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Saturday, September 30, 2006

Climbing Cotopaxi: A Final Note

Yesterday Anne and I met up with the two hikers who had helped us in the hut on Cotopaxi. We talked a bit about what had happened and I found out some more information. The guide who had taken me down from the hut to the car (different person from Anne and my guide) had gone back up afterwards to do the climb with them. Apparently while we were on the way down I passed out.

It really unnerved me to find this out. Partly because I felt very aware during the entire ordeal. Nothing was hazy, I could think clearly, and I was very much conscious. Or at least I thought I was. It's scary to realise I passed out and had no idea.

Even more scary was finding out that 60% of people who pass out in altitude situations like that don't make it. Food for thought.

On a more cheerful note, I'm completely fine, so M&D there's nothing to worry about. I'm leaving Quito today to head south to Cuenca. Tomorrow Anne and I will meet our host family, and on Monday we start Spanish lessons.

Thursday, September 28, 2006

A Question about Film

I'm looking for advice - I mistakenly shot an entire roll of 100 ISO black and white film at 400. I took it to a B&W developing place in Quito, but all my limited understanding of Spanish allowed me to decipher, through fast talking and handwaving by the guy on the other side of the counter, is that I'm screwed. Is there anything I can do, whether it involves something special when developing the film into negatives, or when making prints, that will save some of the pictures? I know that all of the pictures will be hugely underexposed but I'm hoping there's some way not to lose the roll.

How to End Up in Hospital in Less Than a Week

So maybe you're wondering what I was doing standing by the side of the road eating cookies at 11 at night, some 50 miles outside Quito in the middle of nowhere. Maybe not, but I'll tell you anyway. Let me rewind a bit, past the taxi ride, the rush down the mountain, the headache, back to a couple days ago when Anne and I were walking around town figuring out how to spend our last few days before heading to Cuenca.

We were thinking of doing a jungle tour - a few days seeing wildlife, taking canoe trips, visiting villages - which looked interesting enough. But then we found out we could hike up Cotopaxi, a volcano a couple hours from Quito. Definitely the better option. A good hike, amazing views, and an elevation of 5,896m, which meant using mountaineering boots, crampons, and ice picks. Who can resist a good challenge?

Yesterday morning we set off. A newly-married Italian couple joined us. They were doing a 1 day trip, up to the base of the glacier and back, whereas our trip was two days. The itinerary involved a short hike to a hut at 4,800m (15,748 feet), lunch, another short hike to the glacier at 5,100m (16,732 feet) where we would have crampon and ice pick training. We'd sleep for a bit, then at 1:00am set off for the peak, a 6-7 hour trek, to reach it at dawn. We'd be back at the hut at midday, and back in Quito in the afternoon.

Before climbing to the hut we made a couple stops. At one we saw a canyon carved by floodwater rushing down the mountain after the last eruption. At another, we saw a small beautiful lake. Once at the trailhead, we packed our gear in the wind and flying dirt and began the hike to the hut. We started at what seemed like a ridiculously slow and easy pace, but it soon became clear that at that altitude it was necessary. The 300m climb was tough and took an hour. After lunch we climbed another 300m to the base of a glacier and learnt the proper use of crampons and ice picks.

It was during this part of the trip that I began to feel funny. At first I thought I was just tired from the hiking at high altitude. By the time we got back to the hut, I needed to lie down. I was hoping that I could sleep for 7 hours and be OK by the time I got up at midnight. An hour later, I had a bad headache, and after another half hour it was pounding. I knew I wouldn't be able to climb the peak, but was hoping it would die down and I could sleep until it was time to go down the next day.

Anne asked some of the other people at the hut what to do. Thankfully she had no problems with the altitude and took care of me the entire time. The advice was to take two advil and drink lots of water. By this point I had the worst headache I'd ever experienced. I kept trying to shift my head and somehow rest it so that it didn't feel like I was getting stabbed. The advil and water didn't succeed in getting rid of my headache, but it did succeed in making me throw up a couple times. Bad news. Even worse news was that our guide was taking the Italian day-hikers back down the mountain, so no one was there to take Anne and me down.

A little while later, after pills provided by two experienced hikers who thankfully came to help, I was throwing up again. Anne started packing my things so we could leave as soon as our guide showed up.

It was dark by that point and the air had chilled, so the two hikers and another guide helped me into layers of warm clothes and my boots. When our guide showed up, we started down immediately. The hour climb to the hut took 5 minutes in reverse. The others helped me into the front seat of the car, reclined almost flat, and we set off for the hospital.

It took over an hour to drive back down the mountain and out of the park, a bouncy ride over twisting dirt roads (more vomitting), and then finally we were on blissfully smooth paved roads. My headache got better and better as we descended, and I was doing fine when we got to the hospital. I was hooked up to oxygen through nose tubes, then lay there while the nurse apparently went to watch the soap opera I could hear coming from a TV nearby. I lay there enjoying what people in New York and Tokyo pay top dollar for at hipster bars. After a little while a doctor came by and checked out my lungs, breathing, pulse, and temperature and said I was OK. I was given a prescription, and that was that.

