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Around the world on a GS850G for a cause

  • Thread starter Thread starter shirazdrum
  • Start date Start date
SEPTEMBER 1ST, 2011 - CAFAYATE, ARGENTINA

We finally woke up early, took hot shower at the fire station, and headed out due south for Cafayate. We went five blocks and I was hungry already so we stopped for one last salami and bread in Salta. We only had 250km to go and it was early in the day so I wasn?t too concerned about the time. At one of our stops, there was an all familiar shrine built for someone who had died in a car accident. In most of South America, when people die on the road, their families build a little shrine for them on that spot. Depending on wealth of the family, shrines differ from a simple cement box to elaborate granite covered cabins. All year long, people leave water, candle and flowers in them, and in some I have even seen food. (Just in case they come back from the death and are hungry I suppose.)

This particular shrine had something I had never seen before. Apparently the deceased was a smoker, so people had been lighting up cigarettes for him instead of candles, and leaving a few unlit ones just in case he came back to life. That was a touching gesture and I liked it so much that I left him a few cigarettes too. So this is my will: when I die, leave me cigarettes too and don?t forget the lighter either. If you?re feeling generous that day, a few liters of fuel would be nice too since I always run out gas.

The road started nice and turned gorgeous. We entered a landscape so extraordinary that the 100 degrees heat had no effect anymore. This was a land of massive sand stones, tall cliffs, blue sky, and a sun the size of a football field. I have spent a lot of time in Moab and Zion in Utah, but the enormity of this place makes Moab look like a dirt parking lot. The road with its class A asphalt twisted through cliffs after cliffs, and we rode from tropic to desert up and down with each ascend. What we could see from the road was a drop in the ocean of what was beyond, as the real beauty was always a mile off the road but it was mesmerizing nevertheless.

I don?t think I ever used the 4th or 5th gear as we stopped constantly just for another picture. The 250km trip which should have taken three hours at most took us nine hours to complete, and we arrived at the wine producing town of Cafayate at sundown. Cafayate is a beautiful little town surrounded by vineyards and most if not all of its income comes from the barrels. Cafayate is a touristy town and being poor means that you don?t get to enjoy it the way the others do, but that doesn?t mean you shouldn?t stop there.

We needed a place to crash for the night. We started by looking for the Police Station, but they were no good, and the tourism office was less than helpful. The hotel prices were arm and a leg so we went straight for the fire station again to see if we could find a place to sleep there, but the station was so small that it barely had room for their own fire-engine. As always, somehow things worked out. A guy at the station called around, and found us a place to camp at his friend?s yard. When we got to the place, I saw no yard. The house was a colonial style mansion with an open area in the middle and the only way to get inside was to ride the 1000lb street motorcycle up 6 stairs with no ramp. I looked at the stairs and shivered but there was no other way as I wasn?t going to leave the bike on the street. My first try almost ended disastrous as the bike simply wouldn?t go up ? it stalled in mid-air and started to roll back down. On second try, I gave it hell and she climbed all the way up the stairs and we settled down for the night; munching on salami, cheese, olives and bread yet another night.

I grew up not eating pork due to ridiculous religious taboos, but as soon as I reached the age of reason, I took revenge by indulging in this wonderfully delicious animal whenever possible. Now don?t get Vegan on me, pigs are not cute, they are not funny, and they are not smart either. They are just what the good lord had intended them to be ? stupid and delicious. In Argentina, pigs fulfill their destiny by voluntarily going into casings with white pepper corns, garlic and salt, and they get reincarnated into some of the best Salami in the world. The word Salam? comes from Italian and Salami is its plural form used in English to describe this product. Salami is produces in much of Europe and Americas, and it?s an assumption that the Italians are the masters of this craft, but I beg to differ. In my opinion, Argentine salami is the best salami in the world, with Hungarians taking the second place, and then Italy. On average, it takes 30 to 40 weeks for salami to be ready for consumption, and to clarify something, I?m not talking about the garbage you find in supermarkets in United States sold as hard salami or Genoa salami. Genoese salami is a fantastic salami which comes from Genoa, but it has nothing to do with the crap they sell in US by the same name. It?s interesting to know that salami was originally made by peasants as an alternative to fresh meat as they could keep it for years. Now days, it?s not uncommon that a good salami (once a peasant food) to be priced as much as three times of best cut of fresh meat.

Argentina is heavily influenced by Italian and Spanish cultures, and they created bests of both worlds out of this merger when it comes to food. On my trip to Uruguay, I discovered a very small village on the border of Argentina that was like heaven on earth. On both sides of the street, there were shacks with signs that read cheese and salami. Once you enter one of these huts, you can get high on the smell alone, and it doesn?t help much that pretty farm girls shove samples into your mouth. I left that town almost broke as quickly as possible, as it was a sure way to get me to settle down.

