Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Christmas in Haiti



Aussie friend Chris, who works for the U.N., found herself on a short assignment in Haiti just just a few weeks before I'd moved into my trailer in Florida in mid December. Suddenly she was not only not half way around the world, she was just a short flight away. The opportunity to spend Christmas together seemed obvious.

This makes it my third tropical Christmas in a row, after having spent Christmas of 2006 and 2007 in Fremantle, Australia.

I'd never been to Haiti before and found it a land of desparation. Chris works with food distribution in areas of deep poverty and I was able to witness such in levels I'd never seen before, not even in Nepal.

On the brighter side, it is a tropical island, after all, and Chris' smile is perhaps the brightest I've ever seen in my life. We had many good times in Port-au-Prince, and started our own tradition of a pina colada before anything else every evening of the week I was there.

I also joined her co-workers (of every nationality imaginable, including one country in Africa I'd never heard of before) on a cookout on a nearby beach. A bevy of children full of bright smiles swarmed around us half way through the day, focusing on Chris (no fools, they), looking for nothing but our happy energy given back.



Friday, November 21, 2008

Cuzco and Machu Picchu


Jamie was in Ecuador for a hang gliding meet when she met Gry, a woman from Bergen, Norway. A quick friendship ensued and when Jamie learned Gry intended to head for Cuzco and Machu Picchu in Peru next, Jamie admitted it was something she'd always wanted to do. "I know someone who would love to join us," Jamie added.

"On such short notice?" Gry asked.
"Watch this," Jamie answered and pulled out her iphone.

Six thousand miles away, as GW and I were sailing south, I got her text message: "What are you doing the next two weeks? Wanna join me and a new friend in Peru?"

I'd already planned to be in Lake Tahoe the next week with Carrie so Jamie and Gry trekked without me in the Cordilla Blanca, Peru's stunning 6000m mountain range.

We met the following week in the ancient city of Cuzco, the step-off point for most journeys to Machu Picchu.


For years I'd dreamed of being in Cuzco. I read John Hemming's Conquest of the Inca's with fascination while spending the winter of '05 in Ecuador. My enthusiam for the idea of walking the streets of Cuzco myself, imagining the history I'd read so much about while passing between 1000 year old Inca stonework, might equate to a Christian pilgrim's feeling about walking the streets of Jerusalem.

Gry, besides her native Norwegian and English, was fluent in Spanish as well, having spent the previous six months working in an Bolivian orphanage. This made her an exceptional travel companion. Jamie and I got to ride on the coattails of her organization and knowledge, giving us the option many times over to be spontaneous and alter our plans and route towards the ultimate goal of our visit: the ancient city of Machu Picchu. Discovered underneath dense jungle vegetation in 1911, it has been painstakingly cleared to as close to it's majestic glory as modern archeologists can surmise.


Farmland outside the city of Cusco

Jamie and I have vague plans to return next fall to extend the four day trek she and Gry undertook in the Cordilla Blanca into a nine day trek.

My photos:


Jamie's collection of photos:

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Where to Live?


One of the first priorities this fall, now that I'm back in the States, was to visit Carrie in her new, post Clipper Ventures home: Lake Tahoe.


I had never been there before but, after only an extended weekend, this entire region ranks up there (right next to Spain's Bizkaia) as my kind of place to live. Florida is just a place to have a base for now, but not really the place I want to make my home.



Having Yosemite National Park just around the corner doesn't hurt, either.




Wednesday, November 5, 2008

A Bit of Serenity


G.W. had contacted me while I was still in Russia to see if I would be free in early November to help him reposition his boat, "Serenity" from his home near Daytona to Key Largo. He's done the route many times alone but it's always good to have a second hand aboard. It's always good to spend time on a boat with good friends, too.


Unlike me, Gdub is a life-long sailor and yet he holds my sailing skills in high regard because of my circumnavigation in the Clipper Ventures race. That's kind and flattering but it's like me being part of a team that built a steel skyscraper but if you want a kitchen cabinet built, Gdub's your man. Personally, I think it's a bit more useful to be able to build a kitchen cabinet than a steel skyscraper.


Much of the voyage was spent inside the Inter Coastal Waterway, a most natural inland waterway that's lined with both humble homes and palatial spreads.




Our time scheduled allowed us to anchor each night except the last of our five day journey. To me, this is a luxury after spending up to 26 days at sea on a continuous four hours on/four hours off schedule.


Best of all, it was a great chance to spend long hours with one of the better human beings I know. Gdub is the one who told me that most of the best people he's met in life are the one's he's met in hang gliding. I'd have to agree.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Челябинск (Chelyabinsk)


I'm still in Russia, having been in Челябинск (Chelyabinsk) these last two weeks.

