Thursday, June 13, 2024

Into Ecuador

The fact is we don’t know much about Ecuador so the next few weeks will be a new voyage of discovery in this country.

Customs formalities were simple enough, immigration, customs for the van and agriculture to make Rusty legal. Then it was the open road. 

Ecuador is bigger than you think and with a population of 19 million it’s half the size of Colombia. It’s oddly American with fuel sold by the gallon and the currency is the US dollar, plus it’s the last country we will pass through with 110 volt electricity and US style plugs. I saw an ad for a Remax Realty company and road numbering signs look like US interstate signs: 

Fuel is cheap here too. Regular gas is $2:47 a gallon and diesel is $1:80. The roads so far have been smooth clean and well signposted and there are hardly any motorcycles which is lovely especially in cities. Driving is pretty aggressive and crazy passing is the order of the day. This is the border town of Tulcán ten minutes from Colombia and we stopped to buy some food and see what we could find.  Check out the usual crazy steep street with a traffic jam: 

The automated teller machine spat out 25 $20 bills and this fruit stand was selling delicious fruit for one dollar a bag. We got apples pears peaches and oranges, all delicious. A Swiss camper walking past Layne’s drying rack for the fruit she washed made a joke about a fruit market. 

A pleasant small community not feeling at all like a stressful border town. Ecuador looked good, so far. 

Our goal after the border crossing was a German owned campground two hours from Tulcán. 

And a road like this doubled our expected speed on Google Maps from what we were used to in Colombia. No pot holes. Not one. 

The countryside was a mixture of agriculture and wild mountain scenery. We drove between 8,000 and ten thousand feet minding our own business at forty to fifty miles an hour letting the locals pass and take risks. It was a great drive. 










We saw a bunch of trucks at the border driving into Colombia loaded with fruits and vegetables and then we saw greenhouses draped across the hillsides. 













Ecuador has a drug problem and the country is engaged in a struggle to defeat traffickers shipping cocaine through Ecuador. There has been a nationwide state of emergency  for months as the government tries to take down the cartels. The emergency is now in effect along the coast and the border with Colombia where there is a curfew in effect and the army is policing the countryside. 

In fact we passed though several police checkpoints and they were not taking their jobs lightly. We got waved through when they established we were foreigners but buses were being indicted and passengers were being identified, trunks were open and trucks were being search. Traffic was at a standstill at each checkpoint. It never felt scary and the cops were totally professional but very serious. Ecuador is in existential survival mode and I wasn’t going to risk taking a photo at these checkpoints. 

Check out these pick ups and boy they looked suspicious to me. They all looked identical, they drove fast and passed everyone everywhere, they ran red lights and everyone got out of their way. What they were hauling I don’t know but at one intersection there was a car with a woman leaning out the window frantically waving the trucks in front of us onto a side road. Around the corner we found … a police checkpoint. 

Eyes front and keep driving; I saw nothing. 







The lake was a sign we were closing in on the campground and there was still plenty of daylight, and no rain in sight. 

We found a spot at Sommerwind, $12 a night for the two of us, hot showers, electrical hook up and a restaurant with German food and beer. 



German brat and German beer was for dinner. 

An interesting campground at 7,250 feet. 






Tiny homes for  rent on the property. 



This is a well known overlander campground in Ecuador. 

The facilities are good as you might expect. There are washing machines and a dump station as well. 

For a dollar a day you can store your vehicle here and go home for a while. 

And the views aren’t bad. At least for a few days. And Layne has some touring planned from here to discover more about Ecuador. 




2 comments:

Bruce and Celia said...

Great photo tour of the Andes.

Not sure what to make of the stored RV that is clearly marked "CORONER"... hope you have a story about that! :-)

Anonymous said...

Great pictures and it looks like you've landed at a nice campground, I look forward to following your travels through Ecuador!
W