A particularly challeging 2 months as we travel up the west coast of mainland Mexico thanks to a few serious mechanical challenges with Mr. Jones, however when not spending time acting like a mechanic we enjoyed the places we visited
In South Africa, the period either side of New Years day is not really a considered a good time to be on the roads and while we couldn’t be sure the same applies in Mexico, we preferred to err on the side of caution and so after our peaceful New Years eve spent in a gas station/truck stop we hit the road for a short 2 hour hop up the coast to a formal campsite. The drive was super easy and all on a very well-maintained dual carriage way which was a pleasant surprise especially seeing as there were no toll fees involved. Sadly, the campsite turned out to be a little rough around the edges and the beach environment also, with lots of cars and buggies streaming up and down it, partying and enjoying the start of the New Year. So, while we had hoped to stay a few days, we decided that evening to move, especially seeing as further up the coast was the promise of some nice surf and beaches.
If you look at a map of Mexico we were at the “narrow neck” between the Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, roughly only 200km separates the two oceans and in fact over the years a number of proposals have been touted to create an alternative logistics option to the Panama Canal by linking each side with large ports and railway. Aside from an interesting bit of trivia, what this means is that at certain times of the year, the winds in this area can be quite strong and strong winds are generally not conducive to beach time or surfing. We confirmed the wind issue when we moved on the following day and stopped at what would be an idyllic spot if it didn’t feel like Mr Jones was either going to be blown over or have his tent fabric ripped apart. Under normal circumstances we would park Mr Jones facing into the wind so that when the roof is lifted it acts like a deflector but because the spot we stopped at had no electricity we needed to park in the direction that gave us maximum solar and that meant having our back to the wind which then presents a 4m high obstacle for the wind. A restful night we did not have and naturally were on the move again the following morning.
Third time is the charm, it seems, as after a 3-hour drive and for our 3rd night in Mexico since entering from Guatemala we found a nice spot in the little village of San Agustin. It was super busy with many small tents crammed into and under a very large Palapa but the Dutch owners moved their vehicle out from its normal parking spot to make space for us. As a bonus this was under a very high thatch roof giving us shade and keeping Mr Jones cool which was much appreciated, as Tania had picked up the cold/sore throat Stuart had had a few days prior and was looking like she may appreciate a few days in bed.
Over the next four days, we chilled, swam in the beautiful bay out front, did odd jobs on Mr J and recuperated. Apart from recuperation, our 4 days in San Agustin allowed the New Year holiday period to finish which meant when we got back on the road we had relatively quiet roads for the 90-minute hop to Mazunte. Mazunte is very touristy little village which overall looked quite nice and reminded us a lot of Pipa in Brazil and after a bit of searching we did find a camping option but it didn’t have the nicest feel (interestingly similar to the place we stayed in at Pipa) and the surfing beach looked very mediocre and quite a substantial walk from the campsite. The campsite owner wasn’t around when we arrived and then took ages to respond to our WhatsApp messages, so not “feeling it”, we decided to head further up the coast to a campsite called Casa Colibri which had plenty of positive reviews on iOverlander.
Stuart had been noticing a slight vibration in the brake pedal when slowing for Topes (speed bumps) over the last couple of driving days, it didn’t consistently happen but was enough to have him think that perhaps some grit had got stuck between the pads and discs when camped on the beach and in the wind, so while at Casa Colibri he removed the wheels to inspect. Only to discover on the passenger front wheel a completely disintegrated brake pad! Normally brake pads wear down at a steady rate but in this case the only thing left was the steel backing plate!
Disaster!!!
What was very strange with this incident is you would expect for a terrible squealing noise to have been made when metal on metal contact was made by using the brakes or sharp veer to the one side as the metal “grabbed” the disc but the only warning sign we had had was a minor vibration in the brake pedal. In the spares box was an old set of brake pads which we had previously removed before they had reached their end of life so replacing pads wasn’t such an issue but unfortunately because of the metal on metal contact the brake disc had been gouged quite badly and Stuart was concerned that, that roughness would rapidly destroy any replacement pads as well.
This dilemma and the solutions we tried to find and solve it, sent us down a rabbit hole that we hope never to go down again. Our detailed frustrations can be read about in the Captains Log entries for 10 through 31 January 2025.
In summary;
We tried to find a place that could skim the damaged disc (and failed)
ordered replacement brakes and a whole new hub/disc assembly from the UK and after 2,5 very frustrating weeks weren’t able to get them through Mexican customs
Informed Mexican customs that we reject the delivery and requested that they return the goods to the UK,
received new brake pads from fellow South Africans (we have been virtua friends for years but yet to physically meet) who live in Mexico. They kindly couriered them to us and refused payment for them, we definitely owe them a few bottles of wine when (and if) we ever meet physically.
Never have too people been more happy to receive a set of brake pads in the post!!
So, after an extremely frustrating 3 weeks we got back on the road with the intention of being “light” on the brakes for the approximate 3000km it would take us to get to the USA where we knew it would be easier to import the parts. Anybody who has ever driven in rural Mexico will know that being “light” on the brakes is an extremely difficult task considering all the unmarked topes (speed bumps) that dot the roads and can easily catch you unawares.
After only 2 days on the road we encountered our next mechanical challenge, the house battery “load shed” us while we were showering in the dark which confirmed what we had been fearing for a little while – the battery was kaput! Its demise had most likely been hastened by our “Mexican/boer maak a plan” repairs to the fridge a few months prior.
Fortunately, we were just south of Acapulco which apart from being famous for its fearless cliff divers is also a large city and meant we should hopefully be able to source a new Deep or High Cycle battery. Unfortunately for us our arrival in town coincided with a public holiday and then when everything reopened nobody had stock of the type of battery we required meaning one would have to be ordered from the factory on the other side of Mexico.
Cliffs of Acapulco
With 4 days to kill we put the time to good use trying to hunt down a place to refill our cooking gas bottle and exploring the roads hugging the seaside cliffs that parts of Acapulco cling to and from which the famous divers jump.
As if we had not had enough challenges to deal with over the last weeks, when the battery arrived, it had different size terminals to our current one which meant Stuart had to spend sometime outside the battery shop enlarging the holes on some of Mr J wiring lugs and redoing some of the wiring. At this point we didn’t even get frustrated but in hindsight it is amazing both of us kept it together and stayed calm.
Tania got to “enjoy” her birthday with a 4 hour drive as we left Acapulco and headed north but it was well worth it as we stopped at a very very nice RV park called Casa Rayo de Sol (House of Sun Rays). It was largely occupied by Quebecan’s who come down to Mexico with their large RV’s to escape the long and cold Canadian winters and had a stunning deck and facilities overlooking a big beach which even appeared to have some surfing potential. Stuart did get his boards out and try but wasn’t really successful so instead over the course of the next week we enjoyed a number of nice walks on the beach, chilling and reading in the shaded deck area and even had a meal out at local restaurant to celebrate another year around the sun for Tania.
Perfect location for sundownersBirthday “restaurant”
At the end of each driving day Stuart would remove the front wheel and inspect the brake pads which so far hadn’t shown any signs of significant wear. We had done over 700km since discovering the issue and were starting to feel confident that we wouldn’t have any major problems. We might even be able to start braking harder for topes instead of coasting up to them.
Only an hour north of Casa Rayo de Sol was a fairly well-known surf spot called Punta Saladita, it is very much a soft longboard wave but in many ways was perfect for getting back on the board after a relatively long absence. The campsite was also the total opposite to what we had just been in with very basic facilities and a totally different crowd as it was filled with foreign backpackers looking to live the surfer bum lifestyle, but in many ways as equally nice and we really enjoyed our stay there. If it hadn’t been for the fact they were going to hold a trance party, we may have stayed a few more than the four we did spend there.
All was not lost though (from a surfing perspective) as the next section of the coastline had a number of possible destinations for us to visit and next up was Rio Nexpa, a supposedly world-class lefthand river mouth break. If we had thought the campsite at Punta Saladita was a bit scruffy then Rio Nexpa took it to a whole new level: very beaten up RVs, vans and tents whose North American occupants looked they had taken up long term squatting rights. Add to that, was the “bathrooms” which consisted of two toilets sharing the same cubicle without a door meant we very quickly decided it was to be a one nighter stop only. In the morning Stuart grabbed a quick surf before we hit the road for a very scenic drive along the sea cliffs that line much of this coast to another renowned spot call La Ticla.
La Ticla is truly a one-horse town and the surfers probably outnumber the local population but in contrast to Rio Nexpa, it had (for us) a far nicer vibe. Once again it was full of mostly North Americans who come down to escape their winter and many will spend a whole 6 months camped under a palapa, surfing and eating tacos. The main road that leads down the hill through town pretty much leads you straight into one of the two camping options and that is where we stopped. The camping spot was called Camping Rio (River camping) as it borders on the estuary that passes by. For a little while, after driving in we stood around like proverbial lost f@$rts as there didn’t appear to be anybody to help, until some surfers emerged from their hammocks (it was afternoon and they had been surfing all morning), they found us a spot to park and told us the owner would be around most likely that evening – we spent 8 nights there and when we left, we had yet to meet the owner and so left camping fees with one of the long term surfer residents to pass along when the owner did come around eventually. Such was the relaxed nature of the campsite and town.
The surfing was pretty good, even if a bit daunting as it breaks over a large pebble/rock bed which made getting in and out of the water quite a challenge as the waves would roll up the beach and set all the stones off like marbles so it was inevitable that every now and then you would get an ankle or foot bruising if you didn’t get your timing right.
Afternoon chill out spotEvening viewsThe “point” of La Ticla
Our 8 days at La Ticla passed by pretty quickly with a simple rhythm of; Stuart surfing early, then chilling in our hammocks and chatting with fellow campers before making the short 100m walk to the beach in the afternoon to watch surfers and enjoy sundown drinks. Supper would be had at home or at one of the family run sidewalk style eateries that were dotted around town and provided a variety of cheap but tasty Mexican food to the surfers. The food was so good and such good value that most of the campers didn’t ever cook for themselves.
We still had a long way to go (2000+km) before reaching the USA but from what we could determine, apart from a few soulless tourist towns (filled with condominiums) there wasn’t much to stop for, especially seeing as much of the route passed through some parts of the country that don’t have the best reputation for safety and so our last 5 days in Mexico were largely long driving days as we headed north.
Despite it being a very trying period in terms of challenges with MR Jones, overall we enjoyed our time in Mexico but were equally looking forward to exploring the USA, especially seeing as for the first time in 3 years of travelling we would be in an English speaking country.
For more insights into the months travels please follow the links below:
Guatemala, a country that truly surprised us! First for the fact that the “must do” tourist destinations largely lived up to expectation and then because we travelled to multiple destinations with friends we met on the road – a first for us in 6 years of travel.
While we had enjoyed our brief foray across Belize and were looking forward to Guatemala, the exit from Belize and entry into Guatemala was a day best forgotten. The first surprise was a fairly hefty “exit tax” from Belize which supposedly goes towards their conservation efforts but it did leave us feeling a little bit taken advantage of. The Guatemala side of the border was really tiny for vehicle traffic (we think most people cross it on foot) and while reversing backwards, in the chaos, Stuart bumped into a rather solid pole! Initially he thought there was no major damage (but unbeknown to him and which Tania decided to keep quiet about in order to not raise stress levels further, the gas bottle had taken the brunt of the pole and pushed in Mr. Jones aluminium panel behind it. Stuart only noticed this a few days later and fortunately while it is not ideal to have curved piece of “wall” behind the bottle it is not the end of the world and more importantly the actual gas bottle did not get damaged.
In general, since leaving Africa, border crossings have been quite easy and in reality the entry into Guatemala was also, although it did have one annoying requirement – you needed to provide photocopies of vehicle papers and passports with the entry stamp in them before the Aduana (customs) would process the vehicle and to do this you had to go outside to a specific store and pay for them there. On its own this would be annoying but not that annoying however the fact that there was brand new machine in the Aduana office, directly behind the official responsible, which wasn’t being used did make it so…
About 90 minutes from the border is the world-famous Mayan pyramids called Tikal. We had seen other similar pyramids already in Mexico but Tikal is special in that you can camp inside the park with a good chance of seeing Howler monkeys and other jungle wildlife. Additionaly being inside the park allows for witnessing mystical sunrises over the jungle from atop the pyramids befire the general tourists arrive. Sadly, for us, we discovered upon arrival at the gates that despite it being a major tourist attraction, they do not accept credit cards at the entry gate and as we had not been be able to draw any Guatemalan Quetzels at the ATM’s in the border town we had to turn around and give that tourist attraction a miss. At the time it seemed bizarre to us that they had no credit card facilities. And was obviously very frustrating, but in hindsight most visitors will arrive on organised tours where the tour company has already bought tickets/has a concession etc.
Sixty minutes from Tikal is the lakeside town of Flores, which we arrived at in the late afternoon with just enough time to source a local SIM card for our hotspot phone and to take a meander around the pretty island of Flores. Camp for the night was in the parking lot of the local police station, perhaps not so glamorous or pretty but nice and secure.
Pretty streets of FloresIs it a ferry or is it a water taxi?Police station parking aka camping
The next tourist attraction we hoped to visit was Semuc Champey which on paper was only 300km from Flores but as we quickly discovered would be a long journey of over 8 hours (broken over 2 days) thanks to the very slow roads through the mountains made worse by the multitude of tumelo (vicious speed bumps) each village has. The attraction of Semuc Champey is this picturesque turquoise river that flows over multiple limestone rock cascades and pools. After the journey there, we were quite tired and so instead of rushing off and trying to photograph the spectacle that afternoon, we settled into the only camp option available (the back of the local kiosk/shebeen). This would prove to be a mistake for two reasons, firstly some local tour guides where clearly feeling well off from the days earnings and spent the better part of the afternoon drinking, puking and repeating only 20m from where we were camped and then secondly bad weather rolled in, it rained all evening and misty conditions greeted us the following morning meaning no sunshine to create the spectacular turquoise effect. With the prospect of slippery paths to access the pools and no real picture postcard opportunities we cut our losses, packed up and started the long haul out of the valley.
what we come forwhat we got
So far Guatemala and its tourist attractions had done little to impress us but we had high hopes for the town of Antigua where we headed next. Antigua is renowned for having retained its colonial architecture and feel but for us it also offered the opportunity to visit a Landy mechanic, who has a very good reputation amongst PanAm travellers. As we had no contact details for him other than an iOverlander pin location, our first stop on arrival in town was to visit his premises in the hope that we would be able to secure an appointment within the next few days. To our disappointment he told us he would only be able to help us in a week’s time as he was very busy preparing his regular customers vehicles for the Land Rover show Antigua was hosting that coming weekend and to which he invited us as well.
As mentioned already, Antigua has done a great job of retaining its colonial charm and architecture with two of probably the most classic examples being the McDonalds and Starbucks outlets. In almost anywhere else in the world, these would be housed in modern fast food buildings with big logos to identify them whereas in Antigua they are quietly located behind an old traditional facade and if you did not know about them you would easily walk right past. We are not fans of either outlet but Tania had read about how beautiful each one was and so naturally we went in search of them – they certainly did not disappoint in appearance or atmosphere inside.
