche for a starter followed by arroz con
pollo. We brought along a bottle of wine
but I didn’t drink. I had the chicha morada they provided and also some
tea. They had some cookies for dessert. Daniela’s brother did not make it to their
house but her mother did if a little bit later than they had hoped for. I didn’t
take pictures in their house though probably I should have because it is very
nice. The food was really good and
fortunately I didn’t have any adverse reactions to it. I wonder if it was just
Daniela’s family from Arequipa that was the issue?
After we ate dinner we had tried to make plans to meet up
with Dan from NY in Lima downtown. He was staying near there he thought so
Daniela and I took a taxi to get there to meet him for six but due to her
mother’s arriving late we ate later than we expected and showed up at 6:15.
Apparently Dan had already given up on us so we ended up waiting around till
about 7:00 before deciding to head back to the house. We were able to trade emails with him and
found out that he just panicked that we weren’t showing and left after a couple
minutes of us being late. I was surprised primarily because of how late we were
compared to what we said on New Year’s Eve.
I thought he might have figured that out.
At the house we primarily got me packed up and ready to get
on the plane that night but we also relaxed a little bit while waiting. After all was said and done we had to get a
taxi to the airport. My first flight out of Lima was to be delayed by weather
in the US but we were told to go in for the normal time just in case. So we got
to the airport. My check-in was quick. The lady at the desk told me the delay
shouldn’t be a problem for my flight from Houston so I should be ok with my
already set flights. I met Daniela in
the open area and we stayed at the food court of the airport until it was time
for me to head in. My flight remained delayed by some time but I still needed
to make sure I got through security and immigration without being too delayed.
We didn’t eat anything or even do any shopping. We just sat and talked until it
was time for me to go. The security line was a bit rough but immigration was
quick. So probably I left a few minutes
earlier than I needed to. Of course we wanted to be together as long as
possible. I think in some respects we are
getting too used to this part of the trip. I don’t like it much but it won’t be
for much longer I hope. So I got in and
found they were a bit more delayed than they said and spent a couple minutes
shopping but not long. That covered the difference and when I got back we were
basically lined up and ready to board.
The flight boarded reasonably well. I was in the inner aisle
and had a Chinese couple next to me. They were quiet I think. As soon as I
boarded I fell asleep and didn’t really wake up until less than an hour before
we arrived to Houston. The plane was a 767-300. I didn’t even make it to the
safety briefing before I was asleep.
We arrived in Houston. I go through the Global Entry kiosk
and had an added step of being checked for ebola by a live officer but that was
quick. Luggage wasn’t too bad and I was able to get myself through customs (the
non-Global Entry folks were pissed at our speed through the line) and on my way
to baggage recheck and then on to my gate (no security recheck needed as I was
in the same terminal). I didn’t have to
wait too long before we were boarding. I did buy a snack for the morning
because I really didn’t eat on the other flight and this flight wouldn’t have
any food. But it was only some bugles that I ate most of before we got on
board. The boarding was quick again but
I was literally surrounded by children. Some were quiet and some were
obnoxious. The family with 3 kids and another on the way had no control over
their children. I was still so tired I was able to sleep through most of that
as well. We landed maybe a little bit
early. My bag was one of the last off the belt. Still Dad was waiting for me
and we were on our way home with basically no traffic in short order. The
Bruins were playing and lost in a shootout before we got home.
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Pictures from Peru Christmas 2014
The remaining unposted pictures from Peru Christmas 2014 can be found at the following links.
Peru Christmas 2014 Day 14
We had to wake up in time to get mostly packed up because we
had a city tour in Arequipa for the morning but we would be flying back to Lima
at 9 in the evening that day. The hotel was kind enough to let us leave the
stuff in the room for the day because they had not sold the room and did not
charge us for it. We had a brief
breakfast in their restaurant in the lobby which was South American version
continental breakfast. I had coffee, orange juice, toast and some fruit. Daniela
mainly finished the lamb she took back from the day before which the kitchen
was kind enough to heat up for her.
At around 9am our guide for the day picked us up at the
hotel lobby for our city tour. It was private. I am sorry I do not remember her
name. We started in a private car that
drove us up to a couple different scenic points of the city first. In those
points she explained a bit about the history of the city as well as the local
area which again had tons of pre-Incan steps around as well as 3 volcanoes, one
of which is still active though if I understood her right hasn’t erupted since
1450 or so just before the Spanish came.
