Expecting some fun! :)

mg_5419 It’s been a while since I posted but nothing really jumped out until now. Elena’s mum finally got her US visa last week so we went for a drive up to Texas for some shopping. On the way we stopped for a few photos with one of the daily stunning texas sunsets.

Of course I couldn’t resist putting the first one up on facebook and it got some classic comments. . .

Jose Angel Cantu Guzman baby on the road
Peter Speight Place of birth, I-35 South Texas
Jose Angel Cantu Guzman At least it’s the road and not on a mc donalds
Rod Saclier Are you serious? I seem to remember you tempting the gullible but really???
Gene Hewitt she did not…..nooooo!??!
Tim Benson You’ve put on a bit of weight since I saw you last Peter …
Alice Duijnhouwer Ouch that looks awfull
Peter Speight The Parkes and Garden guy (complete with gun, hand cuffs, lights on his truck) stopped to assist which was great. Elena’s Mum was trying to speak English to him and he was trying to speak Spanish to her while I was busy with Elena.
Juan Pablo Leal G nice picture
Alpaslan Bazlamatçi Elena is having pain and you take your time to take picture of her while you should hold her hand !!! çok ayıp
Alison Speight So, a Mexican child at last ;)
But what you had to go through to get one…hai raab!
Helene Uys Are you serious? Did she actually have the baby on the I35?
Bryce Bishop That’s an excellent pic…
Dylan Speight REALLY!?!
Sabrina Bazlamatci you guys are funny yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Dmitry Garin You are a man, Peter! Congratulations!
Natalya Maximova Oh my God!!! Peter, tell to us truth. Are you serious?
Alice Duijnhouwer Where are the pics of the little one? is it a girl or a boy?
Anyway congrats all of you and Richard and James!!

Here is the actual photo that we stopped to take. . .

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And a couple more . . .

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Colombia Day 9 – Bogota to Monterrey

After so many days getting up before 6am today it would have been just nice to stay in bed for a while and catch the later flight. Given that tomorrow is the beginning of the school week there was also a full week ahead of early starts.  Oh well I guess the good thing about an early flight is arriving home early!  This proved to be spot on. Our flights were on time and ok.  We got stuffed in the last row from Bogota to Monterrey with nowhere to recline seats to escape from the guy in-front’s reclined seat so it wasn’t all that comfortable.

With the prospect of ZERO food at home we made use of our 3 hours in Mexico City to have a Carls J. burger.  It was surprisingly good actually.  The taxi was easy to catch as usual from Monterrey airport to home and we found the doors still locked, no forced entry, no water leaks, no gas leaks and as expected, ZERO food.  A quick trip to 7-11 to get some milk was all that I could face and enough to get us through the night and off to school in the morning.

More showers and everyone crashed out by 8.30pm.  What a great week!

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Colombia Day 8 – Puente Narino to Bogata

img_2036-cr2__0 Well the mozzie net wasn’t needed.  As it turned out the only mozzie in the room took plenty of blood from me while we were having dinner earlier.  The room without the fan after midnight was also pretty cool and when the now regular thunderstorm kicked in around 3am it was really nice.  Again the rain continued well into the morning enough to wet us but not soak us on the way to the boat. While we were waiting on the jetty we were attacked by a vicious mob, flock, pack, whatever they are called of mozzies.  They were tiny but fast and left a huge welt the size of a dime after they were done.

Although we had 11am seats booked for the return boat to Leticia we took the 7am boat after yesterday’s delay we decided better to make sure we were in time for our flight otherwise we would also miss our connection to Mexicio city in the morning and get hit with huge expenses for late bookings and cancelations.  It took the lady on the boat a few minutes chatting with their base to accept our tickets but she did so we were set.

mg_2068-copy_0 The boat was a lot bigger than the one we arrived on with 48 seats now and only about 15 people travelling. Most of the tourists who had arrived with us were also leaving, probably they also got hungry with the restaurant closed!  Funny on the boat there is a big sign saying to use the life jackets which are hung over every seat but in reality they just add extra padding to the back of the seat or the odd person uses them for a little wind protection.  This was evident by the rather large spider making her home between one of the jackets and the seat infront.

Sights along the river were of course excellent. . .

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More photos from Day 8

We arrived in the metropolis of Leticia just after 9.30 and made the trek through the now very muddy and slippery trail which was continuing to become

Colombia Day 7 – Marasha to Puente Narino

Rain continuing was a bit worrying with our 3k walk out of the park.  We scoffed breakfast pretty quick, wrapped our packs in plastic and headded out.  Once we got going under the canopy the rain was less than 1/4 of what it was out in the open, really quite amazing.  This made for an easy walk listening to the sounds of the very alive jungle.

img_2082 Just over half way we came accross about 15 of the students from the main group who had been camping out in hamocks overnight.  They were just packing up camp having a cup of tea when we passed by.  They had obviously not had a good nights sleep by the looks of thier faces and drenched clothes.  A group the night before had been complaining about the cold night they spent in the top of the tree but these guys definately suffered worse.