Initially we had chosen a campsite on the side of town closer to the market area and main square but after a couple of days we decided to move to another that looked like it was further from the main part of town but warm showers versus warm ones and free wifi available convinced us to move. Also, we had already walked and seen most of the main parts of town so weren’t concerned about being a little further away while we passed away the time until our mechanic appointment. This decision turned out to be one of our best in a long time, as at the new campsite, over the course of the next few days we got to meet a fantastic bunch of other overlanders (something that we hadn’t had for ages).
When we had first set out on this journey we had had the idea that we would often be meeting overlanders and making lots of new friends, the reality has mostly been quite different in that you don’t meet as many travellers as one might imagine and then as in normal life, not everybody “is your cup of tea”. So, while over the years we have made a few good friends, it has been a lot less than we imagined. In the camp was Christian from Switzerland (travelling solo in a Land Rover and who had been “stuck” in Belize/Guatemala for a while), Debbie & Miguel from the USA (just starting out on their PanAm adventure) and Linda & Christof (winding up their one and bit year trip through North America and Mexico). Many an afternoon and evening, was spent laughing and sharing meals as we all got to know each other.
On the weekend, ourselves and Christian rolled along in a huge convoy through town to the Land Rover show where a special section had been setup for the international guests. Also there was Brazilian lady travelling solo in her Land Rover, who after her husband had passed away just before their trip was due to start and despite zero mechanical knowledge, decided to continue their dream on her own.
After the weekend we spent a day with Will the mechanic, flushing the power steering system and replacing a few items (heater matrix/radiator and suspension bushes) which we had brought back to Mr Jones when we flew from the UK a month prior. After hanging around in Antigua we would have typically moved on but thanks to the initiative of Linda & Christof they had convinced us all to join them on a “slack pack” tour up a Volcano to witness the regular eruptions of its neighbour “Fuego”. Fuego (fire) is one of the worlds most active volcanoes with 3 – 4 eruptions occuring per hour.
Typically, most peoples trip to view Fuego involves a 2 day hike up (and down) Volcano Acatenango to a base camp which consists of a few A Frame huts perched on the side facing Fuego, then for the really energetic they set off in the evening for a few extra hours of walking to get closer to the action on Fuego. Naturally the second stage is not recommended due to the enhanced danger but this doesn’t seem to deter many. Linda and Christof had found a tour company that cut out the hike up and down the volcano by providing a lift in a 4×4 for what was really not a significantly higher price. This 4×4 ride got you to within a few kilometres walk of the A-frame base camp shelters with a perfect (and safe) view across to Fuego. In theory it is possible to buy a permit and take your own 4×4 up to the trailhead which might for a brief moment have been appealing to the two Landy drivers in the group but that appeal disappeared within minutes of being on the trail when we got to experience the sheer steepness and slipperiness of the terrain. The ride up the volcano took around 45 minutes and was as wild as any rollercoaster ride.
The basecamps are literally cut into the side of the volcano and with steep slopes and drop offs all around was definitely not Tania’s idea of a great overnight spot but her fears vanished quite quickly once she had a comfy seat and lots of blankets for the magnificent display that took place just a little way away, each time Fuego erupted.
After a simple but tasty supper prepared by the guides, all 7 of us retired to an A-Frame for a surprisingly cosy and good sleep with no snoring to disturb it. Of course, the lack of audible snoring could just have been due everyone having their heads under the blankets to keep warm.
Christmas was approaching and because all of us had the intention of visiting Lago Atitlan, after our volcano adventure we collaboratly picked a spot on the lake that sounded quite nice and in probably what was a first for all of us contacted the owner, in advance, to find out if he had space for our group which he did have. Although we were all going to the same location, it wasn’t to be a convoy journey (which suited us just fine) but thankfully the two vans did decide to travel in convoy as Miguel & Debbie had a rather scary experience on the final descents to the lake. The roads for this section are very very steep for quite long periods and after our “brake failure” incidents in Ecuador, Stuart decided when faced with them to descend in low range despite it all being on tar. Miguel in his van did not have this option and at one point lost all braking and ended up running off into a ditch! Thankfully Christof and Linda were right behind him and could assist with both getting out of the ditch and attaching a tow strap between their vans to provide braking assistance for the remainder of the trip down to the lake – with adrenaline pumping through the veins they both eventually arrived at camp. That night was a slightly rowdier than normal affair as the relief of having survived a potentially life ending scenario was released, much to the chagrin of some young pretentious yoga bunnies staying in a chalet nearby, even though it was only 21:30. It should be noted that we all dispersed and were in bed very quickly after that but matters were made worse when an email was sent to the owner stating that we had partied until midnight and left refuse everywhere. (It is rather judgemental of us to make such a statement but it is rather amusing (for us) how sometimes those that walk around appearing to be totally at peace with the universe are the least at peace or tolerant of others or influences that might invade, and thus takeaway, from their peaceful state). Sadly, this incident left a rather bitter taste in everyone’s mouths and a desire to leave immediately but with the state of Miguel’s brakes this wasn’t feasible which actually turned into a blessing as 2 days later the yoga bunnies left and we got to spend a fantastic 11 days on the lake.
There are many touristy villages scattered around the lake, most of which are accessed via water taxis but first priority was to find a solution for the Miguels brakes. Fortunately for Miguel & Debbie, this incident had happened while travelling with two Land Rover owners which meant there was some very well stocked toolkits on hand and a reasonable amount of experience to lean on for help and advice. On the first day Miguel & Debbie caught a water taxi to a slightly bigger town nearby in order to buy brake fluid as Stuart was convinced (based on our Ecuador experience) that the fluid had boiled and that a full flush would probably resolve the problem. On the second day, the boys set about flushing the system but very quickly a new challenge appeared – while attempting to open the one calliper bleed nipple, Miguel snapped the bolt. After removing the whole calliper, Stuart and Miguel set off (by land this time) to find a mechanic who might be able to remove the snapped one. A trip across 3 villages, a number of mountain passes and only 20km involved 7 different tuktuk rides, a lift on the back of a collectivo pickup and finally a brief but scary ride in a chicken bus before they were back in camp.
Once the brakes were fixed, the group fell into Christian’s hands who (from previous trips) had already spent quite sometime in the area, to act as our guide. Over the course of couple of days we visited the colourful towns of San Juan and San Pedro. Each time this involved flagging down a water taxi from the dock below camp as they passed by and then when leaving the opposite village hopping on a water taxi that plied the section of the lake our camp was on. In the mornings the lake is quite calm but in the afternoon the winds pick up and along with that the waves, which can make for a very bumpy ride back home, especially if you get a water taxi driver who is a bit cavalier about the waves and his speed, as we did on the one trip – so much so that Christof noticed a crack developing in the hull under his foot during that crossing.
Christmas Eve and day were low key affairs with us getting together as a group to enjoy a sampling of food from each others fridge, while in between catching up with family from around the world.
On Boxing Day, everyone set off to continue their journeys, for Christof & Linda that meant making a quick run to Veracruz (Mexico) as their 18 month trip had come to an end and they had a shipping date for their van, Christian would be heading to the Caribbean side of Guatemala to continue a volunteer work project and Miguel & Debbie would be venturing south with the whole of the “PanAm highway” to explore. We headed to the Pacific coast for what Stuart was hoping would be a fun week or so of surfing.
Unlike it’s southern neighbour (El Salvador), Guatemala is not really known as a surfing destination but it does have one beach break where surfing takes place called El Paredon and so that is where we headed.
Camping options were almost non-existent in town but we did find one low key spot that allowed camping in it’s parking area but unfortunately could only stay 3 days as they had been fully booked out for the New Year period. We weren’t entirely unhappy about this, as they were located only 50m from a huge stage that was busy being assembled for the New Year’s party. Also, as it turned out, the surfing wasn’t spectacular and so a few sessions were enough to satisfy Stuart at this surf break.
In our minds we felt that it would be better to cross into Mexico after the New Year holiday period and so on leaving El Paredon we initially went to the next village about 50km up the coast as Stuart had read that some people had surfed there too. However, upon arrival we did not like the feel of the place and once we saw how dirty and unkempt the only possible camping spot was, we made a quick decision to rather just turn north and head closer to the border. If we got close enough then we felt we would be able to cross relatively early on the 31st.
The problem with plans is they often they go awry! In our case this was when we tried to pack up on the morning of the 31st only to discover that we had “lost” all of Mr Jones house electrics, which we might have been able to ignore if not for the fact that we needed power in order to lower the linear actuators that raise Mr Jones roof. Two hours of problem solving later and we were headed for the border.
The exit from Guatemala was painless and quick but the entry into Mexico was not so. During the course of 2024, we entered Mexico 3 times (twice by air and this time via land) and each time we have had the rather uneasy feeling that we may get denied entry or have hassles. In all cases there has been uncertainty by the customs official whether we require a visa or not (we don’t as we have an American visa which Mexico considers satisfactory) and in the case of this crossing they were uncertain if Mr Jones was allowed to enter (despite him having been allowed entry when we shipped him from Colombia). In the end and after a fairly lengthy process, we were let in as was Mr Jones. Border areas and towns are usually quite chaotic and perhaps a bit sketchy so we try and not stay around them, this one in particular has bad reputation as it on the main illegal migrant route from central to North America and so despite it having been a relatively long day we put our heads down for another 2 hours of driving.
Our first night in Mexico and New Years Eve 2024 was spent in a random gas station/truck stop – just as we had done for NYE 2022 while in the Patagonian Steppes of Argentina.
For more insights into the months travels please follow the links below:
After a busy holiday back in South Africa, we return to Mexico and Mr. Jones eager to restart our travels on a new continent however first we have to overcome many hurdles before we can even get moving again..
Our last travel diary ended with us parking Mr Jones just outside Cancun so that we could take a holiday from travelling and return home to South Africa. Our plan for that holiday was to catchup with family and friends in Johannesburg and Durban before taking a leisurely drive, over a couple of months, down the east coast to Cape Town. Along the way we planned to start checking out possible lifestyle villages in the various towns along the way and therefore identifying possible places we might like to eventually purchase a retirement home.
That plan didn’t last very long, firstly family circumstances resulted in us staying stationary longer than we thought we would and then when we did take an AirBnB in Tania’s old home town we stumbled across a lifestyle village that really piqued our interest and in a pretty spontaneous decision landed up buying a home there. Thus, the last 6 weeks of our holiday become a rather hectic (but fun) rush of moving into our new home, decorating it, rapidly integrating into the community, entertaining and accommodating friends and family before locking everything up and starting the trip back to Mr Jones.
When we had taken the decision to fly home for a holiday back in June 2024, we had always had a timeline on that holiday as we wanted to be able to spend our sons 30th birthday with him somewhere in either Europe or the UK where he lives. So, the middle of October saw us flying to the UK for a wonderful 2 weeks celebrating the umfaan’s birthday. We hadn’t physically spent time together for nearly 3 years so those 2 weeks with him and his girlfriend flew by and before we knew it, it was time to board our flights to Mexico.
Arriving in a hot and humid Cancun from a chilly UK was a serious shock to the system and right from the moment we opened Mr Jones doors it got off to a rocky start! While we had been away the Caribbean region had experienced an above-average Hurricane season (including Beryl which rolled right over Mr Jones parking place), which meant even higher than the already high humidity levels and we were greeted with mould all over the interior of Mr Jones. We had left multiple moisture absorber containers in him and they were all full with absorbed water but clearly, they had stood no real chance of winning the battle.
In addition, the heat & humidity while we were away had done a real number on so many items, the actual list is rather long but some of the lowlights are (some we discovered immediately and some over the course of the next week):
a clutch pedal that refuses to spring back
A fridge and freezer that is not cooling
A hole in our exhaust
Rust in more places than we care to think about
Car radio not switching on
Reverse camera not switching on
Our 12v to 220v inverter not working
Newly purchased shower hose leaking like a sieve
Fans above bed not switching on (an essential device when it is so hot and humid)
Interior of roof box and everything in it very very damp
Air compressor hose perished in places and thus leaking
Secondary solar panel regulator not accepting charge from the panel
Multiple leaks in our internal “house” water system
Loose hose clamps on pipes leading to diesel filter
Power steering system felt very clunky
However, on our first day back, the most critical item was a very flat starter battery that needed replacing. The storage place owner had informed us of this, just before our departure from South Africa, and we had sent him money to source a new one but through a comedy of errors on his side this had not happened and so on our first morning back, he and Stuart headed off into Cancun to purchase one.
Where we had stored Mr Jones, while being a “formal” overland vehicle storage place was in reality nothing more than a clearing in the jungle where the Canadian owner “squatted” and therefore not somewhere we really wanted to hang around at, but thanks to the starter battery issue we were forced to spend an extra night there. It was on this second night, after spending a hot and sweaty day shopping and then swapping out batteries that Stuart when attempting to take a shower (in our shower cubicle) discovered that the shower hose we had purchased only a few months prior had perished to such an extent that it had more holes than a pin cushion. It is highly likely that if he could have climbed on a plane right there and then he would have returned to South Africa.
While a functioning starter battery is critical, the other item which we might consider even more critical (cold beer, wine and nice food are essential) is our fridge/freezer and so with the battery replaced we headed into Cancun the following morning hoping to find a fridge repair technician or shop (google had given us some ideas) but at this stage we were not feeling too optimistic. The reason for our lack of optimism being that this kind of fridge/freezer is quite specialised for the application and not commonly seen in these parts of the world so while there are most definitely people around who repair fridges we were not sure if they would know how to handle one that operates off 12v. After a couple of stops at shops that supply parts we had a number to call but as luck would have it this person was away on holiday so instead we turned our attention to getting the exhaust repaired and finding somewhere to camp.
Tania did a great job of finding a campsite which had a pool and more importantly a super helpful owner. Upon hearing of our fridge issues, he took it upon himself to source somebody who not only could be trusted but would also come out to the campsite and assess the work required. We were all hoping that it would only need a re-gassing of the system.
A fantastic campsite to hang out in while attemting to repair the fridge
It took a few days for Alfredo to source a fridge technician and then they had to come to come out to Mr Jones a further 4 times over the course of a week until we all decided no more fixes could be made. In the process of this week, Stuart learnt a lot about how these fridges work and thanks to the persistence of the technician we ended up with a fridge that “kind of” works. For a full breakdown of everything that was ripped out and replaced refer to the Captains log entries for 12 – 18 November. The total cost for all this effort, only ZAR2k. “Kind of worked” meant that the one compartment cools to around 4DegC and the other to just below 20DegC but in order to do this the motor runs almost 24/7, which is not ideal for living off grid when dependent on solar but in our eyes is better than attempting to keep food cold and fresh via bags of ice which would need to be replaced every couple of days, if one could even source them. It does, however, mean our travel style would need to change until we are able to source a replacement unit which would most likely only be when we get to the USA.
a “new” evaporatora very rusty evaporatorsolenoid that controls gas flow to individual compartments – now removedafter much effort, 3 happy campers
When we encounter issues and delays, Tania is often quick to point out that “everything happens for a reason” and in this case it meant we did not get caught in the path of Tropical Storm Sara which had swept across Belize and the border region with Mexico and brought with it strong winds and excessive rainfall. Fourteen days after landing in Cancun we finally hit the road towards Belize. We had traveled this route fairly quickly in June when we had, had to go to the Belize border in order to cancel Mr Jones Mexico TIP before flying home, so for variety, this time we decided to try and visit some spots along the coast however as we quickly discovered, Sara had left a lot of debris on the beaches and the water was an unattractive brown instead of the postcard worthy aquamarine that is typically found along the Caribbean so we didn’t linger long before crossing over into Belize.
