HobbesOnTour
Guru
- Location
- España
Covid Interlude, Tuesday, July 13, 2021, Gracias to San Juan 35 km Total KM 2477
Min meters 745, Max Meters 1347
Total Climb 951 Total Descent 551
Min Temp 21 Max Temp 34 Ave Temp 27
Gracias, Gracias
Pushing through town I got a lot of stares. A lot of smiles, but a lot of stares. Fire off a bright and cheery "Buenas" and it'll be returned. The stares remain, but the eyes are warmer.
Thank the Touring Gods there were no bystanders when the road rose ahead of me and my sweeping was reduced to a crawl.
Here, like Guatemala, these buses are used as public transport, but in their original state and colours, often with the school district still painted on the bus.
I had been late leaving the hotel, or at least later than I wanted. The hotel included breakfast and since I enjoyed my own coffee before the restaurant opened I thought "what the hell".
Now I was scanning the scrambled sky looking to interpret the weather. Bits of blue scattered amongst the clouds meant warm, not hot. At least for now. I settled down to climbing.
The birds! They chatted about me, called out to me and I'm sure some of them were mocking me. I can't see them, but they sound wonderful.
The traffic that did pass was predominantly friendly - very friendly - Mexican friendly. A toot isn't just a toot - it's normally accompanied by a wound down window and wave. There's a bit of effort in it.
I bought a cold drink and a bottle of water to top up my supply from a very cheerful and smiley girl. To add the two amounts she needed a calculator - very common in these parts, although a phone is usually used.
As I sat and rested the Police came over and I was interrogated - in a friendly way. One guy was particularly curious about my gear so I explained what was in each pannier and invited him to lift the bike. They all did! Apparently, I am "The Man"!
I've read somewhere that a major purge was carried out on the Police to curb corruption and that a lot of the Police are young. That tallied with the four today. Fist bumps and wishes for a good journey when they left. They passed me on the road twice, each time horns and waves.
The youngest was a little girl, no more than three who had just lost her baby teeth, the eldest about 8, two girls, the rest boys. They just looked at me. So I looked back at them.
I broke the ice. "Do you have any questions?". A trickle started, then the dam broke!
About me, the bike, the gear, the journey. The thing with kids is you never know what they're going to ask!
The youngest girl was pulling at the hairbands on my handlebars and asked about them. I explained they were for my brakes and went to explain how I used them. Once she realised they weren't for hair or for playing with she just tuned out!
I passed the cookies around and never saw them again!
Two women up in the shop joined in. The idea that I was going to San Juan (not far away now) was ok, the idea of tomorrow going to La Esperanza was shocking - despite me explaining about travelling from Virginia. Too far they thought!
It was a very pleasant half hour or so.
Then it rained, albeit lightly. I decided I didn't need my rain jacket and I didn't for a while - but then I did! It wasn't long on when the rain stopped and I hit the top in bright sunshine! Spotting a wall I pulled up, spread the jacket to dry and walked down to a shop then back for a roadside picnic. In the sun, a descent ahead of me, it felt good!
https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/chat-zone-for-the-big-big-trip-journal.254098/
Min meters 745, Max Meters 1347
Total Climb 951 Total Descent 551
Min Temp 21 Max Temp 34 Ave Temp 27
Gracias, Gracias
Pushing through town I got a lot of stares. A lot of smiles, but a lot of stares. Fire off a bright and cheery "Buenas" and it'll be returned. The stares remain, but the eyes are warmer.
Outside of Gracias and heading up. There's no way to tell from the sky what is going to happen
By my reckoning I had a bit of a flat section and then uphill almost until the end of the day. Now, I'm not the best at directions, reading maps or interpreting gradients on Gizmo but Honduras doesn't seem to like being broken down into a series of climbs and descents and she rebels, throwing all kinds of gradients at me. I can respect that, especially when I sweep out of Gracias accumulating more stares and calls.
Thank the Touring Gods there were no bystanders when the road rose ahead of me and my sweeping was reduced to a crawl.
Fifteen minutes later, more blue. Still can't predict the weather though.
I breezed through a Police checkpoint and stopped when an old US school bus labouring in front of me was belching black smoke all over me. Then off again into the mountain air.
Here, like Guatemala, these buses are used as public transport, but in their original state and colours, often with the school district still painted on the bus.
I had been late leaving the hotel, or at least later than I wanted. The hotel included breakfast and since I enjoyed my own coffee before the restaurant opened I thought "what the hell".
