Sunday, May 12, 2024

All Change


Pretty pool, huge trees, solitude and easy living for the weekend. Right? Wrong. 

For some reason the pool was closed for cleaning on Saturday the very day after we arrived and had enjoyed one lovely swim, the sand fleas were ferocious and the owners’ dogs, two large dimwitted creatures with not a malicious bone in their bodies wouldn’t leave Rusty alone. He retreated to a quiet corner snarling occasionally to convince them to go away. We decided with a sigh, we had to leave. 

The owners came by when they took a break from organizing  their laborers and we had a pleasant chat as we packed up to go. They recently bought the place and are building a truck camper and want to overland one day. Meanwhile their hummingbird campground is getting ready to expand and become home to overlanders only, no hotel restaurant or other facilities will be offered. One hummingbird got into our home but we swooshed it safely on its way. Silly bird. 

Rusty the sensitive kept his back to the walls so when we went for a walk to relive his boredom the cacophony of fenced in dogs in the street outside made him turn tail back to the relative safety of the campground. That was where the idiot dogs of the owner came by for some more friendly and decidedly unwanted attention. Rusty and I are well suited to each other, two shy grouch potatoes. 

Layne and I liked this place and we were tempted to stay but no swimming pool and an irritated Rusty got us on the road. 

And it was a good day for a drive. I like wide smooth four lane pavement from time to time. We had a Jack Reacher novel on the stereo from the Libby app, the air conditioning drowned the noise of the world outside and the sun shone. At 45 miles an hour I stayed in the slow lane and let my mind drift. I could have been enjoying a Sunday drive on a US interstate. 

Cali is the target where there is another campground with a pool. Our back up plan. 
A “bascula” ( weigh station) actually in operation pulling trucks off the freeway to check their loads. 

Those bloody recreational cyclists clumped in the slow lane of the freeway. This lot I photographed with my little Panasonic camera because they were safely on the shoulder, but usually they are all over the place. It makes a North American driver crazy but I have to keep my irritation to myself as this is normal in Colombia. 

The  situation at the moment is that our parts ordering operation has not yielded any actual deliveries. We have brake dust seals still on the way (thank you Dan) and an engine oil cooler is supposed to be here this week to replace the one slowly leaking oil. The rectangular silver box below. 

We bought an upgraded aluminum cooler built by Dorman supposedly an upgrade on the plastic factory installed cooler which is prone to leaks. This one lasted 50,000 miles and hopefully its $180 replacement from Dorman will last at least as long. Hopefully it will be at our campground address by Wednesday. Maybe. Hopefully. Fingers crossed. 

Meanwhile we’re swimming at our campground outside Cali where the pool is closed for cleaning every Monday,the day we will do some laundry and shopping in Cali. Then on Wednesday we’ll drive up to the La Bonanza campground three hours away in the mountains where our parts will have arrived and we’ll have them installed. Yay. Or not and we’ll have to wait. 

Staying positive we expect to drive to Ecuador some time in early June. It’s raining there too so there’s no real hurry but I want to cross the equator for the first time in my life and Webb Chiles, a frequent visitor there insists it’s the best hemisphere. 

Patience is a virtue and Colombia is a pleasant place to hang out I tell myself. And so it is.