Friday, March 11, 2022

And Now It's Really Over: The Last Post

Well, everyone, we've been home for nearly two weeks now. And it's kinda wild how quickly our trip is receding in the rearview mirror. Last week, we kept marveling: "This time last week we were in Mancora!" "On this day last week, we were in Lima." We reminisced less this week, although we did go out for a chicken dinner last night (our first chicken since our trip ended) -- and we did agree that we like the South American papas fritas (french fries) very much (possibly more so than our American ones...shhhh).

We're back in the thick of things with school and sports and work and appointments and errands and laundry and everything. And it's both wonderful and overwhelming. The laundry especially is excellent; if you ever hear me complain about doing laundry -- in my MACHINES! -- please just slap me.

This post will be our last, and I feel like now the trip is officially over, because we're putting the blog to bed. Clearly, I will have to find something else to blog about soon; I've just had too much fun journaling on this thing since December.

We sat down as a family recently, and everyone shared their reflections from our trip. Check 'em out below:

Wyatt

I've been home for more than a week and I'm thankful because I get to see my friends and play sports. And now I have Roger, my dog. But I'm missing all the interesting animals in the Amazon and all the cool animals -- the blue footed boobies and sea lions and marine iguanas -- in the Galápagos. I wish I was back on the road in Peru and Ecuador. But I'm thankful I'm not eating chicken and rice every day. I hope we have another two-month trip sometime.


Taylor

Now that I've been home, I still love the Amazon and I will remember it for the rest of my life. The animals that we saw, we will probably never see in a zoo. I'm proud of myself for swimming with caimans, and I would swim with them again. I also really appreciated getting to know our Amazon guide, Lander.


Tim

Something that's sticking with me from our trip is the conversation we had with Lander, our Amazon guide, while fishing. I asked Lander if he had ever been to the United States, and he responded, "No, I've never been." And then he shared that he'd never been to Lima. I remember asking Lander if he were interested in going to Lima. Lander told us that he had a brother in Lima but had never visited and wasn't sure if he'd ever go. He was content, he was home in the jungle. He loved life in the Amazon; he loved the simplicity and wildness of it all. And I feel like that's so foreign to me, to us, as Americans. We don't operate that way in this country. We're all about the next thing, we're all about striving, we don't necessarily sit still enough to be content. And so that conversation we had with Lander was eye-opening for me, and it was an amazing reminder that our American culture doesn't have to dominate us.


Sarah

What to say? The whole experience was incredible. I feel stronger for having done it, and I feel that we're closer as a family. I loved the freedom the trip provided, the challenges (hi, zillion Amazon mosquitoes), the learnings, and the overall adventure. Our time in the Amazon was a highlight; that part of the world will always be magical to me. But looking back on all the places we visited -- I loved it all. I think what I will remember most is the people; everyone was happy (well, except the van driver who took us on the Death March to the Nazca Lines) -- even those who had very little appeared happy. I come back here to California, and there is an abundance...of everything. We do not need an abundance to be happy. We need each other. How to bottle this from our trip and apply it back at home? I don't know yet, but I'll be working on it.


*****

So now I will close this blog. Thank you all for reading and for keeping us company during our Andean Adventure. We wish YOU all the life adventure, too. Ciao, ciao! 

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Our Trip: By the Numbers

It's Tuesday evening in California, and we've been home now for 72+ hours. Clothes have been washed, groceries have been bought, the dog has been picked up (God bless you forever and ever and ever, Donna and Steve!), children have returned to school, a Target run has been made, and hair has not been cut (but that's a story for another day). 

We're adjusting to "normal" life, marveling at our potable water and the fact that we can place toilet paper in our toilets. Oh, America!

We're missing our breakfasts of bread and fruit and eggs. We're missing hearing Spanish all day, every day. We're missing saying, "Buen dia!" We're missing the frenetic sounds of tuk-tuks and taxis scurrying about. We are not missing all the stray dogs.

By next week, Tim and I anticipate that our family will be clamoring to be back in Ecuador and Peru. The excitement of being home will wear off, and we'll all want to be in South America again, minus the bug situation, of course. 

I promise not to wax poetic here; we'll save that for the family reflection post, which will come in a few more days -- maybe over the weekend.

Buuuuut, we do want to deliver on our promise to write up our 'by the numbers' piece. So, without further ado, and in no particular order, here are the final stats from our trip:

Number of days traveled: 55

Number of places visited: 18

Number of flights: 16

Number of guides: 9

Number of bus rides: 3

Number of van rides: 4

Number of train rides: 2

Number of tuk-tuk rides: 22

Number of dune buggy rides: 1

Number of female taxi drivers: 1 (and we took a lot of taxis)

Number of female tuk-tuk drivers: 0 (although we saw two)

Number of police bribes: 1

Number of jugos naturales (natural juice) imbibed: Too many to count, and you'd better believe we'll be making these at our house from here on out

Number of alpaca dinners: 2

Number of piranhas eaten: 8

Number of Amazon grubs eaten: 1 (by Tim)

Number of Amazon jungle candies eaten: 2 (by Wyatt)

Number of times we spotted an animal in the Amazon that the guide missed: 3

Best customer service in hotels, restaurants, etc.: Machu Picchu Town

Number of days Tim surfed: 11

Number of days Sarah ran: 37

Number of upset stomachs: 4

Number of hospital visits: 1

Number of hours kids spent on the iPad: 0 (and we probably watched 27 minutes of TV the entire trip)

Number of UNESCO World Heritage Sites visited: 5 (Quito, Cuenca, Lima, Nazca Lines, Machu Picchu)

Number of times we saw fellow guests from the Secret Garden in Cotopaxi outside Cotopaxi: 2 (we saw two fellow travelers in Montañita and two on San Cristóbal Island in the Galápagos...how wild is that?!) 

Number of times we ate chicken and rice: Easily 537

Number of nights (streak) in the same hotel, excluding the Galápagos and Amazon: 5 (we stayed at the Wyndham Lima Airport and at Casa Barco in Mancora, both for 5 nights)

Number of hostels we stayed in: 1

Number of hotels we stayed in: 13, excluding the Galápagos and Amazon

Number of mosquito bites collected: 1,372,984 (ok, maybe I'm slightly exaggerating here -- but only slightly!)

*****

And now I just want to go back! [Frantically searches flights to Santiago. Cruises Amazon (the other one) for DEET repellent spray. Gathers passports...]



And Now It's Really Over: The Last Post

Well, everyone, we've been home for nearly two weeks now. And it's kinda wild how quickly our trip is receding in the rearview mirro...