I wanted to write a travel blog but somehow I ended up writing a whole page on salami and I haven?t even scratched the surface yet. Now that I wrote about salami, I kind of want to write about hams too (again not the kind of ham you see on your thanksgiving table, that?s not ham, that?s an abomination to Spanish Jam?n.) I?ll cut this post short here so stay tuned for the rest of the story, but I can?t promise that it won?t have any salami in it.

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SEPTEMBER 23RD, 2011 - THE BEES, TREES, AND A DEAD COW

When I find a road that is not on the map, my first reaction is to always roll on the throttle and ride straight for it. This time I found a road that was not charted, was reasonably short, and from the GPS Topo maps, it seemed to be passing through some beautiful landscape. Little did I know that this 50km section would prove to be one of the most isolated, hottest, and sandiest roads in entire Argentina.

When we left Cafayate, the only way back was to ride north for Salta again, and go east from there. But not wanting to double-back, I steered the bike into a single lane road which was a shortcut that would save us 150km of redundancy. We rode until sunset but finding a spot to camp became a problem. Before dark, we found a campground, but when I was told $15 for the night to pitch a tent, I bolted out of there. We finally found a nice spot by the lake at sundown and pitched the tent. It was a quiet place, the weather was cool, and not a single soul around for miles. I headed into the bush with my axe and headlamp, chopped some wood, and we settled in by the campfire. I skewered some meat, made a pot of rice, and since Lourdes had never made a fire before (City Girl), I put her in charge of the pit. Mate and a couple of guitar tunes later ? we passed out for the night.

I woke up to a strong buzzing noise all around the tent, and I immediately knew what it was. The night before, in the dark, we pitched our tent under a low hanging tree which happened to host a giant Africanized bee nest. Call me a wimp, but I spent most of my life dodging Asian Giant Hornets. Almost unknown in US, these gigantic killing machines were the most fearsome intruders of my childhood. At two inches long with a wing span of three inches, these hornets are the deadliest and most feared of any flying insect. If the sheer size of these bugs doesn?t give you nightmares, they have five eyes ? two on the sides, and three on top of their head- a stinger the size of your pinky, and they can fly over 50 miles a day. They attack in groups and they spray acid in your eyes before proceeding to tear your limbs apart. I was attacked twice in my life by these out-of-this-world bugs and I have a scar to show for each one. So it?s safe to say that I systematically avoid anything that flies that?s not a bird.

Here's a clip of these hornets killing other bees

I crawled out of the tent slowly and looked around for the source of the buzzing. I found a bee-ball a little smaller than a football, (American) and they seemed to be on the edge for some reason. As I was taking pictures and showing the nest to Lourdes, they went ape****, and 100?s of bees started to swarm around us. I didn?t care what they were selling ? I didn?t want it ? so I started to run for my life and Lourdes followed hopping on one heel (One of her boots lost a heel early on the trip). We stayed by the lake until the bees were gone, then packed up and got the hell out of there.

The hot weather turned for worse and our water ran out. The pavement ended abruptly and the road started downhill which twisted and turned at a steep grade, and what covered the road was only loose gravel and sand. We were riding on a side of cliff, and the bike kept shifting towards the drop-off. As calmly as I could, I told Lourdes that if I tell you to jump, don?t think twice, just jump off the bike if the bike starts to go down. The sand was unnerving. It would get very deep around the corners and my bald rear tire didn?t have a prayer. As we descended into the valley down below, there was no going back. The road we came from was too steep and sandy for the heavy bike to climb back up, and not having good tires made it impossible. We had to ride this road out, no matter what.

If the road condition was dreadful, the valley was unquestionably beautiful. A turquoise swift river ran through the landscape, and tall cliffs surrounded the road ? wild flowers, cactuses, occasional birds, and no sign of a human life anywhere. At the lower parts of the valley, the river had washed off to the road, and river crossings became the new challenge. As I was filming, I had to set the tripod and the camera, cross the river on the bike, and have Lourdes ferry the rest to the other side. Before and after every river crossing came a long section of deep sand as fine as table salt, and the road would climb up again yet for another hill.

