Saturday, November 17, 2007

Holy Toledo: Recap

When Kelli and I heard from our friend Carolyn that she was moving up to Michigan to live in July, we immediately started scheming to go up and visit. Well, we didn't make it up there until the first week of November. We drove up to the Pittsburgh area on Thursday night, stayed literally 500 feet from I-76 (noisy ol' road), and drove up to Cleveland the next day.
As we got to the Cleveland Suburbs, we ended up in the express lane, and by the time we realized what we did, the next exit was Kirtland. Kirtland Ohio wasn't even on our radar, but we decided we might as well stop since we had to get off that exit anyway. We found the Kirtland Temple and did the Community of Christ tour. The tour guide did an amazing job and was very knowledgeable about the history of that grand old building. We also ate at a great restaurant and had pierogies and paprikash. Good meal.
As we both were planning to go to the Rock and Roll Museum we headed on down the road. We made it to the Rock and Roll Museum in Cleveland two or three hours before it closed and stayed until closing. The building takes advantage of natural lighting and is pretty good sized. We spent most of our time on the ground floor. As you walk into the museum, the first picture is an Annie Liebowitz of Chuck Berry. On the other side was a Beach Boys exhibit, including film of Brian Wilson performing with the Boys. There was costumes, a great music influences section, early drawings by Lennon, exhibits of the music scene in various cities, Janis Joplin's Porsche and I could go on. We then went up and watched the Hall of Fame inductees video and spent a couple of minutes in an exhibit on the early years of Rock and then it was closing time. After a quick tour of the Gift show we were on the road.
We drove through Toledo and made it to Detroit a little after nine where Carolyn was waiting for us. We talked for a bit and then went to bed.
The next morning we got up, Carolyn made fabulous cinnamon rolls and we decided to go into Detroit since Carolyn hadn't been yet. We first went to Detroit's Eastern Market, which frankly is incomparable to DC's. It was extensive, the produce was cheap and we had a great time. We stopped in a few shops, bought a few things and then ate at one of the many Coney Restaurants that populate Detroit.
After lunch we headed over to the Motown Museum after a bit of a detour in one of Detroit's "finer" neighborhoods. And by neighborhoods I mean, extensive abandoned warehouses. We arrived at the Motown Museum which is actually two houses linked together. We took a tour of the buildings and were awed by the history. We spent a few minutes in the original recording studio and well, wow.
After that we went to Downtown Detroit, saw where the Fox theater was, gawked at the baseball field and then went down to the riverfront. We gazed over at "Canada," and wished we had our passports since Carolyn had never been. We spent some time at the Underground Railroad Memorial and then headed back to Carolyn's. We ordered pizza and then watched Rocky Balboa(Carolyn loves Rocky). I only watched about 30 minutes before I crashed.
The next morning we got up, hugged and thanked Carolyn and headed out. We stopped at Lake Erie, bought a ton of cheese and sandwiches at the "Cheese house," somewhere in Ohio and drove the rest of the way back to DC arriving home about 7:00. Anyway, great trip and thanks Carolyn!

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Monday, October 29, 2007

Holy Toledo !!!

Here's a post to share information about the Carolyn roadtrip. I've dubbed it rustbelt '07, but another name would work too. I also thought about using a line from the White Stripe song about Detroit (since we're basically going to Detroit Suburbs), but I'm totally open. Anyway, my first blurb:

Excerpt about Toledo:

Tony Packo’s Cafe –1902 Front Street. This cafe gained national recognition
through the frequent references made by cross-dressing Corporal Max Klinger in
the M*A*S*H TV series. The signature item on the menu is the Hungarian hot dog,
which is made with sausage and a secret sauce.
http://www.travel-library.com/holidays/north_america/usa/ohio/toledo/

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Apples Are Amazing


Roadtrip! Stribling Orchards is home to amazing apples, cinnamon apple scones, and fresh apple cider. Located in Markham, VA they are also a gateway to a scenic byway. It was a pretty cool trip - the leaves were changing, the cows and horses were out in the fields, and there were plenty of rolling hills to make it picturesque. We also stopped at a little 19th century church and walked through their graveyard. Overall, western Virginia is a recommended puddlejump if you're ever in the area.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

