(Most of the bum-shaking is to be found
in the next blog entry at Carnival!)
Think of Brazil and there's probably a
picture in your mind of a beach, with coconut trees, a warm balmy
evening, beautiful people in skimpy clothes, barefoot children
playing football and soft Bossa Nova playing in a beach bar. It has
one of the best marketing images of any country in the world. We are
now 3 weeks in to our time in Brazil and it has surprised us,
delighted us, burnt us and soaked us, bitten us badly and fed us
well. It is a country of extremes, it's enormous, its hot, its
sticky, it can rain like you've never experienced before and the
fruit assortment will blow your mind. It's in many ways exactly what
we expected and in others so much more.
Our first stop was in the town of
Bonito, a very long day's drive across the productive farmland that
makes up a huge part of Brazil and a very quick on the road lunch to
get us there are early as possible the very nice but slightly dull
scenery left us wondering where all the coconuts and bikinis were,
but that's the reality of Brazil, it has a strong economy in the
grand scheme of South America, based on its own vast resources of
minerals and productive land, so a lot of it is just that, neat tidy
farms that stretch on as far as the eye can see. But Bonito awaited
us and its main selling point the crystal clear rivers whose clarity
is due to a specific and rare mix of rock type and minerals and where
you can snorkel and see a whole underwater world of amazing fish. We
headed out to the Rio do Prata and had a wonderful day following fish
around and relaxing to the sounds of the jungle around us as we
floated peacefully down the river.
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Half of team snorkel |
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Not exactly amphibious |
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Crystal clear |
Next up was a short hop up to Fazenda
(ranch) Santa Clara in the Pantanal, the enormous wetlands that take
up a huge chunk of Brazil, the working cattle ranch has opened its
doors to tourists and we made it our home for 2 nights, it was a bit
of a treat for us all as they did all the catering and we got to
experience some wonderful Brazilian cooking with lots of beans, meat
and general tastiness! They also took us out on some great excursions
to experience what this part of Brazil is most famous for –
wildlife! Brazil is hands-down the world leader in brightly coloured,
funny looking absolutely amazing wildlife, from macaws to monkeys to
tarantulas to anteaters to capybaras, from tiny ants carrying giant
leaves to terrifying-looking caiman. It would take a miserable-soul
not to enjoy the wildlife here (except maybe the bitey ones – we're
all sporting some rather impressive bite collections, but hey, they
are part of the great Brazilian circle of life and a small price to
pay!)
I'll let the amazing photography of our
talented photo-donators do the talking here (thanks team!)
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Sunset at the lodge |
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Heading off on a wildlife safari |
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Moomins |
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Beautiful Macaws |
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Howler monkey |
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Beautiful blue macaws |
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Rufescent Tiger Heron |
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Iguana |
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Caiman photography club - Wayne, Iain & Keith |
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Caiman |
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Giant otter |
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Baby anteater in a tree |
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Armadillo |
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Dave |
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Glowing caiman eyes at night |
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Tarantula |
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Heading off to find piranhas |
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There's one! Ali & Paul |
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Louisa and her piranha |
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Gen isn't sure |
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Jess and local guide |
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Steve came off worse in his fight with a fish |
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Horse riding Sarah Mike and Gen |
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In the evening the piranhas were cooked up for dinner |
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Roberta and fish |
It was also party time! Due to our ongoing truck troubles we had spent New Year's Eve a month before in a less than celebratory mood back in Punta Arenas, the crew missed it completely, so we moved New Year to January 26th to allow everyone to celebrate together and moved midnight to 10pm because the crew were very tired! The drinks were strong, it was a good night and a bad morning for many.
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Lumberjack Party. New Year mark II. |
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Heavy traffic getting out of the Pantanal |
The timing of our arrival in Brazil
wasn't wonderful, a prolonged drought decided to break at around
about the time we reached Santa Clara and we saw some quite
spectacular rain which would follow us for a while through the
country, but on the plus side the drought had ended for the local
people, which we all of course focused on selflessly as we wrung out
out clothes! It did also take the edge off the baking Brazilian sun
for us, which is definitely a plus for us cold-country dwellers!
Next up we trundled our way back across
the farm-covered South and broke our long drives up with overnight
stops at a bushcamp where we were entertained by the local frogs who
seemed to be having an 80s-keyboard disco with their frog-chorus (you
need to visit Brazil to fully understand the noises that the frogs
here are capable of!) and a lovely little camp before heading in to
the hills to almost 1500m (a pleasant reminder of what cold feels
like) and dropping down the other side to Picture-Perfect Paraty.
