Jimmy Buffett said it best: changes in latitudes, changes in attitudes. The idea being that the closer you get to the equator the more laid back you become. Speaking as one who has now crossed the line and is freezing cold on an overcast day at a mere three degrees south latitude… it ain’t necessarily so to quote another well known lyric.
No sunshine at Swiss Wassi leads me to seek contrast in black and white on my morning walk with Rusty. And as we walked on a sunless Sunday morning I thought about changes in altitude and how we acclimate (or acclimatize) to having less oxygen in the air. GANNET2 took a moment after a few days above 10,000 feet and we saw a check engine light come on, which went away on its own apparently after the computer adjusted the fuel/oxygen mixture. Rusty seems to suffer no ill effects but we are not so lucky.
Modern diesel engines suffer badly from Andean altitude as they are programmed for maximum altitudes around 8500 feet and are not programmed to operate long term at the extremes as we find here in South America. Indeed there is a shop in Quito which offers to remove pollution control systems (DPF) and reset computers to operate engines with good old fashioned black diesel smoke polluting the atmosphere. Altitude is serious business and even our V-6 gasoline loses power above eight thousand feet, and slow trucks are much harder to pass. At extreme altitudes like Bolivia which is mostly above 12,000 feet diesels have trouble starting and idling and warming up after a night of below freezing temperatures as low oxygen levels make reaching operating temperatures hard. The stories we hear go on and on from frustrated travelers.
I’ve been reading about altitude sickness too and I can say it’s a weird illness as its effects are varied and strike different people in different ways. But what’s even more confusing is that these people can feel altitudes in different ways at different times. In Mexico I came down with a blinding headache and nausea above ten thousand feet while Layne had no problems. We tested ourselves by sleeping one night at 14,250 feet at Volcán de Toluca outside Mexico City and we both spent a cold sleepless night gasping. In Ecuador Layne routinely threw up after exerting herself and got a deep persistent cough that wracked her chest while I was not too bad with a scratchy throat and nothing worse. We’ve met people half our age, in peak physical condition who can’t take a walk above certain altitudes without throwing up and feeling like passing out. Altitude sickness is unpredictable and if ignored can cause fluid on the brain (cerebral edema) with lots of severe and even terminal consequences. I know I sound like a warning label but it’s a strange byproduct of driving the Andes this altitude stuff that most travelers prefer not to talk about on their “look at me” Instagram posts.
Red blood cells transport oxygen and they do it in response to the levels of oxygen in the air. If those levels drop suddenly you find yourself breathless until your blood cells ramp up and respond to the low levels of oxygen and that usually takes a few days depending on assorted factors. These blood cells have a life span of about four months but they don’t all die at once as they go through replacement cycles so you adapt to altitude as new cells form and respond to the low oxygen levels. After about four months you have a complete new body of red cells used to whatever environment you are in and theoretically you are completely acclimated.
Which means that acclimatization goes away in reverse order, a few red cells at a time while you sit at the beach enjoying rich oxygen packed sea breezes and your mountain born red blood cells die to be replaced by sea level ones. And so it goes. The trouble is some people, and no one knows quite why, never adapt or manage to cope with altitude. Mountaineers, people of extreme fitness die if they fall ill on the slopes and can’t get down to normal oxygen levels in time.
For us car travelers altitude sickness doesn’t present dangers just discomfort. Headaches, rasping breath, coughing, vomiting and sleeplessness are a pain in the ass when you are trying to be a tourist. That Rusty romps completely unaffected is just annoying. The idea of trudging back up into a place where you feel like you have the flu is unappealing. So why do it?
In our defense we are going to cruise a section of the coast, then go inland, then come back down to sea level and go back into the mountains to see things we want to see. And therein lies the paradox of Peru. Altitude sickness, terrible roads and stark poverty are barriers to extraordinary history. People have been living and thriving in these arid and nasty mountains for centuries. The much vaunted Inca Empire lasted barely ninety years but they conquered cultures that had been thriving long before them in the Andes. And we want to see this stuff. We want to drive these extraordinary valleys and see not only the ruins but their locations too. And to do it we have to throw up sometimes. It’s silly but it’s just being human I think.
You can admire youngsters in four wheel drive off road machines driving Peru on YouTube and we all know that to make a living from it the heroism of the deed must be inflated. I have the good fortune not to need views or likes or supporters so I am free to mock myself and announce how uncomfortable it is to be on the road. Sometimes it’s sublime and mostly it’s fun but sometimes it sucks and I don’t turn the commentary off when it sucks.
At the moment we don’t feel like we want to go to Bolivia next. It will be there when we come back north from Ushuaia but it’s a country that lives above 12,000 feet, temperatures drop below freezing at night year round and the government is largely dysfunctional so simple things like buying fuel become a three ring circus for foreigners. YouTubers love Bolivia for its spiritual indigenous color and stuff but I know I’ll lose my shit when they won’t sell me gas. Better that we wait a while before taking that mess on.
I crave the cleanliness and order of Chile. That country shines like a beacon of smooth roads and easy living and probably there’s a delusion there as well which will surprise me. It’s a crazy country thousands of miles long and a hundred miles wide and full of mystery to me. They export wine everywhere I’ve ever traveled. They have fjords to rival anything Norway or New Zealand are famous for and they have an economy so strong overlanders always complain how expensive Chile is. I can’t wait.
But Peru presents me with a challenge that I have spent time pondering as we sat on the beach filling our lungs with salt air. This is a country that is full of challenges not least for people who live here, poverty corruption mismanagement and lack of resources and lack of opportunity. We are just passing through and testing ourselves in our expensive suburban lifestyle on wheels.
It’s eye opening comparing the struggle to live here with the complaints that pour out of the US and Europe where resentment and irritation bubble to the surface. I shall feel lucky in the coming weeks if neither we nor our vehicle breakdown as we ponder the lessons of the past and hopes for the future.
Life on the road is pretty elemental and all we have to think about is avoiding potholes, not getting run down and making sure to throw up downwind. I can’t wait to find out what’s up in those mountains for us.
We shall change altitude and remain explorers always with one foot on the beach as we go south.
2 comments:
Interesting photo of the dog/s on the beach.
Do regular anti nausea meds help with the altitude sickness at all?
I was making a double exposure on Snapseed with the dog as photography has been rather limited here-another reason we hope to get going Tuesday after the holiday.
Layne has bought some pills from a local pharmacy that are supposed to help with altitude sickness and we also got some coca leaf teabags to see if they help. I tried chewing coca leaves in Colombia and they were disgusting and disappointing and merely numbed my tongue. Hoping for the best.
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