Sunday 19 February 2012

All aboard the Kindle express, first stop - Paradise


So, Hugo has been here a couple of weeks and we are essentially embarking on a tour of paradise. We started out in Cartegena, which was a stunning city that has world heritage status around the old town. We managed to catch up with the German boys for a couple of nights which was some pretty heavy drinking.. For the second time I tried to go to a south American league game and for the second time I managed to fuck it up. I had been told that it kicked off at 5.30pm, I had even bought myself a Real Cartegena shirt in preparation. When we were about to get in the taxi there were a load of people in shirts crowded around a TV watching the match. Apparently it was 3.30 kick off. Tidy. Our first hostel there was pretty mint, it had a swimming pool at the centre, a big bar and a roof terrace to hang out on, and hang out we did.

Hard going
Hugo learned first hand the issues involving having to be a lot more organised over here than in south east Asia. We had been planning to sail over to panama, but due to the fact that it is now Carnival there were no boat available when we wanted to leave, so I spent an entire day trying to plot our exit from Columbia, as I was aware that our next destination definitely would not have internet. After an impossible amount of searching I found flights for $250, booked them and got no fucking confirmation back. The company I booked with were based in San Diego, 3hrs behind us. We were due to leave at 7am the next morning and I could not find out if I had even booked the flight until 11am the next day when their offices were open. Pretty convenient. In the end I had to phone them the next day, speaking to some Indian call centre moron who did not speak English, which tipped me over the edge and I just cancelled them. This meant another 5 hours rescheduling and rebooking every thing. But after visiting Tayrona National Park it quickly became worth it. What had failed to occur to me was the weight of our rucksacks combined with the 2.5hr trek through the jungle to our final destination. A steady flow of travellers were passing us with ease avec their tiny day packs. Needless to say anyone with a brain had left their rucksacks at the hostel. It was pretty hard going. A German lad called Felix had come with us from Cartegena and he did not seem to struggle as much, but for someone who has not exercised for about a year it was tough. We reached the first beach resort about half way there at around 5pm, and took the decision to stay there. The only sleeping option were hammocks, which were strung up in this big hut type thing which looked pretty eerie. I had not slept in a hammock before so I came prepared with rum and valium. I got a bit of a camp-fire going and then we drank the rum and prepared for what lay ahead. These hammocks had mosquito nets which was a nice touch. When I woke in the morning a 5 cm square part of my shoulder had been pressed against the net, and I had a patch of around 20 bites, tidy stuff.

Early the next day we got going again, and on the way I spotted a local guy smoking a massive joint, so I stopped off to make a quick purchase. As soon as I turned around I saw that two of the army guys who man the park had been watching the whole thing from about 20 metres away, so I was preparing myself for another 'fine' (as we entered the park they spotted our rum and 'fined' us $5 to let us take it in. But I was not too sure what the etiquette with this was, so as I went behind some rocks I buried the weed. When I walked past they said nothing, so I went back ten minutes later and dug it back up. I knew I was kind of a marked man after this so I buried that weed in about 20 different places over the course of the next 6 days. When we arrived after another sweaty hike it was like paradise. Breath-taking beaches sitting afoot huge jungle covered mountains. Our accommodation for the first night was considerably worse. Row after row of hammocks so close that when you got in you were touching the person next to you. We had run out of rum and when I felt the heat of proximity I knew that I was in for a bad night. I could hear mosquito approaching, then the noise would stop right as they got to me, but I was so wedged in that I could not even slap them away. There were also several bats flying around in there which did not contribute to our comfort. 
hell
Hugo quickly developed a fear of them and tried his best to irritate them out of there by following them with his torch. Occasionally when he caught it right it looked like the batman signal against the roof. About as cool as it got in those surroundings. It got to about 5am and I knew something had to change. Hugo said when he woke up he looked around and could not see me, then he peered over the edge to see me fast asleep in the dirt floor, surrounded by beer cans with at least 5 flies on my face at any one time. Needless to say we upgraded to the Mirador the next morning, which was this big pergola type construction on top of the rocks. It was very windy up there, very windy indeed. This suited me, I had a sleeping bag, hugo on the other hand, for someone who is not so keen on the cold at the best of times, was not quite so comfortable. He only had a sheet, so he was cocooning himself, and I believe one night he even sealed himself in with masking tape. The views we had when we woke up were incredible, it is probably the best place that I will ever sleep.

