27 January 2014

COLOMBIA


25 Dec 2013-16 Jan 2014
Sign: "Soaring Eagles" flying site on the mesa above Bucaramanga

Click on a photo to enlarge it. ESC to return to blog.

 Last year about this time Mike Brand and Christel Cherry took a flying trip to Roldanillo, Colombia, a small town in the Cauca Valley about two hours by bus north of Cali. They came back with enthusiastic endorsements for the flying, the people and the ease of transportation (both in getting to launch and being retrieved from XC flights). A dozen Seattle-area pilots were impressed enough to seriously consider joining them this year. C.J. and I were among them, but since we were retired, we could stay longer and maybe visit some other locations in Colombia. C.J. had once won a discount coupon for one of Richi Mantilla's tours in his home country of Colombia so she contacted him at his flying site hostel near Bucaramanga and arranged a stay of several days even if we had to bunk in the dorm. Finally, we couldn’t leave Colombia without a visit to its capital, Bogotá, but we would have to arrange that on the fly once we got to Bucaramanga since we were using only public transportation.

G with all our luggage
25 Dec, Wed – We left at 1215 (for a 1545 flt, expecting bottlenecks at the parking lot) on a sunny but cold Christmas day. [It had been hard to pack for a destination within seven degrees of the equator when it was so cold at home.] It was a good thing we had reservations at Skyway Inn for parking because it looked already full to bursting (as were most, if not all, of the other lots according to signs at their entrances). [I had booked a parking reservation pretty late when Sandstone and Extra Car were already full for 25-26 Dec.] After a 20 min. wait the shuttle van took us to Seatac and dropped us off. I carried the two paraglider bags rather than pay the outrageous cart rental; but it felt less outrageous as I struggled with the heavy, awkward bags. Next time we’ll use a cart or carry the bags on our backs. There was almost no wait at the check-in counter and I had already paid the $70 for a second bag for me (talk about outrageous! International flights have up to now always allowed two bags each; maybe it’s just United.) We received new UAL frequent flyer numbers as our old ones were no longer valid. Once again we were pre-checked by TSA so we didn’t have to remove our shoes, belts, jackets, computers (we didn’t have a computer with us this time anyway) or toiletry liquids. At our gate we ate some of the crackers and cheese, oranges and cookies C.J. had brought along. Since we were flying on a narrow-bodied plane, we had to check our carry-ons (C.J.’s rollaboard and my small duffel) but we kept our backpacks. We flew right by Mt Rainier (on the wrong side of the plane, unfortunately) and then between Adams and St. Helens (should have looked sooner for Riffe Lake and Dog Mtn). Once we got to LAX (where we had a four-hour layover) we had to wait for our bags in the jetway and then it was a fairly long walk from Terminal 8 to Terminal 6. Eating places were not abundant and the ones we saw didn’t look particularly interesting but we knew we needed to eat in LAX because there were no meals served on the United/COPA flight to Panama City. We finally chose a sausage place only to find that the sausage sandwiches were extremely bland…and at typical airport prices. While on the SEA-LAX flight I began to think I might have left my money belt on my desk; when I checked my carry-ons carefully, sure enough, it wasn’t there. So I was missing about $120 cash and the USAA debit card I was going to use for withdrawing cash from ATMs and the extra credit card (REI Visa). Fortunately C.J. had her USAA card. The flight to Panama City departed at 2239.





26 Dec, Thu – It was a five-and-a-half hour flight to Panama City and we slept most of the way. After the sun rose we had some views of mountains off the right side of the plane in Costa Rica or Panama. Then we flew out over a bay on the Pacific side of Panama which was full of cargo ships. The weather was warm and sunny with cu’s. We had an hour or so at the Panama City airport and then we boarded for our 1.5 hr flight to Cali, Colombia. Cali’s airport is small and open to the atmosphere, which was hot and
Sign at entrance to Roldanillo
humid. I used a cajero, cash machine, to get 400,000 Colombian pesos (about 200USD). We found out right away that not everyone speaks English in Colombia. Getting a taxi was our first challenge. I went to the right office but could not understand the questions until a young airport official helped us arrange for a taxi to the bus terminal. The office gave me a printed ticket that indicated that the price for the 30-min trip was $45.000 (Colombia uses the dollar sign for their pesos, and a period where we use a comma). The bus terminal was quite a zoo and I left C.J. with the baggage while I wandered around trying to find Transportadora de Occidente among the many bus companies. I finally stumbled upon it and went back to get our stuff. Fortunately there was an elevator because we were feeling like pack burros carrying our wings, rolling duffel and our carry-ons in the heat. Bus fare was $38.200 for the two of us and it was worth it when we settled into the small bus and the A/C kicked on. [I think we could have gotten a taxi directly from the airport for $120.000, but that sounded like a lot of money.] It was more than two hours to Roldanillo and I slept on and off along the way but I remember getting off the highway and going through some small towns and noticing a number of horse-drawn carts still being used. Then we made a swing through the larger town of Zarzal, crossed the Rio Cauca and entered Roldanillo. We got off at the main square in front of the church and I used the map and GPS on my phone to figure out which way to go to get to Cloudbase Colombia where we were staying. It was only a couple of blocks but C.J. was having a difficult time with the rolling duffle on the cobblestones and curbs, Finally, the owner of La Posada hotel graciously volunteered to pull the unwieldy load past the Museo Rayo to Cloudbase. After checking in to our tiny room (with our own bathroom) in the historic, thick-walled building, after a bit of rest we went out for a walk with Mike and Christel to see where some of the fields were that we might land in if we reached the town. [Along the way we came upon a group of men hand-digging a well. They were more than twenty feet deep already and using a hand-cranked windlass to raise and lower the guys who was digging. It was pretty amazing to see see such a primitive operation being carried out in today's usually mechanized world.] Later, Jonathan, the proprietor of Cloudbase, gave the Seattle group a little briefing. Then we went with Beth and Ernie and Gordon out to Waikiki, a recommended restaurant, and puzzled out the unfamiliar menu for dinner. The narrow streets were busy with traffic and there were lots of locals on the sidewalks, too, but it felt like the small town it was and not like a potentially dangerous city. We stopped at a heladeria for ice cream on the way back to CBC. We dropped into bed by 2100 but it was still pretty hot and we did not have a fan in our room, so sleep came slowly.

Some of the Seattle-area pilots at Los Tanques
27 Dec, Fri – Up at 0700 in time for the breakfast buffet (an extra $8.000 ea) with lots of tropical fruit, breads, juice and eggs. [Most of the Seattle crew took advantage of the CBC breakfast prepared by Christian, the resident Swiss cook. Mike and Christel and a few others preferred to go to a less-expensive local bakery.] A little later we crowded into the back of an overloaded jeep for the 40 min drive to Los Tanques launch ($7.000 ea) winding up the side of the mountains to the northwest of Roldanillo then continuing on a dirt road to the base of launch. We unloaded there and paid the farmer/landowner $2.000 ea and then climbed the 169 steep steps to the grassy launch. I probably could have made it with my wing although my chest pressure seemed much worse while in the Valle de Cauca; however, Owen came down and carried my pack to the top when I was only part way up. C.J. gave her pack to a local man to carry for a couple thousand pesos. We had a briefing from Jonathan about bailout fields below in Santa Rita, about possibly going north to or past La Union (or crossing the valley there to La Victoria then going south to Zarzal and then back west to Roldanillo), about the likelihood of afternoon winds blowing strongly from the west, and to land east of Roldanillo at the “trike field” if that happened. In the morning the cloudbase is usually quite low but it raises during the day; when the sky turns blue over the mountains to the west, watch out for the west winds. C.J. had various corrections to make to her gear so we were the last to launch and there were light down cycles. [Fortunately, the jeep driver waited for us to launch so we knew we could get a ride back to town if we were unable to take off.] After launching I lost track of everyone and flew out to get beyond the two sets of power lines. There was strong lift and sink – or at least it felt that way to me because I had not flown since October and my “bump tolerance” was down around zero (actual values were 840 fpm up and 960 fpm down). I managed to stay in the air and twice climb to 6400’ (from the 5600’ launch) and get as far north as the ridge separating La Union and Higueroncito, a small town to the south. Then I headed back toward the south and Roldanillo with no destination in mind, but I thought I might land at Sta. Rita since I had gotten as low as 4600’. However, I caught a thermal above the LZ I had picked out just S of SR and Frisbeed south over the ridge. At that point I decided to at least try to make the trike field along the Rol-Zarzal road. That meant heading out into the flats which were mostly covered with tall sugar cane – not a good place to have to land. “Fly the clouds”, Jonathan had said so I headed for a dark field (probably a harvested and burned cane field) and found lift under a cu forming above it. Getting back up, I flew south to the ridge just to the east of town. There was not enough lift there to get me to one of the LZs we had scoped out on the previous day (and anyway they had looked somewhat sketchy) so I flew out over the city stadium but it had a wall around it and looked pretty small (but I may have been looking at another school field and not the big stadium where Beth landed). I flew back to the north a ways to a field with some trees north of the Zarzal road. After a decent landing to the north, I had to roll under an electric fence to reach a shady spot to pack my wing. Then I still had to do a low crawl under a barbed wire fence to reach a road that led me south into town. It was somewhat more than a mile and the temperature and humidity were both high so it was a long walk. [If I had landed farther out I could have taken the bus, oh well.] I took several rests in the shade along the way and by the time I got back almost everyone was back except Owen (that’s Beth and Ernie, Christel and Mike, Gordon and several Euros who are also staying at Cloudbase Colombia). Later in the afternoon Paulo Escobar, Brian Franklin, and Jeff Slotta arrived; we’ve still to see Ray Kehl and Matt Amend. C.J. and I shared a beer (it goes on the tab for CBC) and ate some of the cheese and crackers we had brought from home for eating on the plane. Later we went out to a pharmacia located on the main plaza to get some metformin which I may have left with my money belt. It was quite a production to get it with our lack of Spanish but at least I didn’t need a prescription. The pharmacist did not have any and had to call another store and have it delivered. Then, when I paid with a credit card, the pharmacist kept asking me something about the card. I tried giving him my PIN but that was too long. Finally he put a single digit in and the operation was completed. [Later we found out that what we were asked for was how many payments we wanted to make; we could have chosen a number up to 12.] Later we were still hungry so we went out to the nearby “Kevin Panaderia” for a couple pastries and a container of drinkable yogurt “oat smoothie”. At 1900 we had a barbecue dinner prepared by Christian at the hostel; it was excellent, great meat and delicious yucca fries among other items. Claudia, Jonathan’s partner, had made a birthday cake for Jonathan complete with candles like miniature Roman candles. To bed around 2200.


Here’s a link to the Hombres Pajaro website with a description of flying in the Roldanillo area: http://hombrespajaro.blogspot.com.au/p/flying-area.html. You should be able to link from there to a google earth download of the waypoints showing where we launched (despegues) and landed (pistas).

28 Dec, Sat – Breakfast buffet; the bus at 0800 was a chiva painted in a style somewhat like jitneys in the Philippines… and equipped with a siren. The view from the bench seats through the open sides was much better than the closed jeep. This time I made it all the way to the top of the stairs and slope at Los Tanques and Owen helped C.J. with her pack. Cloudbase was still low but rising. After a few pilots launched and soared, I got antsy and took off to the left. I didn’t feel comfortable in (what I perceived as) turbulence so when I heard Jonathan say something about “the right” I crossed the canyon to the southern ridge. The finger ridges seemed to collect thermals and I climbed to over 6000 into the wispies. Then I attempted the big transition to the next ridge to the south, but I came in lower than the ridge and had to fly back out into the valley to get over the second set of power lines That put me on the low ridge above Roldanillo, the one with three crosses. I chose not to fly south to the soccer field we had scoped out but which I could not see. Instead, I headed out to the north end of town and made a quick choice of an overgrown field. It turned out that I was inside a compound completely surrounded by a tall fence. Fortunately, a man came out from the vineyard to the west and indicated that I would have to go out that way to reach a gate. Again it was a long walk back to CBC
Drying beans in a small park
 but I stopped along the way to talk to a Colombian who had lived in Chicago for many years. Then I continued past a couple of big soccer fields (a much better choice for landing than my field) and a man drying tree beans on the pavement of a small park. I got back to CBC after C.J. who had landed in a field east of the stadium (estadio). We went out to get a blended juice (jugo naturale) – mango, banana, and pineapple at the Juice Palace on the main plaza. We ate the rest of our cheese with a roll from Kevin Panaderia back at the hostel. After a shower and some rest and writing in our journals, we took a walk to where C.J. landed then across town to the soccer field I had spotted. On the way back to CBC we looked for eating places without much success. Back home Christel gave us a business card for Toscanas so we went there with Matt Amend. It was a pretty good Italian place with decent pizza and a “gratinado” plate of melted cheese over meats (and piña (pineapple) in mine) and tonieta (bacon).