We started at 9 am and it took us five and half hours to cover 50km. When we finally got out of this paradise, I wanted to kiss the asphalt. We were on the verge of exhaustion, hungry, and severely dehydrated. We found a roadside Parrilla (similar to steak house) and parked the bike. I told the waitress to bring on the drinks with as much meat as she got. She showed up with a giant platter, and we ate and drank for as long as I remember. The bill was the most expensive I paid on this trip: $25. That was for two 40 oz. beer, soft drinks, two racks of ribs, five sausages, two steaks, unlimited salads, and bread. We stayed at the grill for hours before heading back into the boiling inferno. I looked at the GPS and the closest town was called Joaqu?n V?ctor Gonz?lez, (named after a politician of the same name) and the next was called Pampa del Infierno (Land of Hell), so I figured we had enough hell for today so we headed for Gonz?lez.

On the road I started seeing big nice yellow lemons here and there, and wondered where they came from. Then I started to see them more frequently, until I saw something that stopped me on my track. A semi trailer had flipped over on the road, and yellow lemons covered the highway. We apparently got to the truck just minutes after the accident, as there was no one around. The driver was OK but very frightened, and rightfully so. The air smelled like lemonade factory and besides the misfortune, it was a beautiful scene. Then people started to show up and proceeded to steal lemons. The driver seemed not to care or if he did care, there was nothing he could do. Ten ton of lemons that takes a crew of workers a few hours to load, disappeared in front of our eyes in matter of minutes. Things disappear in South America without a trace, and the driver knew it too well to try to stop it. Stay tuned.

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still watching...........

You know what they say... if life gives you lemons, make 5,000 gallons of lemonade!!!
 
Ok now this is WEIRD !!!!!.I have the same bike ( even the same color)and I'm building a RTW sidecar rig out of it..:dancing::dancing::dancing:.This thread is gonna keep me up ALL NIGHT..!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Hey guys i'm alive and well. Have been busy with work and taking over 1000 acres of farm land in Paraguay for the project. We had to register the organization from scratch down here to be eligible to work here and that took for ever.

The bike is doing well, except the battery is dead finally after 2.5 years and need a new battery.

i'll post this here as well so if "richsuz" sees this:


Hi Rich,

I have a huge favor to ask you. A friend of mine (One of our ambassadors), Greg Powell, was robbed and assaulted while traveling around Lake Atitilan in Guatemala. It seems that they took his cloths and most of his stuff and he has some injuries. His bike was damaged as well and I would appreciate it if you could give him a helping hand. He is currently in Guatemala City and his email address is mustgo2011@yahoo.ca

I CCed him on this email so he knows about you.

Thanks a million,

And if we have any other members in Guatemala i would appreciate their help.
 
Last edited:
Hey Chris,
Got your email. As I was rounding up help around here and trying to locate your friend, I found out that he was already un good hands. He is staying at a friends house just outside Guatemala City. As warm and comfortable as possible, as his host is not just an avid biker (GS1200 Adventure rider, not Suzuki) he also is a Chef.
We will make sure things get fixed up for him.

Rich
 
Report on Greg,
I did not talk to Greg, but with his host Julio. The bike suffered minor damage. Mainly a broken mirror. He was "stoned" of the bike by three bandits with machetes. I have never heard of that. Since Greg had been in Guatemala City and staying iwith Julio and his wife Luisa Fernanda, he had left most of his belongings there. So at the moment of the attack they took carry on and tank bag, with a substantial amount of cash (that is a no-no, no matter where. Traveling papers, as far as I know are safe. I will try to meet with him tomorrow.
 
Rich,

Thanks a million buddy, I know how hard it is to be in a strange country and things not going as planned. He knew not to carry cash like that, well you just live and learn. I also have never heard of anyone getting stoned off the bike, these guys are getting creative.

I'm glad that you guys get to meet tomorrow, Greg is a nice guy and i'm sure he appreciates the hospitality. Take some pictures if you can. It's a shame we never got to meet.
 
Hey guys i'm alive and well. Have been busy with work and taking over 1000 acres of farm land in Paraguay for the project. We had to register the organization from scratch down here to be eligible to work here and that took for ever.

The bike is doing well, except the battery is dead finally after 2.5 years and need a new battery.

i'll post this here as well so if "richsuz" sees this:


Hi Rich,

I have a huge favor to ask you. A friend of mine (One of our ambassadors), Greg Powell, was robbed and assaulted while traveling around Lake Atitilan in Guatemala. It seems that they took his cloths and most of his stuff and he has some injuries. His bike was damaged as well and I would appreciate it if you could give him a helping hand. He is currently in Guatemala City and his email address is mustgo2011@yahoo.ca

I CCed him on this email so he knows about you.

Thanks a million,

And if we have any other members in Guatemala i would appreciate their help.

Glad your friend Greg is OK.
Can you tell us more about your project?
 