We had no idea what to expect in Belize other than it is one of only 2 English speaking countries in the entire Latin America but our first impressions were very good; firstly it was great to be able to speak English (even if the English is more Caribbean creole sounding and therefore not so easy to understand at times) and thus have proper interactions with people, the people also came across as very friendly and welcoming, although that may simply be helped, by being able to speak the some common language. The country itself appears very rustic and has a bit of a Caribbean island feel with simple houses (mostly on stilts), painted in a variety of colourful colours, surrounded by large lawns and big trees.
Most tourists to Belize go there for its Caribbean islands and the diving and fishing associated with that, as visiting these islands was not on our agenda or within our budget our general plan was to do a circumnavigation around the country before moving on to Guatemala. In reality and because it only has one vehicle border post with Guatemala this would mean, rather a trip along the coast before backtracking a bit and cutting across the centre of the country to this border post.
This planned route might sound quite grand and long but as the country is rather small we actually only spent 8 days there in total. If we had a properly functioning fridge it may have been a little longer as there appeared to be some nice national forest areas with undeveloped camping options that we could have also visited but for now that is not viable.
After that week we couldn’t help but draw comparisons to another small country we quite enjoyed and are fond of, Uruguay. Apart from the different climate and vegetation, the similarities were remarkable: super friendly people, very expensive shops (and not really well stocked), most people appear quite poor and live in basic housing apart from in the popular expat areas where you could be mistaken for thinking you were in Florida. As with Uruguay while everything is often old and quite simple it always appears well organised and very clean.
And that wraps up our first month back on the road, for more insights please follow the links below:
Our first month on the North American continent was quite the roller coaster of emotions which ultimately resulted in us making a quick decision to head home to South Africa for a much-needed holiday from travelling. In between the tough times we had a few really enjoyable weeks on Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula
If you look at a map, Mexico and Colombia are relatively close yet it took us 24 hours of travel to get from the port city of Cartagena to the port city of Veracruz as the travel involved an internal flight in Colombia, then an international flight to Mexico City, a 4-hour twilight “sit-around” in the airport and then finally a 6-hour bus ride. Needless to say, we were quite tired when we finally arrived.
Tiredness and our casual approach did unfortunately catch us out when we landed in Mexico City at 2am: the customs official asked how long we wanted to stay and normally an answer of “as long as we can” means you get granted the maximum allowed period. This time however the officer only saw fit to give us 90 days instead of the 180 we could get and we only noticed this after he had stamped and returned the passports. We figured it was not a train smash and probably would be easy to get an extension to the maximum allowed amount and so didn’t say anything further.
Once in Veracruz we settled into a routine of hurry up and wait for Mr Jones. The physical sailing time from Colombia is just under 5 days but we expected at least another week of administration until we could get Mr Jones out of the port, so we would “hurry up” wherever we could in order to ensure that no delays were caused by us not completing a task quick enough and then wait for the wheels of bureaucracy to turn slowly. The first task in the hurry up part was to go to the government bank (Banjecito) and pay for the Temporary Import Permit. In Mexico, certain classes of vehicle are able to get a multi-year permit which, based on friends experience with a vehicle identical to Mr Jones we were hoping to get as it would make our future travels and parking of Mr J much easier in future years. Our clearing agent had processed the documentation for this but the official at the bank interpreted it differently and granted a TIP for the same duration as our visa period.
In hindsight this was a blessing in disguise as despite being travel weary we had been pushing ourselves to stay on the road longer in order that we could slot in our “vacation” and visit to see Devon for later in the year but this forced a rethink. Within 24 hours of the “bad news” we had decided on a new plan of action which involved parking Mr J in the trade free zone around Cancun, flying home to South Africa from there, spending 4,5 months in SA before flying back to Mexico via the UK. In the UK we would celebrate Devon’s 30th birthday. While both of us had known we were travel weary it was only after making this decision and noticing how excited we were to be going home that we realised just how weary we had in fact been.
Despite Mr Jones having been through a very thorough drug inspection in Colombia and been sealed up for the journey, this did not save him from another one in Mexico so midway through the process Stuart was taken to the port by the clearing agent in order to do another full unpack and repack. As was to be expected all went well with the inspection even if there was one heart stopping moment when the sniffer dog took a particular interest in the area around the one front mud flap. Thankfully it did not do whatever such a working dog should do if they smell something inappropriate but it did cause his handler to bring him back to that spot a further 2 times “just to make sure”.
The weekend was fast approaching and we were getting quite tired of the wait as if we did not get Mr J out before then it would mean waiting until Monday so when we got a WhatsApp at 16:30 on Friday today he was cleared and could be fetched, Stuart was out the door in a matter of minutes. A tired but very happy Stuart eventually got back to the Airbnb at 20:30 with Mr J in hand having been forced to once again break our cardinal rule (the last time being a month prior on our way to the Colombian port city of Cartagena) and drive at night but this time without even a second set of eyes to assist.
The following morning, we threw everything into the back of Mr J and headed out of town hoping to find a quite campsite where we could disassemble the partition, unpack everything that had been stashed in the back for shipping and return him to being our home. The campsite we found was not exactly quiet, as it was the weekend, but did have very shady camping and thus suited our purposes perfectly.
The shipping “security” partition
We generally try and stay on top of mechanical issues and deal with them as soon as we recognise them and before they become a bigger issue. Just prior to shipping from Colombia we had noticed bad wear on the tyre tread and diagnosed it as a wheel bearing issue but had taken the decision to delay attempting any repairs until we were in Mexico, the logic being very simple: you can never be certain that a repair will go smoothly and if we encountered an issue it may affect our ability to delivery Mr Jones to the port on time. Therefore after “restoring” Mr Jones back to a home, the repair was at the top of our list but when Stuart attempted to remove the large hub nut it would not shift at all which meant we were going to need specialist help. In the end this specialist help, actually come down to asking a garage if we could use a large breaker bar and the brute strength of their mechanics. The garage then very kindly allowed us to park in the shade of the workshop and for Stuart to affect the repairs himself. After a couple of very sweaty hours, (temps were in the mid 30’s with 90% humidity) we were back on the road !
At this point we had just under two weeks to drive approximately 1000km to the border with Belize and then another further 400km back “up” to Cancun where we would park Mr J and fly home from. For anybody who looks at a map it would seem more logical to just drive straight to Cancun but in order for us to legally leave Mr Jones in Cancun we needed to cancel his Temporary Import permit and that could only be done at the Belize border. The region between Veracruz and Belize/Cancun is rich in Mayan ruins and cenotes so we intended along the way to stop at a few. Cenotes are basically limestone sink holes filled with underground water, some are open air but many are almost entirely cave-like and spectacularly beautiful (based on pictures we had seen) when just a small shaft of light shines through from above and into the turquoise water below.
One aspect complicating our route planning was that Mexico has many very very expensive toll fees which we were determined to avoid wherever possible, with the advantage being it would take us on (hopefully) scenic back roads but the disadvantage being much longer days in terms of hours. Our first stop was at an area only 150km from Veracruz with many waterfalls and cascades, some of which you could camp near. Although it took 3 hours to cover that distance it still left plenty of time in the afternoon to enjoy the surprisingly cold waters.
The following day turned into a typical longer one than we envisaged and 9 hours later we stopped, very hot, sweaty and tired, at a basic but adequate spot in the jungle a few kilometres away from the Mayan ruins known as Palenque. While Palenque is not the most famous or biggest of the all the ruins scattered across the Yucatan peninsula it is in the top 5 for size, state of preservation and naturally number of tourists. As our first experience of a Mayan ruin we enjoyed it and considered it to be as interesting and spectacular as our visit to Machu Pichu in Peru.
In contrast a couple of days later we stopped at the little known (and thus little visited) Hormiguero ruins. At Palenque we had to pay a hefty sum to enter and then fend off vendors, parking guards, photographers and all the other annoyances associated with a popular tourist attraction whereas at Hormiguero we needed to negotiate a narrow dirt track through the jungle for 10km to arrive at an empty parking area and then just sign a visitor’s book before gaining free (& unfettered) access to the ruins. As a bonus we could camp for free in the parking area. It was very hot when we arrived, so we opted to set up Mr Jones first and enjoy lunch in the shade of his awning with the intention of making a sunset exploration of the ruins. Late in the afternoon a Canadian family arrive and we set off to explore the ruins together while chatting and exchanging information about our mutual travels.
The exploration felt very “Indiana Jones” like as there were no signs giving descriptions or preventing access to parts of the ruins and we were basically alone in the jungle, listening to the sounds and admiring the ruins. The ruins complex is much smaller than Palenque but equally spectacular and for us more enjoyable, even a little spiritual.
It was thankfully a relatively short drive from Hormiguero to the town of Chetumal and the Belize border, so once we had cancelled the TIP at the border we hopped across town to a spectacularly located campsite right on the edge of the Caribbean where we intended to spend a few days, firstly to just relax on some nice green lawn and secondly to stay off the streets for Mexico’s election weekend. The election was the largest (in terms of candidates at both national, provincial and mayoral levels) that Mexico had ever held and had been marred by a number of assassinations and political violence so nobody was too sure how the weekend would go. In the end thankfully, it ran quite smoothly and everything seemed to be perfectly normal on Monday morning.
Perhaps the coolest location we have ever braaied in
Our next and equally spectacular spot was found thanks to needing to get some laundry done before flying home. Tania had done some research and found a self-help laundromat in the little village of Bacalar which sits on a spectacular lagoon of the same name. The lagoon is spectacular both because of its white sandy bottom which really highlights the crystal-clear blue water and because part of its bottom is a gigantic cenote. The hostel and camping we found on the outskirts of town had a very squashed parking area where we could just squeeze Mr Jones in but what it lacked in atmosphere for camping with your car was more than compensated for by the open kitchen & lounge area which led onto a beautifully shaded garden leading down to the lake and their own little jetty. It was the kind of place we could easily build a home / live at and so our ideas of only spending a single night very quickly went out the window and we spent five, only leaving because we had flights to catch.
Leaving Bacalar we made one stop a little bit past Tulum in order to be close to where we would park Mr Jones for the next 4 months. Thanks to iOverlander we had identified a spot just outside Cancun where Mr Jones would live but as it was nothing more than a clearing in the bush where a Canadian operates a vehicle storage facility we didn’t want to spend more time than was necessary to prepare him for our time away. That preparation basically involved a good clean (inside and out), emptying any open food stuffs, defrosting the fridge/freezer, spraying lots of WD40 on anything Stuart could find that he felt would benefit from it (Cancun is very humid and we feared rust or seizing of mechanical items) and then packing our bags for travelling home. All went quite smoothly even if we did get drenched in a tropical downpour and had a bit of stress about whether the tent and awning fabric would dry before we needed to shut-up.
Mr Jones home for the next 4,5 months
Even though we were only about 30 minutes from Cancun, the storage location is a bit remote and with a very early morning flight we did not fancy risking a taxi not arriving to fetch us on time or getting lost and so spent our last night in hotel close to the airport. It felt quite weird but equally exciting to be leaving Mr Jones behind and heading home for our much needed “holiday”.
Below are links to pages that complement this travel diary entry:
After 798 days in the South America we finally ship Mr. Jones onto the North American continent, but first we spend a productive 2 months in Colombia where we upgrade Mr. Jones fresh water system and then relax on the Carribean coastline.
In total contrast to our difficult exit from Venezuela (previous diary) our entry into Colombia went smoothly if rather slow, as thanks to all the delays in Venezuela it meant we arrived at the Colombia customs office just in time for Siesta. Adding to the confusision was that by crossing the border also meant we changed timezones, with the clocks now being an hour different to Venezuela. The lady that captures the Temporary Import permit for Mr J only returned to her post after 90 minutes but at least when she did, she was super helpful and gave us a laugh or two.
Once we had cleared the border we headed into the town of Cucuta hoping to purchase insurance for Mr J and get a local SIM card. The purchase of insurance seemed quite complicated (even for Colombians) and after navigating a long queue Stuart got to the front just in time for the office to close. The sourcing of a SIM card didn’t go much better with multiple service providers telling him that it wasn’t possible to register a SIM card for an extrajaneiro (a foreigner). Eventually we ran out of daylight and with no camping options in the area, resorted to finding a value for money hotel for the night. The upside of this, was that we went out for dinner and had some really nice burgers and beer. We have generally rated the quality of a simple burger to be rather poor throughout South America, so this was a pleasant surprise. The following morning, we took advantage of having safe parking at the hotel and went off in search of ATM’s in order to obtain some Colombian Pesos and a SIM card. For the SIM cards we took a different approach to the previous afternoon and simply purchased one from a little kiosk instead of an official store. All we weren’t sure of now, was whether the online rumors would prove true that you needed to register the SIM card & the phone it was used in within 30 days or risk having the phone blocked! Given that as an “extrajaneiro” we couldn’t purchase a sim card the day before it would imply registering one would also be an issue but we figured we had time to work that out and if in fact we did get blocked that we could just switch to one of our older backup phones and thus start the countdown clock again.
Having had a successful morning, we headed out of town hoping to find a supermarket and complete the last of the typical tasks required when arriving in a new country, that being stocking up on fresh food and getting a feel for pricing in that country.
Our goal for the next few days was to work our way southwards to the capital, Bogota, where we for some reason needed to “verify” Tania visa status at the immigration offices and where we also hoped to get a water tank built. We mentioned that while in Venezuela we had attempted to have one manufactured but that the material costs were prohibitive, Stuart had subsequently established contact with a chap in Bogota who had a good reputation for assisting overlanders and he had given us indicative pricing which was more in the price range we expected.
Colombia is incredibly mountainous which means there is lots to see and do but it also means that travelling is very slow as you twist your way across the country. Unfortunately for us, there were a couple of public holidays coming up which would result in many business’s closing for roughly a week and as we didn’t want the manufacture of the water tank to be delayed by these, we would need to move relatively quickly across the country to Bogota.