The Mirador
There were a few Americans also in the Mirador so the next night I went and dug up the weed and set about building a camp fire on the next beach along (a short passage through the jungle). Just as I was getting her going the military type people appeared out of nowhere and instantly walked in my direction. It was the only time that I had weed on me, and my bumhole began to twitch. For some reason I was wearing thin trousers over my swimming shorts, and in the shorts pocket was weed, two packs of burns (one as a wallet) and a lollipop. He patted me down and felt everything in my pocket, which he asked to see. As I went in for the first pack of smokes I managed to move the weed to the top of the pocket. He felt me up again and this time felt the ball of weed and asked me to take it out. I brought out my auxiliary burns and managed to move the weed out of my pocket and round the back of my trouser leg. This time he felt me again and only felt the lollipop, which he assumed was what he felt before. When he walked away and started searching the rest I tried to act calm, so I put a cigarette in my mouth, lit it and almost spewed when I realised that I had lit it the wrong way round. Smooth. They left empty handed and slightly dejected that they did not pick up a haul. I was pretty god damn relieved to see the back of them. The next day me and Hugo went on a bit of a trek through the jungle to see some old ruins which was pretty cool. The ruins themselves were turd, as is the case with ruins, but the trek there was pretty cool, involved a bit of bouldering etc. It took about an hour and a half to get up there, and when we arrived at the ruins a few of the yanks were up there. I had seen a phone that someone had put next to my camera, and knowing about Hugo's ability to lose things I asked him on the way down if he had left his phone up there, which he had not. I did not bother to ask anyone else. Needless to say when we got out of the jungle someone realised it was theirs and they had to go up and back again to find it. Whoops.

Not sure how this happened
We had originally planned to stay until the friday, then a night in Teganga followed by buses to Baranquilla to fly out to panama early monday morning. Instead we liked it so much there that we opted to stay one more night in Tayrona, although we were both down to the very last of our money. We had dinner and got an early night as we knew the horrendous trek out of there that lay in wait the next day. I woke up at 2am on the verge of spewing and shitting myself. To get to the toilet I had to climb down the rocks in the pitch dark and walk over to the camp. When I got there I was not the only one having similar issues, there were people spewing and crapping everywhere. I felt like I had spewed out my soul and when I got back hugo was awake, fairly smug that it was not happening to him. His arrived about 2 hours later, but I think not so bad as he was not sick. I guess this is down to the fact that he is taking malaria tablets, which are a general antibiotic. I could not sleep after that so we set out early doors. We had just enough money to pay for a horse to take our rucksacks, but the 2.5hr walk back was a horrendous experience. We were so meek, and I was impossibly dehydrated, but every time I tried to drink I would spew it back up. Pretty ideal conditions for a trek. Anyway, we managed it, thoroughly unenjoyable and tough going, but soon enough we were on the bus en route to Baranquilla. The city was a bit of a hole, it felt much more like Columbia. The hostel was okay, it was run by a really nice italian guy who we chatted with for quite a bit. It made me feel even worse about what happened to his towel. My stomach had begun to sort itself out and I took a shower the next morning as we had to leave at 4am. I took a bit of a risk and let one rip, and I realised instantly that a squit of diarrhoea had just sullied his pristine wh ite towel. This almost tipped hugo over the edge, and when he saw it his first question was where the trail ended up. After a brief search he realised that the rest had landed in his flip flop, so every cloud.

Bit of an issue if you don't like your neighbour
When we arrived in Panama City, a very nice place by the way, we made o9ur arrangements to get across to the San Blas islands, a two way 3hr jeep journey that was departing at 5am. After the Tayrona rucksack débâcle I advised Hugo that we should consider just taking stuff in our day packs. Hugo looked slightly disgusted and we decided to take our whole packs. When we got up and walked down to the Jeep we were met with equal disgust, and we had 5 minutes to transfer anything we needed into our day packs. Hugo quickly realised that he had managed to lose his kindle, just 72 hours after he managed to sit on mine and break it. So we are now down two kindles amongst various other things that Hugo has managed to misplace along the way. The jeep ride was an experience. It was a cross between a roller-coaster and a simulator. Good fun, and the scenery was pretty special. We caught a boat down a river which opened out into an ocean full of tiny little islands (365 to be exact). 