Ok now this is WEIRD !!!!!.I have the same bike ( even the same color)and I'm building a RTW sidecar rig out of it..:dancing::dancing::dancing:.This thread is gonna keep me up ALL NIGHT..!!!!!!!!!!!!


Haha I also have the same bike (and color) and am planning on doing an Alaska tour on it next summer. Something about the 850GZ must inspire adventure. :rolleyes:

Chris,
Glad to see you are doing well and still kicking. Don't really have to look closely and enjoy your photos and recent adventures yet but I'll be back soon!

Cheers,
Tim
 
Hey guys, thanks for being around. I have been really sick for a few days with high fever and I?m hoping that it's not Dengue Fever again.

When I started this organization, the biggest thing that struck me was lack of a helping-hand rather than lack of food. The poor people, believe it or not are some of the most creative economist ? they have to be. They stretch a dollar bill for so long that makes my head spin, but the fact is that this very same class is excluded from the very basic financial assistance that others take for granted. The more I got into it, the more I saw the negative effects of traditional handouts, and I changed my focus to a much bigger picture. Not by giving out a bag of rice, but by letting them decide what to do with 10 bags of rice. And that?s where the microfinance project was born. I did my experiments in Paraguay with giving out very small loans, ($80) for duration of 4 months, and if they returned the loan, they could take double and so on. The money that was going to be handed out with no expectation in the first place, now brought in honesty, creativity and made jobs. Their requirement were simple - to send their kids to school, raise small farm animals (chicken and goats) and plant a tree. Out of all participants, every single one of them returned the money, all fulfilled their contracts, and a few opened their own business(fruit stands, wood cutting business,?) with just having an $80 help. It?s amazing how much a 100 dollar bill can do down here, sometimes it?s a matter of life and death.

Then this evolved to something bigger. Instead of just loaning 100 bucks and letting them figure it out, we would loan the money and give them advice on how to put it to good use. Through some contacts I made, we are taking over 1000 acre of farming land which has excellent soil. Here if you spit on the ground, something will grow, but these people struggle with growing and most importantly selling their products. Not that there is no buyer, they just don?t understand how to compete with the commercialized farms and corporations. Paraguay has been mono cropped for a long time with soy and sugar being its most profitable crops and that pushed the peasants to verge of starvation because they can?t grow their daily food and they are dependent on the big market if they grow soy and sugar. Every year, more people lose their lands because they go in debt to corporations like Monsanto (they are big down here) and they end up in the cities washing windows.

Paraguay just celebrated its 200 anniversary of independent and from what I saw, this event (a month long celebration) made the 4th of July like a Wednesday night party. They are very patriotic and I?m using the very same concept to sell them the idea of caring for their own people. We are planning a gigantic parade and carnival from every group in the country and that?s what I?m working on at the moment.

I?ll write more when I get a little better and will keep you updated.
P.S. I found a Yuasa battery for 50 bucks and now I don?t have to park on the hill anymore :)
 
Very interesting approach. I wish you all the success in the world with helping folks to stand on their own.

How many participants did you start with?
 
I started with 9 households, actually 8 and the first one was asset-up to get the rest to participate. They don't take my word that something is good for them, but they take their neighbors word :) between these families, there were 31 children and this was just a fraction of that community. I used another organization's research to find these people and that's working very nicely. They do the leg work for their own projects and we use their data for ours without wasting resources.

I've learned that (very sadly) these people follow a leader without much creativity. For decades, they were under dictatorship like much of South America, and the creativity was beaten out of them. When asked a question, they all look at each other and if one person is brave enough to take a guess, the rest will side with him. This is worse in the female population as the women will wait for a man to step forward and follow him with no challenge.

This is the life in rural South America, a system that came in place from our own government trying to fight communism, overthrowing every democratically elected official and replacing it with puppet dictators. To get the job done down here, a dictatorship approach is applied even in the non-profit sector. What I hope to break this cycle is education but that doesn't come overnight. Paraguay is moving towards the same class of capitalism that drowned our economy, and the US embassy is doing everything it can to make it happen. I (an American citizen) was denied entry inside embassy, and had to speak to the head of security 50 feet from the building. All I was asking for was a meeting with any official and was given an 800 number. Go figure.
 
I'm not American, but if that was my country I'd be notifying every news agency I could think of. { denying embassy entry } However, when you are trying to make small inroads in a country with questionable government ethics. It can be best to speak little and allow your actions to speak for themselves. I applaud your efforts !
 
News does not cover real stories... they only cover what they are told to, this would be brushed over for sure. Just keep doing what you are and hope you are feeling better. If you can email me some more details and time frame for stuff going on I will try to find a way to come down in the next few months.
 
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