Leaving Cucuta we almost immediately started climbing on what was a spectacular road up into the mountains until 90 minutes and 70km later, we reached the little mountainside town of Pamplona where, based on iOverlander reviews, we hoped to overnight next to a football field but being a Friday afternoon, it turned out to be an incredibly busy spot. A little bit of roadside research revealed another possible spot an hour further along, called El Oasis. It wasn’t quite an Oasis but the owners of the restaurant were super friendly and we were able to tuck Mr. Jones next to the rooms they rent out and enjoyed a very peaceful but chilly night. Being up in the high mountains it was quite the contrast from the jungle lowlands we had been in earlier that day.
The following day was once again a spectacular day of driving along mountain passes into Bucamaranga (3,5hours for 120km), including some steep ascending up the slopes surrounding town as we went in search of a campsite that was not to be and then another spectacular drive to a spot above Canyon Chicamocha. The canyon is 2000m deep in places and 227km long making it the second largest canyon in the world. With spectacular views from the campsite, it was the perfect spot to take a rest day and in between admiring the views finalize the plans and logistics for the new water tank.
After a productive day of rest, it was another long day of stunning scenery and many mountain passes as we made our way to a little hippy commune style camp outside Bogota. We immediately felt at home, which was a good thing as this was to become our “on & off” base while we set about the task of upgrading Mr. Jones for the new water tank along with all the ancillary jobs and upgrades associated with that. The only downside was that Bogota is a rather wet and chilly place, something we were not used to after so many months in the hot lowlands of Brazil’s eastern coastline, the Amazon and then Venezuela, but in some ways, it was quite refreshing.
Bogota with a population of nearly 8million people is Colombia biggest city and its traffic congestion reflects this. In fact, they have had to implement a congestion reduction plan whereby only certain vehicles registration numbers are allowed into the city on each day of the week, fortunately this does not apply to foreign plated vehicles and thus allowed us to roam freely but it did influence some of the logistics around the water tank as Juan (our water tank facilitator) could only travel into the city to meet engineering shops and so forth on every alternative day.
We had also discovered that Amazon deliveries to Colombia don’t incur any import duties or delivery charges so Stuart had created quite the cart of items (mostly all the auxiliary items required for the water setup) and was having these delivered to Juan as well. It did require some ingenuity and figuring a way to work around the system as on his first attempt with all items in one basket he got hit with “customs handling fees” of nearly half the order value, but with a little experimentation he discovered that orders under USD190 did not attract this fee. Needless to say, multiple orders under the $190 mark where placed!
In the meantime, while we waited on both the Amazon deliveries and the manufacturing of the water tanks we decided to escape the cold and wet of Bogota and head into the lowlands for a few days. We chose to set off for this “escape” on a Sunday in order to hopefully avoid some of the crazy city traffic and while we were successful in avoiding the cars we instead discovered that Colombians are cycle crazy and the mountain pass we had chosen to descend down is a very popular cycle route on the weekends. When Stuart was still very much into his cycling, we would always watch the Tour de France and in particular enjoyed the coverage of the mountain stages. Having now witnessed the sheer size of the mountain passes in Colombia and seen how many cyclists are out traversing them, it is no wonder that many of the superstars in those TdF mountain stages where the Colombians.
It was a bit ironic, considering that we had come looking for warmer weather, that after our first day in the lowlands we decided it was a little too hot for us, even though where we had camped had a river to cool off in and so after only one night we started climbing back up the pass we had just descended hoping to find a place midway up and a “compromise” in terms of temperatures.
It turned into a bit of a mission finding somewhere, with a few trips along tight narrow and twisty roads only to find that the camping was either exorbitantly expensive, not suitable for vehicle camping or closed, until finally in the late afternoon we stopped at Laguna el Tabacul. The camping was very simple but peaceful and the nature reserve around the lake had some nice little walks. The only downside was that, there was nowhere to plug Mr. Jones into electricity and with the thick forests surrounding us, running off solar for more than a single night was not practical.
Fortunately, by this time the majority of the Amazon orders had arrived in Bogota and so we decided to use our time wisely by collecting the orders from Juan and then going back to our hippy campsite in order to begin installing the items that would eventually connect up to the water tank.
When the fresh and grey water tanks were ready we packed up for a night or two away and headed back across town (on a good day a 90-minute commute) to get them installed before coming back to La Calera in order to complete the remainder of the installation ourselves.
The list of upgrades is quite extensive and Mr. Jones can now truly boast to be “glamping on wheels”: a 55litre fresh water tank (in addition to his existing 60L tank); a 15l grey water tank to collect our sink water; a secondary pump system for the new tank; changes to the gas geyser setup so that we have instant and automatic hot water on tap; a flow meter in order to monitor water usage and tank levels; a second tap in the sink; a new “shore power” battery charger due to us now being in the 110v hemisphere; modifications and improvements to the shower cubicle curtain and finally a quick release connection for our shower hose and head.
In total we spent 15 days in the Bogotá area which when considering the extent of the upgrades and that the manufacture of the tank could only start once we had removed the old 3rd fuel tank, was not a bad timeline.
In between our hard work we enjoyed socializing with both the overlanders that passed through while we there or with the semi-permanent residents, and as a result made quite a few new friends from as diverse a places as Canada, Russia and of course Colombia.
Camplife @ La Calera, Bogota
We thought we had timed the completion of our “to-do” list perfectly when it meant we could leave Bogota part way through holy week (Easter) as we thought everyone would already be on holiday and so largely off the roads. Our initial crossing of the city seemed to confirm this, with very little congestion and easy flowing roads but only an hour out of the city we realized we were horribly wrong as we encountered roadworks and worse congestion than we had ever experienced in the city itself. It seems that many people had not taken holidays for the whole of holy week and were instead trying to squeeze in a trip home to family over the long weekend – 250km took 8 hours and ZAR500 in toll fees, we will never complain again about South Africa holiday traffic!
To add insult to injury, the spot we had planned to stay at near Cajamarca turned out to be a little disappointing and was definitely only good for a single night so the next day we were back on the road and heading in the direction of Medellin, hoping for a quiet commute based on everyone having travelled the day prior and that even if there were late weekend travelers they would be going in the opposite direction. The area between Cajamarca and Medellin is quite popular with “coffee” tourists and it was a sure sign that at this stage we were travel weary when our attitude was: we have already visited coffee plantations and attended demonstrations of the process to create the perfect cup of coffee, so why divert from the main road.
Medellin sits in a valley at 1500m above sea level and is surrounded by quite high hills and like all big cities offers very little in the way of camping, there is however one well known overlanders destination just outside of town called Al Bosque and that was naturally where we were headed. It was only when we started to head out of town that we realized how steep those surrounding hills are! Al Bosque sits at an altitude of 2600m (so 1 kilometre higher than town), poor old Mr. J was not impressed with this and forced us to engage low range just to pull-off from some of the traffic lights. Thankfully the roads were quiet otherwise it would have been quite stressful.
Summary of the climbing & descending done over 2000km!
The cities altitude gives it a rather pleasant climate of around 25degC all year round, the some cannot be said for Al Bosque which being so much higher was quite cold and wet, especially in the mornings and evenings.
The major attraction for us of an overlander campsite was the opportunity to hopefully meet like-minded souls and enjoy some quality interactions and perhaps even make a few new friends.
Of course, this is not always guaranteed as even though we may all have the same passion for travelling independently in our own vehicles, we are all still different personalities and just like in life you are not guaranteed to like everyone you meet who has a common interest.
Thankfully in this case we did meet a few couples who we liked, chief among them being Sue & Hugh from Canada, the fact that they drove a Landy probably also helped.
On one of the days we accompanied them into Medellin to visit the very popular tourist attraction of Communa 13. In the 1980’s and 90’s Communa 13 was a notorious neighborhood occupied by drug gangs and rebel guerilla groups along with the turf wars that naturally followed. At that point it was considered one of the most dangerous cities in the world, until in 2002 the military conducted a number of operations (which included the use of tanks and helicopters) to “clean it up”. While partly successful, the subsequent military occupation was also controversial in that many citizens literally disappeared. Finally, in 2010, a rejuvenation project was started and the result is now a peaceful, but still poor and densely populated area, which feeds off its notoriety as a tourist attraction. Sue and Hugh had been on a guided walk through the barrio a few days prior but felt they had missed out on certain aspects so they were happy to go back and also be our informal guides. For us it was interesting to see but ultimately was way too touristy and commercialized for our tastes, a sure give away was the abundance of fridge magnets and T-shirts declaring “I have been to Communa 13”. Another indicator that it was perhaps going to be a fool’s errand should have been that we visited on 1 April – for more insight into the shenanigans of the day, see our Captain(s) log for 1 April 2024.
After a few days and couple of nice evenings socializing, on which we introduced everyone to a braai, we felt it was time to move on. Sue & Hugh had raved about a little beach camp they had spent quite some time at when they first arrived in Colombia and so that was were we headed for. Our plan was simple, we had 1 month until Mr. Jones was due to be shipped to Mexico and we intended to spend it lazing on Colombia’s Caribbean coastline.
To get there however required 2,5 days and 900km of fairly hard driving with each night spent in a truck stop. Over the course of our time in South America we have spent many nights in truck stops, Colombia was the first country where we were often the only people sleeping in our rig. In Colombia the drivers sleep in a simple hotel or set of rooms that is attached to the truck stop.
Over the next 4 weeks we mixed up our time at two beach camps roughly 80km apart, the one had decent surfing close by and the other a nicer vibe. So just as we started to get bored at one, we would move to the other and then a little while later back to the first one. It was a pretty idyllic life with your feet in the sand and a lovely azure blue ocean on your doorstep but not entirely without its challenges.
The first challenge was when we switched camps and on opening the roof the one gas strut that holds the roof up, blew its seal and leaked hydraulic oil everywhere. In principle this was not too big a deal and just required a replacement one to be installed, which we had in our spares as the lengths are very specific to the roof design. However, while trying to remove the strut the bracket it attached to sheared off as it was badly corroded, which added a little bit of extra stress to the equation but Stuart had in his box of tricks (aka “random spares”) a similar style attachment which he thought we could probably fit onto the bracket. To do this however would require removing the whole bracket from the car and to remove that meant removing the second gas strut on that side of the roof. The roof is held up by two gas struts on each side and the moment the second one was removed the roof wanted to sink down into the closed position. At this point the stress levels went up ten-fold as Stuart now had to support the roof in a “lying down gym-style leg press position” while giving instructions to Tania to find something suitable to wedge into the roof and provide temporary relief. A little bit of improvisation with the bottle jack which we use for changing tyres allowed us to lift the roof back to normal height so that the bracket could be removed. Then all that was required in order to modify the bracket was to find an angle grinder, which Stuart had seen the camp workers using to sharpen their pangas a few days prior.
Sundowner drinks, that evening, overlooking the ocean felt well deserved and went down a treat.
Fulltime overlanding is hard on components“new” bracket, no welding required
The second challenge was when we ran out of cooking gas (we had been trying to run our gas bottles as low as possible as in principle you cannot ship with gas) and had to go off in search of a place to refill one, this resulted in a small round trip of 160km one day. Our gas search was at least easier than a German couple in the camp, whom we assisted with adapters for their gas setup as they had to make a 12 hour round trip into Cartagena to fill their tanks.
Our time on the coast was great but after 4 weeks we were starting to get itchy feet and looking forward to the next stage of the adventure which was a good thing as the cupboards were nearly bare. We had been deliberately running them down, knowing that you can’t ship with fresh foods. We also had a full laundry bag and while there are no rules against shipping with dirty laundry we wanted to get laundry done on our way to Cartagena and Mr. Jones date with a boat. This resulted in us breaking our cardinal rule – never to drive at night! For more on this, see our Captain(s) log entry of 1 May.
In the meantime, this picture of an exploded beer can sums up the end of a very long day
For this shipment to Mexico we were once again going to use RORO so prior to arriving in Cartagena we stopped at one more campsite where we knew it would be possible to source and cut a piece of plywood for making the barricade. Once the barricade was installed, we removed all items from the roof and stashed them in the back away from potentially light fingers. The final task before Mr. Jones could be taken to the port was to get him washed at what is without a doubt the scariest car wash we have ever been to!
3,5 tons hoisted aloft on a single piston
Our last week in Colombia was spent in a hostel close to the historic district of Cartagena while we waited for the whole shipment process to be completed, part of which involved Stuart having to go to the port a few days after dropping Mr. Jones off in order to participate in a very thorough drug inspection. The inspection involved an almost complete unpacking of Mr. Jones which was not fun in the hot and humid conditions but was also one of the reasons we felt comfortable shipping RORO again as once the inspection is done, all doors and openings get sealed with tamperproof security tape, further adding to our own security measures.
Cartagena’s old city is very beautiful and so in between completing the procedural aspects required for shipping, we made the most of city dwelling by enjoying some time walking the streets, enjoying the sights and searching for the large door knockers that are to found on many of the old doors and for which Cartagena is well known for. The knockers come in a variety of shapes and traditionally indicated the nature of the owners employment, for example a “lion head” would indicate the head of the house was part of the military whereas a sea creature meant the household had business in the maritime trade.
On the 14th May, we boarded a flight for Mexico City, it had been 798 days (342 different overnight locations) since we first arrived in South America with many adventures, trials, tribulations, highs and lows but undoubtedly the thing that will stand out for us most from the travels, was all the wonderful people we got to meet and often subsequently call friends.
Hasta Luego South America.
Each circle represents a spot where we spent one or more nights
Below are links to other pages that complement this travel diary entry:
Venezuela, a country which most travel advisories issued by a western government “strongly advise against visiting due to the high risk of robbery, civil unrest, corruption & extortion” and yet it is the country in South America where we received the warmest welcomes, got a taste of what it might be like to be a celebrity (and have decided we most definitely don’t want that) and after nearly 2 months left with only good memories and experiences
In total contrast to what one might expect of a country that is subject to strict sanctions from western governments, suffers from hyper-inflation and whose de facto currency is the USD as its own currency is effectively worthless, the border post was a picture of prosperity with quite possibly the newest and cleanest buildings we have encountered at a border so far. This did not, unfortunately, translate into a fast entry into the country, not due to any problems but rather that the system to capture Mr Jones details and issue him with a Temporary Import permit (TIP) was very slow and beuracratic. It wasn’t too much of a hardship however, as we had a clean and airconditioned waiting room to sit in while the 2+ hour process was underway.
Remote border towns can often have a bit of a Wild West feel to them, Pacaraima on the Brazilian side certainly did, especially given the number of stores advertising “we buy gold” – the border region in both countries has a high number of illegal mining operations. In contrast, Santa Elena which lies just 15km inside Venezuela was surprising clean and seemed like just any other town, that is apart from the high number of very pimped and lifted Land Cruisers driving around. Almost all needed a small step ladder to get into!
Santa Elena sits at 862 metres above sea level which gives it a very pleasant climate and was a welcome relief from the hot & sticky Amazon basin, so when we could camp at the back of a pousada with grass underfoot it didn’t take much to convince us to stay a few extra days. In general, South American countries are football mad but when we took a walk into town on the Sunday we discovered a new and unexpected craze: baseball and as we learnt over the next weeks baseball is a big thing in Venezuela including a number of professional teams.