It's not 5 star but it is certainly competitive
Some of these islands are inhabited by the indigenous Kuna people, whilst others had some very basic guest huts on them. We chose one and it was picture postcard beautiful. Conditions were very basic, there was some toilet type thing but no shower and we were living in sand floored huts, but it was all part of the experience there. We were living amongst a Kuna tribe, and the ruddy Kuna's seemed to have a meeting outside our hut every bloody morning. It became a tad irritating as I have not felt particularly well slept of late. My mattress was so soft that Hugo could not tell if I was in bed from the outside as I just disappeared into it. Food was included in the accommodation cost, which was three sort of meals a day. Breakfast was some kind of egg type thing and bread, followed by the standard rice and burnt salty fish for lunch and dinner (life is so hard). On our first day we took a trip to snorkel off one of the other islands. This mess of a bloke turned up on our boat, covered from head to toe in bright white sun block. I did not even need to speak to him to know he was english. We went for a snorkel and swam to a nearby island, before coming back to see one of the most ridiculous things I have seen. Mr Bean, as I shall call the sun block guy, was trying to get back to land by climbing over the coral about 30 metres from shore. In between my laughing all I could hear was him screaming and shouting, it was so funny but he was also clearly killing really quite a lot of coral. When he got to shore he was covered in cuts and some yellow shit which no one knew what it was. In the rush to pack my daypack I had forgotten my head torch, which was kind of a problem as there was no electricity or lights in the hut. One night we came in at 11am and there was a massive yelp from the floor and something big ran under the bed. After emptying my pants I realised that one of the local dogs had somehow managed to get in

Bean
We spent that evening with Bean and some nice American guy. I had assumed that Bean was some 50+ year old sex tourist, but it turns out he was only 36 years old and had just quit his job writing questions for the Weakest Link game show, and was about to become a lawyer. It is amazing what you assume about people and what you find out. A few days before Hugo arrived I met an American couple who were travelling on the money that the girl had won appearing on the wheel of fortune game show. The day Hugo arrived I got chatting to an Austrian girl on a park bench and ended up going for a few drinks, and it turned out that she had gone on a game show in Austria and won £50,000. Mother fucker. Maybe everyone I see travelling is some piece of crap that has won big on television, that is certainly the assumption that I will make about most people that I meet.



Impossibly aquatic
We spent a few nights chilling on San Blas and have now returned to Panama City for a few nights of the Carnival, which will probably be a massive disappointment but I have no idea what to expect. We bought a bottle of rum yesterday and started drinking it at midday. We were so drunk that we did not really see much of the festival and we were back at the hostel by 8pm utterly wasted. I looked though my photos this morning and it looks like I spent most of my time carrying around some kid dressed in a ridiculous costume. There are at least 4 separate occasions that I have scooped this kid up and I am carrying him around, poor kid probably did not have a clue what was going on. My last memory is me and hugo getting kicked off one of the floats and then there is a nice photo of me lay in the road pissing down a drain. There is plenty more where that came from. On the plus side my spanish is slowly improving, but there are still plenty of things lost in translation. The other day I asked a guy if he sold ice cream (he was carrying a cool box). He started talking for 30 seconds and then started doing an impression of a chicken. I did not have a clue what he said or led him to the chicken impression, so I laughed along with him and repeated my question. This type of thing is fairly commonplace. Over and out.

Brits on tour

An eclectic gang

Why is this man carrying me?


He has got me again

Okay, this is getting beyond a joke

Get away from me, or I will have you arrested

Wednesday 1 February 2012

Another epic journey, and Columbia with ze Germans


So again I think it has been a few weeks since my last update, I think the last rant came after the 60hr journey to get to Lima. I remember hoping that I would never go through a journey like that again. Needless to say two days later I was embarking on a 78hr bus journey to get to Bogotá to meet up with my German mate Florian. I looked into a flight and at that notice the cheapest that I could find was going to run me £600. How's about noooo, okay scotty. I began to think about the logistics of getting there, the border crossings, the wholesale lack of Spanish as a dialect. When I began to read about the border crossings the fear set in and I questioned whether I was up to it. But I had come this far and in retrospect it was a good experience. I decided that if I could make a journey like that with only the most basic of Spanish at my disposal then I could make it pretty much anywhere across this continent. The first thing that really struck me was how little anyone here speaks English, and how much effort it was going to be on the organising front. Granted this has never been my strong point, and it took me a couple of days to plan how I was going to get to Bogotá – but even then my plan was full of holes. I knew a basic route and I managed to make an impossibly frustrating phone call to a bus company that was heading to Puiria in the north of Peru. Beyond this I thought that I could take a nights sleep in Quito (Ecuador) in a couple of days – as the lonely planet advises against taking buses at nights. It was a pretty flaky plan but I had written the names of some towns in the various countries, which was probably the minimum that I could do.

