Little more than a week ago we gradually made our way back
from everlasting summer to the reality of a spring that is spring only by name.
With each flight we moved a bit further away from the Colombian coast’s
thirty-plus degrees with eighty-plus percent humidity; at each airport we
stepped outside for a few minutes to feel the difference. In Bogotá, early in
the evening, I enjoyed the cooler air, thought, just for a moment, with just a
tinge of regret that I missed not to have even seen the highlands this time.
The climate would have been easier for me to deal with – but I quickly
suppressed that ungrateful notion. In Toronto, early in the morning, I saw no
snow, and the air, just above the freezing mark, was still. ‘This is not so
bad,’ was my observation here. ‘If it’s like this at home …’ In Edmonton, standing outside the departure
area door waiting for Carl to pick us up, I wished I had my winter jacket instead
of the fleece jacket when the wind drove thin snow into my face. Even from the
air we had been able to see that the ground was still white. Back to the
reality of home, four times closer to the Arctic Circle than to the equator.
Past experience taught me that it doesn’t take long to adjust.
So, how to get from here
back to here?
It requires a mental leap, admittedly, but it is also very tempting, especially since the sunshine in the first picture has given way to more light snow, temperatures way below where we feel they should be (-9 today, -24 expected overnight), the average depth of snow in the yard still at 37 cm, and wind. Going back to Cartagena, where we spent the last few days of our Colombia trip, sounds like a very pleasant task on a day like this.
We had planned to spend the last few days in Cartagena, by
all accounts a beautiful city with its well preserved colonial buildings. When
we arrived we were eager to get to Santa Marta for the hike to the Ciudad
Perdida: conditions were ideal with the dry weather, and there was no telling
when they might change. Since this was the most important undertaking of our
trip we wanted to make sure to do everything to make it happen. Thus we had
decided then to postpone the exploration of Cartagena's old city till the end. Originally
we had planned to take the bus from Cartagena to Bogotá, from where our flight
was leaving for Toronto, but when we found a very cheap flight we changed our
plans to have more time at the coast.
No big buses go to Minca because of the narrow, very
winding road, so the first part of the trip took place in one of the big vans
travelling between Minca and Santa Marta. We had heard that we could get the
ticket to Cartagena in Minca already, and if we had understood the man selling
us the tickets correctly we’d just have to let our driver know that we wanted
to continue on to Cartagena. Even with diminished weekend traffic it took a
long time to make our way to Santa Marta’s centre where, we expected, we would
end up at the place from where we left at the beginning of the week, trusting
that the bus to Cartagena was leaving from that same curbside spot. We
recognized the area and kept our eyes open for the calle we remembered, but suddenly the van stopped, the driver said
something about Cartagena and indicated that we were to get out. Now what? But
no worries: he unloaded our backpacks, hailed a taxi, gave the driver
instructions and money – and just like that we were whisked away. Of course we
felt a bit at the mercy of the forces that be, but we trusted that the taxi
driver knew where we needed to go (obviously much better than we did), and
really, after not even ten minutes he stopped in front of a ‘Marsol’ bus office.
Everything was in order, and we had about another hour until the bus was
leaving for Cartagena. The office, empty but for a ticket counter and a few
chairs along the walls, was pleasantly cool and, like so many public places in
Colombia, had Wi-Fi.
Later, on the bus to Cartagena, a boy of maybe twelve or
thirteen was my neighbour. He was fiddling with his phone, intermittently
listening to it, and seemed a bit bored. While I was still trying to figure out
how to start a conversation, feeling his eagerness to break the monotony of
the trip by talking to me but reluctant to address a kid that age in my rudimentary Spanish, he asked
me in only slightly accented English where I was from. Well, that was much
easier than I had expected! It turned out that he was he was living with his
Greek father in Baranquilla, a good-sized industrial city between Santa Marta
and Cartagena, and was on his way to visit his Colombian mother in Cartagena.
He had lived in Belgium until he was ten, and his father speaks English with
him. He had many questions and comments and was not shy at all, so time passed
quickly, and I found out a little about the life of a (rather well-to-do) kid
in Colombia. I couldn’t help but wonder what a conversation with a kid from one
of the poor areas of Cartagena would have revealed.
A couple of pictures snapped during the bus ride to Cartagena. There are dozens of these little shops-cum-restaurants in the small towns along the road. This one is uncharacteristically empty.
We were less lucky with the taxi driver who was to take us to our small hotel in Getsemaní, hailed as ‘Cartagena’s up-and-coming neighbourhood’ (price and convenience, not that label being the reason for our choice of a place to stay). He nodded when I showed him the address, turned from the ring road between the beach and the city wall and entered the grid of narrow streets of Getsemaní. After going briefly through a one-way street the wrong way he stopped at busy ‘Plaza la Trinidad’ to let us out. We looked at our map, a bit confused as to where we were. Hadn’t we just passed through ‘Tripita y Media’? Now the sign said ‘Calle del Guerrero’, but it seemed to us that we were still in the same straight street. Shouldering our packs we walked back along the way the taxi had taken us. After the next intersection the name of the street changed again; now it was called ‘Calle de San Andrés’. Could we have been so wrong? We kept going, however, and finally saw the ‘Tripita y Media’ sign again. Now it didn’t take us long to find the entrance to ‘Casa Victoria’, our hotel. Why the taxi driver had chosen to drive right past and let us out ten minutes from our destination will remain a mystery. We could have done without it.
We were less lucky with the taxi driver who was to take us to our small hotel in Getsemaní, hailed as ‘Cartagena’s up-and-coming neighbourhood’ (price and convenience, not that label being the reason for our choice of a place to stay). He nodded when I showed him the address, turned from the ring road between the beach and the city wall and entered the grid of narrow streets of Getsemaní. After going briefly through a one-way street the wrong way he stopped at busy ‘Plaza la Trinidad’ to let us out. We looked at our map, a bit confused as to where we were. Hadn’t we just passed through ‘Tripita y Media’? Now the sign said ‘Calle del Guerrero’, but it seemed to us that we were still in the same straight street. Shouldering our packs we walked back along the way the taxi had taken us. After the next intersection the name of the street changed again; now it was called ‘Calle de San Andrés’. Could we have been so wrong? We kept going, however, and finally saw the ‘Tripita y Media’ sign again. Now it didn’t take us long to find the entrance to ‘Casa Victoria’, our hotel. Why the taxi driver had chosen to drive right past and let us out ten minutes from our destination will remain a mystery. We could have done without it.
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