The southern part of Venezuela is largely an undeveloped natural area known as the Gran Sabana (great Savannah). For us it is a lot less like an African savannah and more a combination of grass highland area (like the Lower Drakensberg or Dullstroom) and the Magaliesberg but it certainly did not lack for large open spaces with fantastic vistas interspersed with many rivers and waterfalls or cascades.
Our first excursion into it was westwards along the border/escarpment edge with Brazil to an area known as Paulji. Along this section we got our taste of what would be a regular occurrence (and general frustration) in the country: military, police or civil checkpoints. They were almost never a problem but far too frequent and often time consuming. The first one we encountered was as we left town and headed west where, after offering us coffee they manually wrote down in a book our passport & car details and stamped the back of our TIP. The next one was 20km after that and then another 20km later before another one 15km after the 3rd – thankfully at all the latter ones we didn’t get offered coffee otherwise we would have had serious bladder control issues on the bumpy dirt road but we did estimate that they probably added an hour plus of travel time to the days journey.
After 2 days of just soaking up the natural beauty and sounds of nature, it was time to head back the way we come, this westward road was a dead end in another 40km or so. Thankfully, the checkpoints only stop you going west and not when you return so we were back in town earlier enough to source a local SIM card (it had been the weekend when we were here before) and to be able to head out towards another attraction of the Gran Sabana, Venezuela highest mountain; Mount Roriama. We had no intention of climbing it as that is typically a 5 day round trek but rather of driving reasonably close to a viewpoint where we intended to spend the night. The track there turned out to be quite narrow and steep with many ruts making us very grateful to have the 4×4 capabilities of Mr Jones. The views and location were a fantastic reward for the effort, big sky country with a 360-degree view and nobody around for at least 20km in any direction.
Mount Roraima in the distance
After a wonderfully peaceful night in our million star glamping location we headed back down the way we come and then a bit further south to other parts of the Gran Sabana. This time we were in search of a waterfall or set of cascades to camp next too, of which the Gran Sabana has plenty. From what we understood almost everywhere was public land or allowed free access, all you had to do was follow the various small tracks leading off the tar road and pick the spot you wanted to stay at. Initially we didn’t have much luck, as the tracks turned a bit too rough for our liking and even though Mr Jones is more than capable we tend to err on the side of caution for two reasons; firstly, we are solo travellers so if something goes wrong there is no rescue or recovery vehicle and secondly, Mr Jones is our home and the last thing we want to do is damage him on some macho 4×4 track. By mid afternoon we had found a perfect spot and got to enjoy a couple of glasses of white wine while lazing in the river.
The following morning, we debated, should we do a bigger loop into the one area that has some larger waterfalls or should we head south and away from the Gran Sabana? In the end we opted for the latter as we felt there was still so much of Venezuela to see but in hindsight a few extra days in the region would have been good and as we learnt from some Venezuelans we met later in the trip, they regularly travel to this area for trips of 3 weeks or more.
Leaving the area, we once again started to encounter regular checkpoints with the associated manual book recording and offer of coffee while you waited. The road also deteriorated quite badly, with evidence of many truck accidents, and so it was a long day to reach the town of Upata where we headed to a pousada which we understood you could camp at. As it turned out, you couldn’t but the atmosphere was very good, we were tired and the rooms were well priced and so we opted to stay. We hadn’t been there long when Jose arrived and introduced himself as being part of the “travellers support network”. We had joined a number of WhatsApp groups focused on travel in Venezuela prior to our arrival and seen on those the wonderful support given by locals to travellers, Upata was to be our first (of many) experiences of that. Tania had cracked a tooth the one evening in the Gran Sabana so she was in need of a dentist, Jose organised an appointment for early the next morning and then come and collected us and escorted us there and then once the tooth had been removed, he escorted us out of town to a fuel station where he arranged for us to get diesel at the standard rate of USD0,50 per litre.
Venezuela has the worlds largest oil reserves (more than Saudi Arabia) but as a result of sanctions and mismanagement most of its refineries aren’t operating and so the country suffers from crippling fuel shortages. From what we saw during our nearly 2 months in the country, 95% of fuel stations are either closed or spend most of the time non-operational due to empty tanks which means there are always long queues at a station that does have fuel. Then add in the fact that, in this country at least, petrol is a far more common engine type and diesel becomes a very precious commodity.
Jose & his family plus tooth extraction time
After thanking Jose profusely and saying farewell we stopped in town for one last item, some painkillers, just in case the extracted tooth and associated cavity become a problem in the next few days. While sitting in the parking lot plotting the days route on the GPS, a young guy approached us to say he had seen us drive into town the night before and “welcome to Venezuela”. After taking a few pictures of Mr Jones and leaving us with his contact details in case we needed any assistance he went on his way. As we recorded in the Captains log, we couldn’t have felt more welcome and comfortable in a country, it certainly wasn’t living up to the dire warnings of western government travel advisories…
From Upata we intended to head roughly due north to the Caribbean coast, thus hugging the eastern side of the country and then to hopefully slowly work our way westwards along the coastline over the next few weeks. The days journey was relatively uneventful apart from a stop over lunch time to investigate why our coolant level alarm would occasionally sound, we were losing a bit of coolant which was concerning and had Stuart particularly worried that he had damaged something or created a mysterious vapour lock when changing the coolant in Brazil, a week prior but logically this didn’t make sense as we had done over a 1000km since then. It would take 30 days and much head scratching until we finally discovered the source of the loss, but more on that later.
In the town of Maturin, iOverlander had a check-in for camping inside the local municipal zoo which we duly stopped at, late on a Saturday afternoon. It was less of a zoo and more of bird and local recreation park but it was fenced and secure and best of all the camping was for free. In an effort to encourage tourism, the local municipality had decided that travellers passing through the area were welcome to stay for free. As an added bonus, there was also a large potable water point in the park, free for use by anyone, so we could fill our water tank and not have to worry about filtering the water first. That evening we stepped out of the “zoo” and wandered around the park next door where there was a big outdoor auditorium and dancing displays being done by the various schools and communities of Maturin – once again a more normal, safe and wholesome community life could not be imagined.
With a host of sanctions imposed on the country one would expect that the availability of general consumer goods could be limited but when we went shopping on the Sunday morning we were pleasantly surprised. Not only was the supermarket incredibly modern but its shelves were well stocked and with a large variety of goods and brands, perhaps even more variety than we had become used to in Brazil. Equally surprising was that while the prices were a bit higher than we were used to, they weren’t too bad, that is apart from cheese, yoghurt, beer and wine.
It must be noted that we had stumbled upon the upmarket supermarket chain which was a good thing as the difference we found the next time we shopped at the larger more common chain was quite significant, the latter being very basic with limited choice and if it had been our first experience would have had us rather worried about food purchases for the remainder of our time in the country.
Before leaving town, we stopped at a few fuel stations, to enquire if they had diesel which we found on the 3rd attempt. Every country has something unique and for an outsider perhaps a little baffling, in Venezuela, it is the method of purchasing fuel. At almost all stations you have to go to the cashier window and pay for your purchase upfront which means you need to calculate the quantity required and “order” accordingly. This means that you never really get a full tank which in normal circumstances may not be an issue but if you are crossing a country with reasonably large distances and uncertainty as to where you may next find fuel, is less than ideal. In Maturin, Stuart ordered 50l but then upon seeing that there was still quite a bit of space in the tank was able to convince the attendant to give him “mas” (more) and to pay a second time for the extra 9litres he received.
After a long day through the rolling hills on our way to the coast, we arrived at a little piece of heaven, Playa Pui Puy. A beach sandwiched between two headlands with a grove of palm trees and grass underfoot to camp under, only metres from a pristine beach and crystal-clear water. To Stuart’s pleasant surprise the Caribbean has some waves, meaning he could squeeze in some board meetings even if he was the only attendant. The only negative, there were no formal facilities so we were limited as to how long we could stay by the amount of water we can carry.
Unfortunately, Tania had begun to show symptoms of flu while we there and by the time we left was feeling quite rotten which doesn’t make travelling in a hot and humid environment when your car has no air-conditioning much fun. This did however lead us to a very opportune and fun meeting with a Venezuelan Land Rover owner. We had pulled over on the side of the road to search for a pousada in the area where she could recover in relative comfort, when Romulo drove past and then in the course of the subsequent conversation with him, invited us to come and stay at his house and pousada.
A couple of fun evenings followed with Romulo and his family, we had to rely quite a lot on google translate for the finer meaning of some parts of the conversation but for once it worked really well. Of potential concern though is that we may have got insight into the type of grandmother Tania may be if we ever get grandchildren, she had way too much fun making and throwing balloon water bombs with Romulo’s 6-year old son!
Romulo & familymischief
Everyone knows that Landrovers leak oil (or more correctly “mark their territory”) but Mr Jones had been leaking for a while quite severely at his vacuum pump which together with the fact that Stuart felt the brakes were sometimes a bit soft, signalled that it was time to replace the pump. It seemed only right to do this on the front lawn of a fellow Landy owners house and so on the second day of our stay Stuart duly set about swapping out the pump with a spare one we had been carrying.
After a warm farewell to Romulo we headed further east along the coast towards Puerto La Cruz and the beach town of Lecheria but first we made a diversion to what looked like a very pretty waterfall called La Sirena. On arrival at the start of the short walk to the waterfall we were greeted by a car park attendant, who amusingly had very clear ideas of where and how we must park Mr Jones (even though he was the only car there), and two police officers. Upon asking the police officers which path we must take to view the waterfall they took it upon themselves to escort us on the 20-minute walk there, waited for us while we take photos and then accompanied us back to Mr Jones. At no time was there any hint that it was unsafe hence the escort or that they expected a “collaboration” fee/tip but rather just that they were grateful to have tourists visit the park.
La Sirena Waterfall
As with the zoo in Maturin, the local Lecheria town council had designated an area next to the main lifeguard station for Motorhome camping but when we had looked on iOverlander we had thought we most likely wouldn’t stay there as it appeared to just be a large empty parking area fronting onto the beach boardwalk/malecon. It was however lunchtime when we got to town and so we decided to swing past and have our lunch there and see if our impressions were correct which they were apart from the fact that the Guardia Civil employees were so welcoming, offered us the use of the toilets in their building and the use of their Wi-Fi so we decided to spend the night. That evening the first of what was to become a regular stream of welcoming committees stopped past to welcome us to town and in a couple of cases to deliver food and drinks as gifts. For people that generally prefer to fly under the radar it was all a bit overwhelming especially when journalists and their cameramen started to appear and request interviews on our experience so far in the country.
Lecheria camping
An aspect that had been missing in our life for quite sometime was being able to socialise with fellow like minded people (i.e. other international overlanders) and even perhaps to form a friendship or two, in fact by our calculation we had not camped near another international traveller for the last 5 months. At Lecheria, in a country where international travellers are warned not to go by their governments, this changed and over the course of our time on the malecon we got to meet and chat with fellow travellers from France, Italy, Germany & Argentina and even form a bit of friendship with Fredrika from Italy. Fredrika’s “back story” was for us quite amazing and inspirational; she had started her journey in Canada by buying an old stereotypical “American soccer mom station wagon” and fitted it out to be able to sleep inside. She had then travelled all the way down the Americas and backup up through Brazil on a similar route to ourselves, doing 90% of it on her own. We often find it hard with two of us to share the load in terms of all the challenges and obstacles one faces, so to do it on your own as a single female – Wow!
We very rarely get to camp and easily enjoy an evening out on the town but the advantage of this spot was that it was within easy walking distance of a variety of restaurants including a Lebanese Arabian one, which quickly become a favourite and saw us returning a second time after our first meal and then when the owner told us he also sells vacuum packs of the delicious pastrami we had just eaten, another stop past was made a day later for “groceries”.
Despite often feeling like a goldfish in a fishbowl, our planned zero night stay quickly become a 5 night one. Apart from the reasons already mentioned another was, we had been invited to stay at a pousada (once again as “welcome to Venezuela gesture”) in the hills high above town which looked quite spectacular. The timing was opportune as Tania’s birthday was approaching so we had arranged to spend the night there for that, unfortunately a miscommunication between the owner and his workers meant they weren’t expecting us when we arrived and with no cell signal in the mountains we hadn’t been able to communicate with the owner and had returned back to the causeway for an extra night.
When we did eventually drag ourselves away it was to head only a little further west to another pousada belonging to a member of the travellers support network where once again we were showered with hospitality and found it quite difficult to both leave and pay for anything. On the list of gifts this time was breakfast followed by a haircut for Stuart from a visiting barber, then cocktails, lunch and dinner and wine along with beers when we walked down the beach with Abdel to visit one of the neighbouring pousada which was hosting a pool party. When it come to the last item, Stuart did eventually manage to pay for the beers but only after a lot of insisting by ourselves that it was the least we could do.
BreakfastPre-haircut
Post-haircut
CocktailsCeviche for lunchSunset cocktails
Carnival weekend was approaching and we thought it would be wrong to be staying for free at a pousada, even if it was just camping in the parking, and that it might also be a bit noisy and another fishbowl experience and so moved on to an official camping area called Las Caracas which was also supposedly near a surfing beach. The route we chose to get there, definitely appeared like the logical way when we studied the map and looked scenic as it drove through a natural reserve area of coastal forest, we were wrong about the former but correct in respect to the scenery. The route through the coastal forest ended up climbing over a number of headlands on very narrow dirt roads with quite a bit of mud and axle twisting hollows to negotiate.
Carnival in South America conjures up images of parades through cities with big floats and scantily clad dancers, which we got to see in Brazil when on the island of Ilha Bela in May 2022 but in Venezuala it seems to generally be a time when people leave the cities for a weekend of partying on the coast. The weekend was a bit like our experience of family week (Easter) in Uruguay but with less wholesome family fun and more load drunken partying. Unfortunately, the surfing spot was a rather strong and big point break with a difficult entry, strong currents and a very rocky exit and so not being familiar with the environment Stuart decided not to participate in any board meetings.
We mentioned in a previous blog entry that Stuart had been contemplating for quite sometime how we could increase our water tank capacity along with planning to make improvements to our hot water geyser and shower setup. Venezuela has a lot of very pimped off-road vehicles and by necessity most of this “pimping” is done with locally manufactured products so he had been keeping his eye out for possible manufacturers of tanks and in that process had come across a guy, who had manufactured from scratch, a setup for a Land Cruiser very similar to Mr Jones and as a bonus he spoke good English which meant we wouldn’t need to struggle with potential misunderstanding in translated communications.
Pablo had his business in Valencia which is about 3 hours east of Caracas. There were a few places between Caracas and there that we wanted to visit but we knew that if we went ahead with the project there would be at least 10 days between measuring and giving the go ahead until the tanks would be ready and that we could therefore double back in that time and visit those spots.
Unfortunately, because of the sanctions imposed on the country stainless steel is very expensive and the eventual price quoted for the upgrades was more than double what we had estimated and so had to decide to not go ahead with the project. It was rather disappointing as we had no doubt that the quality of workmanship would be excellent and have definitely concluded that it would be an upgrade we will afterwards look back on and wander how we travelled so long without. The search for a suitable supplier shall continue.