C.J. with other international pilots
29 Dec, Sun – Same 0800 chiva to Los Tanques but the launch is getting busier as more pilots arrive each day for the Pre-Worlds which starts on 6 Jan. C.J. was busy getting her picture taken with some of the international women (Daria, Marina from RUS, Lulu from Rio, and Paula were some names I remember). Several pilots had aborted launches today and had to restart. I launched okay at 1040 and went N. My bump tolerance was still very low and I climbed to 6100 only once. I was keeping an eye on Ernie who was ahead of me until he landed below the ridge of towers between La Union and Higueroncito. I kept working the clouds but got lower and crossed to the ridge S of Higueroncito. where I found a gaggle of soaring birds. That only got me up high enough to cross Morelia and land hard in an empty field. Three young boys joined me and helped pack up my wing and carry it to the fence which we had to climb over. Just as I got out to the road a bus came along and I got a ride back to Rolda. C.J. was already back from having flown to the ridge above and east of town, then landed east of the ridge in a schoolyard. She got multiple rides back to CBC. After cleaning up, C.J. found that Nick had sent her the Alpha to edit. Before she got started working on that, however, we went out to Flako’s for lunch – good limonada and moro en leche drinks and a mini pizza – with Matt, Ray, Owen and Brian. On the way back I stopped at a cajero at the Davivienda Bank and withdrew $320.000 (that’s 320,000 COP, or about 166 USD). C.J.’s radio is transmitting very weakly; a google search turned up the possibility of a blown final so I ordered a new VX-270R from HRO for $145USD less $20 rebate from Yaesu. I checked USAA and BofA online and everything seems to be as it should. Later we had another delicious barbeque dinner with pork loin, chicken and beef skewers, French-fried yucca (delicious) and salad and stuffed tomatoes. [Several pilots incl. Paulo and Gordon made it to Tulua today, way to the south.]

30 Dec, Mon – Los Tanques again, but this time I launched around 1030, got up in milder, i.e., less scary, thermals then crossed to the south, got up on that ridge, crossed to the next ridge and then made the long transition to the next ridge, a continuation of the three-crosses ridge west of Roldanillo. I came in low on the ridge and had scratch my way up. Eventually I got over 6000’ and pushed S of town. I had to stop and scratch again over the second power lines and work back up to where I was high enough to look to the south. I could see the scarred hillside with the gravel mines that someone had noted as a no-land zone. So I turned east and aimed for a ridgetop bordering on the Cauca plain with all its sugar cane fields and the river. Fortunately there was a little lift on the way because there wasn’t much in the way of friendly places to land. Back at 6000’ I continued to follow the curve of the ridge around the town, now heading NE, then N. Low over the ridge with the hacienda (east of town) I headed west toward some big fields where C.J. had landed on the second day figuring I’d have to land among the cows. On the way I bumbled into a thermal and milked it to climb again above the hacienda-topped ridge. Spotting a Cu to the NE I crossed the Rol-Zarzal road and got under it only to find no lift. By then I was within an easy glide of the trike LZ and landed east into a light wind. While packing up I noticed a sharp pain in my lower back which did not immediately go away. [Cause? Landing was gentle but I had felt some strain while flying. However, I had landed hard the previous day.] I stepped over the barbed wire fence and waited for a bus but an older man on a motorbike came along and loaded me on. The ride was not comfortable and may have exacerbated the back pain but it got me back to the main plaza for $2.000 (more than the bus would have cost). C.J. got to CBC just after me; she had crossed the river and then come back to land on the west side. We went out and bought a sweet roll at the bakery and ham, cheese, and mayo at a supermarket. We came back to eat, then C.J. worked on editing the Briefings. I went to El Palacio de Jugos and had a malteada café, an awesome coffee shake recommended by Ernie. Chris and Erin Ratay from Boulder arrived at the hostel on their motorcycle traveling from Lima to Quito to Roldanillo then on to the north. They had suggestions for our Africa trip. Later we went out intending to eat at the fish restaurant and cevicheria but it was closed. Mike and Christel did not want to eat at the steak place next to it so we ended up at Buffalo Bill’s across from the Waikiki. I ordered mazorca ranchera which was a corn pudding with slices of sausage on top. C.J. had crepes with pollo y championes. Back to a hot room by 2020 (we were probably eating much earlier than the locals do), Jonathan surprised us with an oscillating floor fan like the other rooms have. That really helped cool the room a bit.

La Union neighborhood
31 Dec, Tue, New Year’s Eve – I felt like my back needed a day off so at 0930 C.J. and I caught the local bus to La Union and got off not too far from the main plaza. I marked where we had stopped so we could find it again for our trip home. [It turned out that that would not have been the right place to get a bus back to Roldanillo anyway. Good thing we later ran into Mike and Christel.] We noted that kiddie rides and booths were being set up at the plaza for the celebration. Then we went over to the church which had excellent stained glass with more familiar stories (unlike the new church in Rolda which had indecipherable designs). Then we went west on a street decorated overhead with triangular flags; at the end, blocking the whole street, was a huge nativity scene with live ducklings in a pond, a rooster and two guinea pigs as well as the usual figures. We went north in a quieter but more hilly neighborhood noting the number of paragliders in the air that showed a good flying day. Back at the main square we walked the other direction for a couple of blocks then back to the main plaza again. Just as we started looking for a bus back to Rolda, Mike and Christel hailed us. They had landed north (?) of town and met a nice family that gave them a ride back to the plaza. We hung out for a while then decided to go for lunch. One place, right on the plaza, didn’t have outside dining and it was hot inside so we ended up at Picolinos for a sandwich on the streetside patio. Gordon joined us, too. Mike remembered where to catch the bus home, a small bus terminal just off the main street east of Picolinos. Back in Rolda, after resting for a while, around 1700 we went out to the main plaza where we heard there was going to be a parade.
New Year's Eve festivities
That wasn’t exactly what it was, but there were dancing woodpeckers, zombies, vehicles crammed full of celebrators, often with an effigy to be burned later, and, mostly, there were lots of people running around with large aerosol cans of spray foam like shaving cream. Jeff had gotten hold of a can and was liberally dousing anyone he could get near – Ray and Paulo especially. Escaping from the mayhem we headed back to CBC. Owen, a former EMT (?) and Rolfer offered to check my lower spine thinking that I might have a herniated disc. Fortunately he didn’t find anything and ibuprofen/aleve medicating seemed to reduce the discomfort so it was probably just a soft tissue injury. Owen recommended icing 10 minutes on and ten minutes off, repeat three times. Then do the same a few hours later. I did that before the delicious BBQ dinner while a three-piece band – accordion, hand drum and roughened metal cylinder played with a wire brush – serenaded the group in the main courtyard. Dinner was around 2000 and there was quite a crowd present; who they were, I have no idea, local pilots and friends maybe? Jonathan set off some really loud explosions out in the street and there were lots of other fireworks. Most of the crowd had thinned out by 2230 and around 2330 we went out to the main plaza to see what was going on – nothing much, as it turned out. But we could see some professional-quality fireworks looking straight east down Carrera 8. Even the church was closed up. Back at the hostel we headed off to bed in the quiet interrupted only by a few minutes of intense fireworks at midnight.

1 Jan 2014, Wed – We all went up to the much smaller and flatter El Pico launch, closer to Roldanillo and launchable from south and north. There is still a short walk uphill from the unload point but there is no farmer to pay and no steep steps. Two wings could be set up side by side, and occasionally someone would launch on the opposite side of the narrow ridge. C.J. and I (and a number of others) did forward launches in the light-wind conditions. My takeoff had me heading for the barbed wire fence on the east side of launch but I cleared it without a problem. I didn’t find a lot of lift at the house just below or at the power line tower just a ways farther down the ridge, but just beyond that I got a good one and climbed high enough to cross to the north to the next ridge – the one that ultimately connects with the three-crosses ridge. At that point I had decided to stay back in the mountains rather than try for lift out in the Cauca valley. Continuing on across the
Chris Ratay, G at trike field
gap to the next ridge and then on to the north, I found lift on almost every finger and never got below 5000’ until I was past Los Tanques and approaching La Union. I was over the peak just south of La Union when I decided not to try to go any farther north but to try the route to La Victoria, a town east of the Rio Cauca. Heading out along a series of towered bumps on a ridge that arcs around the SE side of La Union I got down below 5000’. But then I found strong lift and cloudsuck to over 7000’ I had to fly east through a cloud gap to get clear. After tagging the last bump (wpt030) before the resort at the end of the ridge, I headed south toward a cloud out in the flats. Again I got over 7000 and that made it possible to reach the trike field, a good LZ along the Rol-Zarzal Rd, on a glide. [It was about 17 km to turnpoint 030 at La Union and then 12 km back to the trike strip. I flew for about 1:34] C.J. was there already as was Chris Ratay and another pilot. A nice gentle landing made me realize that my back was no longer hurting. The local resident of the trike field offered each of us a nice big mango which we gratefully accepted. Chris got a ride on the back of scooter towing a wagon and C.J. and I got a bus to just behind the church in town. Later we went out and bought a couple of rolls and made sandwiches for lunch, then went out for juice and malteada café but
Christel and C.J. at the Palacios des Jugos
the Palacio des Jugos was closed for the holiday. We found out that Brian and Matt were planning to go to Bucaramanga on Sun 5 Jan, the same day we’re going, so we all got together with Jonathan and Claudia and reserved seats on a bus from Cali that will pick us up in Armenia at 2200. So instead of having to go all the way back to Cali, we can head in the right direction to Armenia. The tickets cost $102.000 each so I went to the cash machine and took out another $400.000 so I could pay Claudia who will pick up the vouchers at the local bus station the next day. I would need to make another cash machine withdrawal to pay for our room and meals at Cloudbase Colombia. [I think it was $70.000 per day, plus breakfast $8.000 per person, plus dinners $20.000-$25.000 per person or just over a million COP!] Disappointingly the juice place had been closed all afternoon; we really missed getting our juice/malteada fix. For dinner we went to El Sazan (something) the fish restaurant. I had a shrimp ceviche and C.J. had the baked tilapia (the whole fish) with salsa. It was served with flattened plantain (noted on the translated menu as “downtrodden green bananas”) rice and salad. And we each had a limacoco, a blended drink with lime and coconut milk (we guessed). Our party consisted of Beth, Ernie, Matt and Brian while other Seattle pilots were next door at the meat part of the restaurant. Back to CBC by about 2030.

2 Jan, Thu – Returned to El Pico which was in the clouds at 0930, broke around 1000 but I didn’t launch until 1148. We met Claudia Meija, another writer for the USHPA magazine on launch. She and her husband
Staff writers on vacation
were setting up their Wills Wing T2C hang gliders. While C.J. was on launch a dustless dust devil tried to snatch her glider and I was right there and dived on it. People helped straighten it out and she launched. Unfortunately she had a cravat on the left side and was unable to shake it out. She had to sidehill land way below launch but not too far below the road between town and takeoff. She had to climb a steep hill and wriggle under some barbed wire but got a ride down with our bus as it was returning to Rolda. Meanwhile I forward launched and flew out to a point over the house where I climbed a bit and then flew straight out toward town (not following the ridge which forms a curve concave side to the north) under a cloud and climbed high enough to fly the north spine to a high point on the ridge, just below the power lines. There was more lift today so I headed NE to try Jonathan’s suggestion to work the main valley. I found lift above the Santa Rita south ridge and “Beth’s Bump”. Then I pushed E under one cloud or above some dark fields. I had my eye on the river and the trike field but it was slow going to the east. Eventually I crossed the Rio Cauca and got about halfway to Zarzal (12 km from launch) along the Rol-Zar road. At that point I realized that I didn’t know what I would do if I kept going east, so I turned around and returned to the bridge and a weak climb. Chris Ratay passed me there on a good line heading to Zarzal where he landed in a military compound with no problems. I turned W and squeaked back to the trike field for my third landing there. I thought my flight was very interesting, trying to connect the (cloud) dots to fly XC over the flats (1:08, 6669 max alt). Bus back to town. C.J. was back already, of course, and unhurt. We went out for a malteada café and a guanabana (wa NAH ba na) en leche blended juice. Then we stopped at the Bancolombia ATM and took out $600.000 so we could pay Jonathan. While we were waiting there was a funeral procession to the church. When we got back we found out that Christel had hurt her knee on landing and that some others had had unsatisfactory flights (probably not as unsatisfactory as C.J., though). Speaking of injuries, there were very few in the ten days – I can think of just the one minor twisted knee which kept Christel from flying for the next day or two. That’s a good record and says something about how mellow the flying is in Roldanillo. Later we had another good dinner by Christian, this time pasta with five different sauces: meat, tuna, non-meat and pumpkin cream, plus salad and coleslaw. Earlier I had used Jonathan’s PC to download my tracklogs – saved to C.J.’s 16 GB thumb drive.

