Friday, July 4, 2014

Final thoughts on our Ecuador/Peru trip

I am going to use this to share some final thoughts and things we learned on our trip.  In no particular order..

First some practical info about the ecuador and peru bathroom experience.
  •  Oddly the toilet often had no seat (yes even the women's restroom).  I assume you are supposed to hover but I really didn't understand.  This happened even in some nicer tourist places and airports
  • Always have toilet paper on you!  It was a 50/50 chance that any given bathroom would have toilet paper available.
  • Many places have pay bathrooms (often around 50 cents for entry including a few squares of toilet paper)
  • You should basically never put your tp in the toilet.  Their sewer system seems to not be able to handle that
  • We never drank the water unless it was boiled or treated.  I did brush my teeth with it and never got sick
  • The inca trail bathrooms are grosser than outhouses


The inca trail bathroom experience
Other random thoughts on our travel and practical tips if you are thinking about going to ecuador or peru
  • Always have small change.  People will often refuse your money if you don't have something close to the right amount of money.
  • Cash is king.  Even if places claim to take credit cards online they often don't when it is time to pay
  • Use scotiabank ATMs in Peru.  These atms never charged us a fee while other ones seemed to say we would be charged $5 per transaction
  • Have lots of space to bring back things.  There are so many amazing textiles and other things that are so cheap.  For example we got this beautiful 6 foot hand made wall hanging for around $50 and that was the most expensive thing we got.
  • Ecuador uses the dollar but mints only coins.  They accept all american money but their coins won't work here.  In Peru they use the Sole but most tourist places accept dollars and atms dispense soles and dollars
  • The private tours or small tours are worth it and usually pretty cheap.  For small group 10 hour tours is was often around $40-50 a person.  If you speak better spanish the transportation system might be more managable but otherwise it is hard to get around
  • Nearly everyplace even big cities have a strange mix of private transportation.  They are private bus companies that compete on routes so there is no overall system map or good way to understand what is going on if you don't speak spanish.  There is the metropolitan in Peru but that is seemingly always backed to the point that having enough room to breath might be an issue.
  • Taxis are cheap (like $2-5 for up to an hour trip) and we didn't get ripped off once (although we always had the hotel or tourist place call a cab if possible)
  • South American beer is generally on the level of Bud light and it is hard to get anything better.  It is however generally cheap and drinkable they way that Grain Belt is drinkable.  There seems to be a few brew pubs and microbrews in larger cities but you have to find them and they are not available in grocery stores.
  • There is more culture things then you might imagine.  Lima and Quito have lots of spanish places that are around 500 years old plus there are tons of things from older civilizations to see.
  • You can get around not knowing spanish but studying basic spanish even for a month was quite helpful since sometimes you run into a smaller place where nobody speaks english
  • They love KFC.  Other american chains were available but KFC was everywhere.  Street food was generally less than half the cost and much better.
  • Despite having so much fresh food they eat mostly meat and potatoes.  Veggies seem to be a garnish, although you could find places where this was not true.
  • Coffee was generally very bad.  Nescafe is all over the place or the Cusco version which is only slightly better.  There are some newer coffee shops that actually serve some of the good coffee they grow there.  Starbucks is only a few places in Peru and it was generally worse than the US
  • Don't bring too many clothes.  Laundry is $1/kg to wash dry iron and fold with service in about 8 hours or less.  Don't give them any clothes you can't part with.  We lost a few socks and gained somebody's speedo.  There seemed to be no self service laundry places.
  • $30-40/night generally gets you a decent place to stay with breakfast.  It won't be the Hyatt but it will mostly be clean, nicely located and comfortable if you do your research.
  • Internet speeds vary widely.  Generally every place we staying in Ecuador had ok internet, but Peru even in big cities the internet could be really slow.  Not sure if that is just where we stayed or a trend.
  • If you have TMobile you get free texting and 3G or slower data.  Calls are 20 cents/minute but they don't seem to have charged us for our short calls.
  • In Peru if you are using dollars to pay make sure they are new without any rips.  Even strange folds can get them rejected by vendors.
  • Flights are cheap especially in Ecuador ($60 round trip for a 1 hour flight).  
  • Buses are cheap especially in Ecuador.  Buses in Peru are better though but cost more for the best companies)
  • They let you bring most things on the flight for domestic flights, but international flights security is possibly even tighter than in the US.
That is all I can think of for now.  If you are thinking about doing your own trip feel free to contact me and ask questions.  Overall we loved our trip!  It was relatively cheap (about 10k for absolutely everything for 2 people 32 days with the inca trail and rainforest being about 3k total).  We saw such a variety of things we didn't get homesick even after a month.  There are lots of culture and outdoor things to do in both countries.