We had about an hour to wait for the boat and in this time all the students had made it to the boat ramp as well including the ones who had camped out.  Their boats arrived before ours but they were still busy passing their packs down the very slippery and steep river bank as ours arrived.  Most of them had found good footholds on the bank so helped us down too.

Our boat was packed full with us taking the last two seats one of which wasn’t actually a seat but part of the isle.  We made a couple of stops along the way to Puente Nior one of which was to drop off a lady aparently just on the muddy banks.  There was some conversation about which side of a small inlet to drop her off and it looked like the boat driver wouldn’t take her to the side that she needed.  I’m guessing she had trouble carying all her stuff much further than she had planned.

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More Photos Here

Arriving at Puente Nior it looked a little more advanced than the other places we stopped but not too much.  A little kid asked us where we were staying and

Colombia Day 6 – Marasha full day

img_1368proc Roberto our guide woke us as promised at 5.30am but we were already half awake after an alarm of one of the teachers who was on an overnight excursion phone alarm went off at 4am.  It only stopped about 15 minutes later when another teacher who realized what it was called the phone.

We have a full card today with Monkeys first, breakfast, canopy tour, lunch, fishing, dinner.

img_1387 Monkeys I thought was going to be a bit ho-hum, tourists feeding monkeys type trip but actually it was very cool.  We paddled (well at least Roberto paddled) across the lagoon in deathly still waters stopping at an overhanging mangrove type tree.  A few monkey calls later and the little fullas came from everywhere.  The jump from the tree to the closest point in the canoe was me so I was the landing pad for 1/2 a dozen hungry monkeys.

We fed them small bananas which they helped themselves to while posing for photos with us.  They were pretty wild jumping skittishly at any small move with a limb that didn’t contain a banana but not aggressive at all.  Richard got a little scratch but then he should have given over the last of the banana and it probably wouldn’t have happened!

img_1484 Breaky was bread, watermelon, pineapple, eggs (which we didn’t try) and round bread things that Richard tried but they were really hard and not edible.  Once it was done we headed out for our tree climb which was exhausting but excellent.  Richard made it about 10m up then got hauled the rest of the way by the guys while I was on the other rig that didn’t have that luxury option so I had to muscle to the top.  Pity I didn’t have more muscle because it was 38m up in the hot, hot jungle and at about the 20m mark the sun was on me and it got doubly hard.  I think I lost about 3kg which was all collected in my shirt and baggies.  I was completely soaked through, what a workout!  We had a 10min rest at the top to take in the jungle canopy and then zip line to a nearby tree (about 80m) and then abseil down.  Really excellent and a must do even if it isn’t included in the park or resort fees.  50,000 pesos we paid, I hope this was what I should have paid! :)

After this it was lunch time with the schoolies.  We lined up for rice, fish, beef, carrots, beetroot (a bit of a pattern forming here) and some deep fried corn tortillas.  Nice all up.

We started the afternoon with a fishing trip which got cut short because somebody ‘didn’t go before we left.’

Colombia Day 5 – Park Marasha

img_1140a Quick breaky today to met the morning taxi by 9am.  Internet was the worst it has been today. Hotel staff said it was unusual but I didn’t believe them!

More Photos. . .

We arrived at the Airis Counter in plenty of time but they sent us to the cashier to verify the cc details.  This is where the dramas started. There was one cashier and she was working with one arm, the other one in a sling.  By the time we were one person away from the front of the line some cow pushed in saying she just needed to pay for her tickets and that she had made the liner earlier in the day. Myself and one guy behind became a bit vocal but it didn’t help much, the one armed girl still kept helping her. Finally it was our turn and we got what seemed to be halfway through and the power went off in the entire airport.  They didn’t stay off long but the systems took ages to start up again.  By the time we were done they rushed us to the web check-in counter and told us to run to the gate.

The flight was jam packed but good it was just two hours long. Richard was dissapointed anyway because by the time the food service started we learnt that none of it was for free and also didn’t look appetizing at all.  Lucky we had our muesli bars and water with us.

Arriving in Leticia was reminiscent of arriving in Christmas Island with a tiny little arrival hall.  Tourists were separated from the locals and had to pay 17,500 pesos each which is something that i didn’t read about before we came.  No big drama, that was coming because I’d forgotten the telephone number in Bogota of the guy we were supposed to call to meet us.  Some guy helped us in the end saying there is an office for our resort in town so we took a cab and waited for siesta to be over to make some progress.  While we waited we tried to use the Internet at a phone station across the road but after 7mins, 500 pesos I only managed to get three pages open and none of them had the phone number that I had found in Monterrey before leaving.