3 Jan, Fri – It was crowded on launch as more people showed up, locals and pilots coming for the Pre-
C.J. aerial photo of Roldanillo (N to right)
Worlds. There was also less room because a tienda was being built maybe for selling food, etc to pilots and tandem passengers. Another launch (Agua Panela?) was visible farther up the canyon from where we were – might be hard for an ENA or ENB glider to make it out from there because it wasn’t any higher. I got off at 11:11 and flew straight toward town over the house and tower under a cloud gaining altitude. Turning north I flew to the bump below the power lines on the next ridge but I was losing until I got there and found enough weak lift to cross to the main ridge. Then I had to scratch to get up over the power lines. I burbled past Los Tanques then had to scratch and climb above the upper power lines on to a N-S ridge with a road running along its spine. That was as high as I had been back that far (behind the upper lines) and I used the altitude to go as far as the high point before La Union. Again I turned east at that point and lost a lot of altitude
C.J. at El Pico launch
 heading to the pass that leads to the curving ridge between La Union and Higueroncito. I got some cloudsuck that got me to my max alt of 6500 but the clouds had dried up in the valley where I had hoped to cross to La Victoria. At the highest bump with a tower on it I turned SE and tried working dark fields on the E side of the highway. I got back up but it wasn’t enough and I didn’t find anything on the ridge south of Morelia so I ended up landing in the same field as day 3. This time I had no kids for company but a woman pointed out where the gate was – a bit more of a walk but it eliminated having to climb over a fence. A bus back to town was there immediately. C.J. was not back before me this time but Ernie and Beth, Ray, Jeff and Chris were all back. C.J. returned with Owen after stopping for a juice with Chris and Erin. Later we bought a couple of rolls and a pastry and made ham and cheese sandwiches and had a bottle of Quatro, grapefruit soda (gaseosa). Later, after hanging around for a while and having nothing better to do, we decided to take Mike and Christel up on their invitation to take a taxi to Bolivar, a small town to the south with reputedly good pizza. Then a few more folks decided to join us and soon we had Jonathan arranging to have the chiva take us there full of pilots. I don’t think the small pizza place was ready for such an influx of pizza eaters but slowly the orders were processed, beers were provided (some with a glass with a bit of lime juice in it) and people were fed. We shared a large pizza with Brian and it was pretty good. It was a long evening, then it was made longer when the owner thought that some pizzas had not been paid for. Someone got that straightened out and we got back to CBC around 2210.

Local bus with paraglider graphic
4 Jan, Sat – Breakfast included our usual scrambled eggs but with cheese this time – all we had to do was ask. We went up to el Pico again. I launched at 1044 to the north into a low-lift cycle. I finally got high enough halfway to town to cross to fairly high on the three-crosses ridge. I worked back to 6k and made the long crossing to the next ridge then had to scratch to get up on the middle finger east of the 1st power line. Then I crossed to the ridge out in front of Los Tanques and scratched up again to get above the N-S ridgetop above the higher power lines. I flew to the north end of the ridge until I was looking down again at La Union, then I turned east and flew out along the ridge with towers on each bump hoping to go across to La Victoria. Once again there were no clouds marking the way so I turned south and worked toward the bare fields east of Hwy 23 (Panorama Hwy?). C.J. came in under me, caught a low save and sky-ed out and continued to the towers before turning south herself. I flew away from the mountains out over the dark fields below 5k and got back up enough to continue toward Zarzal. Not high enough to make it to the next cu, I turned back before the bridge and squeaked back to the trike LZ where laundry showed me the wind blowing from the east. With a decent breeze in my face, I pulled off the best landing of the trip. [Neither of us has encountered the west wind/sea breeze that is supposed to occur in the afternoon. Perhaps we haven’t flown late enough.] While packing up I saw C.J. fly over heading toward the bridge. When she turned back she did not have enough altitude to reach the trike LZ and landed on a road in the sugar cane field. I walked up to check on her but did not see a road. She showed up a little later and we caught the bus back to town.
Later we went out to the bus station to check on buses to Armenia. I took out another $400.000 and later paid Jonathan (about 1.2 million pesos!). We grabbed a couple of rolls and a pastry at the bakery and stopped by the juice palace with Christel for fruit drinks. Dinner was another barbecue by Christian. The Seattle group is down to one table – six pilots, plus Beth and Ernie who ate elsewhere. [Tomorrow we are not planning to fly but we don’t know what we are going to do if we don’t go to Armenia early. If we do go early, we’ll have to sit on our gear until the night bus loads up at 2200.]



5 Jan, Sun – While planning our trip to Bucaramanga, we considered going to Armenia to catch the bus early, leaving our luggage there and then taking another bus for the short trip to the interesting artisan/tourist
Armenia Bus Terminal
village of Solanto. Claudia advised us that leaving our luggage at the bus station was probably a bad idea so we gave up on that idea. But this morning as we were sitting around before going out for a last walk around Roldanillo, Claudia, through Christian’s translation, suggested renting a hotel room for the day for as little as $25.000 within a block or so of the Armenia bus station. That seemed like a reasonable idea (even though Christian said he hadn’t been impressed by Solanto…but it was better than just hanging out in Rolda) so we hustled our gear together and by 1030 we were heading for the Roldanillo bus terminal. [Until the previous day we hadn’t even known there was a bus terminal. We had gone there to check on how often the buses ran to Armenia – despite the usual language problems we thought we understood that they ran every hour and cost 5.000.] We managed to get tickets for the 1100 bus (but they were $11.200 ea). It must have been a totally forgettable ride to Armenia because I don’t remember a bit of it, except passing Zarzal and heading south on the Pan American Hwy which was totally the wrong direction. [At the Armenia terminal I attempted to exchange our vouchers for tickets for the bus ride to Buca at the Bolivariano ticket counter with no success. Finally a helpful passerby translated for me and I found out that the tickets were in Brian’s name and he would have to pick them up; this after a call to Claudia. No problem – we’d be back by six for our 2200 bus departure and have plenty of time to get tickets and a meal.] C.J. had spotted our hotel as we approached the large bus terminal so all we had to do was schlep our gear the two blocks to the somewhat dodgy-looking Hotel El Mirador Paisa. However the owners were friendly and made up a room for us that was perfectly adequate; it even had a shower so we could get cleaned up when we came back from Solanto before our night bus trip. We would meet Brian and Matt, who were also going to Buca, at the terminal – we had arranged a radio frequency for contact. We paid for the room ($30.000 because it was an exterior room
Thunderstorm in Solanto

 with a window) and headed back to the terminal where we found a long line for the bus to Solanto. That should have been a clue about the advisability of going to Solanto on the last weekend of the Christmas holiday. The other thing we noted was that everyone was carrying a jacket or other warm clothing even though it was as hot as usual. We were wearing t-shirts and shorts, also as usual. We scrambled onto the third bus that arrived after about 45 minutes. The trip to Solanto, usually about 30 min we thought, took about three hours (!) due to stop-and-go bumper-to-bumper traffic on the winding mountain road to the village which was already chockfull of tourists. To turn the situation into a disaster rather than an adventure, just as we neared the bus stop it started to rain, then pour, with thunder and lightning. By then it was already past our turnback time so we immediately joined the long line of people huddled as much under the eaves as possible waiting for a bus back to Armenia. We were wet and cold and the sun had set by the time (1900) a third bus to Armenia had room for us. This time the stop-and-go traffic wasn’t quite as bad and we were back at the bus terminal by 2030. We found Matt and Brian right away at a restaurant with their radio out. Brian had already taken care of the tickets; Matt helped us carry our gear back from the hotel; no time to shower but we changed out of our wet clothes. C.J. and I grabbed a surprisingly good dinner at the restaurant in the terminal with a Milo frio and lulo en leche to drink. Our night bus was scheduled for 2230 so we moved to the departure gate, got our bags checked into the underdeck storage (with an additional 20.000 charge for having too many bags). When we boarded the large motorcoach we found it was every bit as refrigerated as Russel had warned us. We wasted no time donning our Seattle fleece vests and jackets, reclined our seats and got prepared to sleep our way to Bucaramanga. But first there was a violent movie with a loud soundtrack which we had to endure while we read. After the movie the entertainment system was shut down and we could sleep.

6 Jan, Mon – We mostly slept until we stopped at what was clearly designed as a bus rest area with a cafeteria, various sales areas and an eating area all under what appeared to be a thatched roof. We bought an over-priced yogurt drink but we weren’t really hungry in the middle of the night. Back on the bus we slept until it got light and they turned the music back on. Sometime later on the outskirts of Buca we were stopped at a police checkpoint and all the men had to get out and show their IDs; they even took a look at Matt’s paraglider. [Later we were told that the police run these searches to find men who have gotten their
Cat and Fat Snuffs in window of "Wingover"
girlfriends pregnant and then skipped out. True?] When we arrived at the Bucaramanga bus station, which was much like an airport terminal, I called Richi and asked if he could pick us up but he said that they were busy with flying and training and we should get a taxi to “parapente Las Aguilas”. We needed two taxis for the four of us and we paid 30.000 which was somewhat more than we should have paid for the 20 minute drive. We got out at Las Aguilas which is the launch, tandem operation and food court that is just 100 ft from Richi’s Fly Site Hostel/Colombia Paragliding. We walked down to Richi’s and entered through the solid, brown, metal gate where Richi met us. “Our” room wasn’t ready because Richi had to eject the three or four guys from Alaska who were staying in it and move their bunk beds into a much smaller room. I’m not sure how Richi decided that we should have “Wingover”, the largest room in the hostel, unless it’s C.J.’s influential position (he-he). In the meantime we walked back up to Las Aguilas to check out the large, grass-covered launch, and had a good schwarma for lunch, and later a couple of helados. Back at the hostel we moved into our room. Then Matt, Brian and Lulu (Brazil) decided to get a flight so we rearranged our
G waiting for soaring birds or locals
gear and signed in at Las Aguilas where they made a copy of my IPPI card and USHPA card. C.J. launched first in light, left-cross conditions. Me too but I got pulled left and had to run over someone’s lines. The ridge lift was enough to keep us up even though earlier even some tandems had sunk out. I got to 1280m/4209’ from the 1125m/3725’ takeoff and considered going left across the gap to where I could see other gliders soaring in front of the old Buca launch. But I stayed above Las Aguilas and tried to stay above all the solo and tandem traffic. When C.J. started out to the LZ, I followed and then flew a bit farther north over what looked like swimming pools or a recreation complex. After landing (0:30) I had to rush to pack up because the retrieve van (cost included in our room rate) was already there. When I got back up to the hostel, I had to repack. After a shower (the shower head itself has a heating coil inside and a double-pole switch right on the shower wall – pretty scary but seems to work fine) we caught a ride in the retrieve van to a mall in Buca or maybe Floridablanca and did some grocery shopping in an Exito supermarket. Since we are staying in the hostel up on the hill, there are no restaurants nearby so we bought some chicken and other stuff for dinner as well as ham and cheese for lunches. Back at the hostel I used my Opinel knife to cut up a couple of chicken thighs and the pineapple to do a stir fry. Many of the hostel guests were doing the same thing so it was pretty busy in the kitchen. Later I caught up on my journal.

