I woke when Brennon tapped on my arm. Breakfast was coming.
I guess I had been sleeping heavily because I hadn’t even heard the carts or
seen the sun fully come up. But we were still on the cramped plane. The rest of
the flight was alright, though. The sun was bright and above the horizon. It
was cool to watch it progressively rise; I would wake up periodically and look
outside. The flat horizon turned from blues to oranges and pinks until the
bright sun blinded us on the flight. The well-trained stewardess had put down
all of our windows with a hanger as we slept though.
When we landed, we Americans had to get our visa, which was $160 worth
of contentment from the Chilean government delivered as a “reciprocation” fee.
Most of us had to get one: Dave, our leader, already had one from previous
excursions, and Luribel is Dominican. They went through a different line while
we waited in the other one. We purchased our visas, went through immigrations,
and then found our luggage at the claim. Dave had met the other two girls that
were on a different flight (which if ours was on time, our two flights would
have landed at the same time), and they had collected our baggage. We did an
accounting and couldn’t find Luribel, so we proceeded through customs thinking
she might be on the other side. We couldn’t find her there, so we sent a leader
and our tour guide whom we had just met to investigate. Mistakenly, she hadn’t
gotten her visa, so they were holding her in immigrations. Because she didn’t
get her visa, they had to export her back to the states. The leaders couldn’t
even get in to see her. After an hour of probing, we found the wall we were
hitting was too thick, so we left to salvage our sad day. We all feel bad for
her; not only did she have to sit in the airport for 15 hours until her flight
leaves, but she had to do it all alone, missing on all the plans. I hope that
she gets to meet us in Peru! It really put a damper on our day.
We loaded the bus and headed to a small touristic village
where we got a real taste of the culture. There were dogs everywhere! I mean,
everybody who has been to South America anywhere has said that there were dogs
everywhere, but I never quite understood. They would just lie in the street,
pee on park benches, hang out in the alleys, everywhere! They were quite tame
as well, so they weren’t much of a bother.
Everybody was really forward, too. They would stick fliers
in your face to make you eat at their restaurant or stop at their tienda. Some
of the things they had were cool: a lot of pottery, sweaters, Indiana Jones
hats, handmade jewelry, and tones of junk! I almost bought lana de alpaca
socks, but I knew they weren’t alpaca, so I passed. I’ll wait for Machu Pichu.
For dinner, we ate at probably the fanciest diner on the
street. Inside, the bathrooms were free (a big deal), but the tables and chairs
were all on dirt floors. It was a really fun and even clean atmosphere. We had
fresh jugo, delicious empanadas, and tender pork and beef steaks, served over
coals to keep it warm. We were also served desert, which was just raspberry ice
cream. I accidentally said a couple things in Spanish, so our waitress kept
talking to me like I knew what she was saying at 100 mph. I felt very stuck
with my Spanish, but I think it will come a long way when I have used it
regularly for 3 weeks.
After, we were taken to our hotel, our gracious guides said good-bye
until Monday. We found our rooms and were finally able to clean up after a day’s
worth of not showering, not brushing teeth, not shaving, not putting on deodorant,
etc. We settled in, then met back together to have dinner and kill the evening.
We walked the streets of Santiago, heading in the direction that would get us
some sight seeing and dinner opportunities. We walked by the Presidential
Palace, but it was fenced off more than usual. It got dark here at 6:30 ish, so
most of the shops had shut down by the time we got out (which was only about
7:30). We ended up going to the Indianapolis Bar, which wasn’t a great choice.
Then we walked back to our hotel because we were all still tired from the lack
of quality sleep from the flight.
Luribel, we feel so bad! We really wish you could be here
with us. I hope to see you when we get to Peru!
1 comment:
Bummer about your friend. Hope she gets to meet up with you later. I read it to your dad. We love how you write. Enjoying hearing how your day went. Love you!
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