Mindo

A week ago, Betsy had her first long weekend from school so we took the opportunity to travel outside of Quito for the first time.  Our destination was a town called Mindo.  It’s about a two hour drive west from Quito over an interesting two lane mountain road.  Our rented Chevy Spark let us feel every bump and groove of the road.  We needed all of its 51 horsepower to just keep up with other drivers, let a lone try to pass on blind double yellow curves like many other drivers seemed to enjoy.

Comparing Mindo to Crested Butte is a bit of a stretch, however, both towns did come up in the same conversation.  Mindo is a small, quiet town with dirt and cobble roads centered around outdoor activities including hiking, bird watching, zip lining, and river activities.

Our first day we hiked to Nambillo Falls.  After a thirty minute hike, we were surprised to find that the area around the falls included an observation platform, some man made pools fed by side streams, a concrete slide built into the contours of the hillside, and a pavilion where residents of the property were grilling out and selling food and beers.  This was the first time Lucy got in some real water and she loved it.  She also provided quite a show for the 15-20 locals who were there on their own weekend excursion playing in the water and chasing sticks (video).  I gave the slide a go too (video) but am still waiting to find this warm river water my kayaking friends keep telling me about.

On our second day we went zip lining and were relieved that it was a double cable system for added safety.  I wasn’t sure what to expect for $14.  There were thirteen segments to the whole tour.  Great fun.  On the way back to town we stopped by a butterfly research pavilion.  They had butterflies in various stages of maturity and the highlight was being able to feed them with ripe banana as they sat right on your finger.  One of the most impressive things we learned was how the cocoons mimic their surroundings.  For example, butterflies that live close to water have shiny cocoons to mimic water dropping off of plants (photos of gold pods).  Amazing.

After a lunch back in town we went for a hike with some of Betsy’s coworkers that happened to be staying in Mindo. This by far was the thickest jungle scene we encountered.  Steep hills, thick foliage, vines, ferns, and a ton of humidity.  To start the hike we had to cross the Mindo River in a pulley and rope “cable car” that held two people (and a dog).  Lucy hated every second of it but it was surprisingly safe and efficient.

We had such a great time in Mindo and are excited to return.  The next time we go we will have our own vehicle to explore even more as we are close to pulling the trigger on one.  But that is another post.

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No No

This last weekend we also went to the town of Nono, about an hour away.  It was great to get out of the city.  We drove through the town to a small parking lot and then hiked to a water fall.  Along the way we met a nice family that was on the same hike.  Lucy finally was able to get into the water.  Good times.

Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun

Today, Quito will become the closest city on planet Earth to the Sun; it is the Equinox.

This weekend, we visited Mitad del Mundo, the middle of the world.  Commonly referred to as the Equator.  Near Quito, there are two prominent celebrations of this.  The first, established some time ago, is presented with great pomp and circumstance, complete with flowered gardens, stone walkways, and a four story tower with an observatory.  The second is 250 meters away from the more well known line, was discovered eighteen years ago with GPS, and is the exact middle of the earth.  This true Equatorial line is complete with experiments to illustrate the effects and significance of this very real line.  Balancing acts, two sided sun dials, and tubs of draining water that illustrate the opposing Coriolis effects on the different sides of the equator.

My favorite picture below shows my hand over a sun dial.  We were so close to the Equinox that the sun dial cast nearly no shadow.  Today at noon CST the sun dial will cast no measurable shadow and the earth will be in balance.

The Coriolis Effect causes counter clockwise rotation in the Northern Hemisphere (Tornado) and clockwise rotation in the Southern Hemisphere (Typhoon).  However, at the equator, this rotation does not exist.  To illustrate, see the video below to watch water in a basin drain straight down with no vortex.  The leaves fall straight through.  Amazing.

 

A Nice Little Weekend- Part 2

Like I’ve been saying, “We put a nice little weekend together”.  After the botanical garden, Betsy and I took a 15 minute cab ride to Nayon, a sleepy town east of Quito and down the hill.  Right away Nayon felt more like our pace.  The main industry of this small town is selling greenhouse plants.  The gardener we purchased our plants from, Juan, is a third generation gardener and also does work for the school.  It was hard to decide, but we got a few things we had always wanted but never had because of the sheer expense in the states or how restricted the environment was back home.  In the end, we purchased two different palms, four rose plants, a lime tree, an orange tree, some tomato plants, and azalea bush.  Juan even loaded up everything in his brother’s pick up truck, drove us home, and helped us plant the rose bushes.  Amazing.

A Nice Little Weekend- Part 1

We put a nice little weekend together.  On Saturday, we took the ten minute walk from our apartment to Jardin Botanico, an 18,000 square meter botanical garden in Parque Carolina.  There were many areas containing various trees, bushes, flowers, and cacti.  The highlight was definitely the Orchid rooms, which consisted of two separate greenhouses of differing climates.  Coming in as a close second was a humid greenhouse containing carnivorous plants.  In the slideshow, these are the tubular shaped flowers.  The two species below traps insects by either drowning them at the bottom of the flower or closing a lid, trapping the insect.  I’m definitely going to keep my head on a swivel in the jungle.

 

 

Parque Metropolitano Bike Ride

On the east side of Quito is Parque Metropolitano, the largest urban park in South America clocking in at nearly twice the size of Central Park in NYC.  It’s on a ridge so it overlooks the city to the west and then down the next valley to the east.  The park is full of trails, playing fields, picnic areas with grills and covered structures, as well as large pieces of art.  It’s also home to horses and alpacas.  The topography consists of rolling hills and cliffs covered with Eucalyptus trees, bushes, vines, and grasses.

There is an east entrance to the park a very short bike ride from our front door.  I was excited with what I found; great trails with endless loop choices that will get my heart rate going and feed my soul.  I also got my first glimse of Cotopaxi, the 19,347′ volcano to the East of the Parque.

Looking west from Parque MetropolitanoIMG_5193 IMG_5179IMG_5181IMG_5188IMG_5187IMG_5182IMG_5186Looking East from Parque MetropolitanoIMG_5195IMG_5194Looking East from Parque MetropolitanoLooking East from Parque MetropolitanoFirst View of Cotopaxi