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Bushcamp enroute to Paraty |
Or at least that was the plan. Me
(Emma) and Simon were already having heart palpitations about this
drive, on the previous year's trip only 20km from Paraty we had had
to do a 300km detour due to a bridge wash-out (did I mention the rain
here is powerful?!) we used our best Portuganglish and read all the
signs which said “road works – expect delays” but nothing about
closures or restrictions and just to confirm asked the locals which
direction for “Para-gy?” (t is pronounced as a g here – the
alphabet keeps you on your toes in Brazil) and they smiled and
pointed encouragingly in the direction we were going. Brilliant.
So we headed over the pass and began to
drop down the other side, the lovely paved road made us both relax
and just when we were beginning to think it was all going to be easy
(something you should NEVER do) the road fell apart. Ok so there was
a road, but you know those scenes on Top Gear where they take an
'accidental' wrong turn and end up crawling their way on an
unfeasibly bad road with terrifying drops over the edge – well it
was very much like that, except, in our defence, there was no wrong
turn!
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Interesting road to Paraty |
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We thought the Top Gear Back-Up car had arrived, the driver had a beer in hand as he made his way along the trecherous road |
The further we went, the worse it got
and with nowhere to turn around we had to continue. Then we found the
“bridge of doom” aka a very small bridge with many holes that
shook when we – normal-ish sized humans - walked over it, let alone
a 13 tonne truck.
Much calm and reasoned discussion was
had.
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It went something along these lines... |
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Simon uses his background as a bridge structural engineer to inspect while Emma's wondering what she's done with the 'bridge collapse risk assessment form" |
Meanwhile the group bounced up and down
in the back of the truck with excitement (we definitely have a bunch
of overlanders!) As a precaution, and because they were so excited
and bouncy, we got everyone off the truck and walked them across and
Simon, very slowly, inched his way across the bridge while we all
held our breath.
And.....we didn't fall in the river!
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We didn't smash through it! Yay! |
So with that exciting interlude over we
needed some beach-time stat and pretty little Paraty awaited us with
sand, sea, a gorgeous colonial centre complete with giant cobbles,
little crabs with one giant claw who pop out of the road when you're
not expecting it, brightly coloured boats, wonderful souvenir shops,
fabulous fresh fruit juices and the now weekly Odyssey cocktail night
(Ali makes a mean Mojito) Paraty was good to us.
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Pretty Paraty |
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Lovely cobbled streets are shut off to cars |
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Alternative transport is used instead |
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Crabs fighting on the cobbles after the tide has receded |
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Tasty cake stalls |
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Pretty churches |
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Haviana shopping |
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Monkeys at camp - White-Eared Tits (no really) |
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Paul makes friends with a mango |
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Very cute |
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Boat trip time! |
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The perfect boat |
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Ali & Simon |
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Jess |
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Gen & Emma |
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Beautiful bay |
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Ali makes his amazing mojitos for cocktail night |
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Somewhat rainy - cook tent provided a perfect cocktail bar! |
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Fresh mint, lime, mango, ginger, Brazil is cocktail-paradise! |
Conjure up that image of Brazil in your
head again – is there a giant statue of Jesus on a hill there? A
big round mountain that looks (apparently) like a sugar-loaf?
(whatever that is) Well there should be because Brazil's heart and
its Soul live in Rio de Janeiro, quite possibly the best setting for
a city on Earth, so much of what makes Brazil what it is comes from
here.
There aren't clever words I can write
to do justice Rio de Janeiro, it's buzzing, it's edgy, it's cool,
it's beautiful, it's fun, it's funky, it's noisy, it's generally
awesome. Here are some photos instead.
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Her name is Rio |
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The heart of Rio |
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Wayne in Rio |
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Photo time |
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The Big Man |
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Wayne & Paula enjoy the views |
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The beautiful Lapa Steps |
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Tiles have been donated from all over the world |
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Rio Cathedral |
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Inside the stunning modern Cathedral |
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Roberta goes hanggliding |
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Drinks on Copacabana beach |
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At the Copa, Copacabana |
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You can never have too many bikinis |
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The Rocinha Favela (shanty town) |
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On the Favela Tour |
Whether on the city tour exploring the
tourist highlights, learning about Brazil's diversity and the reality
of life for many Brazilians in the local favelas (shanty towns)
watching the football or hang-gliding over the amazing volcanic
landscape: an excellent and fascinating time was had all round!
