Every now and then, overlanding travel throws up not just a gem, but a surprising gem. A kind of âWell! Who knew???â moment. In south Guyana we have such a moment. After the minor disaster that was our short-lived attempt to reach Kaieteur, in the Guyana Rupununi weâre surprised to find compensation in spades: the beauty of the savannahs and the little visited Amerindian petroglyphs.
Tag Archives: South America
Guyana: Tolls and TV Stardom
Driving into a new country you inevitably find yourself comparing it to the one you have just left. Whatâs different? Whatâs the same? Is the food (or more importantly, the beer) any better or worse? We really enjoyed our time in Suriname with the drone and the jungle kids, now in our north Guyana blog we find: (i) TV stardom, and (ii) a very expensive car ferry.
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So… Suriname!
Suriname, Suriname⌠where exactly is that? Near Vietnam? Nope. Next door to Ghana? Errr, no. Itâs on the north coast of South America, above Brazil, snuggled comfortably between French Guiana and Guyana. Itâs in the northern Amazon basin, so itâs hot, humid and â at the risk of stating the bleedinâ obvious – jungly! Weâve been here a month now and one of our highlights has been entertaining jungle kids with their first ever drone sighting (click here). But Suriname has some history, great wildlife and other stuff to see too, including some interesting âbird-cage cultureâ. Here’s the Suriname travel blog…
21st Century Jungle: The Video!
Catching up a bit here with the last blog about our jungle trip in Suriname. Now, get yourself some popcorn, sit back and enjoy the Suriname Jungle Video: Maroon kids chasing their first ever drone! Sooooo cute!
Suriname: 21st Century Jungle
Suriname has rather a lot of jungle. In fact, itâs pretty much all theyâve got here. Best we take a peek then. Last blog we had the thrill of a live rocket launch in French Guiana, now we see the jungle kids’ thrill of seeing their first drone! We’re heading far in-land, well beyond where Cuthbert our camp-truck can take us. Hereâs the story in our Suriname jungle blog …
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Suriname time-out
Teeeny update… After the excitement of French Guiana with turtles and rockets, we’ve been parked up for a while, doing not a lot, chilling-out by the river in Suriname with a different type of traveller! These guys are taking some time out from sailing around the world. Yup… across the high seas in those little boats. Makes overlanding look a bit tame by comparison! If you want to see some awesome video diaries of their life on the ocean waves, see www.seachangelog.com.
Marcus has been doing a bit of geekery… building and programming a computer system to replace the Iveco computer controlling  Cuthbert’s diff-locks (Afam computer  replacement). Any brain-boxes out there who can work out the square-root of a jar of pickles might find the write-up interesting đ
Click on the picture for link to page.
Heading off for a week of jungle-exploring. If we don’t get eaten by a caiman, there might be an interesting update soon đ
Link to next blog: Suriname: 21st Century Jungle   Link to full South America Blog
Monster Turtles and Rockets
There are turtles and there are giant leather-back turtles. And then there are space rockets. An odd combination, but in French Guiana weâre lucky enough see both in the same week. The end of our last blog featured a cliff-hanger, waiting to see whether our application for tickets to the next French Guiana rocket launch will be successful. Well⌠we got them! And whilst we contain our excitement before the big launch day, we head off to see the giant leather-back turtles on the beaches of the far north corner.
Protests and Papillon
Damn tedious all this protesting and road-blockade malarkey, but hey⌠âCâest la vieâ, as they say here in French Guiana. In our last blog we arrived in a charming but blockade-ridden, far-flung part of the EU. Now, after a month of disruption, the protesters toddle home and things gradually get back to normal. For us this means freedom to move around the country. It means, the re-start of the Space Race (officially exciting!). And it means some first-hand proof of Hollywoodâs tish, tosh and piffle on Papillon Island!
French Guiana… bonjour!
Just over the bridge from Brazil Amazon and⌠politics! Overlanders are always best advised to avoid national politics as they travel, but sometimes things just jump in your face. French Guiana is an overseas department of mainland France. Itâs officially part of the EU, it has the Euro currency and, we find out to our cost, the people have the same French propensity for road blockades and labour strikes when they feel hard done-by! Continue reading
Amazon Delta
You canât just drive across the Amazon Delta you know⌠youâd get a bit wet. Cuthbert earned his âWater-fording Proficiencyâ badge reaching the Lençóis Maranhenses but this time we need to put him on a barge which zig-zags over 38 hours between the mangroves and islands, crossing the Amazon Delta. Compared to the much travelled western side of the continent, this north-eastern route of South America is, even in the dry season, relatively little trodden by the âoverlanding communityâ. In the currently prevailing rainy season, even fewer travellers venture up here. Hmmm⌠maybe thereâs a good reason for that!! Continue reading
Lençóis Maranhenses – Dunes and Lagoons
It’s challenging driving to Lençóis Maranhenses, but is it worth the schlepp? âA spectacularly unique place⌠thousands of crystal-clear lagoons between dunesâ… so they say. Our faith in travel journalists has been tempered slightly by our recent experience in Jericoacoara (see last blog), but we’ve not lost hope. Actually, Lençóis Maranhenses manages to exceed our high expectations, there’s just the small matter of getting there, testing Cuthbert’s off-road capabilities and our nerves!