The city used to have 2 main bridges over the Rio Chili but nowadays
there were a real lot of them. At the
first point there was a statue of an Incan who was supposed to provide good
luck. She also explained about a local
potato called maca and the local Arequipan papaya which is small and very
different tasting from normal papayas.
The second site was also mostly scenic and we got a bit more detail
about the city.
We saw a church built in the 18th century that
was made with the local white volcanic rock. Volcanic rock in the region of
Arequipa is either white or pink. The pink is not as sturdy as the white so
most structures using volcanic rock are made with the white with maybe some
pink for decoration. Though it was a catholic church it was set up on the
outside with a really gothic/Incan look. The guide explained that most people
out these ways didn’t fully just convert to Christian or Catholic but I will
say hedged their bets and wanted to continue to work with their own gods. I am sure that was the case for the vast
majority of the peoples in South America being force to be Catholic by the
Spanish.
We headed to the Plaza de Armas and she explained to us
about the square and the cathedral which was neo-classical style though made of
the volcanic rock. We didn’t go in that
one but did go into another church built by the Jesuits. This had some impressive decoration in the
section that was built by brick rather than volcanic stone on the inside
because apparently the plasters used don’t stick to the volcanic rock. The
Jesuits had initially had the whole church painted in a style representing the
jungle that was still in this one chapel/room.
Unfortunately they wouldn’t let us take pictures in there. The outside was also a gothic/Incan mix. The main part of the church was more baroque
style at this point.
After that church we walked our way to the Monasterio Santa
Catalina which was a convent founded in 1589 or so. It is still active with 15
nuns now. The place is termed, “A city within a city.” This because the nuns were originally
permanently cloistered in there with only contact to the outside world from a
couple speaking rooms near the entrance.
The inhabitants were typically the girls of rich families who were sent
there at age 12 or so as novices and were made into nuns by 18 or sent back out
to be married depending on the family’s choices. I don’t think the girl typically got a
say. It would be easy to say that in
those days the women lived pretty well with servants and large spaces because
they came from families who paid dowries to the convent to keep them there. If
there family didn’t have enough money then they had to work as a servant to pay
off their dowries on their own. The
convent was really huge and covered a few different “districts” that were built
up in different centuries: 17th, 18th and 19th. By this point we had switched over to a guide
form the convent instead. The primary
guide of the day left us inside the convent and was done with her part of the
day. Also, outside we met the “Most Kind
Peruvian” as voted by a contest. I believe he used to be a policeman but now
worked for the convent as a crossing guard for traffic so visitors could get in
without getting run over. He said hello to everyone in different languages
including English and was always smiling. We took a couple of pictures with him
before we entered the convent.
The convent had a nice garden as well as an interesting
laundry area. There were several chapels though most of that was converted into
other working areas when the convent was turned into a standard convent of
equality rather than the place of status it had originally been. There was one
beatified mother superior at the convent. Her two miracles were explained to
us. First supposedly after she died and was buried her remains were exhumed 9
months later and were still perfect. Second a person with cancer supposedly ate
the dirt from her grave and was cured of the cancer. So John Paul II beatified
her when he visited Peru in the 80s. I think we spent about an hour inside the
convent. You don’t get to see the active
nuns who are cut off (but apparently can get permission to leave by the mother
superior these days unlike before). Daniela bought some sweets made by the nuns
in the convent too while we were there.
The tour car took us to the travel agency that Daniela works
with to provide people tours in Arequipa. They had provided all we took that
day. We met with the owner for a few
minutes and she explained about her company and provided some wisdom to Daniela
because her business had been around for over 20 years. After that few minutes the owner drove us to
downtown Arequipa to meet up with Daniela’s family so we could have lunch. They
were all waiting anxiously. It was her aunt and uncle and cousin. We all piled into a taxi that drove us out to
a restaurant that was a fair bit out of town.
The treated us to lunch. They ordered us a mixed plate that had
chicharon, rocoto rellenos, pastel de papas (it was like au gratin potatoes),
estofada (beef stew), lambs’ feet (pata de cordero) as well as rice and some
other snacks. It was far too much food. The lamb foot was rather unpleasant to
me being like rubber with a flavor I didn’t care for. Her uncle ate a dish of meet from the nose of
a cow served in a sauce with tomatoes and onions. They ordered a second dish of
that and asked us to eat some of that as well. It wasn’t really that bad
honestly. I was stuffed already by the time that came through. The got us some
local chicha (which is fermented like a sort of corn beer) and some anis
acholado which is like anisette. We ate
and talked for a couple hours before we had to return to the hotel and get our
stuff ready to leave.
