This is the wrong time of year to visit Paraguay as it’s hot as Hades with not much relief except for the odd rain shower and the odd swimming pool.

For the locals it’s just another day at work and Caacupé is full of busy people being busy in the heat.
Abandoning your sandals on the sunbaked sidewalk seems akin to fire walking to me but I’m just a gringo.
On the road to and from the campground, about five miles there lie a few dustcatcher stores.
Luckily we have no room for full sized statues and bulky works of artisanal art.
The main road between the two main cities, Asunción and Encarnación is a smooth pleasant freeway. A rarity.
Since the alternator was fixed we’ve driven a chunk of it to charge up our batteries and test the installation. So far so good.
Rusty is doing well, his leg is healing and he’s hardly limping at all. He doesn’t cross paths with Fran anymore, he reluctantly takes the pills I force on him, and his life has returned to what it was before Fran attacked him. He even gives me a kiss after our pill taking session in the evening to show there are no hard feelings.
The trouble now is we need to wait for a package we ordered, a new inverter as part of a new installation with a new battery charger after ours quit. Waiting for a package to be delivered is the worse feeling of helplessness.

As of Saturday afternoon it was overdue so our plans to get in the road have come to naught. Frustration is a pointless emotion…and we have a shady place to wait at $15 a day.
We have lived for two weeks generating electricity from our new solar panels and they do so well we can run our Dometic 12 volt rooftop air conditioner all night and sleep comfortably. So having proved that we now want to travel and fix the shore power fiasco later. But we incautiously paid for the new 3,000 watt inverter and it hasn’t arrived. Luckily we didn’t pay for the new charger which apparently is no longer available.
Our plan is to check out Paraguay a little but the heat is awful making tourism a fraught sweaty unpleasant business so we figured why not go west to the Brazilian coast. We both could use some beach time and the summer crowds should have dispersed by now.
We had considered a straight drive to expensive Uruguay to get the shore power fixed but we now have solar power and a working alternator and are doing fine so we thought to have some fun and go back to dreary mechanical issues later.
This is the mini market on the road at the bottom of the campground. Packaged goods, beer and sodas, a meat counter, some root vegetables and you have a collection of the basics. In Caacupé we use Superseis (Super Six) a modern full service supermarket. As we wait to be released, to go see more of Paraguay on the way to Brazil.
Ludwig reminded me of me, riding a Suzuki 650 with minimal luggage he is on a one year sabbatical.
He landed in Chile with his motorcycle in January and has already toured the southern tip of South America. He came here as a friend told him that the owners are from his corner of Bavaria in southern Germany.

He spent three days here resting and talking German and now he’s off to northern Chile to ride the Atacama desert, the driest place in the world.
I told him him how much I liked the coast of Chile between Iquique and Antofagasta do I hope he rides it. A Canadian apparently rode in and out yesterday on a Harley Davidson. He was looking to rent an air conditioned cabin so he left before I had a chance to even see him which was a pity. For every ten thousand North Americans afraid to travel Latin America there is perhaps one who is wandering around unnoticed and enjoying life on the cheap in the sun.
Ah youth! I’m glad I spent mine the same way else I’d envy him. Meanwhile Mark the English traveler and his attack dog Fran have moved into their new home in the campground built in seven weeks at a cost of $20,000.
We had beer and single malt to celebrate (which delayed the publishing of this post) and I was glad to see Fran secure behind a solid fence.
Mark lived twenty years in Los Angeles with his American wife. He has a son and a daughter but he wanted to grow old(er) in the sun and retirement is easy to organize in Paraguay.
We do like a coastline which landlocked Paraguay lacks. I grilled sausages and vegetables on our folding Skotti grill, a solid stainless box that unclips and travels flat. It’s a quality addition to our travel gear.
So we are now hoping for liberation and escape. It’s about time something went our way. I suppose I was foolish to assume car could rebuild that electrical system and have it all work perfectly right away but we are in a van in South America to be bonds and explore not sit still. We are both feeling the need to go be tourists.
It’s past time to go west and start to check out some of those famed Brazilian beaches.