I'm sitting in the airport at Bogotá
waiting on a flight to Neiva, drinking a cafe latte from an
espresso-sized cup. I won't be getting my usual 12 oz of milk this
way! The coffee here tastes like chocolate, smooth and creamy. The
flight before ours is late, but so far we are set to be on time.
From Neiva we will catch a taxi or
colectivo to take us to Villavieja, a small town in the Tatacoa
desert. This is just a side trip mostly to indulge me, on the way to
San Agustín. Last night Margaret bravely booked our room over the
phone in Spanish. The hotel has
a guide, who will take us into the park to walk through desert mountains and then to
the astrological site where we will “stare at the sky”. It's a nice stopover en route to
elsewhere, and makes for a short day of travel today, before several
bus trips over rough roads for the next week. I don't expect to have
any internet connection, but we'll see.
(There is a BIG gap here, due to a 6 day bout of TD. The trip from here to San Agustín and beyond is posted in retrospect with photos after I arrived home to Edmonton.)
(There is a BIG gap here, due to a 6 day bout of TD. The trip from here to San Agustín and beyond is posted in retrospect with photos after I arrived home to Edmonton.)
Yesterday we went to Zipaquira, Zipa
for short to visit El Catedral de Sal. Rather than close an old salt
mine, the miners kept working to create an underground cathedral from
the remaining shafts. You are completely underground, and everything
around you is salt. It begins with a long climb up from town to the
entrance to the mine. The first section is the Stations of the Cross.
Each cross is carved from salt, and labeled with the appropriate
number and description. You hear the occasionally chords of Ave Maria
as the lights change colour and hue, creating a surreal effect. Here are some of my favourites:
We ended our day
streetwalking in Bogotá. Talk about surreal. We have been in many big
cities, including in South America, but the bustle on the streets in
the Candelaria district defies description. Calle 7 is a peatonal so street
vendors compete with artists for attention. Seems everyone is a small
business here! Never have we seen so many. Young, clean
shaven, mostly male, they are everywhere, in groups usually. Every
major store has private security often with a muzzled, closely
controlled, dog. I felt very safe!
Sellers with things to eat. Arepas. |
Artists. This is like spray and brush graffiti I think but on paper. |
Videos for sale--YMCA! |
Living wall at a nearby hotel |
Because of this....(no crowd--just a woman with a megaphone) |
Art Deco and Urban Art - great combination.
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