Brazil: Tudo Bom!
Tudo bom… All good! The most common phrase weâve heard all over Brazil. Itâs a statement, itâs a question, itâs a greeting, itâs said with a smile and itâs a reflection of the consistently chirpy Brazilian nature which continues as we head into the far north. We’ve done middle Brazil. Now on this latest stretch we hit the coast at Salvador then head north: dodging coconuts, reaching the far east, dining with Iveco, and testing our nerves with Cuthbertâs capacity on dunes and deep-sand tracks.
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Mission: Middle Brazil
A brewery, a palace, a gold mine, a football stadium, a police selfie, a floating angel, broken glow-plug, a desert lagoon and a foot swallowing sand-bubble. Our last post saw Rio and fab beaches, now weâre on a mission to see the great mix of middle Brazil, with the added dilemma of so much to see, so little time!
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It’s Brazil, Baby!
You like beaches? Brazilâs got trillions. You like jungle? Theyâve got the worldâs biggest. You like mountains and caves? Yup, theyâve got those. Waterfalls? Tick. Deserts and dunes? Err⌠yes. Wildlife? Yah, plenty dat too. And of course, the football⌠many shed-loads of that! They do sport, they do fashion, they do science, they do arts, they build things, they party-hard and theyâre the economic power-house of the region. Sure, they have few teeny political snags on the agenda at the moment (who hasnât? đ ) but overall, weâre looking forward to seeing Brazil (and those beaches!)
Little Falls, Big Falls
Argentina has its finger stuck between Paraguay and Brazil. Yes, really! Look on the map… thereâs long, narrow, finger-like, sticky-up bit in the far north-east of Argentina: Misiones province. We crossed into Argentina from Paraguay at the bottom of the finger and set a new northerly course through Misiones, up to Brazil and Iguazu Falls.
Paraguay
The Chaco⌠a chuffing big, flat plain stretching east from the Andes. Covering eastern Bolivia, north-east Argentina, a bit of south-west Brazil and much of Paraguay⌠itâs big. After the descent from the Bolivian altiplano, itâs a long, long, straight road reaching over 800km to Asuncion. We expect the Chaco to be hot. Turns out⌠our introduction to Paraguay is not just hot, but damned hot! And what’s Paraguay all about beyond the Chaco? Read on in the Paraguay blog…
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Bolivia: Celebrities and Wine
In the Andes at over 4,000m again⌠a bit of re-acclimatisation is required. We interrupted the sequence of our blogs slightly for our âDakar Specialâ when we had a tougher than expected challenge to catch the Rally in Bolivia. So now please humour our âtime-warpâ as we step back in time to a few days before the Dakar: weâre leaving the beaches of Arica on New Yearâs Day for a last bit of exploring in the Andes of northern Chile before crossing into Bolivia.
The Dakar
No, we havenât just upped-sticks and shipped to Africa, weâre in Bolivia for the world famous Dakar Rally 2017. After a load of security shenanigans in West Africa, the rally formerly known as âParis-Dakarâ was shifted to South America where itâs affectionately known by locals as âEl Dakarâ. Hereâs the story of our attempt at finding over 400 bikes, quads, cars and trucks charging across the altiplano in 2017, together with our Top Tips if youâre contemplating a trip to see Dakar 2018.
Not-so-silent night
Itâs not every Christmas that we open our presents to the booming sound of Chileâs answer to Snoop-Doggy-Dog (or whatever the latest hip-hop chap is called these days) and to be honest, it wouldnât be our first choice for 2016 either! Nevertheless, thatâs what we get đ Â But before we launch into the Christmas Story, there is the final instalment of the Tyre Story. Continue reading
Colca and Coast
Itâs little visited, the south coast of Peru, which is a real shame. Back in September when we travelled up through southern Peru we took, like most travellers, the mountain route via Lake Titicaca and Cusco. Now south-bound, weâre loving the coastal route south of Nazca and on to Chile. Continue reading