From Isla de Margarita we took a bus to Merida. On our 1st day we did paragliding on the Andes mountain range. We drove from Merida about an hour and made our way up part of the mountain range and waited there for the wind to be right so we can take off. You basically just stand there and then the wind catches the parachute and your off. No running or anything you just get lifted up. We both had a pilot flying it for us and we went up at the same time. It lasted for about 30 minutes and we decended around 1000 meters. The views were incredible as we were flying down in the middle of a gorge with the Andes either side of us. Plus there was a rainbow. Sams pilot decided to do some quite tight downwards spirals where you plummit about 100 meters in a few seconds. Samantha saw this and was glad her pilot didn´t really do that as she was feeling a little motion sick. The pilots stopped on the way home and decided to buy us some beers, a water melon juice for samantha and snacks, which topped off the day. They also introduced us to the oldest man in the village.
The 2nd day we did canyoning, which is a mix of rock climbing, abseiling, jumping into plunge pools in and around waterfalls and sliding down natural water slides in the rock. At the start of the day we once again drove up into the Andes and then walked for about 30 minutes to the gorge where the river and waterfalls were. From here we walked through the river after putting on our wetsuits. The river was rapids or fast flowing water all the way along. During the day we abseiled down 3 water falls. The 1st was 10 meters, the 2nd was 15 meters and the 3rd was around 30 meters. Whilst we were abseiling down the waterfall the water was totaly battering your helmet on you head and throwing your body around. Sometimes it was hard to see and breathe because the water was constantly in your face. It was a scary experience, but also fantastic. In between abseiling down the waterfalls, there were a number of large jumps, one of which was into a very narrow slit between two rock walls. Sam was first to volunteer and made the jump look easy. Samantha on the other hand, wimped out and had to slide down the rock face and in the process twisted and hurt her arm. Next was a slide of about 5 meters and down a rock face, this looked very dangerous due to us not knowing the depth of the water at the bottom. Once we had finished canyoning, we were welcomed by a family having a bbq at the bottom. They invited us to eat with them and to share their wine. This was very tasty and appreciated. We then walked for 5 minutes and were given are provided lunch back at the jeep. We were stuffed.
On the 3rd day we went on the worlds longest and highest cable car ride, the Teleferico de Merida, which was around a 3000 meter ascent on 4 cable cars to a snow topped mountain called Pico Espejo (4765 meters). The ascent took about an hour into the clouds. Due to ascending 3000 meters in an hour or so you get a headache and at the top the air is pretty thin, which makes it hard to breathe so we didn´t stay up there long to avoid getting altitude sickness. Also we went to an ice cream shop, which is in the guiness book of records for having over 900 flavours. Sam had the flavours spaghetti and cheese, which made him feel sick as it was disgusting, coffee mocca and maltin polar, which is a malt, horlicks tasting energy drink in Venezuela. Samantha had rose water flavour and cheese and ham flavour which was surprisingly nice with lumps of cheese and ham.
We have just got back from a 2 day trip to see an unique natural phenomenon that happens no where else in the world, Catatumbo lightning. The phenomenon is the lightning is accompanied by no thunder at all. This is the collision with the winds coming from the Andes causing the storms and lightning, as a result of electrical discharges through methane created by the decomposition of organic matter in the marshes of Lake Maracaibo. Being lighter than air, the gas rises up to the clouds, feeding the storms. Once we got to the lake we stayed on floating houses in the middle. We went out in the dark to find snakes and caimen, the guoide shone the torch and it would reflect back in animals eyes. We saw 2 monkeys, a group of birds which we got within inches of, a boa constricter and a caimen. The caimen was around 3 years old, and looks alot more muscley and scary than the alligator we caught in the amazon. Sam asked the guide if he could hold the caimen, noone else in the group wanted to. He also wanted to hold the snake, Crazy! That night it was more cloudy than usual because it rained extremely hard earlier on in the day. So rather than seeing the lightning bolts, there were more flashes in the clouds and bolts moving from cloud to cloud instead. To get the pictures sam woke up at 3am and was patiently taking them for about an hour or so. On the 2nd day on the way back to Merida we stopped off at a coffee musuem and a sugar cane place where they made it into a block of a brown sugar substance that tastes malty.