How to Lose the Yankee Vote Or my note to Giuliani


So, you're a mayor of one of the biggest baseball cities in the world. You are from that city, you claim to be a life-long fan of the baseball team, you wear their gear and love to tell the story that you got beat up for wearing a Yankees cap in Brooklyn, you go to their games even after you're out of office, and you claim you're rooting for their biggest rival in the World Series because you're an AL fan? That's the lamest excuse since Sen. Craig went prowling at the Minnesota Airport.
Even if you narrowly escaped the big sleep by a 3-2 vote(which somehow ups your cool factor), you're dead to me, and many, many other Yankee fans. I cut Mitt some slack for changing his views on certain issues, but this? Even if New Hampshire primaries are coming up, this is unforgiveable flip-flopping!!! Oh why do I care? I'm more or less a Democrat.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

75 And Counting Down the Minutes


The NCLEX is finished - for better or for worse. I was photographed, fingerprinted, shook down, and escorted to my testing station (by very nice Pearson Center employees) for 75 questions to determine whether or not I can practice as a nurse. I spent last night looking up stuff on the internet from people that failed the test as a way to pre-emptively console myself that it was going to be okay if I sucked it up a little.


So with 75 questions, I either passed with flying colors or failed miserably. The beauty of the test design is that you can't tell which you did because everyone finishes only answering 50% of the questions correctly. The key is that you finish at 50% on a higher difficulty level. For more on that you can read about the test here. Surprisingly, reading about other people that had failed was comforting.

With 24 hours until I find out if I passed, I decided to list a few things that involve the prodigious number 75:

1) 75% - a Gentleman's C. Good enough to get you out of Yale and elected to high national office.

2) 75 years ago, the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached its lowest level in the Great Depression (you can only go up from here!)

3) In '75, Jaws debuted (and most of the characters survived).

4) Rhenium the 75th element is one of the 10 most expensive metals on earth (if Wikipedia is to be believed).

5) Mona Shaw is a 75 year-old retired nurse from Virginia that smashed up her local Comcast office with a hammer. While we don't condone violence, we commend Mona for her sitcom-esque flourish. Double points if she told the customer service rep "Fo' Shizzle My Nizzle!"

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Ziering!!!


I'm going through all my music and listening to all the stuff that I never listen to and have discovered some bands I didn't even know I had. Including the Flaming Lips. Turns out the Flaming Lips made a memorable appearance on Beverly Hills 90210 where Ian Ziering's character said "You know, I've never been a big fan of alternative music, but these guys rocked the house!" What a tool.

To see this amazing lip synched performance - with some awesome head bobbing to the beat by Ian Ziering - check out this Youtube link.

Also, I thought I would put in a plug for allmusic.com, which gave me the information to track down this rare sellout performance. Allmusic is a comprehensive database of musicians, their discographies, and bios of the bands. Nothing says love like comprehensive geekiness.

Monday, October 22, 2007

This is the Part Where I Apologize For Jinxing the Indians


Yes, the Red Sox are going to the Series. Apparently their pitching staff is more resilient than Lazarus. And the Indian's batters are streakier than Nancy Grace's hair.


So that should teach me that making predictions on my blog is a bad idea. But, what are blogs for if not putting down bad ideas. Prediction: Rockies sweep the series (because if they go to game 7, they're sure to lose). Prediction: I'm going to eat my words in a week.

48 hours to Game 1 and the NCLEX. Game on!

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Jason Schwartzman Knows My Name


As long as I change my name to Sylvia.

The Darjeeling Limited played last night in Georgetown and afterwards Jason Schwartzman (yes Max Fischer himself) came to answer questions.

Best question of the night: mine of course. Because Schwartzman renamed me Sylvia as he chose me to ask a question. I could get used to that name. There's lots of famous Sylvia's in the world: Sylvia Plath, Sylvia ummm....

Most moronic question of the night: "I noticed the Ipod is different between the Hotel Chevalier [the short prologue film] and The Darjeeling Limited. Is that character driven?" All I can say is best fan ever!