I did not really have a great feeling for Lima. I was in the supposed nicest part and it was still a bit of a dive. In fairness I say this about pretty much every city I have ever been to, but as I left the outskirts the poverty and reality really hit home. Huge shanty towns made up of tiny huts littered the horizon. Then shit got even more real when I realised that the road had been cut into some huge mother fucking sand dunes, which must collapse every time it rains. It was pretty nerve racking, these huge sand banks a meter from the bus window and a 200ft drop into the pacific ocean on the other side. 

View from the bus window - road has a pretty solid base I imagine
This bus was a 15hr stint and I after watching a couple of films in Spanish I was given my first taste of the lovely Spanish music that gets played on these journeys. It is impossibly bad. The music itself is this continually upbeat combination of pipes, harmonicas and god knows what else. Apparently they also sing about heartbreak and other such topics but always just continually to these upbeat songs. The best analogy I could draw is imagine burying your dog to the match of the day theme tune. For 15hrs. Anyway, things began to get tough around 8hrs in when I realised that there were not going to be any scheduled stops – aka no burns. There was a toilet on board, I gave it consideration but the smell of that toilet was worse than any lack of nicotine. I was also getting pretty hungry, then at 7am some pikey looking bloke got on the bus with a basket of what looked like buns that had been run over. I did not know what he was saying so I waved some money at him and in exchange I got a squashed roll with a cold fried egg in the middle. Mmm yummy. The alternative to eating it was holding it and looking at it, so I ate it.

The Peru / Ecuador border
We arrived at around 9am and the place was shit, so I booked onto the 9.30am to Lajo, Ecuador The scenery was pretty much desert until approaching the Ecuador border. I was the only westerner on the bus which made me a bit nervous about the border crossing, but it was all pretty smooth going. They could tell that I didn't have a clue what they were saying and I suspect that they could not be assed asking questions any more than I could be assed listening to them. Once in Ecuador as we reached the Andes the scenery was pretty incredible stuff. I arrived in Loja at around 6.30pm and it was too dark to contemplate anything but another bus – it genuinely felt like the safest place to be after standing in the bus terminal for 10 minutes. So I booked the 9.30pm to Quito arriving at 9am the next day. By this point I could no longer feel my legs and I was in some perpetual state of confusion, so it was quite welcome that they use American dollars in Ecuador I had no spare capacity for currency calculations. So another 12hrs of upbeat weird music and I was in the capital. I was so tired and fed up that the thought of getting into the city and finding a hostel made me immediately stumble my way through another bus reservation and onwards another 5hrs to the Columbian border at midday. I had to have my bag between my legs because some fucking goon turned up with a double mattress to store on the bus. Nice one.
Load your double mattress on there ked


When I arrived in the pretty grim town of ipales it was getting dark – and it was the first time that I began to feel a bit scared. Everyone was staring at me but no one was interested beyond that. There was no one trying to hassle me or 'help' me. I had read on the internet that I needed to get a taxi to the border, and not knowing the word for border I just muttered Columbia through a drivers window and off we went. I feel nervous about getting into most taxis over here. Not only are they these shitty little yellow cars that I have never seen, but I am also never sure if I am actually going to arrive where I have asked them to take me. The border crossing was a little nerve racking, lots of shifty looking characters acting shifty, waving wads of cash at me for some reason. Show offs. It was okay, but not an experience I would recommend. Another death ride in a taxi to the nearest town called Tulcan to see that this place was as soulless as ipales, so I went straight to the bus terminal and booked a night bus to Cali. 

Camera does not do it justice
Again, the scenery was unreal when I woke in the morning. The road circumnavigated the Andes, rising high high into the landscape – it really was a sight for very sore eyes. When I arrived in Cali it looked very nice, but I was now within 20hrs of Bogotá so I thought fuck it, may as well just carry on. This journey was a little more real. We were boarded several times by police with torches, camcorders and guns. I had taken a valium to sleep so I was fairly relaxed about it, but when I took out my camera to take a photo the guy next to me quickly intervened and gave me the international sign language for bad idea (slit throat sign). On our first stop this same young guy disappeared into the toilet and came back somewhat rejuvenated. He was sniffing a lot and tapped his leg incessantly for the final 4hrs of the journey. Welcome to Columbia.