On the freeway between Caracas and Valencia we had noticed a number of concrete pillars that seemed to have signage indicating free potable water so when we left Valencia we stopped at one to investigate. The one we chose to stop at had two police/military persons standing guard near a broken-down vehicle and after enquiring with them if it was acceptable to take water we set about filling our water tank and all other available containers we have, as we were hoping to spend the next week wild camping on remote beach and weren’t sure if there would a freshwater available. Of course, the two policeman were curious about Mr Jones and ourselves and after only a few minutes couldn’t resist coming over to us and assisting with the water filling process while quenching their curiosity.
The remote beach we were headed to is called Cuyagua and is located in the Henri Pittier National park. To get there you have to climb up and over the coastal mountain range which makes for a spectacular drive through the forests but is also very slow going – the last 50km took over 3 hours. However, the reward is worth it, with a roughly 1km beach sandwiched between two high jungle covered headlands and where you can camp metres from a crystal-clear blue ocean.
View from our backdoorPlaya Cuyagua
The Land Rover community in Venezuala is very small (roughly 150 vehicles) and so they all know each other and usually where somebody is travelling (if they are travelling). On our second day on the beach one of the locals who provides services to campers had tried to tell us that he had a friend who has a Landy, unfortunately part of what he was trying to tell us got lost in translation but as the weekend approached we discovered what he had meant when two very pimped defenders drove down the beach. As it turned out, he had also left them a little confused a few days prior when he had sent them a message saying that one of their friends in a White Landy was camping, with the reason for their confusion not being poor Spanish but rather that they know of only one white landy in the country and it was at that stage on the other side of the country.
Playa Cuyagua ticked most boxes for us: a pristine beach surrounded by nature, lovely warm and clear waters with some pretty decent surfing, a river at the one end where we could top up with water for showers (but it did confirm why we want an extra water tank) and as a bonus it had a pretty decent and reliable cellphone signal. Apart from finding a source of diesel, in Venezuela a decent cellphone signal is possibly the next most valuable commodity – cell service was very sporadic and unreliable, even in cities.
The other destination we had skipped on our way to Valencia was the quaint German colonial town of Colonia Tovar. Most people had mentioned to us that it was a “must-see” in the country and as an added bonus it appeared to have one fuel station that had a regular supply of diesel. We were running a little low on diesel having used up the fuel in our 3rd tank when hoping to get the water tank made as the “new” water tank would have replaced this 3rd fuel tank. By now we are pretty used to some steep mountain roads but the approach to Colonia Tovar from the Maracay side took us by surprise and resulted in more than a little cursing when we were in low range and Mr Jones was not only struggling but stuttering! This had Stuart wandering if were about to run out of fuel (Mr J’s fuel gauge doesn’t really work), fortunately we didn’t come to a stop on the hills but were only able to get 50l of diesel as the garage was running low. The attendant told us there would be a new delivery on Friday so we resolved to stay in. town for 3 extra nights in order to ensure we could fill our tanks properly. This wasn’t too much of a hardship as we got to enjoy a nice lunch out of bratwurst, sour kraut and a German craft beer the one day. It was also a pleasant change in temperature from the beaches, as we were now at an altitude of 1800m asl.
When we left on Friday, all in low range (even through town), we encountered chaos and a long line of cars outside a different fuel station which supplied petrol and had us hopeful that the attendant at the diesel station on the outskirts of town had been correct. Sadly, he wasn’t and, on our arrival, now had no idea when the delivery would arrive. His tanks were now also dry which left us no option other than to head back down the super steep hills we had come in on and start the search for diesel in every town we would pass on our journey for the day. Around 3pm we did encounter a long queue of trucks on the outskirts of Valencia and at the end of the line a fuel station that was about to receive a delivery. Being a small vehicle and a tourist meant we could skip to the front when the tanker arrived 45 minutes later. The price for this: lots of photos and selfies with the station manager and various others while answering questions about our journey.
Until this point the beaches of Venezuela had blow us away for their pristiness, location and general tranquility and so we were pretty much expecting the some for our destination that evening when we left Valencia. Playa Patanema turned out to be none of those things, it was filled with little beach shack restaurants and all free space was taken up by, for hire, shade baraccas and chairs. To make matters worse, while it was meant to be another free camping spot we got hassled by a young boy and then a restaurant worker for money or gifts/collaborations from almost the moment we stopped. Needless to stay, any ideas of staying longer than a night quickly evaporated.
We had arrived on a Friday night, and while we had a peaceful night once the opportunists had left, we had a very early morning wake-up call as unbeknown to us we had parked only metres from what on the weekends becomes a stall selling food and the vendors had arrived early to prepare arepas ( a local maize style flat bread which is often stuffed with cheese or ham) for the days visiting beach goers. After a quick breakfast we hit the road in the direction of San Felipe, a small town roughly 90km inland and a camp spot which had rave reviews on iOverlander and was marked as being at the back of a hotel run by members of the travellers support group. Upon arrival we discovered that the hotel was in fact a “love motel”,
All through South America you come across these love motels where a room can be rented by the hour, multiple hour or even night. Many have pictures outside clearly showing the amenities which may include a jacuzzi, dancing pole, soft or bright LED lighting and so forth and from early in our trip we had often joked that we really needed to add an iOverlander check-in at. While we weren’t going to be the first to add a check in this was going to be our opportunity stay at one or at least at the back of one.
While the concept of a love motel seems quite gaudy, there is a very good reason for there existence; that being that many households are multi-generational and the homes are quite small making it quite difficult for any “love time”. That is what was explained to us, at least, but we are still quite fascinated how these establishments have a highwalled entry and exit driveway which allows for total discretion in the comings and goings and as we saw at Campo Belo most rooms also have a locked garage so you that your vehicle is not visible to other guests either.
The camping was setback from all the rooms so we were never aware of the comings and goings and it turned into another highlight of places visited, the extended family that own the motel were super friendly and once again would not accept any payment from us apart from posing for pictures and taking our paw prints.
They have a really cool concept, in that they take a handprint from all the campers that pass-thru and in this way are collecting slabs of the visitors which one day they will use too tile the wall of the kitchen and communal area in the camp.
The pouring of concrete and collection of handprints only took place on the morning we wanted to leave, so it was a rather slow start but after such wonderful hospitality we could not complain. As a final gesture, they phoned around to the garages in town to find diesel for us and then when they found one arranged with that station manager to expect our arrival. Once we were finally on the road we headed back towards the coast and then westwards to the Coro Peninsula.
This large peninsula juts out into the Caribbean ocean and is the northern most point of Venezuela, unfortunately it isn’t the northernmost point of the continent, that honour is taken by Colombia just next door which has a similar peninsula jutting a few kilometres further north otherwise could have claimed to have visited the all the major geographical points on the continent having already passed through the southern, western, eastern and central points on our travels. Interestingly and in stark contrast to the rest of the Caribbean coastline this section is very desert like whereas just before this it is 100% tropical. Colombia’s peninsula has almost identical characteristics in both being desert like and surrounded by tropical forests and high coastal mountains.
We overnighted on the beach on the peninsula before attempting the following morning to drive to the San Roman Cabo (lighthouse). We say attempting because we hadn’t gone far when Mr Jones low level coolant alarm would sound every time we hit a slight bump. As mentioned a few time in this diary entry we had been experiencing this occasional sounding of the alarm and a slight daily coolant loss for a while but Stuart had not been able to find a leak and was a bit mystified and worried that we were losing coolant into the engine which would be a major catastrophe. On this morning when it kept going off and because we were on lovely quite roads we pulled over to investigate and this time there was a clear puddle in front of the passenger seat footwell which indicated that the heater matrix which receives hot coolant from the engine was leaking. In many ways it was a major relief to have this issue as it is relatively easy to bypass the matrix but it does mean we no longer have a heater. We had an identical issue in August 2019 in Mozambique and between the East Africa travel leg and then the Covid lockdown weren’t able to fix it until well after the winter of 2020. Hopefully we can source a spare part sooner (and remember to do so) this time and before we get to colder climates as the consequences of not having a heater can be unpleasant as can be read about in our blog post of July 2020
Once the engine had cooled sufficiently, we bypassed the heater matrix and continued on our merry way to the northern point where the wind was blowing quite strong and there wasn’t much to do other than snap some pictures. Supposedly the island of Aruba was only 20km away but all we could see was blue water out to the horizon, Stuart did attempt to climb the internal stairs of the lighthouse to get a better view but ran into a locked door halfway up.
The northernmost point for us & Mr Jones on the South American continent
Leaving the peninsula, we headed into the town of Coro in search of diesel as despite having filled up just 2 days prior we had already done 500km and the next known town for diesel (Merida) was at least 600km away which in principle we have enough range for but with supply so unreliable it is always best to fill up as often as you can. Once we come across a long line of trucks we knew we were in the vicinity of a fuel station that supplied diesel but on finding it we were told that their tanks were empty and a delivery would only happen tomorrow at 10am. With no known camping options in Coro we set about searching for a hotel that had suitable (i.e. no height restrictions or is at least 2,7m high) secure parking for Mr Jones.
The old town of Coro is currently undergoing a rejuvenation and the parts that have already received attention are very attractive.
In our previous experiences of obtaining diesel in Venezuela we have been quite fortunate that as tourists, we have always been allowed to go to the front of the truck queue and received attention almost immediately. When we arrived at 10am there was already a hive of activity and it was quite difficult to get attention or know where to park, etc, but eventually Stuart did manage to find the manager and he told him we would need to wait for an hour or so. While a little frustrating, we couldn’t complain considering that many of the trucks had probably been waiting days, fortunately after only about 30minutes we were called over and were able to obtain an almost full tank based on our estimate of what we required (as previously written: you have to prepay for your gallons so its really difficult to estimate exactly how will make the tank full).
At this point we had pretty much seen all there was to see along the coastline and so had the intention of heading roughly south west across the interior of the country via the mountain town of Merida and onwards to the border with Colombia. From what we could tell looking at the map, whichever way we went would be fairly slow as this route followed the spine of the final bit of the Andes as it stretches northwards from Colombia. The GPS gave us the option of an initial fairly direct and theoretically fastest route through the mountains outside Coro and google maps gave us two options that either went around via a westward route or eastward route. The eastward route would take us back the way we had come a few days prior (and so didn’t appeal) and the westward one would take us via Maracaibo (which a number of Venezuelans had warned us was a relatively dangerous area) so we opted to trust the Garmin.
The Garmin route was spectacular and reminded us of some of South Africa’s southern cape mountain passes between the coast and the Little Karoo but within an hour the ETA was already creeping out far and we knew we were in for a long day and would be lucky to get to our intended overnight spot before dark. For the entire drive we averaged 35km/h and when, with less than an hour to go until sunset and still 100km to cover, Mr J started to sputter a bit on the uphills we knew we needed to find somewhere to stop for the night. For most of the drive there had been very little options to even just stop on the side of the road, thanks to the dense bush, let alone pull over for a sleep so when we come around one hairpin and there was an open space in front of what looked like a rural community hall we pulled in and enquired with the ladies cleaning the hall if it would be okay to park for the night.
In the morning we set about trying to fix the issue. Stuart surmised that it was probably the result of a clogged fuel filter thanks to dirty diese,l which made sense seeing as we had just filled up and perhaps it hadn’t been the best quality. We do carry spare filters for such an eventuality but they are stored in a box mounted underneath Mr Jones next to the chassis, so the first job was getting the box down. After changing the filter the issue and trying to bleed the system the issue was still there and as Stuart was convinced it was related to the fuel supply ( we have quite some experience with this from incidents in South Africa and the Pantanal, Brazil) so the next obvious culprit to assess was the manual fuel pump. As soon as Stuart removed that, we knew he had found the source of the problem – operating the camshaft manually created no suction whatsoever. When we had replaced this in the pantanal a year and half prior, the garage had thought us crazy when we had requested they supply us with two as in their opinion these last forever, thankfully we didn’t listen. After a consultation of the spares spreadsheet we knew where the spare one was hidden/stored and could retrieve it from the cavity behind his kitchen drawers.
As we drove away and where reflecting on the symptoms Mr J had displayed the previous afternoon we realised that in all likelihood Mr Jones had been struggling with the defective fuel pump for a while and had perhaps already tried to tell us this on the steep hills driving into Colonia Tovar (see above). It would appear that on flatter terrain the fuel pump was coping fine but once we hit steep mountains the poor suction from the pump was insufficient to pull fuel from the tank to the engine.
In many ways it was a good thing Mr Jones forced us to stop the night before as the remaining distance to our intended stop took longer than expected and so between conducting the roadside repairs and stopping to shop meant we only arrived at the dam outside Barquisimeto late in the afternoon.
The area surrounding the dam is a small nature reserve and the rangers at the gate had told us we could camp anywhere but that there would a regatta taking place over the weekend. In our tired state we had misunderstood them and not realised they were warning us that the areas closest to the water would get very very busy the following day with participants for the regatta. The first arrivals started from around 6am and by 8 we were practically surrounded and once again feeling like goldfish in a fishbowl thanks to all the curiosity being directed towards ourselves and Mr J. We were tired from the last few days and in need of a break but knew there was no ways we could survive the weekend camped where we were, thankfullu there were other areas a bit further up the slope, they weren’t as pretty and more in the direct sun but did have an a-frame shelter so we packed up under the stares of many and moved. Overall it was a good decision and we enjoyed the weekend and got to recover.
From the dam to Merida is only 400km but google told us that it would take 9,5 hours, so not wanting to repeat the mistake of a few days prior we looked on iOverlander for an overnight spot that would be roughly half way. The only viable option appeared to be at the Basilica Coromoto, we haven’t camped in the grounds of a large church before but there is always a first for everything. The church was reminiscent of the large concrete cathedral in Brasilia and after a brief walk around to admire it, we settled down in the shady parking area behind the police post for a relaxing afternoon. As camping spots go, it turned out to be quite good with great security, peaceful and the ability to use the bathrooms and showers attached to the back of the basilica.
Before getting to Merida we had one other stop we thought we might make for a night, some thermal pools that from the pictures looked to be in a spectacular location. What we hadn’t factored in/didn’t know was that they required a rather steep hike to get to them and while Stuart could have done that, it was most definitely not something Tania would be able to do with her foot issues. Also, upon arrival we got swarmed by flies when stopping in the parking area where you would camp which would make the whole experience unpleasant so we moved on to Merida.
In Merida there was supposedly a reliable supply of diesel and also a nice-looking camping spot just outside of town, both turned out to be untrue and after a frustrating couple of hours seeking both we resorted to checking in to a hotel for the night. As we picnicked on the bed for supper, Stuart hit up the travellers support WhatsApp group in the hope of someone finding diesel – in theory we had enough to complete the remaining 300km to Colombia but as we had not been able to complete full the tank previously we were unsure exactly how much fuel we actually had in reserve.