We packed up and had maybe another hour and twenty minutes
so walked to the downtown area and talked and took some pictures before
returning in time for our private transfer to the airport. We got checked in and the plane boarded on
time (we met Dan the guy from New York getting ready for his flight also and
spoke to him briefly). The flight was
uneventful except for a few bumps and a harder than expected landing. We had a
snack on board somehow. Daniela had
prearranged a safe taxi for our arrival. The luggage took forever still we got
back to the house around 10:30 or so. Daniela’s mom was waiting outside for us
and we talked for a while but I had another incident where I had to run to the
bathroom though I had believed I was better by then. Maybe about 11:30 we
called it a night.
Peru Christmas 2014 Day 13
I am sure that we woke up late. I think it might have been
around 10:30 or so but since we got to sleep some time deep after 3am it made
sense in a way. I don’t think we really drank that much so neither of us really
had any sort of hangover but I had an emergency trip to the bathroom in the
night and I was hoping I was better by morning.
We got cleaned up (I was pleased to find out the shower worked better)
and headed out to a restaurant that served farm raised (on the premises) trout
as a primary dish to meet her friend Elisabeth Yenny (call her Jenny) and her
husband Fulvio who is originally from Italy. Jenny also worked onboard the same
cruise ships Daniela did back in the day and that was how they met. Jenny lives in Arequipa and the couple had a
pizza shop that they were deciding to close and open a different one due to
location issues. Also to come along were
there friends Lucecita and her boyfriend Andrea (also an Italian) and another
couple that I am sorry I really can’t remember their names but they were more
quiet than I was. The wife was
pregnant. Fulvio was sick from eating
bad calamari during their New Year party wherever they went so he really didn’t
eat or drink much.
Guess what, I had to again run to the bathroom (which didn’t
have a seat and only had paper towels outside of the stall) because I again had
an emergency. I had had a little bit of beer before this and I stopped
immediately. Apparently the restaurant
was on some sort of holiday menu which meant it only had about half of what it
typically serves and everyone got upset and we decided to go somewhere
else. So they settled up the beer and we
all piled out and walked to a new restaurant about 7 blocks away with a short
ride from a local family’s van.
The new restaurant was on what Fulvio called Calle de
Cholesterol. Their specialty was also
chicharon and all sorts of other deep fried things. Daniela ordered lamb ribs. I had a dish of
white rice because of my stomach. They had a lot of beer amongst everyone but I
just had water. We had spots of dancing as this place had live music that
continued throughout the time that we were there. I think we met at the first
restaurant somewhere between 12 and 1 and left the second restaurant around
6:30 or so. They were all very funny
people but it was of course very difficult to follow everything because there
were only a few spots of English in the conversation. I did my best to keep up
but at times I had to tune out because it was too much concentration with all
the people talking and the music in the background. They were definitely a partying sort. It was a long day for me. After that Daniela had hoped to have dinner
with her family but I begged off and she agreed probably because she was full
from the lunch. We went back to the hotel and took it easy for the night.
Peru Christmas 2014 Day 12
We once again woke up early and got cleaned up and packed
because that was the only night we were spending in Yanque. We had a brief breakfast at the hotel
restaurant (which was included) and then hung around watching the animals until
the bus came to pick us up. The bus
brought us to Yanque’s Plaza de Armas and we did a bit of local tourism in
Yanque where we watched local children dance and looked at all the stall
selling stuff on the square. After a few
minutes we all got on the bus and were brought to another small town nearby
called Maca where we visited the town and the church and even had our picture
taken with animals. During this tour we
met a Canadian couple from Nova Scotia and I talked hockey for a bit. Mike was
a Bruins fan. His point being it is the nearest NHL city to Nova Scotia and we
don’t speak French.
The tour continued on to the Colca Canyon where the primary
target was to see condors flying. We had a few different stops along the way.
Getting there they gave us a bathroom break and then we arrived at the canyon
where we waited for about an hour and a half or so before we started to see a
few condors flying around. As we had
only seen a couple at the scenic point we started on our way back towards
Chivay. However on the way we got out of
the bus at least once because we spotted more along the way and the guide
stopped and let us get out and take more pictures. We were able to get some really good ones.