So the movie: gorgeous, quirky, touching. And I almost cried. If you see the movie, you'll know which scene I'm talking about. The movie reminded me of all the scariness of traveling; hurtling down a track in a foreign country trying to locate yourself on a map so you can get off on the right stops to get to the must see sites. Trying to connect to a foreign culture and the other travelers around you. Inevitably, the most memorable parts of the trip come when your itinerary is blown to hell.
Darjeeling is not everybody's cup of tea (it's definitely not a Diet Coke). According to Schwartzman, the film was a very personal journey for the writers and I think it's the same for those watching it.

Other observations about the film: 1) The race for the train was a fantastic opening sequence. 2) Favorite line: "I like the way this country smells. Kind of spicy." 3) Why is Adrien Brody so hot in all his gangly dorkiness? and 4) The mustache looks surprisingly at home on Schwartzman's face. Anyway, long live Sylvia!


Friday, October 19, 2007

In Honor of October


October is home to baseball playoffs and breast cancer awareness. In honor of both, some teenagers in Kansas came up with the best t-shirt in history. Unfortunately, their school banned sales of the shirt because it was too cool (or some other BS reason that had something to do with being uptight).


You can get the full story here, or check out another blog's take on the story here.

Invaluable Information for Saving TV


And I have a bone to pick with you America - who the hell is watching Dancing With The Stars? You are ruining television for the rest of us. I have recently found out from the futoncritic.com that tv shows get canceled for 1 of 3 reasons (check out the link for the full analysis).


Futon's analysis gives a run down of all the time slots ratings numbers and reveals that 20.5 MILLION people are watching Dancing With B-List Stars That Nobody Cares About And Doesn't Ever Want To See Again (I'm talking about you Ian Ziering). So when my beloved Pushing Daisies doesn't come up with even 1/3 of the audience, the network decides to cancel the more expensive (and infinitely better show) to run more nights and or re-runs of the inexpensive Dancing With The Has Beens (because talentless hacks come cheap).


By the way, kudos to futoncritic.com for providing lists of stats, tables, and exhaustive analyses for the inner tv geek in all of us. Seriously, check out their "10 things you need to know about the new season" for a full rundown.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

NBC or ABC (CBS isn't even in the running)

The fall television season is upon us and I think there has been enough time to evaluate the new fall shows and make a plea to watch some of my favorites so they don't get cancelled.

To Watch in no particular order:

1) Pushing Daisies (if only to hear the narrator say "muuuurder" over and over against a technicolor background).

2) Ugly Betty (if only to watch Mark and Amanda out razzle dazzle each other).

3) 30 Rock (because I can't get enough of that Liz Lemon - Jack Donaghy magic).

4) Chuck (super-spy geeks. What can I say... I'm in love).

5) Friday Night Lights (and I don't even like high school football or Texas (just kidding Texas, but your ego can take it, I'm sure)).


Please don't let them die ("I believe in fairies" *clap clap* "I believe in faries).


Funny how none of CBS's shows make the list. Funny how CBS has put all their eggs into the Reality Show Basket in lieu of an original idea.

Colorado or Cleveland?




These are the hard choices. Both are underdogs (relatively speaking). One has Grady Sizemore, one has an entire infield of some of the most graceful/kickass players in baseball. I know, I know it's premature to assume Cleveland is going to the series, but c'mon, the Red Sox pitching staff couldn't carry them through the Congressional softball leagues at this point, let alone the playoffs (no offense Beckett).




An aside...Is it self-respecting to crush on a player from afar after you find out that he has a groupie fan base that calls themselves "Grady's Ladies"?...

A further note from the major leagues: MLB gameday webcast is much better than ESPNs. Why am I so interested in baseball? Distraction. Up to 5 hr and 14 minutes of study distraction in some cases. There's only one October and there's only one NCLEX.








Friday, June 8, 2007

Peru is just cool...

US scientists discover new, potentially deadly bacteria
Thu Jun 7, 1:13 AM ET

In a dramatic case of microbial sleuthing, US scientists said they have discovered a new, potentially deadly strain of bacteria previously unknown to medicine.
The bacteria was found in a 43-year-old American woman who had traveled across Peru for three weeks and suffered from symptoms similar to typhoid fever or malaria. The woman has since recovered.

Named Bartonella rochalimae, the new species is a close relative of a microbe that sickened thousands of soldiers during the First World War with what became known as trench fever, spread through body lice.