Chelyabinsk is about 1600 kilometers due east of Moscow, deep into the main body of the huge Russian landmass. This is considered Asia since the city lies just over a hundred kilometers east of the Ural Mountains, the arbitrary eastern limit of Europe.

The other day at a small store here, when the cashier saw that I needed my friend Anya to translate the amount I owed, she asked Anya, “Where is he from?”
“America.”
“What’s he doing here?”
“Traveling,” Anya responded, not feeling particularly obliged to be any more detailed.
“Traveling here?!” the cashier asked with an incredulous look.

No foreigner, I suppose, would venture this deep into Russia without good reason. I do have one, however. Great friends.

I’ve often said that my friendship with Sveta, whom I met in Virginia in March of 2004, is truly one of the 10 best things that have ever happened in my life. What the other nine are, I’ve never bothered to define other than my daughter clearly being the first.

Through my friendship with Sveta, so many good things have happened in my life, be they other new friends, experiences, or places. Is it coincidence or relevant that the extreme contentment of these last four years of my life have also been the years I’ve known Sveta? She always brings such spontaneity, energy, and exuberance into anything.



Some of those blessings are my past and present experiences here in Chelyabinsk, Russia, where Sveta grew up. When she returned to visit her family in January 2005, I joined her and was delighted to feel as welcomed into the fold as if I’d been adopted. It was here that I met and became such good friends with all her family, particularly her older sister Anya, who is fluent in English.

(I must pause to comment how lucky I’ve been throughout the world in being the beneficiary of the linguistic abilities of so many others. My feeble attempts in studying various languages over the years…partially successful in a few, laughably hopeless in others…is in some measure an expression of my gratitude.)

Odd as it may sound for someone who’s been leisurely wandering around the world for a few years, lately I felt like I’ve needed a vacation of sorts. What I’ve really wanted to do is just sit still for a while. I’ve been doing so much here and there since the Clipper Ventures race ended in Liverpool early last July. Right now, then, I am so very happy to have been doing very little of significance here during these weeks in Chelyabinsk, other than enjoying these old friends and even new ones.

When I met Zhenya in Italy last July where she was competing in the World Hanggliding Championships, she was almost speechless when she learned I’d actually been to her hometown of Chelyabinsk. I suppose it would be like an American meeting a Russian while in Europe who'd been to his hometown of Des Moines, Iowa. It's a major city, yes, but not a place many venture without a specific reason.

Zhenya and I got to share some time here over these last two weeks as well.


I've been staying with Ludmila, Sveta and Anya's mother, who doesn’t speak much English but we've still had such a great time together. I've learned more Russian from her these last two weeks than from all the time I've spent over the years with all my other Russian friends combined. She and I will sit at her kitchen table, each with our Russian/American dictionary in one hand and a shot glass in the other, talking about different issues while we thumb through our dictionaries for the appropriate word. Now and then we'll try to come up with new toasts for which we can take a shot of vodka (“Never more than three per evening,” is our mutually agreed upon rule).

The first toast is always to one’s health and the third is always to love, leaving the second as the only opportunity for creativity. Our most common toasts are to her granddaughter (Sveta's daughter) and to friendship (be it personal or Russian/American).

I’ve never been particularly fond of anything as strong as vodka and even less fond of drinking something by throwing it down my throat, but I’ve found that between all the shots I’ve downed between my time this month in Moscow, Velikiy Dvor, and now Chelyabinsk, I actually have grown almost fond of the bitter, tangy taste of Vodka that you can experience if you sip it very slowly.

If only I could get them to let me sip it slowly to enjoy it.

It’s been a sublimely beautiful time here for me, one that has evolved in a different sort of way from how this summer’s other adventures have unfolded. It’s been peaceful, quiet, relaxing, loving, spiritual, and uplifting in a way hard to describe. At one extreme, I've joined Anya and her friends out in the city one night while some of them practiced their mildly illegal art of "fireshow" on an empty plaza.


On the other end of the scale, I've joined almost every class that Anya has taught in her yoga studio since I've been here. We've also spent much time together as a family, enjoying simple domestic pleasures such making pelmini, a Russian kind of ravioli.


As in 2005, we drove out to nearby Lake Tourgoyak where we immersed ourselves in the pleasures of being in the beautiful countryside. There we joined other friends in a full afternoon of enjoying a true Russian banya; a sauna that includes repeating cycles of soaking up the heat, being worked over with gathered bunches of birch twigs, then taking a dip into a frigid lake.

Even though it’s only late September here, light snow flurries fell on our faces during our banya experience. The time of year also made walks through the forest colorful and breathtaking.


Time's up. On Sunday, October 5th, I'm finally going back to the States, a country in which I haven't resided for a full three years.