7 Jan, Tue – Up at 0720. Breakfast was served around 0800. Sarita had made grilled ham and cheese sandwiches on thick wheat bread. Around 1000 or so we went up to launch and watched for soaring birds (and local pilots) Around 1100 a couple of people were getting thermal lift so we got suited up. C.J. and I
Richi's Fly Site Hostel
launched around 1122. I did a reverse into a good cycle and climbed out right away to the right above the corner and power line. There was plenty of lift but then the wind picked up and the clouds began to draw strongly. I pulled big ears and 1/3 speedbar to avoid going into the wispies and probably breaking the air traffic ceiling of 500m above takeoff. (1585m/5200’ 0:36) I flew upwind of the LZ and had to do a few asym spirals to get down – and then I was coming in at the same time as Lulu. The LZ is plenty big enough to two or more wings to land at the same time and she is an experienced pilot so it was no problem. [But I did lose my Opinel knife and chapstick and bottle of sunscreen from my pants pocket. I wasn’t wearing wind pants so there was no elastic cuff to catch things. I was taking some pic in air and probably wiggled around enough to dislodge the pocket contents and then they fell into the high grass when I stood up to land.] We came back to the hostel on the retrieve van, showered and made ham and cheese sandwiches for lunch. We signed up for Richi’s tour to Chicamocha Canyon for tomorrow (100.000 ea). We’ve got to get to an ATM sometime soon as we have only about $65.000 on hand. The weather deteriorated later and we had some rain. Richi put some flying videos on the flat screen TV. Later we cooked up the other two chicken thighs with some pineapple and onion. It tasted much better than it sounds. We went to bed early and were glad to have an extra comforter on the bed.

8 Jan, Wed – Up at 0615 for a granola, fruit and liquid yogurt breakfast. We got going to Chicamocha
Turkeys on launch look down at Chicamocha Cyn Nat Park
Canyon around 0730, stopped for gas and propane (the van runs on both) and bottled water and then headed south on the mostly two-lane highway that continues to San Gil and eventually Bogotá. We descended to a bridge over the Rio Chicamocha at about 300m and then climbed steeply the winding road past the entrance to the national park with its huge tobacco leaf sculpture commemorating a revolt in Santander department. A kilometer or so beyond that we turned onto a dirt road that lead to a large, flat platform launch covered with blue tarps (and old paragliders). Part of the $100.000 we paid Richi was for the launch fee, the rest for guiding and transport. Richi took off with Marie in a tandem first so he could coach some of the new pilots in the switchy winds and rocky surface of the canyon bottom. I took off fourth at around 1030 and found some lift out at the end of the ridge that extended out and down from launch, the usual house thermal,
C.J.'s inflight pic of launch at Chicamocha
but I never got back up above takeoff. I flew along the cactus-studded hillside north almost to the cablecar  and then returned to the LZ area, crossed the river (just so I could say I had) and set up into the east wind perpendicular to the road that ran N-S (the usual wind was supposed to be up canyon from the south). I had a gentle landing on a smooth patch of ground. (0:20) C.J. had a much better flight, higher and longer. Matt and Brian had even better flights – we had to wait for them to come down. It was HOT down at 250m and there was no shade so we were glad when Wilfredo showed up with the van and we could drive back up the hill with the A/C running. We stopped in Pescadero, along the Rio Chicamocha at a water park cum restaurant and had lunch/dinner. My churrasco was extremely tough but C.J.’s whole tilapia was good. Side dishes were yucca al vapor (steamed yucca root?) and some smashed and flattened plantain (I think). We got a pitcher of limonada with
Richi, C.J. landing at Chicamocha
our meals. Figuring out the bill was too difficult so we just divided it x ways and we each paid $25.000. Even though we both changed into swimsuits, the water was too cold for me to do the water slides or swim in the pools, but C.J. got into it. Marie and Aine said they hadn’t gotten some kind of vaccination so they didn’t swim or go in the water either. Back at Buca (or more probably Floridablanca) we stopped at a gas station convenience store that had a cash machine and I withdrew $780.000 COP, ~403USD. When we got to the hostel C.J. and I decided not to fly even though we had gotten back before 1600. We went over to Las Aguilas and had a couple of jugos leche and bought a schwarma to have for dinner later. Roldanillo was a much more convenient place to stay in terms of access to restaurants and ATMs (and I missed the malteada café from the Juice Palace). Richi called COPA for us and tried to change our tickets so that we would not have to go all the way back to Cali from Bogotá just to fly back to Bogotá to get our flight to the States. No luck, but they told him we might be able to do it at a COPA office or at the Bogotá airport –go there as soon as we get to the capital. Richi’s recommendations for a place to stay in Bogotá were
Baked tilapia at the aquatic park
Casa Platypus, a “boutique hostel”, and Sue Candelaria (Sue, pronounced “sway” means visitor in Muisca). I checked them out in our Lonely Planet guide and then looked at their webpages (nice to have wi-fi everywhere we stayed!). When I tried to contact them for a reservation I didn’t have any luck: I got some Japanese page for Platypus, and the security form wouldn’t accept my input at the less-expensive Sue. I sent emails to both hoping to hear back soon so we’d know where we were staying in the city. Brian is going to Bogotá at the same time we are so we can all go to the bus station for a night bus together. We ate the rest of the pineapple and the schwarma for dinner and had a refrigerated Costco truffle for dessert around 1930. C.J. started to nap and fell asleep, woke up only to change to PJs and went right back to sleep.

Centro historico, Giron
9 Jan, Thu – We got up around 0700 and stayed out of the way while those going back to Chicamocha got their breakfast; then we got scrambled eggs, toast and juice. We had decided to take a day off from flying and go to the Mercado Central in Buca, and maybe to Giron, a nearby town with old architecture, cobblestone streets and a big church. We convinced Marie, Aine(“on ya”)’s sister to go with us. Just as we went out the gate a local bus came and it was going to Giron so we decided to go with the flow. The bus route wound around the neighborhoods of Floridablanca for a while before taking the highway to Giron. We got off in a residential area that did not look historic at all. My phone/map app showed where we were so we wandered in what seemed to be the right direction until we reached a main street that had a sign pointing to the centro historico. We crossed a foot bridge into the old town. In the river below were four men, chest-deep in the water, lifting shovelfuls of sand to an anchored raft. There were lots of shops and the big church. We bought a cup/bag of mango peelings which were fun to eat but not quite ripe. When we got to the end of the historical district we had to figure out how to get a bus to the central market in Buca. None of us had much Spanish and it wasn’t clear what the bus sign should say. We found a likely spot that seemed to have buses going in the right direction. Then we tried asking people waiting; most people ignored us, but a woman with her mother spoke English well enough to tell us to go with them as they were going the same place. We followed them onto the bus and then they showed us where to get off. Even better they got off
Marie. C.J. and our local guides at Mercado Central
and said they’d show us the Mercado Central. When we got there, Angélica and her mother took us up to the fourth floor where there were many places serving food. I got some nice safe fried chicken, beet salad, squash, rice and yucca root and soup but Marie and C.J. got the sopa tipica which looked a lot like menudo plus another full plate of food. And a pitcher of fruit drink. People must eat much more than we do in Colombia because portions everywhere have been huge. After lunch (Marie paid; we owe her) we walked through the market looking at fruit (we each had a curuba – what we had been calling fish-eye fruit) veggies, clothing and miscellaneous stuff. Mary bought a hammock like ours from Ecuador. Then we walked down a pedestrian street (probably calle 35) to Plaza Luis Galan with the Palace of Justice on one side and the no longer used Cathedral San Laureano on the other. A little farther on we came to the Parque Garcia Rovira which
An iguana for holiday decorations?
had Navidad decoracions made of lighted recycled plastic water bottles: spiral trees, iguanas, tropical birds, polar bears and igloos. The other church we wanted to see was also closed, Capilla de los Dolores. To the north of the park was the City Hall (Alcaldia de Buca.) which had a detailed and complex Nativity scene on its portico. We went back up to Carrera 14 to find a bus back to the Floridablanca but that turned out to be not the right place so we walked a few more blocks south and through a flower market in Parque Romero (as in the assassinated archbishop?) and across the main street Calle 45 to a bus stop just outside the central cemetery where we caught a bus to the base of our hill at the Esso station and Tiger Market. We stopped there long enough to get some curuba, lulo and maracuya ice cream popsicles
before walking a short ways up the hill.The bus came before we got to the end of the sidewalk and we were soon back at the Fly Site Hostel. After a rest break C.J. and I took our wings up to launch and flew in the afternoon ridge lift (0:30, 1349m) I thought again about going across the canyon to the left where gliders were soaring but I didn’t want to sink out and walk back from wherever I landed. I landed after C.J. and Aine and others in the LZ. Dmitri, a student from AK, got his wing slightly tangled in a tree again. After a shower at the hostel we walked a short distance up the road to the Argentine restaurant which was closed and gated. But someone had called ahead and made reservations so we were admitted and served an excellent meal including crisp rounds of fried plantains with tomatoes and additional appetizers of sliced sausages. C.J. and I shared a large cut of pork which was tender and tasty, wine and beer ($40.000) Matt, Brian, Aine, and Marie with Hugo from France showing up later on his motorcycle.
10 Jan, Fri – Grilled ham and cheese sandwiches with piña and papaya. Since there was hot water on the stove I made hot chocolate from one of the packets I had brought with me. [BTW, since the second day at Buca when we had both had a touch of travelers’ diarrhea we’ve been treating our water with the Steripen UV instrument.] I got an email back from the Cranky Croc hostel in Bogota saying they had a private room with a shared bath so I booked a reservation there. [A couple of days later we found out why Sue Candelaria did not have room – Richi had arranged for his 14-person Latvian tour group to stay there.] Later in the morning we took our wings up to LA where some were already soaring and there were a few bird gaggles visible. I waited for someone else to launch but no one did (that’s a clue!) so I took a good cycle. But it was a fake and I had a very short (0:05) flight to the LZ. Brian and Joe landed shortly after me. C.J. waited and caught a good climb to over 2000m and flew for 40 minutes mostly by herself. After
The dorm at Colombia Paragliding
packing up I left my gear with J & B and walked to the Esso Station/Tiger Market to use the ATM. I took out another 400.000, bought a 1.5l bottle of cold OJ and started back up the hill. I caught the bus at the intersection of the road to the LZ. C.J. wasn’t back but arrived 10-15 min later with Joe and Brian who had had a long wait for the retrieve van. C.J. and I ordered a panzarotti (calzone) for lunch and a box of “Thai” food for dinner then went back to the hostel to stash our wings. When we got back to the food court ready for lunch somehow the Lunch Box guy had misplaced our order so we had a longish wait. We drank the OJ and then bought two jugos 
Amazingly fast construction of new showers at Richi's
naturales en leche from Susi Frutti, mora and maracuya. After lunch, back at the hostel my stomach was a bit unsettled so I rested for a while [Conditions are strong at midday anyway so most solos don’t fly until 1500-1600.] Later we went over to launch and conditions were gusty. C.J. didn’t feel like flying but I took off around 1720 and got up right away. I made a few passes and then tried crossing the gap to the west. It turned out to be pretty easy. There was lift in front of the big, white house that was under construction, and near the old PG launch beyond it. I pushed out front still climbing under clouds. As the sun began to set I had to remove my sunglasses as I headed for the LZ. [I was plenty high enough to go back to LA and topland, but if that didn’t work out, it might be difficult to reach the LZ.] Over the LZ I did a couple of asymmetric spiral turn to lose altitude and landed after several other pilots. We waited quite a while for the van but finally got back up the hill. I got a shower and drank part of a beer before going to lie down and read. I didn’t feel like eating any dinner.
11 Jan, Sat – Our last day at Buca; we were planning to take another night bus to Bogotá. After breakfast C.J. and I packed up what we could and paid for our lodging ($95.000 per night for Wingover). We flew
Hibiscus at Colombia Paragliding
for the last time in Colombia. There were good thermals and I was able to cross the gap again and go as far as the boundary of our air space at the power lines beyond the old launch. (0:30, 1480m). Aine helped me accordion-fold my wing for travel but then the van showed up and I had to just cram everything into my bag to get a spot. We packed in two sunk-out tandem as well, but C.J. had just landed and would have to wait for the next run. When I started sorting out my gear back at the hostel I was unable to find my thin, black antenna which I had not secured in my unzipped flight deck. Fortunately it had just fallen out on the ground nearby. When C.J. got back we ate our mango (bought on our first night in Buca) and had ham and cheese on rolls for lunch. Then we packed, took showers and finished packing; luckily Sarita was not in a rush for us to get out of our room. It was 1400 and we were weren’t expecting to get a taxi to the bus terminal until 2000 or so. Brian was also going to Bogotá and another pilot so we would have company on the trip. Around 1700 Richi called and offered us a ride in his van with Wifredo who was taking it to Bogotá for Richi’s tour with the Latvians. That would save us a taxi to the bus terminal and another taxi in Bogotá to the Crank Croc but we would have to pay for a night in a hostel in San Gil along the way.[$65.000x2 + $25.000x2 would make the cost just about a wash, but the convenience of being dropped off at our hostel and not having to do all the transfers with our baggage might be worth it.] Brian was up for it so we agreed to go with Wilfredo. We had a dinner of warmed up “Thai” food and left a tip for Sarita before saying goodbye to everyone and leaving at 1900. The drive up to Chicamocha was slow and windy in the dark with lots of trucks. Then it was fast and windy as traffic thinned. We reached San Gil at 2130 and Wilfredo dropped us at a big, busy hostel, Macondo, run by an Aussie (?) friend of Richi. Our room, which we shared with Brian, fronted on a garden area with a Jacuzzi which was filled with noisy gringos. The noise quieted rapidly when the spa was turned off at 2300.
12 Jan, Sun – We got up at 0630 to meet Wilfredo at 0700 but he didn’t show up until 0715 [Strangely enough, Colombians are usually punctual; Wilfredo didn’t say so, but I think we were asking him to leave too early. But we, especially Brian, wanted to get to Bogotá early enough to get his tickets straightened out.] We were almost out of town when C.J. realized that her passport in its purse was missing. Wilfredo took us back
G outside the Cranky Croc in Bogota
and luckily the girl at the Macondo desk had found it. We drove through the mountains until about 0930 when Wilfredo stopped at a good roadside restaurant – good eggs and excellent cocoa. Wilfredo had a soup that was a specialty of the region. [Caldo?] Then it was just a long drive to Bogotá and a congested drive through the huge city. Wilfredo got us right to the Cranky Croc before 1500, but wouldn’t take Brian to the airport – per Richi’s order. It was pouring when we arrived and we got soaked carrying our gear in, but the reception guy was very sympathetic and gave us towels to dry our hair and told us we could come back to the desk to register later. We tried to help Brian with canceling his Avianca flight from Cali to Bogotá but eventually he decided that he would have to get a taxi to the airport and deal with it there. [Later he emailed us that he was successful, which gave us hope that we could get our Aerorepublica flight changed as well.]. From the airport Brian was going to a luxury hotel – maybe to make up for the dorm
accommodations for the last several days in Buca. Our room was tiny – barely big enough for a tall wardrobe, a bed and our packs (after putting the wings under the bed). The bathroom, right outside our door, was also tiny and shared with… (not sure how many, but there were lots of bathrooms, some with showers and some without). Agewise we seem to be outliers on the bell-curve of those staying at the hostel, but we later met some older guests. Still, it’s remarkably quiet, comfortable, and seems safe [We’re not going out after dark in the city, at least not on our first night.], and reasonably inexpensive for a capital city ($74.000 per night, about 35USD). After settling in and changing into warm clothes, we went out to find a meal, having missed lunch. We weren’t too optimistic because it was Sunday and we had heard that everything is closed. But there were many small places open and after walking west to a small plaza on Av. Jimenez (Plazoleta Rosario?) we went back to a parilla (grill?) we had passed called Que Como and shared a combination plate of chicken 
Catedral Primada, Plaza Bolivar
(pechuga), beef steak, and chorizo sausage with small  potatoes and a corn “pancake” (arepa) and two fruit drinks. Refreshed, we walked south past a practicing drum corps to the Botero Museum and then west to Bolivar Plaza fending off beggars and hucksters. Some kind of political or social rally had been going on so there were lots of people around plus food and souvenir vendors as well as a number of “ride the llama photo ops” for children. Somewhat nervously we retreated to the Botero museum but it was after 1630 and they were no longer admitting anyone. We stopped in at the Iglesia de La Candelaria, and also ran into Wilfredo who must be staying nearby at Sue Candelaria. We walked back to Av. Jimenez and went NE a bit to another plaza (Parque de los Periodistas) with a monument to Simon Bolivar and a channeled river running through it, then circled the block to our hostel. C.J. wasn’t feeling well and went to bed at 1900; I lasted until 2130.