It is also related to a bacteria identified 10 years ago during the AIDS epidemic in San Francisco as the cause of cat scratch disease, which infects 25,000 people a year in the United States.
It was this previous work on cat scratch disease related to AIDS that helped experts at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention isolate the new bacteria found in the female traveler.

The findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Two weeks after returning to the United States from her trip to Peru, the woman experienced potentially life-threatening anemia, a rash, an enlarged spleen, insomnia and a high fever that lasted for several weeks.
Her traveling companion did not fall ill.

The Peruvian Andes is home to a related bacteria, spread by sand flies, and at first this was what experts thought was causing her illness.

Further investigation indicated the culprit was a new species altogether.

The new discovery is the sixth species identified that can infect humans, said Dr. Jane Koehler, professor of infectious diseases at UCSF and senior author of the paper.

In 1987, Koehler encountered her first patient infected with Bartonella at the AIDS Clinic at San Francisco General Hospital.

"The bacteria were eating away a bone in the arm of an AIDS patient - for
months," Koehler said. "They can cause extremely painful lesions and tumors of blood vessels on the skin of immunocompromised patients."

In 1997, her team discovered that the Bartonella henselae bacterium causes cat scratch disease. Symptoms include swollen lymph nodes and fever after a person is scratched by a cat.

The new bacterium is treated with a different antibiotic that those used for cat scratch disease.
"When a patient has a high and persistent fever, we need to come up with the correct diagnosis and treatment as soon as possible - particularly for those with a weakened immune system, who can die from the infection," Koehler said.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