Chelyabinsk 2005 and 2008

Monday, September 15, 2008

Seven days in Великий двор (Velikiy Dvor)


Last July at the World Hang gliding Championships in Italy, I once sat talking with people of various nations about what place in their own country they would most want to show to a visitor from another country. When it was Yulia's turn to speak, she told us of Velikiy Dvor, where her family spent the first six years of her life. There they lived in the peaceful comfort of a simple country life while Russia's difficult transition out of communism made living in Moscow too much of a challenge. Above, Yulia's mother Gulia has just returned from a wolf hunt.

When her family was able return to Moscow in the early 1990's due to the stabilization that eventually emerged, the rest of the town's small population soon followed to other major cities and Velikiy Dvor became a ghost town.

As Yulia described the area and how much she'd always longed to return there one day to see it again as an adult, I could see an inspiring gleam in her eyes. To her it was not so much a place but a state of mind.

A few days later as she and I talked of something else, I changed the subject and told her, "Remember that place you described where you grew up? I'd love to go there one day with you."
"Then let's do it," she simply said. I love it when people take me at face value.
"I'm serious," I countered, just to be sure.
"So am I," she said.

And so the wheels began to turn, both in our minds and in reality (airline tickets, visas, etc.). Initially there was talk of a group joining the adventure but, in the end, it was only she, her boyfriend Artur, and myself.

(Artur has asked that I not post any pictures of him on my blog, for reasons I didn't understand but of course did not question. The only images of him shown here and in the slide show below are ones where he is far enough away to be indistinguishable.)

I arrived in Moscow on September 5th and, after a bit of visiting, Moscow touring, and most importantly shopping to pick up a backpack and other assorted camping gear for myself, we were ready.

Monday evening, September 8th, we took an over night train to Вологда (Vologda). Arriving bleary-eyed at dawn, we spent most of that day on a bus heading further north to the nearest paved road that passed close to Мирный (Mirniy). There we hiked a few kilometers down a dirt road into the small group of houses where Yulia hoped that any member of a particular family there that her mother had once known might recognize her and assist us with covering the remaining 50 kilometers. We were prepared to cover that entire distance on foot but the friends were found, they remembered Yulia and her family, and we were given a ride further down the rough dirt road, something that took two hours in itself.


We were dropped off at a wooden bridge being rebuilt but lacking the last few truckloads of fill-dirt at the far side. After crossing it on foot, hopping down the the ground, and taking a short walk of a few hundred meters, we were there at Великий двор (Velikiy Dvor).


Though part of the house's foundation had settled and dropped the back half of the log cabin structure a few feet, Yulia's childhood home was mostly intact. This was not true for many of the other home in the town of perhaps 15 houses. Many had roofs that had completely collapsed. Some had walls that had fallen down.

Inside Yulia's home we were delighted to find a picture of her as an infant still up on a wall.


We spent some time cleaning up bird droppings, dust, and other debris, chopping wood for the night, and preparing for our first night in our home for the next week.




The next morning, our first full day there, we set out to try our hand at fishing on the river. A complete day's effort was met with little success.

The second day we hiked five kilometers to a nearby town on the edge of the lake feeding the river passing by Velikiy Dvor, hoping to find a boat we could borrow or rent. It was there that we encountered one of the trip's greatest blessings: Alec.

We had asked whomever we'd encountered (perhaps three people) if we could rent a boat to take out onto the lake. An old man offered us his rowboat free of charge, but cautioned that it would be difficult to row into the lake against the wind. After struggling with it a few hours, we reluctantly agreed and let the rowboat drift back to the shore. There we encountered fisherman returning from the lake on small boats with outboard motors and asked our questions again. We were directed to Alec's cottage and, when queried, he said he'd be happy to take us out himself tomorrow if we could return in the morning at around 11:00. The size of his boat, however, allowed only two people to join him.

His cottage had a row of freshly shot ducks hanging on one side and Yulia asked if we could buy one. "No, but you can have one,"Alec answered and handed her one, much to Yulia' delight. We would have fresh meat that night to go with the mushrooms we'd picked during the hike there.

The next morning, at Yulia's insistence, Artur and I left her and hiked back to Alec's town. After a few tries in Alec's boat as well as those of his friends, we discovered none of the boats could carry three full grown men, so Artur was left behind to fish from the shore while Alec took me off onto a wonderful, marvelous adventure of both the Russian wilderness and human kindness.

It was only after a few minutes into our journey to the part of the lake Alec wanted to show me that I discovered he spoke a little bit of English. He'd stop the motor now and then to describe various things about what we were passing, stopping onshore at one point to visit a small fishing hut that, to his gentle disgust, had been left less than clean by the previous user.