Aside from those stops we had a couple more scenic stops. In one Daniela bought
a couple of cups of frozen sancayo ice cream. Sancayo is a fruit from a cactus
in the region. It is tart like a lemon and filled with lots of black seeds. The
kind without milk started to look like saliva as it melted but the one with
milk was more like ice cream. I liked
the one with milk more. So did Daniela. With
the scenic stops and one more bano break we were able to get to a local
restaurant near Chivay.
It was a buffet restaurant. I took more than I ate. We split
a beer. It had a variety of foods but I was still not feeling very hungry
possibly from being sick or from the altitude.
After lunch we redistributed passengers and then took a ride on to
Arequipa. There was little guide talk on this about 3 hour ride and we took
turns falling asleep some. When the bus arrived in Arequipa it dropped most of
the passengers off at their hotels if they wanted or at the Plaza de
Armas. Before we got out we made a deal
with the Canadians, the couple with the Japanese and the guy from New York to
meet at 11pm right at the Christmas tree in front of the Cathedral.
We got settled into the hotel room and immediately went on
our way downtown to meet Danielas cousin Marita at her Ice Palace ice cream
shop. It was on the way to the Plaza de
Armas from the hotel. She gave us some
ice cream to try from the shop. Her family has four Ice Palace shops around
Arequipa. I had coffee and coconut and
Daniela had some fruit flavors. Marita
came out with us to help us shop for New Year’s Eve. Daniela needed some
accessories and we needed the Peruvian traditional yellow underwear for each of
us. We walked around all over Arequipa
it felt because her cousin knew all the places to shop for what we needed. When we were done with that we went back to
the hotel and got cleaned up and dressed up for the evening.
First we were invited to her Aunt and Uncle’s home to have
dinner. We walked down to meet her cousin and then we took a taxi to their
home. They were already dancing when we
got there. There were several friends and relatives. We of course started dancing right away and
they served a few different drinks in the course of the night. I think there
was some Bailey’s, followed by champagne and then when we had dinner,
wine. One of the guests worked for Es
Secur as a radiologist and was familiar with Hologic’s products which was kind
of neat. We had our plans to meet the people from the tour at 11 but the night
was going by pretty fast and they insisted we eat with them so we did and ended
up leaving a bit late. They served two
types of salad, apple sauce, chicharon, some rice and potatoes. I took a bit of everything except too large a
chunk of the pork. I ate most all of it
except for the pork I ate all the meat and left the fatty stuff behind. There was a lot of it. We left I think around 11:30 to meet people
we were supposed to find at 11. They got
us a taxi and we took it to the main square.
At the main square, near the Christmas tree, we did find the
two Canadians and the guy from New York. They were already a couple to a few
beers into the night and of course by then the fireworks had already started.
We watched all the local people shoot off their fireworks. There were
professional grade bombs going off but they were just being set off in the
crowd sort of randomly. Of course some
openings like mosh pits had formed and people were mostly staying out of those
points. There were a couple that set off really low and even one I think that
exploded just off the ground. I know I saw an ambulance waiting in the square
but as much as I teach Daniela I am not sure any did actually get hurt. It is
just an assumption based on all the chaos.
After the new year turned and everyone wished each other Feliz Ano we
stayed for a little while longer watching until a dog that was going nuts by
the fireworks kind of made us decide it was best to get out. There was a point
he tried to attack some exploding firecrackers.
We walked out of the square to Calle San Francisco and
eventually found a bar/club called Carusso on the second floor of a small plaza
on the street and paid 15 soles each to get in. They said they had no tables
left to sit at but the goal was dancing anyway.
So we bought some beers and started dancing. They did a DJ mix of
Spanish and American music. After a couple of hours the other 3 foreigners had
their fill of dancing and decided to leave. We escorted them out and continued
on dancing for probably another hour before deciding to leave ourselves.
Daniela was wearing new shoes and her feet were killing her. We took a taxi to
the hotel and crashed for the night. We had asked the hotel if we could switch
rooms from the first because the shower didn’t function great and the lack of
any light blocking curtains made the room bright at 5am. When we got back to
the hotel they moved us down a floor to a room that was almost identical except
it had a sheltered window which meant not as much light could get in.
Peru Christmas 2014 Day 11
We had another early day for the idea of taking tours so we
had to wake up at around 6am or so.