The guide set Anne and I up with a taxi for the 1.5 hour ride back to Quito. I felt completely normal again, and hungry too because of my newly-emptied stomach. Since we hadn't done the summit climb, we still had some of the cookies and chocolate we took along as snacks. We had just broken out a pack of Chips Ahoy when we felt two thuds - BAM! BAM! - and then heard a squealing eeee-eeee-eeeeeee as the driver pulled the taxi to the side of the road. We hit something, whether it was a rock or an animal I don't know, but it managed to take out two tires on the right side of the car. The driver radioed for help, and Anne and I got out of the car, eating our snacks as we watched the driver jack up the car and start changing one of the tires.

Soon another taxi pulled up, lent the driver his spare, and we got in and left in the second car. Our new driver liked his music loud and 80s. Although he made exceptions for essential newer hits like Blue by Eiffel 65. The rest of the ride passed by uneventfully, and by the time we reached our hostel in Quito at 1 in the morning I felt like I had lived 4 days in the space of one.

The question now is how to top this experience. It can't be all downhill after the first week. Maybe we'll try being dropped out of a helicopter and skiing down a mountain. Maybe we should go back to Cotopaxi and do it there.

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Lunch in Translation

Ate lunch at a restaurant which had helpfully provided English translations of each item on the menu. Included were such delicacies as:

* Chop with potato
* Noodle with meat
* Broth of leg
* Wadding

Anne was adventurous and chose the last option, which turned out to be cow stomach. Nice and chewy. Maybe it´s a real term I´m not familiar with, due to the lack of cow stomach in the restaurants I usually go to. In any case, bring on the Spanish lessons!

Friday, September 22, 2006

Arrived Safely in Quito

Got up at 5am in Germany, made my way through a long check-in line, two sets of security checks in Frankfurt, terrible airport organisation, and a cancelled flight in Miami. By 5am (German time) the following morning I was in Quito. Slept well.

My expectations upon arriving at the Quito airport, one part based on India, two parts based on ignorance - mess, dirt, crowds, noise, more dirt, cars honking horns, people everywhere. The reality, a normally functioning city, relatively clean, and a taxi ride more civilised than ones given by drivers in San Francisco (who seem to take special joy showing off the roller coaster nature of the roads). Given, it was nighttime so things may well be more hectic in the day, but it was different than I expected.

First day out and about and the altitude hasn´t made me feel at all sick, but I get short of breath very easily. Strange effect. That´s all for now!

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Finland, Germany, and Onwards

One day to go before leaving for Ecuador. I spent a very relaxing couple of weeks in Finland with Eero and Jenni. We took a weekend boat trip to Stockholm a week ago. One night on a cruise there, a day in Stockholm, and one night back. It's a beautiful city, much more picturesque than I had imagined. There's an old section, on an island in the river that runs through the city, that has narrow streets and buildings that look like Italy. The rest of the city had beautiful stone buildings and shopping streets. I only saw a small part of it but it struck me as very nice place to live.

I arrived in Germany a few days ago to meet up with Anne. We're currently in Heidelberg (another gorgeous city - I think I need a job that shifts me to a new city every year, so many great places to live!) visiting André and his girlfriend Katrin. Tomorrow morning we catch flights to Quito. Original plan was to go to language school in Quito but we got lots of recommendations to go to Cuenca instead. We now are booked into a hostel for our first days in Quito, and have enrolled in a language school for four weeks in Cuenca beginning on the 4th of October. The bus ride from Quito to Cuenca is about 10 hours, which I imagine will be tiring but will let us see lots of the countryside. We'll need a couple days to acclimatise to Quito's ~3000 meter elevation, then we'll see what the area has to offer. Will probaby take the bus to Cuenca a couple days before beginning the course.

It's strange to be sitting in familiar surroundings, knowing that a day from now I'll be in a completely new place far from here. I've had the idea of this trip for so long that it's odd to think tomorrow it actually begins.

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Tubing

Have been spending a relaxed weekend in Hanko, a town an hour or so outside Helsinki where many people have summer homes. Although it's getting a bit late in the year, the Finnish summer was apparently unusually hot so it's still relatively warm.

Went out yesterday with Eero & Jenni on Eero's motorboat, towing an innertube behind us. My memory of this from last year involved choppy waters, hanging onto the tube for dear life as it swept in a wide arc when the boat turned, and getting thrown off after hitting waves which tossed the tube a few feet in the air. Great fun. This year we went on a day without much wind so the ride was smoother. The water was also colder, but it was worth braving it.

Iceland Suggestions

If anyone is thinking of taking a short trip to Iceland, here's my suggestion, for what it's worth. Fly in on Saturday or Sunday. Rent a car and drive to a few different places around the island. Spend 5 or 6 days hiking and camping, there is some spectacular scenery to be found. (I saw some glaciers, as well as canyons formed by them, around the south coast and Thorsmork. See pics.) Make it back to Reykjavik for the following weekend and enjoy the wild nightlife on Friday and Saturday.

If I go back again that's what I'll do. On this short trip I was happy to spend some time relaxing in Reykjavik, which felt fairly empty during the week.