But the time had come for us to wave
adeus to Rio and head on up to the part of the trip that Simon
and Emma had nicknamed 'beach-hop.' We would be hopping our way up
the Atlantic coast, chewing up the kms and punctuating them with
sand, sea and suco (fruit juice.) We had a fair whack of kilometres
to cover – our sense of what is 'far' and what is 'close' has
changed somewhat after a few months in South America (but have you
seen it on a map?! It's HUGE!) but our drives up the coast were
actually pretty comfy in the end and we found some really lovely
spots to stay. The further up the coast we got the more interesting
the scenery and the people got, people started waving and shouting at
us in excitement, the Mediterranean look of the people changed to
African (Brazil's one of the most diverse countries in South America,
there are a huge number of Afro-Brazilians, many of whom are
descendants of slaves brought over to work on the plantations.) The
colours of the houses got brighter, the trees got greener, suddenly
people were waving cacao pods and sugar cane at us through the window
of the truck, it all made Southern Brazil seem rather restrained,
(which it really isn't!) In short it was great – there's nothing
more contagious than an enormous smile on the face of a local, who
seems to think you turning up in their town is the best thing that's
happened all day (that or they're all permanently giddy with
excitement – it's possible, there's a lot of sugar, coffee and
chocolate grown here!)
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Crossing Guanabara Bay |
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Coffee growing in the hills |
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All getting a bit tropical - the bananas here have developed their own evolutionary protection of a plastic bag to keep the birds away, it's amazing! |
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Relaxing at our first camp |
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Chris and coconut |
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Bit rainy at our second camp! |
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The only place to be when it's raining |
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Rain's stopped! Time to get busy relaxing again |
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Dinner time at camp |
We stopped in a little town called
Trancoso and it was so lovely a 2 nights were nowhere near enough, in
fact the morning we left a bit of coercion was required to drag
everyone away! It's a very smart very pretty town with a beach that
goes as far as the eye can see, Helen and David did their very best
to walk to the end of it but even they were defeated! It has a
gorgeous central square that is lit up like a fairy land, it's what I
like to call 'parent friendly' ie your Mum and Dad would love it:
it's classy, it has wonderful gourmet food, it's picture perfect and
even the toughest of cookies were won over by it.
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Beautiful Trancoso Beach |
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Chris, Steve, Louisa, Claire, Kaye, Gen and Sarah on the beach |
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Funky blue crabs |
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Cocktail time again - this time for John's birthday |
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Drinks out on the Quadrado |
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The beautiful Quadrado by night |
After Trancoso even more beach awaited
us with a stop near the town of Ilheus where our camp was near enough
on the beach and we all fell asleep listening to the crashing waves
and mostly realising how lucky and privileged we are to be in such a
beautiful place.
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Ilheus |
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Ilheus Cathedral |
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Colourful boats |
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Dave eating cheese on a stick |
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Our beach, next door to camp |
What was all the beach-hopping leading
to? Well, a week of beach time was to be followed by a week of party
time at Salvador Carnival where I am writing this from. But that's
another story for the next blog!
So of course our regular readers will
know that we are having truck woes, our normal truck, poor old
Ithaca, had broken down after Christmas, in such spectacular fashion
that an international operation of repairs has been underway, since
then many hours of work have been done, many sleepless nights have
been had and many stress hormones have been produced in order to get
her up and running and back to us. Meanwhile we are in a replacement
truck which is chugging us around the country, it got us down the
road of doom to Paraty even, but she does lack the level of luxury
and space to which we had become accustomed which has taken its toll
in this hot and sticky environment. Brazil can be tough: the heat,
the mosquitos, the rain, but those things are part of what makes
Brazil so brilliant – its sheer outpouring of life: the bugs,
birds, frogs, fruit, anteaters, armadillos, and more colours than you
ever knew existed in the natural world, and we're nowhere near
finished yet, Brazil holds many delights for us in store.
Spirits are high, on the whole we
realise how lucky we are to be seeing all these amazing things and
that they're worth some discomfort. Travelling through this
compelling and fascinating country, experiencing its colours, tastes,
smells and smiles, we are all here because we love to travel and
that's the stuff we live for.
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