After we got cleaned up we had a short breakfast in the hotel. We were
picked up by a tour bus that brought us through the region on our way from Puno
to Chivay. We had to cross through the
mountains and go to altitudes of 4920 meters at one point on the trip. We had a
few scenic overlooks along the way but it was a couple to three hour drive
between the two points. We met a couple (not sure if they were really
a couple or just traveling together) that was a woman from Arequipa in Peru and
a Japanese man from Saporro who is living in Chile. They were very funny. The Japanese guy spoke
Spanish and a little bit of English as well.
We also met an American guy from New York named Dan who was traveling
alone through Peru and didn’t really have set plans so asked us what we were
doing to have a good idea what to do. We
told him we would meet him at 4pm to try to get him booked on our tours for the
next couple of days.
Actually we spent the night in Yanque not Chivay. Yanque is
about 15 minutes away from Chivay downhill.
The tour bus dropped us off at Chivay’s Plaza de Armas and we
immediately took a taxi to the hotel called the Eco Inn Lodge. We asked the taxi driver to bring us back to
the city at about 2pm. This gave us
enough time to get settled in and take a brief nap before we the taxi actually
did come back and pick us up and bring us to Chivay. We ate a quick lunch at a
restaurant suggested by the taxi driver which was primarily a buffet place but
we ordered off a menu because neither of us wanted buffet. Daniela had a set
menu that had quinoa soup along with medallions of alpaca and all the tea she
could drink. I had spaghetti with
hauncaina sauce with fried beef. I ate most of the spaghetti but the meat was a
bit too much for my stomach still so I left a fair bit of it behind. The guide
for our next couple days found us at the restaurant and told us we needed to be
at the bus for 3:40 but we were a few minutes late. We had told the guide about Dan and
fortunately he found him and signed him on so he would go through the Colca
Canyon on to Arequipa with us. We had to
do some shopping because Daniela needed a swimsuit. That was what put us a bit late.
The tour for 4pm was actually a visit to a local hot
springs. Daniela remembered a specific springs but that was not where we were
brought. Apparently the one she remembered is much nicer but that had a few
pools under maintenance and was too crowded to bring tours to with its now
limited number of pools. So instead we went to one just below our hotel Yanque
that I think was called Chacapi. We did
spend a fair bit of the hour in the water. It was very windy and the springs
were open air mostly so we stayed in the sheltered pool. The water was warm but not boiling hot. It
actually turned out to be reasonably pleasant even if we spent our time at the
deeper part where Daniela could not touch the floor and I could barely tip toe
to reach it. I didn’t take any pictures
of the hot springs. After the hour was
done the tour bus brought us back to the hotel where we got cleaned up and then
went to the reception area/restaurant and had a dinner of only dessert. I had
quinoa ice cream with some sort of fruit sauce on it and Daniela had a banana
crepe. They were both very good. We accompanied those with a pitcher of hot
chocolate.
When we finished that we went back to the room and watched a
movie on TV that was in English but they only gave the title Votas de Amor in
Spanish for some reason. There weren’t even subtitles in Spanish for it. It was
a romantic film starring Channing Tatum as a guy whose wife gets a brain injury
in a car accident and loses 5 years of her memory. She apparently never regained it but they
fell in love all over again. It was
supposedly based on a true story. I am
sure it was a touch fantasized. After
that we called it a night.
Friday, January 02, 2015
Peru Christmas 2014 Day 10
We had to get up early to get picked up for our tour to Lake Titicaca. We had a short breakfast but the tour arrived early so we had to rush and still they drove away and had to come back for us.
The start of the tour brings you to the port at the lake and we boarded a small boat that held about 25 people. The guide explained about the lake and about the cultures that existed and exist on and around the lake. The main focus of the tour was to visit the Uros and Taquile Island. First we rode out through the reeds to the floating islands of the Uros.
Yes, floating islands. They are all artificially made using reed roots and reeds. The islands are apparently well designed enough to last 25-30 years. The Uros moved to the lake many years ago and were originally Aymara, a pre-Incan culture. I am not totally sure what motivated them to move onto the lake itself. It was explained somewhat as escaping persecution from other cultures. Originally they built reed boats but those only lasted about 3 years at best before they would sink. When they learned how to build the islands obviously they were more permanent. The thing is every week they have to build up their island with more reeds. This includes raising any of their homes up higher as well. They said it takes about 4 people to pick up one of their reed based homes. They prop the houses up a bit higher than the rest of the walking surface. It is odd to walk on the reeds. You feel like you are sinking in or destroying their ground on them as you create indentations. They primarily subsist of fishing. They obviously would have difficulty with agriculture however they do also eat the new reeds which provide a few nutrients and moisture. We tasted them. It was a bit spongy but not terrible. Their new mode of income now is tourism and they take turns sharing the tourists among the 23 islands they have. The island we visited was a new island for tourism and their boat was very new comparatively to the others we saw. They spent some time explaining to us how the island was built and they sang some songs and danced a little. They were of course very pleasant. We got to visit inside one of the houses. They sold some handicrafts and we got to take a ride on their reed boat to the other side of the islands. The men were all off fishing I presume because only the women and children were in town.
