How quickly the terrain changes with a bit of elevation difference. Within days of walking, gone the lush jungles, arrive the clearcut pastures with picturesque Jersey cows grazing on broad verdant slopes. It looks like Wisconsin. Days more of walking and the scenery changes to tall picture-perfect volcanic cones dripping with waterfalls, cascades, and cataracts. Active, too, emiting gases and glowing at night. These have largely remained hidden in the puffy white clouds, yet from time to time, the bitten-off peaks appear. The swirling clouds that shroud can be playful boas encircling the throats and shoulders of the mountains as I walk by. I spent a day walking through rather fresh cinder, in areas plowed through as deep as a house. Dusty grey powder and nothing but a fashion faux-pas to wear black pants as I do, freshly laundered, too.
The short daily distances I've got mapped out to reach the Santuario de Lajas exactly on the day before Easter have gotten to me - what do I do with the rest of the day? Because it's not my comfortable pace, I gave myself a day off in the cute mountain village of Penipe where Franciscan nuns runs a shelter for evacuees from the local volcano, Tungurahua. Despite the nightly glow, there are no evacuees at the moment, so I had the place to myself and three nuns attended me with diligence. One of the nuns, a sweet babbler named Salvadora, insisted that I stay a week, and I compromised by staying two nights. From a local indigenous group, she holds many secrets of the herbal world in her head and produced a tasty and effective infusion of several herbs to cure all complaints of the stomach: chamomile, lemon verbena, lemon balm, dandilion leaves, and corn silk, snipped fresh from the ear. With the day of rest, I can now resume my comfortable pace of a marathon a day.
Funny thing, a good number of people have been offering me chocolate Easter eggs for the road =)
The short daily distances I've got mapped out to reach the Santuario de Lajas exactly on the day before Easter have gotten to me - what do I do with the rest of the day? Because it's not my comfortable pace, I gave myself a day off in the cute mountain village of Penipe where Franciscan nuns runs a shelter for evacuees from the local volcano, Tungurahua. Despite the nightly glow, there are no evacuees at the moment, so I had the place to myself and three nuns attended me with diligence. One of the nuns, a sweet babbler named Salvadora, insisted that I stay a week, and I compromised by staying two nights. From a local indigenous group, she holds many secrets of the herbal world in her head and produced a tasty and effective infusion of several herbs to cure all complaints of the stomach: chamomile, lemon verbena, lemon balm, dandilion leaves, and corn silk, snipped fresh from the ear. With the day of rest, I can now resume my comfortable pace of a marathon a day.
Funny thing, a good number of people have been offering me chocolate Easter eggs for the road =)