The New York Times: The Other Macchu Pichu

The Other Machu Picchu
By ETHAN TODRAS-WHITEHILL


DAWN had just broken, and the lost city of the Incas lay empty — not a tourist in sight. From the priests’ district, the high point of the ruins, the bright green central plaza stretched along the narrow summit of a high ridge and dropped precipitously on both sides to a turquoise river thousands of feet below.
In a small chamber two feet from where I stood, the high priest had once meditated daily to seek guidance from his god. In the two-story peaked-roof structures downhill and to the left, workers had dropped off their tools at night — weary men stumbling in after a Sisyphean day of cutting and lugging stones. Beyond lay a panorama of jungle and 17,000-foot peaks. Around me was silence — and isolation.
This was Peru, but not the famous Machu Picchu. I was at Choquequirao, a sister city of similar significance built along similar lines, but harder to reach and, for the time being, still sufficiently free of tourists for a visitor to imagine, without much effort, the priests and builders, the supplicants and courtiers roaming its paths and plaza. Twenty-five years ago, Machu Picchu must have looked much like this.
Choquequirao’s builder, Topa Inca, chose his city’s site and design precisely because of the similarities to Machu Picchu, the city of his predecessor, Pachachuti, according to Gary Ziegler, an independent American archaeologist who worked on the first Choquequirao excavation. The two cities were about the same size and served the same religious, political and agricultural functions. But because archaeologists long underestimated the importance of Choquequirao, the city’s existence was known for almost 300 years before the first restoration was begun in 1993. It is still only 30 percent uncovered. The Peruvian government is just beginning to plan for large-scale tourism there.
In 2006 Choquequirao drew 6,800 visitors, according to Peru’s National Cultural Institute, more than double the total in 2003 but a little more than 1 percent of the number who went to Machu Picchu. For now, Choquequirao remains “an Inca site you can visit without a 60-person Japanese tour group and two tour guides with umbrellas and megaphones,” Mr. Ziegler had told me — a “journey for the savvy traveler.”
I was traveling with five companions: my girlfriend, an Israeli couple who were both Army veterans, a Dutch student and an Arizona bookkeeper turned vagabond. We had coalesced into a group while studying Spanish at a language school in Cuzco.
The first part of our journey to Choquequirao took us to Cachora, the nearest town. It has no direct bus service, so we went from Cuzco by cab — a beat-up station wagon that bumped and twisted over 100 miles of poorly paved road. When we arrived, well after sunset, the indigo sky was dotted with the last twinkles of alpenglow on the snow-covered Salkantay ridge, so impossibly high above us that it was easier to believe they were stars.
We dined at the Terrace of Choquequirao, a menuless two-table restaurant owned by Gilberto Medina, a thin, deferential man who talked to us over coca leaf tea. In the previous year, he told us, the town’s main road had been paved and two new restaurants had joined his. Hotels were under construction, and the first Internet cafe had opened.
In Cuzco before the trip, Pedro Tacca, the director of patrimony for the National Cultural Institute, had spoken to me about the importance of preserving communities like Cachora and the other towns near Choquequirao as tourism to the site grows. He said Peru is trying to control growth and access to Cachora to keep it from becoming another Aguas Calientes, the town closest to Machu Picchu, which is made up entirely of tourist shops, restaurants and hostels, with a railroad track — where the tourists arrive — instead of a main street. “It’s a community without personality,” he said, “horrible in contrast to majestic and beautiful Machu Picchu.”
For now, Cachora still belongs to its residents, farmers whose way of life has changed little in centuries. Invited by Mr. Medina, we went to the elementary school to see a celebration of the Festival of the Virgin Carmen. Children in flannel shirts, wide dresses and colorful mantas (blankets) performed traditional dances, sashaying, spinning and mugging for their doting parents. In the finale, a 25-foot bamboo tower of flammable pinwheels, linked by fuses made with newspaper, set off a shower of colorful sparks. The children tucked their shirts over their heads and ran back and forth under the fiery spray as if it were a playground sprinkler, shrieking with delight.