After the reed boat ride we got back on the tour boat and took a ride to the island of Taquile. The highest point on that island was easily over 4000 meters. We had a long climb up from the lake to get to the first stop which was a nice vista where the guide spoke a bit about the culture there. They were of course conquered by the Spanish but their primary language was also Aymara. They lived off of agriculture and raising animals aside from tourism as well. We ate lunch at a restaurant in one of the communities on the island. Apparently they share the tourists among the different communities where are basically different families (similar to the Uros). The restaurant served quinoa soup and fried trout and it was very good but I was very low on appetite from the sickness or the altitude or both so I didn't eat much. The sun came out while we were on the island and by the time we were done I was very badly sunburned. It was mostly a walking tour which brought us up to the plaza de armas then down to a new launch point to get back on the boat. The island was very beautiful and there were many great views of the lake from different vantage points.
The boat brought us back to the port where we met Roxana and got a tour bus back to the hotel. I felt like crap by the end of the tour so I stayed in and went to bed and Daniela went out to buy a few things and to get some food. I fell asleep early still trying to recover from all that was wrong with me.
By this point I suspect pictures will be posted when I get home.
The start of the tour brings you to the port at the lake and we boarded a small boat that held about 25 people. The guide explained about the lake and about the cultures that existed and exist on and around the lake. The main focus of the tour was to visit the Uros and Taquile Island. First we rode out through the reeds to the floating islands of the Uros.
Yes, floating islands. They are all artificially made using reed roots and reeds. The islands are apparently well designed enough to last 25-30 years. The Uros moved to the lake many years ago and were originally Aymara, a pre-Incan culture. I am not totally sure what motivated them to move onto the lake itself. It was explained somewhat as escaping persecution from other cultures. Originally they built reed boats but those only lasted about 3 years at best before they would sink. When they learned how to build the islands obviously they were more permanent. The thing is every week they have to build up their island with more reeds. This includes raising any of their homes up higher as well. They said it takes about 4 people to pick up one of their reed based homes. They prop the houses up a bit higher than the rest of the walking surface. It is odd to walk on the reeds. You feel like you are sinking in or destroying their ground on them as you create indentations. They primarily subsist of fishing. They obviously would have difficulty with agriculture however they do also eat the new reeds which provide a few nutrients and moisture. We tasted them. It was a bit spongy but not terrible. Their new mode of income now is tourism and they take turns sharing the tourists among the 23 islands they have. The island we visited was a new island for tourism and their boat was very new comparatively to the others we saw. They spent some time explaining to us how the island was built and they sang some songs and danced a little. They were of course very pleasant. We got to visit inside one of the houses. They sold some handicrafts and we got to take a ride on their reed boat to the other side of the islands. The men were all off fishing I presume because only the women and children were in town.
After the reed boat ride we got back on the tour boat and took a ride to the island of Taquile. The highest point on that island was easily over 4000 meters. We had a long climb up from the lake to get to the first stop which was a nice vista where the guide spoke a bit about the culture there. They were of course conquered by the Spanish but their primary language was also Aymara. They lived off of agriculture and raising animals aside from tourism as well. We ate lunch at a restaurant in one of the communities on the island. Apparently they share the tourists among the different communities where are basically different families (similar to the Uros). The restaurant served quinoa soup and fried trout and it was very good but I was very low on appetite from the sickness or the altitude or both so I didn't eat much. The sun came out while we were on the island and by the time we were done I was very badly sunburned. It was mostly a walking tour which brought us up to the plaza de armas then down to a new launch point to get back on the boat. The island was very beautiful and there were many great views of the lake from different vantage points.
The boat brought us back to the port where we met Roxana and got a tour bus back to the hotel. I felt like crap by the end of the tour so I stayed in and went to bed and Daniela went out to buy a few things and to get some food. I fell asleep early still trying to recover from all that was wrong with me.
By this point I suspect pictures will be posted when I get home.
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