13 Jan, Mon – Up at 0720 to use the shower quickly (the bathroom next door was out of commission and I hadn't noted that there were at least two more nearby).
G on Monserrate, Sanctuario in distance
 It was pretty chilly overnight but the sun coming in our window via the courtyard after 0740 warmed things up quickly. Breakfast didn’t start until 0900 or later (and was not included in the room rate) so we asked at the reception desk and were directed around the corner to a small restaurant associated with Hostal Casu. C.J. had the caldo, a broth with potatoes, criolles, a hunk of meat and a plate of scrambled eggs on the side. I had a good ham and cheese omelet. (It has been fun to order food that normally is fairly expensive in the States for about half the price in Colombia.) The weather looked to be clear so we checked with Reception again about getting to the funicular which runs to the Monserrate mountaintop. We walked up to the base station (although Lonely Planet had cautioned readers to take a bus or taxi through an area that had had some robberies) and, when we bought our tickets, C.J. correctly answered the question about our age so that we got a geezer discount. [The Spanish lessons paid off!] There were lots of Navidad decoracions scattered about the top and along the Way of the Cross – they must be quite spectacular at night (apparently so because the funicular ride after 1800 is much more expensive). We walked around to the viewpoints overlooking the city, visited the Sanctuario/iglesia and went to the Artisan market where C.J. bought a new purse. Then I spotted a wraparound woven poncho for C.J. that looked cool in red and that took our last $40,000. By now (1130) what little haze there had been had burned off and we had an even better view of the city and its surrounding mountains. The statue of Our Lady
C.J. and new wrap
of Guadalupe on an adjacent peak was also sharply in focus. Earlier we had walked a short distance down the pilgrims path for walking to the summit but were glad we hadn’t tried that at 3200m above sea level. We took the funicular back down, walked through another market which had nothing of interest, bought a couple of rolls with our change and returned to the hostel thinking we could use up the last of our ham and cheese. Alas, we must have left it in the fridge at Buca. So we had a big drink of Crystal Light with ice from the freezer then I went to talk to Reception about finding a COPA/United/Aerorepublica office. She found several but not nearby, so we figured we might as well go directly to the international airport where it would be most likely that English would be spoken. I got good directions for using the Transmillenio bus line which runs in its own lane, and the airport shuttle from the last station, but I misinterpreted where we were supposed to start our trip (Universidad, near the Parque de los Periodistas) and went to the wrong station (near the Museo del Oro). Again a passerby rescued us and put us on the right bus to get us to where we could change to the bus we should have taken in the first place. It was all a lot of unnecessary stress. Anyway we took the Las Aguas bus to Universidad, walked through the tunnel and got on the K6 bus which took us out to Portal El Dorado where we walked through another pedestrian tunnel to another platform where we caught the (free!) shuttle to the airport. It sounds complicated but it’s a great (!) bus system – very fast, clean and pretty cheap (We paid only one fare of $2800 for all that trip). In the international departures hall C.J. spotted a COPA information desk and we got our Cali-Bogotá flight canceled. That means we won’t have to fly or bus all the way to Cali just so we can get on the plane to come to Bogotá. Yay, a time and money saver! We caught the crowded shuttle back
Street pizza!
to Portal El Dorado, bought a ticket card with 4-5 rides on it (apparently they could not sell us a single ticket for some reason). Transmillenio Bus J6 got us back to Universidad and we walked back into La Candelaria to a pizza place not far from our hostel. Good, thick-crust pizza (2 slices plus two glasses of a local soda cost about $8000). We ate sitting on the sidewalk steps which was fine except for the bold pigeon who snatched a piece of bacon off C.J.’s pizza while she was trying to take a photo. Back at Cranky Croc, we asked about the Salt Cathedral and the guy at the desk told us about a guided tour to both Zipaquirá (where the Salt Cathedral is) and Guatavita (a lake which may have been the source of the El Dorado story) – a full day for $120.000 each. We had figured the bus out today so we could get to Zipaquirá on our own but a tour which included our own guide, breakfast, lunch, and admission charges sounded deluxe, so we signed up. According to the sign in the hostel common room there was going to be a “social dinner” starting at 0730, but when I checked later, nothing was happening so we read, journaled and played until bedtime.
14 Jan, Tue – Up at 0630 to meet our guide, not José but his brother Alex, at 0700 – just the two of us in Alex’s car. We drove out of Bogotá on a road (I-50) that climbed the hills/mountains to the northeast
Preparing arepas, Boyaca-style
through interesting scenery. We may not have been in the mountainous department of Boyaca when we stopped for breakfast in La Calera but the roadside restaurant (Asaderos de Arepas, a series of eating places under a roof but open to the street) had the Boyaca-style arepas, thicker and more yellow than the arepas we had had elsewhere. We sat right next to the bamboo-burning grill which kept us warm in the mountain air at 9000 ft. In addition to the arepas, Alex ordered a local specialty for us, agua panela which was hot sugar cane juice with a chunk of white cheese in it. Alex had the hot chocolate with cheese which we had read about. [We had seen signs along the roadside advertising agua panela on the drive down to Bogotá but hadn’t been able to figure out what it was.] C.J. didn’t find the too-sweet broth palatable but I ate mine. Alex also ordered scrambled eggs with green onions and tomatoes for us and cups of good hot chocolate. Colombia would rate right up at the top of any hot chocolate list. We were stuffed when we left and got back in the car. On the road again
we took the right fork signed “Guasca” still on I-50 (left went to Sopó where there is a flying site; La Calera had a brown PG sign
Laguna Guatavita
indicating a site there, too). When we reached the town center of Guatavita we were the only tourists and all the shops and museum were closed. The town is newly rebuilt following an earthquake which destroyed it, and the new buildings are all white-painted and squeaky-clean. However there was nothing much of interest to us. We took a few photos and moved along. A few km from the village we turned right onto a secondary road which gradually deteriorated to dirt. We were figuring that we’d end up at a typical forest service trailhead but at the end of the road was a big national park sign (Laguna del Cacique Guatavita) and entryway, paved parking, flush toilets and rangers/tour guides. Alex escorted us through the gate and told us to catch up with the tour that had already left. We walked along the paved trail until we reached a thatched ceremonial house. The small group with the guide was just leaving so we tagged along. Unfortunately the guide was speaking only in Spanish and the group was moving slowly. When we reached the trail leading to the rim we moved on ahead. The trail was fairly steep and broke out of the jungle before we reached the rim giving us a view of the surrounding countryside. It wasn’t really very far to the crater rim (well, it looked like a crater rim, anyway) and a good view of the apparently circular lake [It’s really 300 m x 200m.] We followed the trail counterclockwise around the rim until we had a view of the cut or Opening where treasure hunters had excavated the rim to drain the lake. They were trying to recover all the gold jewelry that the native Muisca people had sacrificed to the god at the bottom of the lake. Very little was ever found – certainly not enough to pay for the excavation! We walked to the end of the rim trail and then followed a trail indicated by a “salida” sign down a way. But we chickened out when the deteriorating trail did not seem to be going in the right direction to get back to the park entrance and Alex. We retraced our steps, passing a ranger/policeman who radioed something about us, and returned to where we started. Then Alex drove us back down the seven km to the main road, turned right and continued to Sencilla passing along the Embalse de Tomine and its dam. We stopped on the main plaza in Sencilla long enough for Alex to buy us some bottled water. I-50 ran into Route
Restaurant wall in Zipaquira
55 (from Buca) and we went south until we turned on Rt 56 to get to Zipaquirá. We stopped for lunch in town at a very colorful (artesianale?) restaurant with all kinds of old tools, and other items like an armadillo, some BIG plants, animal skins… on the walls. We had soup, and then my huge plate of beef, potato, corn, yucca and rice arrived. C.J. had Alex cancel her order of chicken and she shared my meat. I had a beer and C.J. had two jugos. Once again we were stuffed! Alex drove us to the entrance of the Catedral de Sel and left the car in a no parking zone while he ran up to get our tickets. It was 1400 when he waved us on and said he’d meet us at 1540. There were no English tours so we were on our own to follow the tunnel into the mine. We passed the fourteen Stations of the Cross – just large, lighted crosses carved out of salt, each one different, situated at the near end of each mined-out gallery. Pushing through a turnstile we found ourselves in a passage that ended in a locked gate. We had to backtrack and climb over the one-way turnstile. We finally
reached the large underground cathedral with its huge cross. I was a bit distracted with stomach cramps but fortunately there was a bathroom, flush toilet and all, way down the end of the farthest gallery, past all the souvenir shops and cafés. When I got back to C.J. it was getting late but we had enough time to look at the enormous pillars, the salt-crystal “waterfall”, a large carved
Sculpture in the floor of the salt cathedral
 nativity scene with larger than life figures, and a sculpture on the floor resembling part of the painting on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Back at the surface, Alex showed up a little bit late and took us down through Zipaquirá where I asked him to drive us past the main square and big church. He let us out to walk across the square and get some photos before we got to where he was stopped and waiting for us. Then we headed straight back to Bogotá; the route looked familiar from our trip down with Wilfredo. Traffic wasn’t too bad; Alex said that rush hour is from after 11700 until 2000. After settling in we went out to get a couple of ice cream cones at the local Crepes and Waffles shop – very good ice cream on also very good cones (coffee toffee and avenilla, maracuya yogurt and arequipa (caramel). Then we sat in the common room where a fire was burning in the restaurant grill and caught up on our journals and talked to some of the other guests. I arranged for a ride to the airport with the reception guy at 2230 for our 0114 flight (seems kind of late) for only $25.000 – about the same as a cab. Time tomorrow for another ATM withdrawal.
Gold artifact at Museo del Oro
15 Jan, Wed – Breakfast at Casu again then we tried to find the ATM we had used the last time when we returning from Monserrate. We couldn’t find it but we did find another one (no lack of ATMs in the area) and withdrew another $300.000, more than we hope we’ll need but a cushion seemed like a good idea. [Maybe we can ask Paulo to exchange any extra Colombian pesos we end up with.] Back at the hostel we packed up and moved our gear to the communal kitchen not realizing that Reception meant us to put it in the hostel restaurant kitchen which is locked. Oh well, no problems anyway. Then we went out to visit the Museo del Oro which turned out to be free for those over 60. There were three floors of exhibits of gold artifacts and information. Afterward we went across the street to an artisan mall looking for a souvenir poncho for me. I had seen them being worn by men on our night bus to Bucaramanga but they did not seem to be a popular item in the souvenir shops (except for ones with soccer team logos). There were some nice t-shirts however. We walked south on Carrera 7, newly designated as a pedestrian street (a good idea because the volume of pedestrian traffic was such that
Botero's take on the Mona Lisa
the sidewalks would have been seriously crowded). We went as far as Bolivar Plaza passing the Cathedral and chapel, then E and back N to the Botero museum – full of paintings and sculptures of rotund people (works donated to Colombia by Botero), and some Picassos, a Dali, a Calder, Henry Moore and others. We skipped the museum of modern art. By then we were ready for lunch so we returned to Av. Jimenez and a middle-eastern fast food place called Schwarma Khalifa. We got a combination plate and a couple of jugos naturales en agua and ate on the second floor overlooking Av. Jimenez. When we left we walked at least ten blocks north on Kr 7 with the crowd and checked out two or three more artisan malls as well as a church, N.S. de Las Nieves (although we don’t think it snows very often in Bogotá). Along the street there were people performing music and puppet shows and a group of indigenous people were walking along with drums. But many people were
C.J. in the common room at the Croc
dressed in suits just like in any other city. Not finding my souvenir poncho we returned to the first artisan shop and bought a t-shirt with what looked like a Nazca bird on the front and a happy-monkey on the back. Then we went back to the hostel so C.J. could take some ibuprofen for her hip and foot – too much walking. The next order of business was to get a Frutas del Bosque crepe and ice cream sundae “Alaska” at Crepes and Waffles. Back once again at the hostel I took a shower and changed into travel clothes, then we hung out in the common room until our airport ride showed up at 2130. It turned out to be Alex, the driver from our Guatavita trip. We were at the airport shortly after 2200 but there was a long line to stand in while United reps did security checks and checked bags. We had to stand in another line to pay the $70USD (plus $11 tax) for our third bag. But at least we had been in Colombia long enough that we did not have to pay a departure tax. After clearing a perfunctory security check we stopped at the tiny food court (three eateries) and had Burger King Whoppers. It was a shorter than expected wait to board because we began boarding 45 minutes to an hour before our departure. There was a Britt souvenir store across from our gate and we were able to sample some of their chocolate-covered nuts and fruit while we waited.
16 Jan, Thu – We slept right through almost to Houston arriving at about 0530. It was pretty chilly in the jetway so we knew we were out of the tropics. As usual it was a long walk to customs and immigration and we had to move our gear through the scanners and drop them off for transport to our Seattle flight. There were no problems and we continued to our gate. I went out in search of breakfast because no food, not even snacks, were offered on the United/COPA flight. There was quite a bit of choice and I decided on Wendy’s steel-cut oatmeal combo with OJ and an oatmeal bar. Our flight at 0912 arrived in Seattle at 1212. The air during the flight, besides being turbulent, was crystal clear and we had great views of the mountain states. I used my phone’s GPS a few times, until the battery got too low, to locate ourselves. The first location was near the border of UT, CO, and WY and we could pick out Flaming Gorge Reservoir and the Uintah Mountains. Notably, there did not seem to be much snow anywhere in the west. Next we flew over the Wasatch Range and Bear Lake and up near Pocatello and the Snake River Plain. From there we could spot the Tetons and Jackson Hole (not the town) and Craters of the Moon. We could see King Mountain clearly with the Lemhis and Beaverhead Range in the distance. We could see the Pioneer range but could not pick out Sun Valley. Then Hells Canyon and Wallowa Lake, the Blue Mountains, Colombia River, Tri-Cities,
Tiger Mtn  and Squak as islands in the fog
 Kiona, Saddle, E-burg, and Lakes Cle Elum, Kachess, and Keechelus. Fog on the west side of the Cascades covered the lowlands but left Tiger, Squak and Cougar looking like islands. We could trace the I-90 corridor peaks from Granite to Mailbox, then the Middle Fork gap to Teneriffe and Mt. Si. We finally descended into the fog and landed to the south breaking out only in the last hundred feet or so. Our luggage all showed up and we didn’t have to wait too long in the cold for our ride to Skyway Inn where our car was waiting near the office. We stopped for groceries at Costco and Fred Meyer then checked to see if we could pick up our mail but it had been delivered already. When we got home we found lots of downed branches, and our front door was wide open! Nothing was missing in the house: TV, computers, my left-behind money belt with $120 and credit cards. Whew! It wasn’t even particularly cold in the house.