Thankfully he received feedback regarding a garage we hadn’t tried, that may have fuel and so the next morning we set off to find it. On arrival the security guard told us you could only get diesel if you were on an approved list, not to be deterred Stuart pulled up at a pump and asked again which at that point the owners son arrived who spoke perfect English and happily helped us. The only catch; it was black market supplies and come at a cost of USD0.95 instead of the standard $0.50 price per gallon.
As with the previous days driving, google predicted a long day ahead of us to get to San Critobal (the closest big town to Colombia) with a driving time of over 6 hours to do the 300km. We are almost always slower than google so expected closer to 8 especially when after entering a particularly long tunnel through the mountain our headlights seemed dim and so we pulled over after the tunnel to investigate. The lights were working and we think it was just our eyes not adjusting to the sudden change from bright to dark that made us think this but while checking the lights Stuart did notice that we had no working rear tail or brake lights so that meant a quick change of bulbs on the side of the road.
We had really enjoyed our time in Venezuela but the last week of heading towards the border had tested our patience (slow and poor roads, breakdowns and on-the-go maintenance, lack of diesel etc) and so by this point we were really looking forward to Colombia. The country still however had one more challenge to throw our way, the border crossing. There is a newly built and very smart “international bridge” for vehicle traffic where they happily processed the cancellation of our TIP on the computer but when we got to the passport control area only 100m away we were told they had no power and would need to go to the other border post 5km away to process those. Assuming we could then exit via that border post we weren’t too concerned but when we arrived, there was no obvious parking so Stuart squeezed Mr Jones into the taxi rank parking and we joined the line to get our passports stamped only to face the next burecratic hurdle. The Venezuelan passport officer wanted a hard copy of Tania’s Colombian visa (why it was of any concern to him is beyond us but there is a first for everything!) so we had to now walk into town to find a print shop and then come back and join the line again.
When everything was finally complete, we hopped into Mr Jones and attempted to drive through to Colombia only to be stopped 50m later and informed this border crossing was for pedestrians only and that we needed to turn around and drive the 5km to the post we had visited the first time. Except when we attempted to do this, a Venezuelan customs official wanted to see our TIP which of course had already been cancelled and no manner of trying to explain the whole process to him and his colleagues made any progress. He eventually requested us to drive into the yard attached to the customs office to resolve the issue, which we did, and when Stuart parked in one of the many parking bays (there was not a single other car in sight) a different official insisted we move 5 parking bays over and further away from the building – if ever there was a display of meaningless power this was it and it was too much for Stuart who duly started to rant in his bestest worse Spanish at the multitude of officials standing around doing nothing! This seemed to do the trick and fairly quickly a “jefe” (Spanish for boss) arrived and we got some action – we were free to drive the 5km to the other border post and exit Venezuela.
Pretty sure we could have parked 5 spaces closer to the building…
Below are links to other pages that complement this travel diary entry:
A short and sweet travel diary entry as finish off nearly a year of travelling in Brazil with a “hop” of only 1000km northwards through the Amazon from Manuas to Boa Vista and onwards to the Venezuela border
Despite us having just spent 5 days doing nothing but laze around as we “cruised” up the Amazon river, on arrival in Manaus we were both shattered from the journey and so when we found a rather pleasant camping spot outside of town it was an easy decision to spend 2 nights andd have an “active” rest day in between. “Active” in that we could slowly potter through some jobs although one of those did result in Stuart hurting his shoulder when the drill slipped while he was trying to fix a bracket on Mr Jones snorkel.
In the buildup to the Amazon ferry trip we had run our supplies of fresh and frozen food down quite low as we weren’t sure where Mr Jones would be parked on the boat and if he would be able to receive enough solar power to maintain the fridge/freezer battery. Our intention had been to shop in Manaus before heading out and we had done some on arrival but had eventually called it quits when both of us started to exhibit warning signs “that enough was enough”, so after our rest day we had to make a 1 hour round trip back into town before being able to hit the road north.
Brazil generally has excellent gas stations/truck stops and for transit days they have become our go-to place to spend a night but as we discovered on the section from Manaus north to Venezuela this was not the case, with most possible stops being quite small and dirty. Late in the afternoon we pulled into one such spot just before the native Waimiri-Atroari Indian forest reserve as we had read that it was not allowed to drive the section through the reserve after a certain hour. The conductor of Mr Jones was feeling quite sorry for himself after a long hot day in the car as not only did he have a sore shoulder but was now suffering with a cold that he must have picked up on the boat, efforts were made to console him with a cold Fanta from the stations little kiosk followed up with a beer.
The efforts clearly worked as the following morning, he decided to drain and change Mr Jones coolant before we set off. The changing of the coolant had been on the to-do list ever since our less than satisfactory encounter with mechanics in Fortaleza, we had the 10litres of fluid necessary to do the job but had never been in a spot suitable to do the job as it is next to impossible to do without spilling at least half of the old fluid on the floor. With a dirt parking area and plenty of rain each day to dilute the impact, Stuart had decided that this little garage in the middle of the Amazon jungle was as good an opportunity as we may get for a while.
The drive through the Waimiri-Atroari reserve was spectacular in respect to the dense nests of the forest but sadly this also means you see very little other than a mass of green next to the road and it all tends to blend into itself. Just the other side of the reserve we crossed the equator (our 3rd time on this continent and so stopped for the obligatory photo). Compared to other equator “crossings” it was a very low key affair with no touts demonstrating the theoretical physical effects of being in the northern versus southern hemispheres and so forth.
Our overnight destination for that day was the National Park of Virua where we hoped to spend a few days and get the opportunity to soak up the sounds, sights and atmosphere of the rain forest. In order to visit you in theory need to send an email requesting this a few days before arrival but as we travel with no fixed itinerary we had only done this the day before and then since then had not had internet signal which meant the rangers were a bit surprised by our arrival, it was however not really an issue and easily solved by signing the manual register.
The campground is in a beautiful clearing in the forest but unfortunately it was oppressively hot (even by our standards) and so after only a very short while we decided it would only be a one nighter. An aspect that totally surprised and mystified us was how quite the forest was, we took a short walk into it and apart from the dense vegetation meaning you cannot see very far off the path to spot birds or wildlife we also heard no activity, apart from the briefest glimpse of a solitary monkey. It was so eerily quite that we actually could hear a leaf falling.
Two hundred kilometres south of the Venezuela border is the town of Boa Vista and it was here that we had or first (and thankfully only) opportunity to wander if visiting Venezuela was a sensible thing to do, the reason being it is home to some very large white tented refugee camps. That night though as we sat in a river to cool off from the days heat it was more, for us, about reflecting on our journey through Brazil: in total over our two visits we had spent 309 days in the country and visited 25 of its 26 states plus of course the Federal district of Brasilia, had countless fantastic experiences and only a few negative ones (mostly with regards diesel injector specialists). Sadly, after all those days our Portuguese is still terrible!
Muito Obrigado Brazil.
Below are links to other pages that complement this travel diary entry:
A different travel diary entry this time around, excerpts of our observations and experiences over 6 days on a ferry as we cruise up the Amazon river from Belem (near the Atlantic), to Manaus (1600km inland). A real insight into life on the river and what is involved for your average citizen to live and commute in this part of the world.
Tuesday 9 January(Day 1)
6:00 – Early morning wake-up call at the private marina we have been camped at the last few days as many kayakers and rowers arrived for what we presume is pre-work exercise session.
9:30 – After a quick stop at the bakery we arrive at the ferry dock and Stuart sets off to try find out how we “check-in”. There seems to be a lot of organised choas. At first there is some confusion as too our ticket and the boats list but eventually it is clarified and we are told to wait. The ferry is only due to depart at 18:00 today but we had been told to come early, no idea when they will load the cars and there seem to be far more cars than deck space. In the meantime, they are loading all sorts of cargo into the hold and onto part of the car deck.
10:00 – We take our hammocks on board and find the bottom deck to be quite full so head upstairs to the 2nd deck. It is not clear how or if anything is organised and while standing around looking a little lost, a friendly chap in plain clothes introduces himself as the Captain. We ask him where is the best place and side to put our hammock and he helps to rig them up.
10:15 – Stuart decided he may as well start working on the new bumper watertank (our previous one cracked a couple of days ago) and so leaves Tania with her kindle and hammock and our phones plugged-in too a electrical outlet directly above our hammocks
12:00 – There seems to be some activity around the cars, so Stuart finsihes up with gluing the watertank and packs his tools away. Hopefully he can complete the cutting and gluing of the tank while underway on the ferry so we are “good to go” once we reach Manaus.
13:00 – Roughly 14 cars/SUVs have been loaded, Mr. Jones was second to last to be loaded.
14:00 – Upper deck is starting to get fuller.
14:35 – we get our taste of what could be a regular occurance, a torrential downpour. There are tarpaulin sides which can be dropped to prevent rain entering the sleeping quarters.
18:18 – We are underway, no streamers or firecrackers to mark our departure so we pop a selfie of the two of us in our hammocks. Not being regular selfie takers, in the first attempt Tania looks like we suspect we might feel on day 5.
19:00 – the rivers serve as a highway to all over the Amazon river delta and its tributories and so there are many ferry boats going all over the place. We get overtaken by one that is similar in look and size to the one we are on
21:00 –
Our location @ 21:00
We had originally hoped to be able to lift Mr. Jones roof and sleep inside him as well as cook suppers but as we didn’t know how easy it would be to access him and had read that the deck of the ferry was quite sloped, Tania had pre-prepared a number of meals which just required heating up. As it turns out we can’t lift the roof without potentially blocking the Captains view of the river ahead, the deck is sloped and we won’t even be able to use our external gas stove as there is no space next to MR. J, the cars are packed in like sardine. Supper tonight was cold hot dogs! At least we can bring our chairs upstairs and have created a “lounge” in which we can drink our wine.
10 January 2024, Wednesday (Day 2)
6:00 –
Our location @ 06:00 on 10 January
8:00 –
Docked in Breves, loading new passengers and offloading cargo and for some perspective: this is the largest town on an island called Marajó. The island is comparable in size to Switzerland and is the worlds 35th largest island. And we are not even in the ocean, just the river delta!
10:44 –
Latest location, we are idling in middle of river so this guy can pull up and offload his multiple bundles of what look like broomsticks. Who would have guessed the logistical chain involved in getting a wooden broom stick to a store near you…
13:30 –
Cruising slowly through a narrow tributory. The locals paddle out towards the ferry boats in anticipation of “parcels” being thrown overboard for them. The parcels consist of food or clothes which passengers have put together and donate – on one hand it can look like a nice charitable thing to do but having seen how many boats are plying this route their must in fact be a booming second-hand thrift shop in the area. And in the most extreme case a powered motorboat picked up a few packets, then pulled alongside and proceeded to sell sundried shrimp and açaí to the passengers (don’t think they where in need of donations).
14:30 –
We just paused for a quick passenger pickup: Mom and her about 6-year old daughter transferred from this local taxi to our ferry. Stationary time, possibly under one minute 👀👀
17:15 –
We have finally entered the Amazon River having reached it 23 hours since leaving Belem and as we did, this little canoe motored up with a food delivery. It’s about the 4th one today, so we are beginning to think that some passengers have the equivalent of a Mr D delivery app. Always the same food: sun dried camorone (shrimp) and acai
21:00 Gurupa Town –
Per Wikipedia, the town is 300km inland from Amazon mouth and is the centre for palm heart extraction in the region. Looks like we will be here for a few hours as they unload cargo. We thought it was strange when the boat lights went out 30min earlier tonight in the sleeping area but that was so they could switch them on again at 9pm it seems..
11 January, Thursday (Day 3)
5:00 – Town of Almerien –
Didn’t think the boat could take anymore passengers but silly us. Stuart was already almost bumping hammocks with the lady next to him and yet a mother and daughter who just boarded managed to put theirs either side of the lady next to him. The mother has serious attitude but on the “bright side” she had to string her hammock like a bunk bed and her top bunk is now directly below the night light that stays on when we sleeping and so Stuart doesn’t have to sleep with his hat over his eyes anymore
With two nights of sleeping in hammocks under our belts, we haven’t done too bad for rest, Tania slept very well on night 1 and Stuart okay. On the second night we seem to have reversed the roles. Hammocks are not that great for sleeping in as they place a lot of pressure on certain points and you can’t just roll over. Also, ours are perhaps a bit small when comparing to other passengers. It seems the best way to sleep in them is slightly diagonally and a bigger one is better for that. (The things you learn 🙈)
9:10 –
We are in the middle of nowhere, all of a sudden the engines go into idle and many curious passengers get up to see what’s happening down the side of the boat. A small boat has pulled up alongside, ties on briefly while a few huge polystyrene cooler boxes are offloaded (presumably shrimp or fish) and one passenger who is standing on the roof of the small boat embarques. 5 minutes later we are back underway
12:00 – Prainha
The larger village of Prainha. After the 5am boarding earlier today we were now truly convinced that no more passengers could be fitted, guess we were wrong once again. All those under the canopy in the below pictures are boarding. We are hanging tight to our seating area and having learnt from previous “space invaders” when we lost valuable real estate because we either weren’t in the hammocks or had them tied out the way for our seating/lounge have put our hammocks and chairs out BUT based on the circling peeps with hammocks in hand looking for a spot, don’t know if we will be able to resist an invasion for too long. Interestingly, based on the map it seems this town and a few west of it are actually connected by some kind of road inland.
17:00 Town of Monte Alegre
It has taken 5 hours to sail from Prainha to this one, two of the towns connected by road inland.
It is also the first first mass disembarkation since we started in Belem and we actually have a little space around us, we were a bit sad to see the family directly next to us leave, as they have been super sweet and had a real cute little boy who, on the first morning, decided Tania was his new favourite aunty to play “hide behind a 10cm wide pole with”. We have felt quite sorry for some passengers as some that boarded earlier today could not find space anywhere so have been hanging around the last 5 hours hoping to get a spot. As soon as people started to pack up they moved into spaces. Will be interesting to see if we get a lot of new arrivals, embarking from this town as well and where they will find space.
The dockside vendors here have an ingenious method for both receiving payment and passing goods up to the passengers. In other towns they have just stormed on board as soon as the boat pulled alongside and then have to dash to get off again when it starts to pull away.
12 January, Friday (Day 4)
00:35 The major town of Santarem
The Captain told us when we passed him on the deck yesterday afternoon that we would dock in Santarem at 1am, so when we were woken by the engines going into idle at 00:35 we thought we were early BUT in what was a truly impressive parallel parking maneuver (over the next 25 minutes) we did in fact tie off to the dock at only a few minutes passed 1.
The ferry behind us only got bumped once in the entire process, causing it to shift slightly and create a bit of excitement for a few of its passengers who were on the gangplank disembarking at that point.
If Stuart’s Portuguese counting was correct we will be here until 11am although our Ghanaian friend who speaks Portuguese seem to think we may be here all day as the offload and load cargo. And if we understood the Captain correctly we can go ashore and wander around Santarem.