By the time I arrived it was around 10pm and dark. I opted for another death taxi and by night the place looked horrendous. All I could see was graffiti, garbage and crack heads. All Florian had given me was the name and address of the hostel, I did not see anything else I would need. The driver could not find the hostel and I could tell he was on the verge of just dumping me somewhere – but other than giving him the address there was not a lot I could do. After an hour of driving around these terrible streets off the back of a 78hr journey he finally located the place and I asked the owner if he had any Germans staying there. 'No' was the answer. Tidy. I had a little walk around and I felt out of breath after about three steps - it wasn't until a few days later that I found out Bogota is at 2600m above sea level. 

Celebration / Protest
The hostel was pretty gash and when I woke up there was a kid opposite me who looked like a Mongolian version of Ronnie Corbett. In a week I did not see this guy leave the hostel once. I was about to take a dump when one of the bedroom doors opened and to my relief me and Florian were stood face to face trying to work out if we were who we thought we were (last time we met I had a shaved head and he had quite long hair – now almost the opposite on both accounts). They had not gone to bed until 6am – something that I have grown pretty well accustomed to over the past few weeks – so we grabbed some breakfast and I went for a wander around on my own whilst he got some more sleep. To be fair the place looked a lot nicer by day. The area was set against the backdrop of a huge mountain and by light the graffiti looked pretty awesome. This area of the city was made up of quaint little colonial side streets and it had a nice feel, other areas were pretty damn ghetto. I wandered into the central area and I stuck out like a sore thumb – I was the only person in eyesight wearing shorts. A few people touched me, which on the whole was a disturbing experience. I managed to walk into the middle of some protest or celebration - it was hard to tell which to be honest - but there were a lot of horses and a lot of people shouting "gringo"at me.


When I got back to the hostel Flo introduced me to his mate Obi, and then he told me that another two guys that he sort of knew from Munich were staying upstairs – and that two of their friends were also arriving in a few days. These guys are all on 3-4 week annual vacations – so for the past couple of weeks I have basically been on a German lads holiday. Pretty, pretty, pretty cheap. Columbia is not as cheap as I was lead to believe by the 2009 version of the Lonely planet. I reckon prices have as good as doubled in the two years since that publication, as tourists begin to return following years of bad press. I have not really felt threatened since being here, but it is not a good idea to walk the streets alone in the big cities after dark. I did this a few times in Bogotá and I walked a bit faster than my usual 0.5mph.


La goon
After a few days of partying flo and obi headed off to San Andres, the £450 return flight priced me out, so I hung around with the German boys for a few more days in Bogotá, went to some big lagoon and then we headed north towards the Caribbean coast, to a party town called Teganga.
The bus took 16hrs, and when we climbed on board the back 8 rows or so had already been taken by some big family type arrangement. I reckon some of these people might have been family friends without kids, because they seemed way too happy to be about to face 16 hours on board a bus with their young children. They were constantly making each other laugh and joking around with the children. There was a real variety of people of different generations, even some old woman was getting involved in the banter. It was great watch them all laugh and joke together, constantly shouting and singing. That was for the first 5 minutes of the 16hr journey, after which it became really quite annoying.

Teganga
Teganga was a pretty cool little place but there were a lot of annoying people trying to be hippies, basically rich but dressed in clothes that look like pyjamas. My other minor issue was that in addition to Spanish I also do not speak German. When the 6 of them were together I kind of felt on the fringes, as there was not a lot I could contribute. When in smaller groups it was cool, as they would speak English, which was not only gratefully received but also very impressive. But it was to be expected, it is not as if all of my mates would start speaking German if there was a German in our group. It was not a real problem for me, as I was spending long, lazy days in a hammock reading and practising my Spanish, but at night I began to feel a bit conscious that I was the only one not talking... They are all top top guys, and each made an effort to talk to me in English on nights out – but I sensed that I was probably also a bit annoying for them at times because someone would always feel that they had to make a translation of a joke or story that was told in German..

Being on this lads holiday reminded me of being away with my own mates. We would go to bed at some awful time, get up at midday, argue about what to do for the rest of the day and then just begin drinking again amidst some half-hearted suggestions. I am actually the youngest person amongst this group, somewhat of a first on my travelling experiences. It is reassuring to see that it is still acceptable to go away partying into your late thirties. These boys could seriously put the booze away – they are Bavarians, it is just what they do. The other problem with a group of seven is that it is almost impossible to make travel arrangements, as each wants to party of whatever on a different night – so three of four would be packed and ready to leave at 9am whilst the other three or four have not gone to bed yet. After two of three attempts we finally managed to leave as a team and headed to Santa Marta, en route to some place well off the beaten track called Palomino, a tiny beach in the Tayrona National Park.

