Travelling in South America – The Stats

  • Countries visited: four (Peru, Chile, Ecuador, Bolivia)
  • Visa stamps collected: sixteen (including cheeky unofficial ones from the Inca trail, Macchu Picchu, Galapagos Islands and Easter Island). Lucy might run out of passport space before we are done!
  • Temperature range: 25C (Galapagos) to -20C (Bolivia – brrr!)
  • Min and max pieces of clothing worn: one (swimming with sharks in the Galapagos) and 16 (Lucy in Bolivia, not including three blankets, a sleeping bag and a hot water bottle at night)
  • Max days without a shower: 3.5 (twice – Uyuni Salt Flats and Inca Trail). For the record, it’s OK if you are both smelly at the same time
  • Pisco sours drunk: 35 (best one claimed made by James in Easter Island). And 35 isn’t as bad as it sounds between the two of us over a whole month! On second thoughts, how did we drink so little?
  • Rodents eaten: not entirely sure. Rodents eaten on purpose: one
  • Highest altitude: 4,900m (on the Uyuni salt flats tour. Gasp, wheeze.)
  • Most bone rattling ride: it’s a close call between the bus ride from Uyuni to Potosi (Lucy hit the ceiling at one point, from a reclining chair) and the final night crossing in the Galapagos (Lucy hit the ceiling at one point, from a prone position in bed)
  • Best building: you might think the Incas would win this, but our hotel room in Puno after four days in a jeep had a duvet! And a hot shower! And cable TV!
  • Best monolithic structure (South Pacific island category): the HUGE double ice cream cone that James ate in the shade of a stone Moai on Easter Island
  • Best new expression: “Poop!” – used twenty times a day by our guide in the Galapagos, and now a common part of our joint vocabulary. (But think about it, he has grannies and toddlers in his multi-lingual groups – how better to say it?)
  • Most unexpected cake: it’s a tie between the one five days out of port on the Galapagos boat trip baked on a slant in the galley, and the one three days into the Inca trail, baked on a propane burner. One said “Happy Honeymon” (sic) in icing; the other had bright green jelly on top – decisions, decisions
  • Scariest flight-related moment: a toss-up between Lucy in a turbulent six seater Cessna over the Nasca lines, and James when a condor about the size of the aforementioned Cessna flew low over his head in Colca Canyon
  • Closest wildlife encounter: you might think it was in the Galapagos, but almost being pushed off the Inca Trail over a sheer drop by a pack Llama probably clinches it
  • Intrepid Points gained: hundreds!

So, goodbye South America, roll on Papua New Guinea!

2 thoughts on “Travelling in South America – The Stats

    • Yeah, did we not mention the bit where we went to E-Z-Chapel in Vegas and tied the knot? $65 including complimentary steak dinner.
      Only joking I’m afraid though it would have been fun 😉
      We were actually with a honeymooning couple so there was a proper reason for the cake. I kind of got the feeling that there would have been some reason for the cake regardless of the group however – the crew ate the majority of it and there may well have been mutiny on the high seas if they didn’t get their weekly dose of cakey goodness
      We’re passing back through Sydney in about another 10 days – unfortunately for about 12 hours only. Will look longingly Melbourne-wards whilst we’re there
      L&J

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