From Cachora, the trek to Choquequirao is 20 difficult miles in the mountains. Most visitors rent horses, but all of us were in our 20s, and we decided to hike, walking out of town the next morning with mules carrying our packs. The dusty road took us down a quilt of fields and mudstone houses stitched together by lines of outsize aloe plants and shimmery blue eucalyptus trees. Our legs followed the road along the winding cliffs over the Apurímac River, but our eyes stayed fixed on the Salkantay ridge to the north, now appearing in daylight like the snow-capped, protective plates of a massive stegosaurus.
After a knee-crushing 4,000-vertical-foot descent, we spent the second night at a campsite full of pleasant surprises like flush toilets, a shower and cold bottles of Coca-Cola from a woman whose family had trekked them in to sell to tourists. The next morning we embarked on the last and hardest part of the trail: eight miles and 5,000 vertical feet up.
Glad to rest, we stopped after two hours at a three-hut village called Santa Rosa, where in a thatch-roofed store Julian Covarrubias, a baby-faced 25-year-old with a faded Adidas hoodie and a neat goatee, told us he was seeing 15 to 20 tourists a day, and that was plenty for him. Five years ago only one or two a month came through. Sure, he said, he was selling more Cokes now, but his family had been on this land for over 100 years, growing sugar cane, avocados and papayas, had made it through occupation by Shining Path guerrillas in the ’80s, and didn’t want to leave to make way for government tourism projects.
We returned to the arduous trek (which government officials hope eventually to eliminate by building a funicular up the mountain) and at nightfall were setting up camp in the government campground just below the main plaza of Choquequirao. A man approached — 40 or so, with a thin brown ponytail and a button-down shirt left open above a black Tasmanian Devil T-shirt — and directed us to a different spot, saying with calm authority, “I decide who camps where.” He was Enrique Yábar, park chief of Choquequirao.
Mr. Yábar told me that if it were up to him and most of his 24 workers, Choquequirao would remain unknown until more work had been done to limit the effects of tourism. “All of us as inhabitants of the Andes,” he told me, “are directed by our gods, the mountains, and we have the mission to protect them.”
I couldn’t wait until morning to see the ruins, and neither could Avishai, the Israeli man. We hiked up and emerged out onto the open ridge top, a cold wind cutting through our fleece jackets. A wide-winged condor swung on a thermal a few hundred feet away and stopped dead, as if hanging from a mobile. We began climbing stone steps and ducking through ancient doorways like two toddlers on a jungle gym. For a precious few minutes, that ridge top, those 15,000-foot violet hills, those buildings so revered by an extinct civilization, were ours, and our sovereign desire was horseplay.
The next day, after my quiet moment at dawn, we all explored the ruins. Our mule driver knew a little about the site, but for the most part we guided ourselves. I had Spanish-language photocopies of government materials; the one book I had found in English was filled with beautiful photographs and too heavy to tote up the mountain. We saw only six other tourists.
Choquequirao, like all important Incan cities, is laid out in alignment with the movements of the sun and the stars. One building on the central plaza has nooks in which the mummies of important citizens were placed, and it is onto these nooks that the first rays of dawn fall each day.
The city’s central temple is a small rectangle on the other side of the plaza with evenly spaced depressions for altars and stone hooks where the priests hung their raiment. The most striking feature about the temple is how tiny it is; like those at Machu Picchu, it could fit perhaps 20 worshipers and had very little of the architectural grandeur of a mosque, a church or a synagogue. But then, an attempt at human grandeur here, in the shadow of the jagged jungle peak Corihuayrachina and facing arid, domelike mountains so gargantuan they make clouds look small, would seem redundant at best.
Although Choquequirao is more spread out than Machu Picchu, and therefore less photogenic, the promontory on which it lies reaches its zenith with a ceremonial hill behind the plaza, a smaller version of the rugged mountain seen in every photograph of Machu Picchu. The hike up takes just a few minutes but affords a 360-degree view of the ruins and the surrounding landscape. The curious feature of the hill is that it was scalped, flattened and denuded of vegetation by the Incas so their priests could perform rituals there.