This was certainly one of our most successful flying trips. C.J. said that she had more flying hours in Colombia than she had had in all the rest of 2013 together. It was also successful in that we got to visit three very different places in Colombia – small-town Roldanillo in the Valle de Cauca, the mid-sized city of Bucaramanga in the Cordillera Central, and the eight-million population capital city of Bogotá high in the eastern mountains. Another thing that made this trip unusual was that we relied almost completely on local transportation and never felt that we needed a rental car.





















20 December 2013

Rob’s Birthday in Florida

10-17 December 2013

What started out as a trip to visit C.J.’s brother Rob and maybe help him get the family home in Palm Coast cleaned out a bit turned into a family reunion lacking only brothers Greg and Bill.

C.J. and I left as usual in the dark of a cold and rainy morning. We left the car at Sandstone Inn parking lot when I found out that the prices that AboutAirportParking.com quoted were higher than what the Sandstone quoted online. [I was amazed.] We met Ginny and Wally in Atlanta and then shared a ride with them in their rental car from JAX to Palm Coast where Rob met us with snacks and drinks. [That was plenty to eat because we had a meal during our layover in Atlanta.]

A breakfast on the coast at the Java Joint was the exception to our usual morning oatmeal but it was enjoyable to sit on the porch sheltered from the north wind. Back at the house we spent much of the rest of the day raking up the maple leaves which were still falling as we bagged up the piles. Meanwhile Wally used the electric leaf blower to clear the roof of pine needles.

Mary and Dave flew in from Chicago and Pat drove down from Williamsburg, VA. On Saturday Jennifer and Kevin came over from Tampa with their newborn daughter, Macy. That night Mary prepared her signature pot roast and we all had a great meal. C.J. baked fresh rolls; Jenn and Kevin brought Key lime pie and fresh crab; and Mary whipped up a batch of brownies (which, together with the pie and ice cream, gave us the requisite three desserts).

Meanwhile during the week, Rob, Dave, Wally and I worked on clearing the accumulated grime and hard-water deposits off the windows. Windex took some of it off but we needed to soak some of the worst ones in CLR and then attack them with a razor blade scraper. The sisters mostly worked on deciding what should be kept and what could be thrown out or donated to Goodwill. Many trips were made to Goodwill. On the last couple of days C.J. and Ginny spent hours going through boxes and boxes of photos, discarding most of the travel photos unless they were good ones that contained a family member.

By Monday we were ready for a break and everyone else had left except us, Rob and Gin. We took an evening walk along the Intracoastal Waterway down to the children’s memorial park. Before heading back to the house for another dinner of leftover pot roast, we stopped at Farley’s, an Irish/sports bar in European Village.

Rob and Gin drove us to the airport around 1100 on Tuesday. We got there in plenty of time to have a hearty lunch at a decent restaurant before going to our gate. It was a good thing we got filled up because there wasn’t time in Minneapolis to get a bite before boarding. We were a little late getting into Seattle (probably because the flight out of Minneapolis was late leaving the gate). It didn’t matter since we had to hang out and wait for our checked baggage – Rob had given us two old suitcases so C.J. could take home some mementos she wanted to save. We were lucky to catch the Sandstone Inn shuttle without even having to call for a pickup.

It seemed like a successful trip to me. Rob had already gotten rid of a lot of stuff before we got there, but we really whittled down the piles that were cluttering up the place. The living room looked pretty nice by the time we left.

18 December 2013

2013 Christmas Letter





Dear Friends,

Happy Holidays!  This time last year C.J. and I were preparing for the once-in-a-lifetime Panama Canal cruise. In 2013 we’re just back from Florida for a Farnsworth family gathering (mid-December) and then, on Christmas day, we fly almost as far south as the equator to Colombia for a paragliding trip. As you can see we’ve made a conscious decision to do as much as we can as long as we can keep on doing it. Thus, we’ve also scheduled our first trip to Africa for early March – we’re hoping for fall-like weather in South Africa to provide some paragliding and general tourist-ing as well.

Last January was an exception to our usual plan to go somewhere warm to get out of the gloom-and-doom of a Seattle-style winter. We had plenty of sunshine, fluffy snow and blue skies in Yellowstone, but the temperatures were anything but warm, hovering close to zero during the day. Ginny and Wally joined us at the Worldmark resort in West Yellowstone and we did some ski touring and just plain touring using snowcoaches to get into the park all the way to Old Faithful. The photo above is from a ski trip in to Taggart Lake in the Tetons on the way back from Yellowstone.

Good thing we got the active stuff out of the way because in February C.J. had elective surgery to fix a bunion that was making walking, skiing, even square dancing painful. Remembering her first bunionectomy decades ago, we expected a quick return to full activity. That wasn’t the case and even now her right foot isn’t pain-free. Meanwhile I was trying to stay active by going for a hike twice a week while C.J. was in physical therapy. Even with C.J. on a knee scooter we managed to attend the USHPA board meeting in Colorado Springs, especially important because Wally was being recognized for his service with one of the highest awards of the Association. Shortly after getting home I found the (almost) perfect replacement for our old Subaru: a new-to-us Kia Sorento, and later sold the Trooper, so we are now a one-car family.

After rigging the Sorento up with a trailer hitch and the required wiring, we took our first new-car “camping” trip down to Dog Mountain for the Frostbite Fly-in, although C.J. wasn’t ready to fly just 2½ months after surgery. C.J. continued PT through May while I put up a new section of fence hoping to keep the deer from eating the garden goodies that C.J. was working so hard on growing. Our second camp-out was at the Blanchard Hill fly-in where we celebrated C.J.’s birthday by going out to dinner at a well-regarded restaurant on the bay, and by C.J.’s first flights since her foot surgery.