Now I was scanning the scrambled sky looking to interpret the weather. Bits of blue scattered amongst the clouds meant warm, not hot. At least for now. I settled down to climbing.
Fifteen minutes later even more blue!
This road had few guardrails or walls to stop, but it also had very little traffic. Very little.
The birds! They chatted about me, called out to me and I'm sure some of them were mocking me. I can't see them, but they sound wonderful.
The traffic that did pass was predominantly friendly - very friendly - Mexican friendly. A toot isn't just a toot - it's normally accompanied by a wound down window and wave. There's a bit of effort in it.
I'm really developing a taste for painted ads.
So that's how my morning progressed - slowly ascending in a warm, friendly place. I was getting the steepest section out of the way first. When the road levelled off I pulled into a shop that had a rickety bench in front of it and a Police pick up beside it.
I bought a cold drink and a bottle of water to top up my supply from a very cheerful and smiley girl. To add the two amounts she needed a calculator - very common in these parts, although a phone is usually used.
As I sat and rested the Police came over and I was interrogated - in a friendly way. One guy was particularly curious about my gear so I explained what was in each pannier and invited him to lift the bike. They all did! Apparently, I am "The Man"!
I've read somewhere that a major purge was carried out on the Police to curb corruption and that a lot of the Police are young. That tallied with the four today. Fist bumps and wishes for a good journey when they left. They passed me on the road twice, each time horns and waves.
Right beside the road. I can reach out and touch.
I got rolling again and was soon climbing again, although not as steep as earlier. Sun out, I was heating up but in no rush whatsoever. There are views that deserve to be remembered, villages where people smile and wave and dogs that rarely do much more than look at me. There are also crabs! I couldn't believe my eyes when I spotted one at the side of the road - as familiar to me as if I was on a European beach. Except I'm in the Honduran highlands and he's on the road!
Why would I want to rush through this?
Spotting a shop on one side of the road and a lean to offering shade on my side I pulled over for another cold drink. There's something about a cold drink that is just so good. Spotting a small pack of my favourite cookies I treated myself. A group of 10 kids eyed me up curiously while I was in the shop and by the time I left had gathered on the steps below the shop. There'd be no shade for me! I sat down beside them.
The youngest was a little girl, no more than three who had just lost her baby teeth, the eldest about 8, two girls, the rest boys. They just looked at me. So I looked back at them.
I broke the ice. "Do you have any questions?". A trickle started, then the dam broke!
About me, the bike, the gear, the journey. The thing with kids is you never know what they're going to ask!
The youngest girl was pulling at the hairbands on my handlebars and asked about them. I explained they were for my brakes and went to explain how I used them. Once she realised they weren't for hair or for playing with she just tuned out!
I passed the cookies around and never saw them again!
Two women up in the shop joined in. The idea that I was going to San Juan (not far away now) was ok, the idea of tomorrow going to La Esperanza was shocking - despite me explaining about travelling from Virginia. Too far they thought!
It was a very pleasant half hour or so.
Passing through a little village.
Back on the bike I crossed a pretty, stoney river and started the last climb of the day. A guy in a pickup stopped for a chat. If I'd been concentrating more on what he was doing rather than my Spanish I'd have noticed that he was busy covering things in the bed of his pickup with a tarp!
Then it rained, albeit lightly. I decided I didn't need my rain jacket and I didn't for a while - but then I did! It wasn't long on when the rain stopped and I hit the top in bright sunshine! Spotting a wall I pulled up, spread the jacket to dry and walked down to a shop then back for a roadside picnic. In the sun, a descent ahead of me, it felt good!
Because the road was so quiet I pulled up on this bridge to enjoy the water bubbling away below me.
Everything changes here so quickly and I got a fright back on the bike when I rounded a bend to a cloud so big, so dark, so angry that it was almost purple. I flew down the hill to the small town of San Juan. I found a new, cheap hotel, had a shower and went off to explore. It has a small park, pretty, a simple but bright church and not a lot else.
The park in San Juan. Small, but quirky. The wibbly wobbly staircase is a bandstand.
I returned to the hotel and a good friend has sent me a concert that I fell asleep while downloading. The rain woke me up - ferocious unlike earlier. I waited for it to stop then grabbed a bite. Early night for me!
Artwork outside a store in San Juan. The shopkeeper stepped away so as not to interfere with the shot. I couldn't see an artist's name - unusual.
Chat? Yes Please!
https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/chat-zone-for-the-big-big-trip-journal.254098/