Colombia Day 4 – Just lazy around Bogota

Colombia Day 3 – Shoes and Gold Museum

Colombia Day 2 – Around Bogota

Colombia Day 1 – Getting there

Hurricane Alex – No Water???

Collecting water after Hurricane Alex - Monterrey

What a lot of water!!!  Hurricane Alex was very weak by the time it made it in to us here in Monterrey however, there was still plenty of water left to drop. Monterrey city had 619 mm (24.4 in) of rain while not too far away in Estanzuela they managed to survive through 1, 819.5 mm (32.26 in) of rain in just under 48 hours!  The river was flowing at over 2,500 m3 per second and taking a lot with it as it went including our favorite Go Kart track which used to be on the dry river bed that hasn’t seen rain in 20 years.

Anyway, what happened to all the water?  Just as the sun was starting to dry things out the main water supply for Monterrey was cut.  By today most people had used up their tank water and bought the shops dry including the really over priced supa dupa brand waters that most people would never normally buy.

Family hair wash outside after Hurricane Alex

Although strange to see that wasn’t the real shock.  That came on the way home.  Along our street there is a pretty big hill, well OK it is massive.  Anyway there were dozens and dozens of people filling up containers to take home, washing their cars and washing themselves.

Here is just one of the lines at one of the more accessable waterfalls.

This whole family made the trek up from a lower lying neighborhood to wash their hair.

Loads more Hurricane Alex photos here including before and during photos.  Tomorrow I’ll go and get some after photos.

Bugs in our Coriander Seeds!

Hi-ho all,

Well apart from the remnants of Hurricane Alex causing havoc in and around Monterrey we are also out of just about anything to make a decent meal from.  So as we often do in that situation we chuck anything that has any life left in it into a curry.  The coriander seeds were just about to go in when Tatiana noticed a small black bug in the top of the container.  On closer inspection there were dozens of them looking for the exit and on closer inspection again there were even more meandering around amongst their incubators!

I Googled them but unfortunately coriander seeds have turned out to be good at warding off many garden bugs so I quickly got sick of filtering through over 18,000 results for black bugs in coriander seeds.

Tatiana questioned if we could just put them out in the sun for a while and let the bugs scatter from the harsh heat but while Alex is with us we are a little short on sun and besides, I still don’t think I’d be all that keen to consume the habitat of quite so many unwelcome little critters.  I think I’ll stick to the ground coriander for now and safely dispose of the evacuated seeds and the bugs.

Bon appetit.

Hurricane Alex arrives in Monterrey

Here are some photos from this morning with Hurricane Alex still 6 hours away.

Hurricane Alex is coming!

This used to be a great Go Kart track.  The Marquee for the PIT has almost gone.

Go Karts Monterrey underwater.

The speed of the water is amazing.  Here it is about 2.5 – 3m deep and still the swell pushes up off the bottom.

Waves in Monterrey from Hurricane Alex

PIT marquee almost completely gone now. :(

Pit lane at the Go Karts is gone.

Pumpkin Pie

Pastry

6 oz flour (168 gm)
3oz butter or margarine (not low fat)
pinch salt
cold water
Add salt to flour

Rub butter into flour (rub with finger tips, keep mixture as cool as possible) until it looks a bit like bread crumbs.

Mix in a small amount of cold water, enough to make a stiff paste.

Roll out on a floured board, using a floured roller (milk bottle OK)

Grease the dish with butter wrapper.

Line dish with pastry

Trim edges.

Filling

10 fl oz cooked, mashed pumpkin, cold or warm, not hot
1/4 tsp ground ginger
1/4 tsp nutmeg
pinch cinnamon
3 eggs
5 fl oz milk approx
4 oz sugar
10 fl oz is about 300ml

Put pumpkin in a bowl, mix in spices, eggs, sugar and enough milk to make it like a thick batter.  Pour it into the pastry case.  Bake at 190C for about 40 minutes.  Stick a knife in it  -  it should come out clean.

Hamburgers

Ingredients

500g of lean minced beef
1 medium onion, peeled
1 medium potato, peeled
2 eggs
1/2-1 cup breadcrumbs or 2-3 slices bread, cut or torn into small pieces (may need more or less)
salt and pepper

Directions

Grate the potato and then the onion in a large bowl.

Add 1 of the eggs and mix with spoon or hands addming the salt and pepper.

Add the mince and the other egg, mix until well blended.

Add the breadcrumbs until the mixture sticks together but is not too dry.

Shape mixture into 4 patties each about 3/4-inch thick.

BBQ or fry the burgers for 10-15 minutes.