I will go back and update other days as I get a chance.  I am also already thinking about our next trip.  In Jan I will be going to Mexico, or San Diego or Africa or some combo of those things.  We are hoping to do another big trip next summer probably in July this time so St. Kate's is happier.  Current options are the Balkans, SE Asia or Spain/northern africa.  We are looking for someplace relatively inexpensive that we haven't been too that we should do before having kids.  If anybody has ideas let me know. Thanks for reading!

Day 32 Lima to Home

First I am going to go back and update all the days we missed.  We had absolutely terrible internet the last 2 weeks.  Mostly I am updating this so I have a record of what we did, but hopefully somebody else will find it helpful or interesting.

Going back to our trip home...

We got to the Lima airport slightly after 11 pm.  After getting yelled at by the Lan people (very unhelpful airline) and getting my bag completely taken apart at security we were into the terminal where I shopped and Zach sat around until our 1:55 am departure.

The flight was uneventful but not great.  I got stuck in the middle of the middle, but luckily all I wanted to do was sleep.  Breakfast was horrible.  Eggs was the only option and we got served last so we had about 10 min to chow down before we landed.

Zach's covert picture of me getting searched in Lima
Dinky with the nasty expensive nescafe latte and brownie while waiting in Lima

AA breakfast...no option but eggs and no there is nothing else to eat (not even to pay for)

We landed in Dallas around 9 am (somewhat early).  Of course we had to go through customs  there and that was fun.  They have these new machines that scan you passport, takes your picture and sends you on the way unless there were problems.  Zach made it through ok, but I got a big x on my ticket because it only printed one of my last names and then I didn't match their records.  That meant you had to go stand in line with the other rejected people and go through normal entrance procedures.  They claim it is random but I was the only white person in line...  We got separated when this happened and Zach tried to text me where he was going.  He got yelled at and pushed on his way (no you can't go tell you wife where you are going!).  Despite the fun we eventually made it though...they didn't even search our bags which made Zach sad because he could have brought in the coca leaves he wanted.
Dallas starbucks = way better than Peru starbucks

The Dallas airport seemed ok except for the lack of faster healthy food.  I got starbucks for breakfast and we sat in their lounge charging things.  Then we meandered to our gate stopping at Uno pizza for lunch.  That was a truly terrible cheese pizza, but like I said there were not many options.  Final stop was for some underwhelming chocolate frozen yogurt and then we boarded to MSP.  Our flight was delayed supposedly because they had trouble finding a path around the Iowa storms.  Despite the reroute we still hit some pretty bad turbulence.  I can now also confirm that AA doesn't seem to offer any free snacks on US flights.  We got juice and no option for peanuts (even to buy snacks). We landed about 30 min late at MSP and Ethan came to get us.
Welcome home to flooding Minnesota!

Dinky says goodbye until our next travels

That should have been the end of our travel fun, but unfortunately the check engine light started flashing on 494 and we had to stop in the menards parking lot.  We tried putting new gas in and slowly made our way up local streets home.  The car was shaking terribly and threatening to stall the entire time.  We took it in the next day and thankfully it just needed new spark plugs.  Not so expensive and it runs really well now.  I guess the moral of that story is don't let your car sit for 33 days in the sun and flooding rains

Gas light came on on the way home from the airport :-(

 We did finally make it home and after some unpacking and surveying the damage to the garden we ordered pizza luce and called it a night.  I am already thinking about our next adventure so if anyone has suggestions send them my way.
Our collection of stuff from our trip (yes we made the weight limit on the way home)