On the mechanical front there is no change. There are horrible grinding sounds coming from the front of the van most likely from the new second alternator. We hope Chris can check it on Monday but I drive GANNET2 only rarely and reluctantly in the meantime. It is exceeding frustrating.
If you were parachuted here from your commute you’d probably blow a gasket but…we’ve seen worse on this extraordinary journey so we pressed on. It was a matter of working here and there to the surprisingly heavy traffic. Cars trucks and motorcycles kept coming and going and dodging the big gringo van.
Oh, just to complete the picture…
And the side road off the main track just got worse.It was washed out with trenches dug out by water running down hill, a small cement bridge, patches of soft sand. It reminded Layne of crossing Guyana and which road we have no desire to revisit.Nice house, big garden, air conditioned bedroom, big German fans, cool tiles for Rusty, no workable swimming pool, terrible approach road requiring car rental for $30 a day. We decided even at $30 a day or $12 a day for a month we wanted to stay mobile. If we can get GANNET2 safe to roll our plan is to visit Bolivia as a replacement battery charger is at least two and maybe three weeks away. Don’t want to be stuck down this road in rainy season.
We had a weird interaction with the campground owners who celebrated the husband/mechanic Chris’ birthday. (Loki is draining an empty beer can). We only got invited at the last minute by Chris’ volunteer live in helper, a German woman called Inge who has befriended Layne and she asked why we weren’t going to the potluck. So we went, somewhat unwillingly at this point but choosing not to snub the kindly Inge. Inge made room for us among the Swiss couple (on the left) with the terminally broken Citroen Jumper van, sitting next to a German couple we befriended in Argentina so we were linguistically outnumbered supported only by Mark the Englishman who owns a house on Chris’ land.We’ve had lots of campground gatherings and only the French for some reason make a habit of excluding others. Mostly everyone mucks in even if the common language in the end is English. We did the right thing and then left when Mark got up. Had we organized the evening everyone would have been invited. I overthought the whole rather negative episode but Layne reminded me we are here for mechanics not kumbaya so rather than drive for Asuncion to find a shop to fix the damned second alternator we plastered smiles on our faces and ended up having a pretty interesting conversation with Teo and Pia our German friends who spends eight months of the year in their rather capable but cramped Toyota Landcruiser. They had to have their dashboard air conditioning fixed. We all have problems. He is retired from a life as a university history professor and researcher. He traveled the Amazon with a back pack in his twenties riding the ferries in a hammock and staying in jungle lodges in areas where we have driven.








































































