Friday, 25 July 2008
Wednesday, 23 July 2008
Isla de Margarita
From Angel Falls we decided to skip the Orinico Delta because it was too similar to what we had done in the Amazon in Brazil. Instead we decided to head up to an Island in the Carribean sea to relax for a bit. We had to get a 4-5 hour ferry across to the Island from the mainland of Venezuela. Firstly we headed to Porlamar, the capital of the island. The island is duty free so there were just shops there and one small beach. After 2 nights we moved to the real Isla de Margarita and went to Playa el yaque (El Yaque beach) to improve our tans. This is one of the best destinations in the world for windsurfing and some tournaments are held there each year. We stayed there for a week in a little apartment complex owned by an American a couple of minutes away from the beach. The apartment had satalite tv, kitchen and air con so it was like being on an actual holiday rather than just backpacking which was nice.
Thursday, 17 July 2008
Angel Falls
On the first day of our trip to Angle Falls, we visited the falls themselves. We got to the falls via a 3 hour boat ride with scenary of the tepuis mountains all the way, it was very idealic. Halfway there we stopped off in one of the local indigeous peoples home for lunch, we tried some of their homemade bread, which we found quite sour. Luckily we have spaghetti bolognaise for luch rather than the bread. The waters to the falls were very rough at places, and somehow we managed to be sitting in the exact place on the boat where the waves would flood in, Samantha at point of arrival to the falls, was soaked through. We then walked through the jungle to a halfway point of the falls, where we could see the waterfall clearly as the weather was good. We then walked to our camp which was in view of the waterfall. We were sleeping in hammocks which was quite luxorious compared to the tents on Roraima. Next morning we were awoken by the guide as a very friendly and tame anteater was eating the remainder of the dinner from the night before. We then made our way back to the main camp and later on in the afternoon and visited the Sapo Falls which was an amazing experience. Our new guide, Oswaldo was brilliant, he made Samantha a crown from a jungle leaf. We had to wear our swimming wear for this experience as it was a very wet one. We walked behind the waterfall, which was a very noisy and windy experience. At the time of us doing the walk there was a thunder storm which made the experience even more incredible. We could see the sky flashing as we got soaked from the fall. On the final day us and a guy called Anthony from our trip went to a local indigeous restauraunt and surprisingly ordered the best burger and chips possible, which was a nice, but English way to finish the trip.
Wednesday, 9 July 2008
Venezuela - Roraima
Next we headed off to Santa Elena, where we booked ourselves onto a hike up Roraima, a 2800m table top mountian. In our group there was 6 people, 2 French guys, 1 Venezuelan women and 1 Brazilian guy, our guide used to be native indian from Guyana, but missionaries taught him English and called him Roger when he was young. The first day of the hike we began our hike from the first camp called Paraitepui, we hiked for 6 hours and covered 12 km. We then spent the first night at the first camp called Rio Tek, didnt sleep well as we were staying in tents. Second day we woke at 5am with the sun, had a breakfast of the national famous dish areypas and scrambled egg and headed off to the next camp a further 10.5km along and 450m up. To get to this camp, we crossed two rivers, the second called Kukenan, this river was fast flowing and quite difficult to cross, we wore our socks so we didnt slip and the guide carried Samantha´s bag for her or she would have fell in. The second night we stayed at the bottom of Roraima, at the base camp. Roraima looked within touching distance but next day we realised just how much further it was to the top. The third day we began the walk from base camp to the top of Roraima, which was about 500m up and 2.5km along. When we reached the top we were congratulated by our guide and made the extra walk to hotel Indio, which was basically a cave on the edge of Roraima. We then went to explore the surface, which was the inspiration for Arthur Conan Doyles book, The Lost World and for the Jurassic Park film. On the forth day we did some more exploring. We firstly washed in the pools, which were quite cold but refreshing. We walked to the 'window' of Roraima, which was a fallen rock which had created a window of the Guyana rainforest below. We also walked to the highest point of Roraima, which had some amazing views on the way up and from the top. On Roraima because its higher than some clouds when the weather changes Roraima can become very foggy as the clouds roll in. Sam decided to do some rock climbing and twisted his knee which didnt help when the next 2 days were all downhill, putting most of the strain on your knees. The fifth day we walked from the top back down to Rio Tek, this is 15km and almost all downhill. When we reached Rio Tek, we swam in the river there and washed under the small waterfall. The last day was 3.5 hours back and this was 12km. When we finished we were all congratulated with a chinese fried rice lunch, which was much appreciated. Throughout the entire trip we got absolutely covered in bites from various insects, mainly sand flies. We also saw a miniture scorpian hiding under a tent when they were packed away. On the way back from Roraima we went to a small waterfall where the rock was bright red due to magma hardening on the surface.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)