Trails & Techno - Text - December 22
Trails & Techno - Text - December 22
Trails & Techno - Text - December 22
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at having the chance to Renault redline Santiago Hyperspace
through Santiago’s nearly deserted
Sunday morning streets. I say “nearly”
because we had more than one close
call with slow-moving pedestrians and
cyclists downtown.
Forty kilometers and fifteen
minutes later, the rebel taxista pulled Han Piojo’s Millenium Taxi
directly into a reserved parking spot and wished us well up north. Once
inside Arturo Merino Benítez Internacional, we checked in at the
LanChile counter and headed to the salón de
desembarque. Andy caught up on the current issue
of The Economist while I dined on a scrambled egg
sandwich chased with some lukewarm café con leche.
As expected, the LanChile flight backed away from
the gate on time at 9:00. Once again, the in-flight food
was nothing short of spectacular: panqueques con dulce de
“Peanuts, Mister Bond?” leche, pan, una copa de
fruta, yogur con sabor de
frutilla, jugo and café. The quality of the
fare was only surpassed by the beauty of
the azafatas on board. One green-eyed
blonde in particular named Carla left us
both speechless.
Carla surveys the aisle At 11:30, we touched down in the
northernmost city in Chile’s Atacama Desert, Arica. Only a handful of
adjectives like “flat” and “arid” could be used to describe the City of Eternal
Spring. Still, this town of 140,000 has an oasis-like quality thanks to the
dark-sand Pacific beaches that are quite popular with Chileans and
Bolivians alike. In addition to being a convenient beach outlet, landlocked
neighbor Bolivia depends on Arica as its main port.
Arid Extra Extra Dry Palm Concourse Flowers Give Our Life
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Santiago? Do you remember falling on the dance floor at the brewpub? I
think we really impressed a lot of people that night. How many rounds of
Pisco did we have? Did that girl really tell you that she had to work all
weekend...I think that she was just trying to get rid of you. I wish that we
could have brought Samantha with us. If you had to choose between job
offers in Buenos Aires and Santiago, which would you pick and why? Me too.
At 20:00, we finally boarded AeroPeru flight #492 to
Arequipa. The flight was only thirty-five minutes long and
dinner consisted of a delightful AeroPeru individually-
wrapped lemon drop. We touched down in Arequipa at
21:00, grabbed our packs and jumped in the back of a waiting
taxi. The driver, Edgar, was a nice fellow who took us to a
hostel on Calle Jerusalén called Nuñez.
While waiting for Andy to scope the place out and pay twenty-six
nuevos soles for one night’s lodging, Edgar floored me with some friendly
advice: “No se queden aquí. Vayan directamente a Cusco mañana.” This
subtle aviso made me think that this town of one million was probably
not the best place for a couple of North Americans to be hanging out.
It was no secret that many Arequipeños had been actively involved
with Sendero Luminoso which had embraced a sort of militant
communism that rejected most Western religious and ideological
traditions. Despite the capture of many of their leaders, including Abimael
Guzmán in September of 1992, many proud Andeans and former Sendero
activists still harbored a strong anti-U.S. sentiment.
Edgar’s warning was further reinforced by the hostel owner who gave
us similar advice. We asked about restaurants in the area, and he advised
us against straying too far off No se queden aqui: Don’t stay here.
Vayan directamente a Cusco: You all should
the beaten shining path. We go straight to Cusco.
settled on a nice pizza place aviso: notice, warning
three blocks away called Sendero Luminoso: Shining Path. Peruvian
communist movement which adopted a rural
Pizzería San Antonio. The fundamentalist approach in opposition to
atmosphere was warm with a Peru’s transition to civilian rule in the late 70s.
white bar, bright yellow walls and eight wooden tables, two of which
were occupied by groups of South American and European travelers.
The huge fireplace in the rear also served as the oven for the delicious,
rectangular pizzas. The walls were covered with assorted graffiti from all
corners of the globe. Scrawled in one corner was a simple two-word
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“Viva River.” This was a clear indication that some proud porteños had
dined here as well. Other scribbled comments shed considerable light on
public opinion of Alberto Fujimori and his handling of national affairs.
Post-pizza, we went straight back to the Nuñez via Calle Jerusalén and
picked up a liter of agua sin gas for drinking and tooth-brushing.
Morning view down Andy climbs in the
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