He loaned me his best fishing reel (the one I'd bought in Moscow, he gently explained, was not very good) and we fished from opposite sides of the boat. I caught one fish (two kilos: huge by my standards but average to small for the lake, I was told) and after a bit, we felt it was time to get back to Artur. As we neared the shore, he slowed the boat down to walking speed and said, "I get duck for you." In just a few minutes he shot two on the wing at unbelievably long distances.

Back at the shore he brought Artur and I into his cottage to join him for mushrooms, sausages, bread and, of course, many shots of vodka. After another hour and perhaps seven shots each (both Artur and I lost count) we felt we should return to Yulia, who'd spent the day scrubbing her home and cutting grass around it with a scythe we'd found.

Artur and I were happy, then to return to Yulia with plenty of meat to add to our stores of food to consume over the next few days.

Yulia, Artur and I went back to join Alec and his two hunting companions the next day, using all three available boats to carry the six of us out into the same area of the lake I'd been the day before. We only caught one fish between all six of us (though two got away) but Alec had caught a huge one (perhaps six kilos) two days before and so we had a huge feast anyway, deep frying filets in a wok-like device over an open fire.

As it began to grow dark, Alec and his friends used their boats to give us a ride down the river under the colorful sky, skimming on the water back to the bridge next to Yulia's home. Our hosts insisted that we three take the lone catch of the day for ourselves. With too much vodka in us again, we did not think clearly enough to get any contact details with Alec, who lives in Moscow and was only there at his dacha for another day. Before this could be rectified, all three were gone.

I so wish I had the chance to see Alec again and take him to dinner in Moscow. In all my travels these last few years, it never ceases to amaze me how good people can be all around the globe. Alec is the perfect example.

Below is a three minute collection of footage from my first afternoon with Alec amidst his kind generosity and hospitality.





Artur, Yulia and I spent our remaining days in Velikiy Dvor living simply, picking wild fruit (the forest floor was covered in blueberries and a cranberry-like fruit that was naturally sweet), cutting up scrap wood for our fires, and enjoying the natural beauty all around us.






Sunday morning, by prior arrangement, we were picked up by the same friends who'd driven us to the bridge near Yulia's home and were dropped off back at the paved road. There we caught the bus returning to Vologda and continued on with reversing the 24 hour process that had brought us to Velikiy Dvor. The last leg was, again, a Russian sleeping train which, to me, was almost as much of an exciting adventure as anything else. After dawn, I sat transfixed at the window, fascinated with simply watching the small details of Russian life pass by as we closed in on Moscow.



Below is a slideshow of the trip.

Next up: Visiting both old and new friends in Chelyabinsk, Russia.


Friday, August 29, 2008

A Short Pause in London

I'm here between adventures, preparing for my last one (upcoming) before I return to the States. More on that later.

For now, I'm just enjoying where I am. I do love this city, London. It's probably the only city in the world I've visited where I think I could be happy actually living in the city itself. Below was a part of my experience two nights ago strolling along the south bank of the River Thames.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

My Favorite Places on Earth



After we'd flown back to the mainland and most had gone separate ways in Barcelona, Nicole and I returned by bus with German to his home just outside of Bilbao, Spain. After we arrived, we discussed what to do with our few remaining hours of daylight.

I said that I had just one request. I wanted to visit the bar I'd frequented so often two years ago in Bilbao's port town, Getxo while part of Sir Robin Knox-Johnston's shore team preparing his boat for his solo round the world race.

Once we arrived and I sat sipping my beer at El Patron (The Skipper), I was overcome with the sense that this was one of my favorite places on earth. It was here that my adventure with Sir Robin blossomed into such a collection of new friends. Not twenty feet from where I sat that evening was the table where I met German, Rafa, and Saioa, who I have come to value so much and through whom I've gained a whole new world of friends and experiences in Spain (and elsewhere).

It was here that I'd slump into a chair with a beer at the end of each day in October of 2006, exhausted but glowing with supreme satisfaction in my soul from the combination of productive hard work and a sense of being an enviable part of something grand.

I've already commited to support another remarkable human being in the next edition of the Velux 5 Oceans in 2010.

When I'd first met German at that bar in 2006, he'd asked me what else I'd seen of the region in the two weeks we'd been docked in Getxo. "This bar is as far as I've got," I told him. "We don't have the time or energy to venture any further."

Sipping my beer again in Getxo today, long removed from Sir Robin's voyage around the world and my own that followed, it was clear to me that the joy of a location isn't really about the location itself but what's associated with it. Getxo and the region of Northern Spain is beautiful, no doubt, but all my strongest joys seemed to end up coming from the people and the experiences we share, such as those I've found in the Spanish port of Getxo.