The demise of the multi-purpose New Home “sewing” machine, also decades old, necessitated a replacement. The new Baby Lock Unity does much finer embroidery as well as providing state-of-the-art laser marking and more decorative stitches than we’ll probably ever use. Later in June we went to the 11th annual Rat Race at Woodrat Mountain and on several of the non-flying days we went hiking and to Oregon Cave Nat. Monument (and I got a new mobile phone that actually works outside of cities – 425-260-4842).

Then things began to get busy: we came back from Oregon and went right to Chelan for the XC Classic and a week later caught a buddy-pass flight to Alaska. Once again C.J. had an assignment to write an article for HG&PG magazine about the chapter of the year – the Arctic Airwalkers. Just like the Hawaii group last year, the Anchorage-based members put us up in their homes, drove us around to their flying sites and fed us like kings. The weather was perfect, the bugs were practically non-existent and we actually got some decent flying in extremely scenic places. Back at home C.J.’s brother Rob and sister Ginnie visited us, and their uncle. We got Rob down to Mt. Rainier for a hike to Alta Vista above Paradise, and we all got to check out the new visitor’s center.

In August after a three day trip to camp and hike into the Goat Rocks Wilderness, we took the next two weekends to attend memorial gatherings. First for Dan, one of our paragliding friends, we went to his friend Dave’s cabin near Winthrop and scattered his ashes as we flew from Goat Peak. C.J. and I got in another hike the next day and barely escaped a thunderstorm. The next weekend all but one of the Farnsworth siblings and a few of the next generation (and for pregnant Jennifer, the next-next generation) gathered at the old Tuthill plot in the Washingtonville, NY, cemetery to lay the ashes of their mother beside their father’s remains. Despite the reason for the gathering, it was still a celebration more of connections than of death. When C.J. and I weren’t meeting or eating with the rest of the family, we toured around the area to see places that we remembered from our time in nearby New Paltz.

By the time we flew home, summer was winding down. There was just time to go to Dog for Tina and Larry’s anniversary before we took off for a distant Labor Day fly-in at Sand Turn near Sheridan, WY. We had a great time driving through Yellowstone and over the Beartooth Scenic Highway and Big Horn Mountains. On the way back we drove up into the Wind River Mountains and hiked to Upper Green River Lake through magnificent scenery. Next we tried flying right from our campsite in Jackson Hole with some local pilots but the scenery was better than the flying conditions. On the way home we overnighted in Yellowstone where we ditched the crowds by taking a hike along the canyon rim. Two days later Belinda and Davis welcomed us to Boise with lunch and a house concert.

Back home we found that our water bill was astronomical! The main line was gushing, not leaking; fortunately our neighbor was able to get a fix on it and do another repair to the kitchen drain while he was eeling around in the too-low crawl space. So there was no reason we couldn’t take off for another couple of distant fall fly-ins…except for the three feet of recently-fallen snow on the Mt. Howard launch. Oh well, there wasn’t any snow in the red rock country of central Utah so we went for that fly-in by way of far eastern Oregon and northern Nevada. We were lucky to catch the aspens still glowing golden on a hike to alpine lakes and bristlecone pines in Great Basin National Park before reaching Richfield, UT, and two of the highest launches we’ve taken off from (one at 11,200ft). The camping at Castle Rocks was particularly scenic.

No long trips in October because the USHPA board meeting was held in Renton, only a half hour from home. But we were able to get to the Halloween/Women’s Fly-in at Lake Chelan this year for the first time in many years (usually the board meeting conflicts with it) and we opted for kayaking on Sun Lakes rather than doing short paraglider flights from Chelan Butte.

A windstorm in early November blew out a section of our aging fence but we were able to patch it back together, avoiding an expensive and time-consuming replacement. We chose to celebrate our 37th anniversary in Canada as we had last year, but this time in Vancouver. We used our timeshare points to book a week at The Canadian, a high rise condo right down town. It was a different experience having a view from the 22nd floor of city lights rather than the usual ground-level view of mountains and meadows.

That about covers what we’ve been up to. If you want even more detail, go to my blog or C.J.’s online scrapbook. Speaking of which, C.J. continues to scrap every day both digitally and on actual paper (where cut-and-paste means with scissors and glue!). Sewing with the new machine and making greeting cards also keep her creative juices flowing. In preparation for our Colombia trip she conscientiously spends an hour each day studying Spanish, usually before I even get out of bed. As copy editor and staff writer for HG&PG magazine, C.J. puts in much more than the ten hours a month for which she is paid. [I get to read her edited copy as an unpaid backup.] So far we both seem to be blessed with the good-health gene (fingers crossed, knock on wood) although we’ve seen some erosion in what we can do, or at least, in how fast we can do it.

As we think of all our friends during this holiday season, we hope you are enjoying good health and finding things to do that make you happy. We always love hearing from you. MERRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Love,


C.J. and George

30 November 2013

Anniversary in Vancouver, BC



18-25 November 2013

Caption for A-Maze-ing Laughter sculpture

After the success of last year’s anniversary in Victoria, C.J. thought that we should do another Canadian city for this year’s thirty-seventh celebration. We haven’t spent a night in Vancouver since the era of Expo 86 excepting a few overnights in the backyard of a fellow pilot on the North Shore during Grouse Mountain Fly-ins. C.J. found a week just before Thanksgiving available at the Worldmark resort in downtown Vancouver and we used some of our expiring points to book it, a win-win situation.
Anniversary selfie
18 Nov, Mon – We got on the road around 1220 and stopped at the Burlington Costco for a rotisserie chicken and a Costco lunch. We also filled the gas tank with the cheapest gas we’ve seen in a long time - $2.999. Waiting time at the I-5 border crossing was 15-20 minutes and then we got into a real traffic slowdown where three lanes merged into one at the George Massey Bridge under the Fraser River. That put us in Vancouver at the height of the rush hour – around 1700 – in the dark and rain. We had no trouble finding the Worldmark building, a 32-story highrise at 1080 Hornby, just a couple of blocks south of Robson and one block east of Burrard. C.J. went in to register while I waited in a no parking zone for directions to the gated underground parking. Once we were parked, we moved our stuff to the 22nd-floor two-bedroom unit with a hotel cart. The view to the north was particularly good with tall buildings and the canyon-like Hornby St. with its glow of bright red taillights. Later we noticed that one of the buildings had a trapezoidal light display that changed color. After a dinner of rotisserie chicken and chocolate cake with whipped cream, we spent some time planning a hike for the next day. After much discussion, we decided that Hollyburn Peak near Cypress Mountain sounded like a good choice but we’d have to wait for the morning to see what the weather and snow accumulation looked like.

19 Nov, Tue – The morning started off partly cloudy and we could see snow on the mountains to the north especially on the higher summits. The deal breaker was the sub-freezing temperature and the howling wind. Later, as the clouds burned off the temperature inched up and we
"Digital Orca" at Canada Place
headed out for a walk in the city. We walked north past the law courts and the Vancouver Art Gallery heading for the convention centers at Canada Place. We stopped at the Vancouver Tourism office and got some maps and additional info about hikes. We walked around the west conv. ctr. reading the historical signage on the fence along the seawall. C.J. took some photos that included The Drop, a large blue raindrop crafted by Inges Idee, and Digital Orca by Douglas Coupland. I walked past the nearby 2010 Olympic Cauldron without recognizing it. We then walked through the east convention center which had three totem poles, the large one carved in the 1900’s. We didn’t take in the expensive Fly Above Canada but did stop for the multi-media War of 1812 presentation, an interesting perspective from the Canadian, British, U.S. and First Nations viewpoints. Then we walked back up Burrard Street through the shopping and restaurant district back to our suite for lunch and a rest. We had gotten some general directions to some artwork we wanted to see so we set off along Davie Street. There were lots of shops and eating places but it was clear that we were not in the high-rent district any longer.
Inukshuk at English Bay Beach
Heading south on Bidwell we reached the shore of English Bay and the inukshuk, a stone structure resembling the human form, constructed by Alvin Kanak. “A gift to the city from the Northwest Territories during Expo 86; it later became to symbol of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games.” A small crowd had gathered nearby where a sailboat had been washed onto the seawall and was
C.J. amid A-Maze-ing Laughter
taking a pounding from the wind-driven waves. Walking west along the Seaside Bicycle Route at English Bay Beach, we finally reached the group of large, bronze, cartoonish figures called A-Maze-ing Laughter, by Chinese artist Yue Minjun. After taking a bunch of pictures, we started our return by going north on Denman (passing several falafel eateries and other ethnic choices), then turning east on Comox which at that point was a greenway rather than a street. At the top of the hill we cut through a small park (Mole Hill Park?) and in two blocks we were back at Hornby and  WorldMark. Back on the 22nd floor we found our door was unlocked and that it wouldn’t lock when we closed it. We reported it to Jennifer at the front desk and she sent up a maintenance guy while we went over to the Sheraton to enjoy a soak in their hot tub. Back at the desk we found out that the lock would have to wait for repair until the maintenance man who knew how to fix it came on duty Wednesday. WM was willing to move us for the night but since we weren’t going out, we could lock the door from the inside. C.J. whipped up some pork stew from the roast we had brought with us; so far we haven’t spent any money, Canadian or otherwise.
20 Nov, Wed - Last night we decided that it was time to give Hollyburn Pk in Cypress Mtn Prov Park a try so after breakfast we drove across the Lion’s Gate Bridge and west on Canada1/99 then up the long switchbacks of Cypress Bowl Rd. We stopped at the second turn to look out over Burrard Inlet, English Bay and Vancouver in the morning sun. By the time we reached the trailhead for Hollyburn Peak there was snow on the road and piles along the side where it had been plowed. The temperature was below freezing but the wind that had been so strong yesterday was mild to calm. There were a couple of cars in the Nordic ski/snowshoe parking lot but when we got out and walked around a bit we found that the snow was frozen and icy. We decided to do something in the lowlands instead of struggling up an icy trail in snow that would only get deeper. Since we were not far from the downhill ski area we drove the rest of the way there and found that they were making snow and the area was having its opening day. The parking attendant reported that the temperature was -8 Celsius, but that hadn’t kept a sizable number of skiers and boarders from getting their first runs of the season. We headed down and found our way to Marine Drive by returning to
Point Atkinson Light House
Exit 10 and finding a street that went through. Marine Drive took us to the entrance to Lighthouse Park which is a forested chunk of land preserved from logging and development (because the lighthouse on Pt Atkinson needed a dark area behind the light). We found a map brochure and took the most direct route downhill to the lighthouse area. I wore my new boots to see how much breaking-in they needed (not much, it turned out). Just outside the closed Coast Guard area there were several buildings which are used by the community for retreats, day camps and other events. We climbed up to the “lighthouse view” which didn’t have a very good view probably because of the new tree growth below the viewpoint. However, the view from the rocks of West Beach were excellent. Later we climbed to another farther west viewpoint for lunch. We had views of Bowen Island across the mouth of Howe Sound, and Vancouver Island in the distance. We saw several barges under tow and the Horseshoe Cove-Nanaimo BC Ferry. After lunch we retraced our steps to the camp buildings and continued to East Beach, Arbutus Knoll and the Valley Trail. Since none of the trails were very long we took the longer one, Arbutus Trail which climbed steeply over a ridge and just as steeply down the other side. We then picked up the Valley of Giants trail, through an area with large cedars, to the Summit trail. A short but harrowing climb over slippery rock got us to an actual summit. From there it was a short descent to the parking lot and by 1430 we were heading back to Marine drive. We made a quick stop for groceries in Ambleside (?) and then ran into four lanes of traffic trying to merge to one lane to cross the Lion’s Gate Bridge. Still, we were back to the condo early and found that our door had been repaired. [BTW, the manager said that he was giving us a housekeeping token for the inconvenience of having our door unable to be locked.] C.J. made another stew-like dish for dinner and we talked about when we should go out for our anniversary dinner.