Palomino
For some reason the only ATM in Teganga did not take my cash card. so I ran up a tidy little debt of a cool half million pesos. Once we got to Santa Marta I maxed my daily allowance to pay Christian back and got a little for myself for Palomino. After the 2.5hr bus ride we got off at Palomino and I was a little surprised by what I found. It was literally a few shacks along the road. We had to walk through a sort of palm jungle for about 20 minutes to reach the beach, but when we got there I realised what it was all about. The beach was stunning and deserted. There were a few doss houses along the beach front – offering very basic dorms or hammocks to sleep in, or you could pitch your own tent. We took a place that was recommended to the Germans, which was also owned by Germans – so a bit more German thrown into the equation. The beach had much more of a feeling of the Pacific about it as opposed to the Caribbean – huge waves crashing against each other and nothing on the horizon but a feral pack of dogs. These dogs always make me think about bully. Sometimes when I see a dog I first wonder what its reaction would be to being put inside a computer case.
How a dog in a computer case should look

 I think this probably forms my initial benchmark when assessing the worth of any particular dog (although I also like to take a moment to picture them in a flatcap and sun glasses). I repeatedly get told off at restaurants for feeding the stray dogs. I can understand in part as some of the customers find them a nuisance, and if they are getting fed then they will keep coming back. But here I discovered the angle of the conscious owner, who actually likes and look after certain dogs. They put out the scraps of food into a bowl some distance from the restaurant, so if some douche bag like myself feeds them then they have to essentially shout at their own dog – also making them feel bad. I have seen some pretty maingy looking dogs here. Usually they hang around in packs then you will see one with mainge that has been totally ostracised and lies there on its own, pitifully trying to keep the thousands of flies from its various wounds and sores. It makes me feel terrible – far worse than seeing some advert for starving African children. I then have a moral battle to fight. Is it better to feed these dogs – give them a moment of happiness – or is this just prolonging their misery? As horrible as it sounds I think it is better to just let it starve and end the misery. No one is going to help them, and it is not like there are a lot of vets around even if someone was willing to touch the godforsaken thing and go to the expense and time of healing it. I think this kind of struggle is only really restricted to dogs. When I see a gimpy chicken hobbling around on one leg I can barely contain my laughter. I could probably attribute this to a summer working in a chicken factory – maybe sawing the feet off these horrible creatures desensitised me somewhat. I don't want to see them suffer in some battery, but I also won't lose any sleep about it.

Palomino was a strange little place. Utterly deserted but when I took a stroll at night I came across some weird tribal dance taking place on the beach. It seemed pretty inappropriate – a load of young adolescent girls doing some weird sex-dance whilst some old weird looking guy chanted at them. I don't know what the craic was, but it made quite uncomfortable viewing. 

Lynn these are sex people
After a couple of nights on this beach it quickly became obvious that I was running out of cash, and fast. Needless to say there was not a cash point here, and all of the German lads understandably needed their cash for themselves, as they wanted to stay for a week +. So I was forced to make an exit, a 2.5hr bus journey back to Santa Marta just to take out some ruddy bloody cash. I really wanted to stay there for a few more days but instead I have come down to Cartagena, where my boy Hugo arrives on the 2nd for a month of travelling around with me – and also have the Germans back for a night or two in a few days. It was nice to leave in a way as I was getting mercilessly ravaged by mosquitoes, and I am not taking any malaria tablets. It is basically like Frank Spencer turning up for work on the first day of a new job wearing roller-skates. This morning I beat my personal best and woke up with 59 bites. Good times.

Dinner
I arrived in Cartegena late, and as with any city, it looked bad by night. Weird people wandering around whispering something about a bloke called charlie in my ear. I spent today having a look round and it really is an unbelievably beautiful city. The historic centre is a world heritage site, and it is easy to see why. I am now trying to make arrangements for Hugo's arrival – it really does take a lot of effort to make plans here, but I am beginning to get to grips with the language a bit better. I can say exactly what I want but when someone speaks to me my mind freezes and I don't recognise a single word – so conversations are quite one way. But everyone is very friendly here, they talk to me, tell me how long they have lived here, tell me that that love English football, pass me a card with a number on it and then tell me to ring if I need cocaine, weed or hookers. I have literally been given about 5 of these cards today – but on the plus side one of these lovable rogues is going to take me to a cock fight on friday – where I will finally get to see some chickens beat the crap out of each other. Anyway, got to shoot, I have some phone calls to make. Bay.