On the other side of the plaza, the city climbs steadily uphill following a carved stone aqueduct where water will again flow in a few years as restoration progresses. It soon reaches a zigzag set of terraces resembling a giant’s staircase. Obsessed as they were with building cities on top of mountains, the Incas developed terraces like these to grow crops. Choquequirao has quite a few scattered about, long rice-paddy-like structures imposing angular order on the wild cliffs, but these narrower terraces were special. The priests probably used them to grew the special coca that figured heavily in their rituals. (Modern Andean peoples still use the coca leaf, not to make cocaine but for the mildly euphoric coca tea that appears to occupy the same space in their culture as our coffee, alcohol and aspirin wrapped into one.)
A path from the central plaza leads to the residential district, a complex of newly exposed simple four-walled houses that the jungle is already doing its best to reclaim. The place had a creepy “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” vibe, heightened by the rustling of unknown animals in the brush. That glancing-over-your-shoulder fear, the sort of adrenaline rush you hope for at ancient ruins, is still attainable at Choquequirao.
My favorite structures were the peaked-roof houses between the central plaza and the priest’s section above. Missing only the straw thatch above to be livable (and perhaps a couch or two), they were the largest buildings in the site. Inside one, I lay on my back on the neatly trimmed grass floor and reveled in the interlocking Incan stonework — and the silence. All that day, my group saw only six other visitors at Choquequirao. I could have lain smack in the center of the central plaza, which at Machu Picchu is strictly off limits, and no one would have bothered me.
Choquequirao truly is the lost city of the Incas. In the days of the Spanish conquest, Choquequirao became the principal religious center for the last-gasp Inca state, but its name does not appear in any of the chronicles of the age. Mr. Ziegler theorizes that the Incas did not want the Spanish to know it existed; in fact, they never did find the city. When it was abandoned in the late 16th century, it just shut down, tools left in place for archaeologists like Mr. Ziegler to find hundreds of years later, “like someone just turned out the light and walked away overnight,” he said. The first Westerner to visit was Juan Arias Díaz, a Spanish explorer who arrived in 1710.
Later in the day, I saw a man in a denim shirt and a broad-brimmed hat studying some papers against the low stone wall. I asked him if he was an archaeologist. He shook his head and said something in Spanish that I didn’t catch, and then tried again, saying in heavily accented English, “You know: ladies and gentleman!”
His name was John Chavez, and he was an entertainer hired by the Peruvian government to greet tourists and show them the central plaza. But he was still learning the ropes. Every time I asked a question, he looked down at his notes, which were highlighted and annotated like a high school history textbook, and then gave me an answer that was muddled, incomplete or occasionally wrong.
I found his incompetence oddly thrilling. For all the stories I’ve heard from older travelers about how the great sites of the world felt before they became household names — Angkor Wat, Prague, Machu Picchu — I finally had one of my own: “I was at Choquequirao when even the tour guides didn’t know what they were doing.”
VISITOR INFORMATION
Flights to Cuzco generally involve a change in Lima. Early July flights on LAN Peru from Kennedy Airport in New York were recently available at about $1,110.
Several travel agencies in Cuzco organize tours to Choquequirao with pre-arranged accommodation, transportation, guides and mules or horses, typically for about $300 to $400. SAS Travel on the Plaza de Armas has a good reputation (51-84-255-205; www.sastravelperu.com).
To tour on your own, hire a taxi to Cachora from Cuzco ($40 to $50 one way), leaving early in the day (or the driver won’t want to take you). You can pre-arrange a return with your driver, but it’s not necessary.
In Cachora, stay at the Casa de Salcantay, a small new hostel in a Dutch climber’s highly aesthetic home, complete with tulips ($22 a person per night, including breakfast. www.salcantay.com). Jan Willem van Delft, the proprietor, speaks perfect English and will help you arrange mules and horses ($7 to $10 a day each) and a mule-driver.
Along the trail there are campsites every few hours, some government-run, others belonging to villagers, with very small or no fees. If you don’t like one site, you have to hike a few hours to the next. If you arrange your trip in Cachora, your mule driver will be an adequate guide.
ETHAN TODRAS-WHITEHILL’S last story for Travel was about New Age spirituality tours in Egypt.