 21 Nov, Thu – We didn’t get out until after 1000 but we did get some good Maui pancakes with blueberry jam, and I found a coupon for The Salmon House in West Vancouver and made reservations on line for Thursday evening.
Lynn Canyon suspension bridge
Our plan for the day was to go to Lynn Canyon and do a couple of short hikes, loops if possible, and that’s what we did. We started by dropping in to the Lynn Canyon Ecology Center where we picked up a paper map and talked to the person at the desk about routes. She asked us about conditions at Hollyburn because she was heading there on Sunday and she had been out at Lighthouse Park on that really windy Tuesday. We started by crossing the famous Lynn Canyon suspension bridge first built back in the early 1910’s. Today it was treacherously slippery with frost covering the wooden treads, so careful stepping on the roughened metal sections was necessary. From that highpoint, 150 m over the water, we went south, downstream, through forest on the Baden Powell trail and on stairs to cross another bridge at Twin Falls. From there we climbed back up to the level of the Ecology Center, café (closed for the season) and the parking lot. After a look at the map, we decided to do a loop to the north and maybe continue on around Rice Lake. Back across the still slippery suspension bridge and then down a rougher trail over lots of exposed roots we reached the 30 Ft Pool, a deep, clear body of water just upstream of an island in Lynn
C.J. at Rice Lake
Creek. To continue to the next bridge we had to climb the 160 or so steps of a rustic stairway. At the top a right fork went to more stairs, so we went left, saw the pedestrian bridge leading out to Lynn Avenue and continued up a narrow gravel road to the entrance to the Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve. Twenty or so seniors were gathered near the entrance with daypacks and hiking poles (the first folks with poles we had seen so far), obviously ready for a group hike. We passed them and in a quarter mile reached Rice Lake. A display showed what the old flume looked like; it had been used for getting 56-in.-long bolts of cedar down to “Moodyville” where there was a mill back in the early 1900s. Rice Lake had been used as a storage place for the bolts, then the loggers raised the level of the lake 9m and sent the bolts down the flume. The walk around the lake was pleasant but cold – there was even a skim of ice on some of the inlets. We finally found an opening in the brush on a peninsula and sat down in the sun for some lunch. Afterward we continued around the lake to the south end where there was a fishing pier which was almost totally covered in frost feathers (except where the sun had hit it). We took a slightly different route back to the suspension bridge, going down the second set of stairs as well
A window table at The Salmon House
as the first set. The bridge was still slippery and by now even the slip-resistant metal was no longer so slip-resistance. A large group of older students were just starting across; we didn’t stay to watch. We got back to the condo by 1530 and rested up, got showers and then got dressed to go to dinner at The Salmon House On The Hill in West Vancouver. Traffic was pretty crazy in downtown Vancouver at 1830 but we made it to the restaurant just a little later than 1900 anyway. The view was as good as advertised and the food likewise – almost like being back on the cruise ship. We had New Orleans-style clam chowder and mussels and tempura prawns for appetizers; tortilla-encrusted trout and alder-smoked salmon for entrees; and dessert was a pavlova (meringue/chocolate mousse) and Paris Brest (a puff pastry with coffee crème and chocolate sauce). With a couple of drinks it came to over $90 – good thing we don’t do that too often!
22 Nov, Fri – After an hour’s worth of internet research I called Bayshore bike rentals on Denman near Spokes, the other (and more expensive) rental place right on Georgia and Denman. [The cheapest place, Ezee Rider, apparently was closed to prepare for the snowboard season.] We walked the mile-and-a-quarter along Robson through the downtown shopping area in sunshine that kept us comfortable while wearing just fleece jackets despite the sub-zero (Celsius) temps. The shop attendant at Bayshore found us bikes that fit, provided us with helmets and U-locks, a map of the trails and sent us off out the back door through the parking lot. [Parking lot! We could have driven to Bayshore!] After circling the parking lot to get the feel of the bikes (21 speed mtn bikes with front shocks [mine anyway]), we headed NW along Alberni
Totems in Stanley Park
on a green-painted bicycle lane right to Lost Lagoon. There we found the designated bicycle path for the seawall promenade, almost always separated from the walking path and usually sharing with the inline skate path. We made our first stop pretty soon to don wind jackets. Later, in the shade and where the morning dew had not melted, C.J. put on her windpants (I had left mine at home, I guess) and I fit my warm hat under my helmet. We spent some time at the totem poles, stopped for a picture at the 9 O’clock Gun,
C.J. and our bikes near "Girl in a Wetsuit"
Brockton Pt. Lighthouse, Girl in a Wetsuit, the figurehead of the Empress of Japan and the view from beneath the Lion’s Gate Bridge. About that time we began to notice that the rock faces above us were covered with ice! – It was cold, luckily there was no wind. We kept moving until we got back in the sun just past Siwash Rock, then stopped at a minor projection to have lunch in the increasingly weak sunshine. From there it wasn’t far past Ferguson Point, Second Beach, and the pool to Lost Lagoon. We discussed continuing down the seawall to English Bay Beach, but we had had enough of the cold so headed back to the bike shop and paid for the
2.5 hrs ($38.40 incl GST and locks). The walk back in midafternoon was quite a bit more crowded – maybe because the high school students were heading home. We stopped for chocolate-dipped ice cream cones at Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory. Back at the condo I was ready for a nap before downloading our photos from our cameras
.
23 Nov, Sat – We got a leisurely start sometime after 1000 walking down Nelson to Granville (which seemed a bit seamy) and across the Granville Bridge. Then we found our way somewhat circuitously to
Part of Granville Public Market
Granville Island. There was an abundance of shops and galleries to explore but we spent most of our time in the Public Market which definitely felt more foreign than the Pike Place Market in Seattle (although we haven’t been there in years so maybe it feels foreign, too). Wandering through other areas like Net Loft and the Railspur District we stopped in a shop where they were making brooms from sorghum, and another shop that had lots of items that may have been First Nation work. Back at the Public Market we decided on a salmon chowder pie for lunch – very good with nice flaky crust ($10.50). Then we found a gelato stand with peach-mango and coffee flavors, both excellent ($10.25). Since there were no seats available – the area that was usually extra seating was full of holiday craft and foods booths – we sat on a bench outside in the sun to finish our gelatos. If the sunshine had been any weaker it would have been too
Aquabus and Telus World of Science
cold. Having done enough window shopping, we caught the Aquabus to the end of False Creek ($7) where we walked along a trail to the Telus World of Science, the last-standing, now re-purposed, building of Expo 86. Our Pacific Science Center membership cards provided free entrance. We took in a show on electricity (using a pickle for a light bulb!?), then wandered through most of the exhibit and activity halls. The feature exhibition was “Amped” about modern music. The display of “amptiques” included some things we still use. Body Works showed how a Canadian science exhibit might differ from one in the US by including life size and generally anatomically accurate male and female figures.  We looked into the KEVA gallery where many kids and families were creating various things with wooden planks and pieces. The Sara Stern Gallery had displays of natural history –dinosaurs, a beaver lodge big enough to climb into, animal skins and such. By 1600 we were pretty tired and ready to head back to the condo. It was a fairly long walk but mostly on a pedestrian trail past the BC Place stadium and the Edgewater Casino, then up Smithe St. to Hornby and home.
24 Nov, Sun – Around 1030 we started on our walk through the Heritage District of Vancouver and on to
Narrow building in Gastown
other parts of the downtown. We walked up Hornby to Georgia then across to Burrard. C.J. caught a reflection of the Hotel Vancouver in a building east of the Vancouver Art Gallery (with the overscaled roof clock on Parr and Fee’s 1912 Vancouver Block). The 1889 Christ Church Cathedral is the oldest church in the city. C.J. took some more photos of architectural details on the Marine Building (1929) to the NW. Near the bottom of Burrard we turned E on Hastings then dropped down to the CPR
Gastown Steam Clock
station. Across the street was the ornately-columned temple-styled Bank of Commerce building (1908), since re-purposed as the Birks Jewelers building, with the Birks Clock in front. We continued Cordova and then Water Street into Gastown where we were just in time for the 1130 rendering of “Westminster Chimes” on the Steam Clock. We stopped in a couple of souvenir shops/native art galleries as we worked our way east to the Gassy Jack Statue across from a very narrow flatiron building. To reach Chinatown, second largest on the Pacific coast,
Chinatown gate on Pender St.
we took Carral and soon found ourselves in a block-long flea market inhabited by a mixed bag of locals and street people. Leaving that behind, we reached Pender and looked west to the entrance arch to Chinatown. We turned east and walked past many small shop, most closed on Sunday, to the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Park (next to the classical garden of the same name. After a brief tour we continued E on Pender passing many local food shops selling dried fish, veggies and sundry unidentifiable things. Reaching the edge of Chinatown we turned south on Gore then back W on Keefer. We walked through a park and then through International Plaza and past the impressive Vancouver Public Library to reach the Christmas Market set up in Queen Elizabeth Plaza. The long line of people waiting to pay to get in so they could buy gifts and food convinced us to skip that opportunity.
In Falafel Maison with owner
Instead we headed west on Robson and found the Falafel Maison just past Seymour. It was a tiny place with inside seating for six but we got our falafel sandwich (pita) and schwarma platter (meat, salad, rice, tabouleh and a pita round) and carried it all out to a sidewalk table. It was warmer than yesterday and the food and Lebanese shop owners were both very nice. Heading for home around 1400 we stopped at Robson Park and descended to the ice rink then climbed up the stairs on the other side to the Law Courts (with the giant red spring sculpture) and out onto Hornby. Back home by 1500 we were ready for a rest. There was plenty of stew left for dinner so we didn’t need the additional pot of soup. Around 2100 we left the condo again, this time to Christ Church Cathedral for the Compline Service. There were quite a few attendees but not enough to fill up the rather small (for a cathedral) church. Much of the service was familiar to old Catholics and some of the Gregorian chant was even in Latin. On our way back to the condo through the still-busy street we looked into the impressive Hotel Vancouver, noticed the “dripping” Christmas lights on Robson, and walked through the lighted trees at the Sheraton.
Cathedral Place
25 Nov, Mon – After getting mostly packed up we dropped a load in the car and then went out to look at some architectural details downtown. We stopped at the old Provincial Courthouse, now the Vancouver Art Gallery, and also took a bunch of photos of the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver (gargoyles, dragons and various other beasts). The Cathedral was open for visiting so we went in and checked out the stained glass and huge organ. Next door is Cathedral Place and the builders had created a bit of open space between the two buildings. It had Gothic-like arches and reminded one of a cathedral close or cloister. On the same building were large replica statues of three nurses that had been on the Georgia Medical Dental Building which used to occupy the site. [The Vancouver Walks guidebook wryly claims that they are the Rea sisters, Dia, Pia and Gonno.] By then it was getting close to our checkout deadline of noon so we returned to the condo and cleared out. We retraced our route home but in sunshine instead of rain. There was a 25 min. wait at the border but none at the George Massey Bridge this time. We stopped at Burlington Costco for gas ($3.059) and lunch and some groceries and were home by 1530.
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04 November 2013

Talapus and Olallie Lakes


 4 Nov 2013
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The sun was shining although the forecast for later was rain. There was a trace of snow near the top of 4000-ft Mt. Si in our backyard, but we didn't think anything of that. Once C.J. finished checking the beta of the December magazine (and finding several uncorrected edits) we bailed out of the house.

We were able to drive all the way to the trailhead on FS 9030, the old Lookout Point Road (I think, although it doesn't show that name on the maps any more). We had last hiked up to Talapus Lake, about two-plus miles and 1200 ft elev. gain, several years ago on Christmas Eve. This time we didn't bother carrying snowshoes...we would not have needed them this time either. There was one car at the trailhead and we met three other people on the trail. I understand that that's a really low turnout for this trail.


Wilderness Boundary
We started up what appeared to be a continuation
C.J. at Ollalie Lake
of the road at 1100, crossed some swampy area on sturdy boardwalks and negotiated several switchbacks all in hem-fir-cedar forest. We didn't stop at Talapus and it was another 1.25 miles and 500 ft of elevation gain to Olallie Lake. We had been walking in frozen granular snow and ignoring the snow and drips from the trees most of the way up, but now the snow started getting deep enough to hide the trail as we reached the upper lake. BTW, we hadn't changed out of our warm clothes for the whole hike; it was that chilly. The sun was still shining on the far end of the lake but the clouds were starting to roll in when we sat down on our inflatable pads for lunch at 1310 or so. Later we continued on, hoping that the trail continued around the lake; it didn't
G at Talapus Lake
and we started back down around1345. It took just about two hours to reach the car with a stop at the lower lake to enjoy the view up into the mountains. Total mileage was probably just over seven considering the extra distance to the north end of the lake where the obvious trail petered out. This was our first hike since PDT changed over to PST and it was already getting gloomy as we hiked the last mile (sunset was supposed to be around 1650). At least the threatened rain held off until we were home and had had dinner.