Saturday, June 2, 2007

Carolina.......

Last weekend we headed down on Friday for the beach. We got a house for the beach the Monday before. All the roommates signed up, as did 4 guys from Langley Ward. Friday night the drive down I-95 went pretty well. We got there about midnight and went down to the beach to hang out. On Saturday we hung out with about 500 or so other Mormons. Sunday, Kell and I went to Hatteras. Monday, we went back to the beach and then drove on back. We saw dolphins, Sara saved a couple of skates, a few lighthouses, spent some time in the water, played on the beach, strained a foot muscle, got a little sun, played some games, talked, flirted, skimboarded and slept on the beach. All in all a great weekend.

Friday, May 4, 2007

Cusco

Kelli suggested that we get the hotel room (which last time we just booked a hotel in basically the airport in Cusco) out of the way and I think we should maybe book our tickets to Macchu Picchu. Below are the times and the ticket prices. From: http://www.orient-express.com/web/tper/journeys/4_53409.jsp

TIMETABLE
Vistadome 1

Departs Cuzco 06.00
Arrives Machu Picchu 09.40
Departs 15.30
Arrives Cusco 19.20

Vistadome 2
Cuzco 07.00
Machu Picchu 11.00
Machu Picchu 17.00
Cuzco 21.25

Backpacker
Cuzco 06.15
Machu Picchu 10.15
Machu Picchu 15.55
Cuzco 20.20

Prices:(Roundtrip)
Vistadome: $113
Backpacker:$ 73

JOURNEY

The train journey from Cuzco to Machu Picchu is a highlight of any trip to the Andes. The 3 and a half hour journey takes you through a changing landscape. First there is a steep climb out of Cuzco into the surrounding hillside, by means of a series of switchback turns known locally as "the zig zag".
The train then stops at Poroy before descending into the Sacred Valley, passing by lush, green fields and colourful villages in the foothills of the Andes. After departing Poroy and going through Cachimayo, the train descends to the plateau of Anta, a patchwork landscape of typical Andean crops and passes lush fields and colourful villages in the foothills of the Andes.
Far to the left, just below the horizon, the massive agricultural terraces of Jaquijahuana can be seen, close to the village of Zurite. Sadly, these great terraces are all that remain today of what was once a major Inca city, lost forever during the first years after the Spanish conquest.
Beyond the town of Huarocondo the great plain narrows dramatically as the track enters a deep gorge carved by the rushing Pomatales River down which the railway, too, is funnelled until it meets the Urubamba River, which runs through the beautiful Sacred Valley.
The train passes through extensive areas of terracing dotted with the ruins of Inca fortresses. Bisecting this are still-visible sections of an ancient, long-abandoned highway adopted by the muleteers of the late 19th century, who used it to travel between Cuzco and the rubber plantations of the Amazon lowlands. Five kilometres beyond Pachar, is the village of Ollantaytambo where farmers work with the same patience and skill that their ancestors must have employed to shape and then move the huge blocks of stone with which they built both their homes and the temples in which they worshipped.
As the train leaves Ollantaytambo to begin the last part of its journey to Machu Picchu, the temple complex known as The Fortress, dedicated sometime in the 15th century to the many deities of the Inca pantheon, can be seen to the right above the earthwork ramp once used to drag its monolithic blocks up from the valley floor. The railway follows the river into the Urubamba Gorge.
At Coriwaynachina, known simply to the generations of hikers who have begun the Inca Trail there as Km 88, a fine staircase carved into the rock leads to a series of ruined buildings where once, it is said, Inca artisans took advantage of the constant wind that rises from the valley floor to smelt gold.Emerging from a short tunnel, a series of beautiful agricultural terraces marks the ruins of Qente, which in Quechua means hummingbird. In this fertile microclimate fed by a nearby waterfall, giant hummingbirds are indeed a common sight in the early morning and bright flowers bloom all year round.
Surrounded by tall ceibos and rocky outcrops hung with orchids and bromeliads, the train passes Km 104 at Chachabamba, from where the one-day trek to Machu Picchu via the magnificent ruins of Wiñay Wayna begins.At just two km from Machu Picchu, the train arrives at Aguas Calientes. Surrounded by the high, green mountains that cradle the famous lost city, as well as myriad other Inca remains, this small town, which is well known for its thermal baths, has blossomed into a popular overnight destination for travellers to Machu Picchu.Guests disembark at Aguas Calientes for the magical ruins of Machu Picchu.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Peru '07: The Rough Itinerary

May 10: Arrive in Lima at 10:50 pm

May 11: Fly to Cusco at 5:00 am

May 12: Macchu Picchu

May 13: Half day in Cusco-Fly to Juliaca

May 14: Juliaca/Puno

May 15:Puno

May 16: Puno/Arequioa

May 17:Arequipa/Lima

May 18:Lima/ DC

May 19: Fly Back

Thursday, April 12, 2007

And Peru Came Tumblin' Down


Yesterday afternoon, a friend of mine e-mailed me asking if she could go to Peru with us since her plans to go in May fell through. She bought a ticket and last night Kell and pored over the Peru book I picked up at the library. Since she'd never been to Cusco and Macchu Picchu, we decided to add that leg of the trip in. Kell told me, "that means we can get a picture of the two of us at Macchu Picchu and you can put that on your wall. "
You see, I have this 8x10 of Chelsea and I in Macchu Picchu. Its been on the wall facing my bedroom door for about 4 years and is the first thing people comment on when they see my room. Kell admitted she's a little jealous of it, but we never got a pic of the two of us in Macchu Picchu. Well, this morning, my roommate Megan shut the front door and Peru came tumbling down. The picture is fine, but the glass frame is destroyed. Its not a big deal--but a little ironic that it happened less than 12 hours after we decided to go back to Macchu Picchu.

Friday, March 9, 2007

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Homesick for a place I've never lived before

Come February time, when the snow starts falling and the temps drop, I start missing New York. The past two or three years, I've been to New York over President's Day weekend. There's the story of the infamous blizzard of '03, the Gates of '05. There's something about wandering around NYC in the snow, planning what to wear so you're not soaked by the end of the day.

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Delaware in a Day

About 3 and a half years ago, Kelli and I decided to hit the beach. Our destination was Rehoboth, the best beach I've been to out here within a 4 hour radius of the house. We drove on out...and about 3 hours from home, realized we were nearly to Philly. We had been to Rehoboth 4 or 5 times at that point and didn't use the map for directions. As we drove, and drove, and saw a sign saying I-95 was 10 miles in front of us...we knew the beach didn't move...but Rehoboth is 100+ miles from I-95....So, we got out the map, quickly saw we made a wrong move and that we were on the opposite corner of the state. Luckily, Delaware is small enough that we decided to just turn around and hit the beach. We drove through Dover, Wilmington and saw a lot of ghetto. We got to the beach about 4..long enough to soak some sun, lounge around, eat some sea food and do a little shopping before we arrived home after 10...a little sheepishly but no worse for wear. Plus, after that trip, we got to tell people its totally possible to circumnavigate Delaware in a day--If there was any doubt.