First priority however, once it is a more reasonable hour is to use the fact that we should now have cell signal on our “hotspot” phone to answer some queries that have come through on Tania’s Colombia visa application (while we have Starlink connection on our phones these queries need a computer the WiFi we paid for on the boat is for one device only). We have limited time to answer those and so don’t want to wait until getting off the ferrry in Manaus to attend to that.
Once we had dealt with the visa queries we decided against going onshore in case we had misunderstood the departure time, last thing we need is for the boat to pull away without us as there is no passenger check as to who disemabrks or embarks at these stops. They do very informally “check-in” new passengers.
So instead Stuart used the stationary time to finalise the last bit of cutting and gluing for the watertank. In the below pic it is clear how tight the parking space was when we arrived, the forward hull of the next boat overhangs ours.
11:00 Santarem
And we are underway again. Looks like Stuart’s ability to count and tell the time in Portuguese has improved as he understood EL Capitan perfectly yesterday for both arrival time and departure time.
As we pull away from town we get to see our first “meeting of the rivers”.
There are a couple of points along the Amazon river system were two rivers come together but don’t mix for a number of kilometres. This non-mixing occurs because the two rivers flow at significantly different speeds, have different temperatures as well as different solid densites making the division clearly visible. In the case of Santerm, it is the sediment heavy Amazon and clearer Tapajos river.
17:20 Middle of nowhere, Time for sundowners
It has been a long day of cruising with no stops or small boats pulling up alongside, probably because we have been in the main Amazon channel which is just ginormous. You can barely see the other side and even ocean-going size vessels look small when far away.
Got the GPS out around lunchtime to see what speed we cruise at = it seems to be constant 17km/h
When we do venture into the side channels or around islands there is noticeably less dense forest and more grassland which means cattle farming. Have spotted a few barges setup like floating kraals presumably for taking the beef to market.
13 January, Saturday (Day 5)
5:10am, Small town of Parantins
Another early wake up call, as we pull into this little village. Mr Jones will lose one of his voyage mates as the car next to him (with bicycles on the back), gets off here. But first they must offload the one in front of him (this one joined in Santarem).
That was our 4th night of sleeping in the hammocks and hammock life ain’t all it’s cracked out to be (not a palm tree or cocktail in sight). Sleeping twisted like a banana is awkward, puts a lot of pressure on your neck and gives us a headache! Wriggling can set off a domino effect with the hammocks to your side BUT wriggling is the only way to change position and put the pressure on a different point.
5am wake-up call
The locals seem to cope with hammock life much better than we do, from really young to some on the boat who must be in their late 70’s already. This youngster even had a very cool hammock which was perfect for a little boy.
As we pulled away from Parantins we made a number of sightings of the pink river dolphin, known in this part of the world as a Boto. Folklore has it that they morph at night into handsome men and seduce the women. Seeing as it was early Saturday morning we reckon they were heading home after a succesful night on the town.
8:15 Middle of the main Amazon channel
As we head down the back stairs for breakfast @ Mr. Jones, the further inland we have gone the wider the river seems to have got. For perspective, in the below picture, there is another ferry boat in the top middle left of the picture.
11:25 / 10:24 Saturday
Time zone crossed, we just gained an hour, however lunch (for those that take it in the canteen) is being served on the old time zone time. In the meantime, while we are cruising close to the one bank, you can barely see the other side.
In the dry season (which we are currently at the end of) the Amazon is usually between 3 and 10km wide. In the wet season that width can triple meaning some parts are 50km wide creating huge underwater forest areas.
And the delta mouth where it empties into the Atlantic is 328km wide, the fresh water pushes up to 300km into the ocean. The river was first discovered by a Portuguese sailor in March 1500 when he noticed that he was sailing in “freshwater” while over 200km offshore.
14 January, Sunday (Day 6)
6:15am – Roughly 4 hours until we reach Manaus
4 hours to go until we can dis-embark
The rain is pouring down and it’s a little chilly. Weather app says it is 24 deg C but after months of living with the temperature never really dropping below 30, this may have us searching for jackets when we get back to Mr Jones.
Rain has scuppered Stuart’s plans to get up early and mount the bumper water tank, which he completed during the voyage, and to be able to put the grill back on the front of Mr Jones.
It’s a good thing that we plan on going shopping once off the boat and that most attacadao’s (Makro style supermarkets) have large undercover areas – guess he will be completing that job while Tania shops.
9:00 – getting closer to Manuas
The storm has cleared up giving Stuart the opportunity to mount the watertank and tidy up his tools from the passenger footwell so that Tania will have place to sit once we disembark.
10:40 – The meeting of the waters outside Manaus
“The meeting of the waters outside Manaus“
This time it is the meeting of the Rio Negro (with it’s clearer tanin coloured water which flows from the Venezuela highlands) and the sediment rich Amazon river which has ultmately flowed from the Peruvian Andes. It is surreal to think that we parked Mr. Jones on a small cement bridge which in theory crossed this river close to it’s source back in 8 months ago! To read that travel diary entry click here
Having crossed into the Rio Negro, we have clean water off the back of the boat now.
Tannin collared waters of the Rio Negro
11:15 – Manaus
It is crazy to think that we are 1600km from the Atlantic Ocean, yet only 45m above sea level and we are surrounded by ocean going cargo vessels and even a cruise ship. Almost everything that comes to this city of 2,5million people arrives by boat.
We estimate there was somewhere between 300 – 350 passengers on board the boat and we had hoped we would not be the only international overlanders (aka persons able to speak English) on board in order to have some company. As it turned out there was a Belgian on board (who was not friendly and we had zero engagement with) and one Ghanain (married to a Brazilian) who was super friendly and helped us out with a number of things, not least of which was understanding how the one and only single gas burner (available to passengers) worked so that we could reheat suppers.
saying goodbye to Tedd and his family
If we had thought getting Mr. Jones onto the ferry had been a little nerve wracking, it was a good thing we did not know what awaited us in Manaus until it was too late. The dock was super busy and our boat pulled up offcentre in front of small floating dock. Stuart and Mr. Jones were the first to exit but because of the position and tight spacing of cars on the boat it took quite some manovering just to get onto the ramps of which the right hand one was super close to the waters edge and a pole with bent metal sticking up only centimtres from Mr. J. To keep things interesting, it was pouring with rain.
Hold on tight while you watch the below video:
Once on the floating dock we needed to get him up the other side, but the ramps didn’t reach all the way and the metal was super slippery, even with the differential locked and in first gear low range Stuart could only make it halfway before losing all traction and slipping. Once the wheels started to slip it changed the angle Mr. J was facing meaning that as Stuart backed back down, Mr. J got close to the waters edge between the dock and boat alongside. After two failed attempts, the help of a delivery truck was sourced and we got an assisted tow up the slope. Needless to say, the ferry located to a different berth for offloading the rest of the vehicles.
And that is how our first ever “cruise” ended, perhaps next time we consider a 5-day cruise experience we will spring for tickets on a fancy ocean going cruise ship with a proper cabin for berths.
A very hard month for us in which we struggled with the harsh environment of the Ceara state, really started to miss home and had to deal with a mechanic who left us feeling rather ripped off. Not all months being nomadic are “sunshine and roses…”
Last months travel diary ended with us reaching the end of the BR101 coastal road in Brazil, it also meant we were about to enter the state of Ceara which was to be the 21st state we have visited in Brazil. Ceara is world famous for kite-surfing which means it is windy, our first indication of this was when we got a little lost on our first day in the state and spent hours driving past massive wind farms for electricity.
Based on our timing, we were under the impression that while it would be windy we would be travelling in the tail end of the windy season, and therefore shouldn’t experience hectic winds. Our intended destination on that first day was a wild camp on the beach just a little south of the small village of Sao Bento do Norte but when we arrived there and parked just above the beach in order to figure out how to access the beach and drive south we got sandblasted. It was clear that a wildcamp on the beach would be positively unpleasant and so we moved on, at which point we got lost in the maze of dirt roads traversing the wind farms.
After a long day we arrived at what was described as a surfcamp in another small village called, Sao Cristavoa. However, on arrival, there was nobody home and the site looked more abandoned than appealing so off we went in search of a wild camp, which we found just next to the beach as the sun was setting. What had meant to be an 80km day had ended up being over 400km.
In the morning, when we could observe the ocean better it was clear that there was no surfing to be had and so after a leisurely breakfast during which a number of locals slowly cruised past clearly fascinated by Mr Jones (we got the distinct impression that word had gone out about the strangers just outside town), we packed up and moved on to a campsite under development called Vida Nova. It was quite a popular spot with long term Brazilian motorhomes, who seem to spend over a month in each spot they stop at, and the owners were also super nice, even organising an asado for us the one evening. The downside, was that the camp is very exposed to the wind meaning you get buffeted all day long by wind and sand and it had an unattractive beach. The beach was very flat and reasonably hard packed which meant that everyone took their cars onto the beach and drove up and down it, often at high speed which made going for a stroll on the beach, feel more like walking down a 4 lane highway.
In the meantime, Mr Jones had picked up a loud “knocking” sound which Stuart couldn’t trace and so we had decided to seek out a mechanic in Fortaleza. We have had pretty good experiences with garages operating under the “Bosch Service centre” brand and google told us there were a couple in Fortaleza, the last major town we would encounter for over a 1000km. The garage convinced us that the issue was the fuel injection pump, which was very frustrating as that had been overhauled in a small Brazilian town just over a year prior, at quite some expense. As the weekend was approaching and we didn’t want to be without Mr Jones for days when he would not be worked on, we agreed with them we would come back on Monday morning.
While we waited for the weekend to pass we put the time to good use to research ferry boats, and ultimately book one, for the trip up the Amazon river from Belem to Manaus. Despite the Amazon river being the main transport route for everyone who lives along it, the booking system is surprisingly informal, we did everything via WhatsApp once we had managed to find the cellphone number of a booking agent. Brazilians love WhatsApp and in particular voice notes, which made it quite challenging with our limited Portuguese as the agent would send long voice notes in reply to our enquiries and requests for additional information.
Knowing that we would be without Mr Jones while the fuel injector pump was being overhauled we booked into a backpacker hostel in Fortaleza, hoping that there would be other international backpackers who we could interact with. We hadn’t met or engaged with another international traveller since the middle of September, which meant that apart from talking to each other, every other social engagement had to some extent relied on Google translate. Google translate is a wonderful tool which we couldn’t do without but it doesn’t allow for free flowing conversation, thus making all such engagements rather limited and frustrating. Much to our disappointment, the only people staying in the hostel were Brazilian!
What was meant to be a 2 night stay in the hostel turned into a 4 night one and what was meant to be a relatively expensive job turned into an exorbitantly expensive job! It had escalated from the fuel injector pump to include the injectors as well, plus a whole lot of ancillary items which in Stuart’s option did not make sense and he spent a whole lot of time arguing with the garage about the extent of work and getting items removed. Once again google translate was invaluable and at at the same time incredibly frustrating.
When the injector pump had been repaired a year ago, we had experienced a rapid overheating of the engine when driving away, from what we believed was an airlock in the cooling system – this ultimately led to a head gasket replacement a month later. At the time that mechanic was adamant that they hadn’t touched the expansion tank of the cooling system and as we hadn’t been in attendance at the time we could not prove them wrong. There was no ways Stuart was going to allow that to potentially happen again and insisted on being in attendance for every step of the reassembly process and as he witnessed – it is next to impossible to do the job without the removal and replacement of the coolant – chalk one up for one lying mechanic last year! It was a good thing Stuart was in attendance this time as they proceeded to overfill the cooling system and with the wrong mixture of antifreeze, leading to more google translate arguments as they insisted they were right. In the end Stuart prevailed but then with it past closing time and getting dark, when he took it for a test drive the coolant leaked – thank goodness for our coolant level alarm. The stress levels at this point were through the roof!
Not wanting for them to rush while trying to fix the leaking coolant, nor risk further issues when driving through dodgy Fortaleza in the dark we called it quits and called an Uber to take us back to the hostel for another night. We were both physically and mentally shattered and most definitely not in love with Brazil anymore.
The saddest part of the whole experience, while we do believe that the pump and injector pump overhaul has made Mr J run a bit better, the knocking sound we had been concerned about was still there, just slightly subdued and so they had ultimately not fixed the problem we were concerned about.
We were very keen to get the hell out of Fortaleza, apart from the mechanic experience it is the first major city in Brazil where we have felt you need to watch your back, however we had one important logistical task to deal with once we got Mr Jones back the next morning – swap out our Brazilian 5kg gas bottle for a new one as ours was empty. Brazil does not fill foreign gas bottles and only swaps its own for full ones. We had purchased a Brazilian bottle in September when our South African one had run out and this bottle was now also empty. In theory it should have been an easy task of stopping at a depot, and making the swap however as we were to find out, in the north east of Brazil, 5kg bottles are not used and so the depots only had large 13kg ones. We spent roughly 4 hours driving from depot to depot in the town until one eventually pointed us to the actual gas plant outside of town but even there we did not come right.
So, with no options left, we headed out of town to a little village that appeared to have a surf camp but upon arrival found that the restaurant associated with it no longer offered camping which was a great pity as the surf out front looked rather nice and so as was a theme for this month, we moved a bit further up the coast to our next option. This was meant to be fantastic, based on the reviews, and only metres from a wonderfully quiet beach with nobody on it. When we got there, we found very high walls around a locked up large compound and at least 500m of dunes separating it from the beach. It was by now late in the afternoon and as this spot was quite remote we decided, if nobody was home then we would just camp outside its walls. Some hours later, as we were finishing cooking supper, the German owner and his Brazilian wife arrived back home and so after eating our food, we packed Mr J up and moved inside the compound. The following morning, we did try and access the beach, but wind and fine sand do not make for a pleasant experience and we abandoned that idea after only a few hundred metres.
For weeks, every Brazilian Motorhome owner we interacted with had told us that we must visit a spot called “Beach Camping” in Praia do Baleia. Based on our most recent experiences we were fully expecting to be disappointed but thankfully that was not the case and it was the perfect spot to restore our karma. As always language was a bit of a barrier but we had some great interactions with fellow campers, enjoyed an asado with them, took long walks on the beach (the wind wasn’t even that strong), Stuart managed a bit of surfing and perhaps most importantly managed to sort out our gas problem. As every South African knows, a braai is a wonderful place for men to stand around and discuss a variety of topics and it was at the asado (South American term for a braai) that the issue of not being able to find a replacement gas bottle come up as well as a solution offered. The suggested solution was to gravity fill the 5kg bottle from a 13kg one using a special adapter that the one Motorhome owner had and after a bit of further discussion (with google) Stuart proposed that they in fact try and fill our South African bottle rather than the Brazilian one. The following morning after searching through the multitude of different sized fittings Stuart had purchased before the trip for this exact prospect, he found one that fitted onto the Brazilian adaptor and our Cadac bottle. 30 Minutes later we had a full Cadac bottle and had gifted our 5kg Brazilian one to the helpful Motorhome owner, who in return gifted his adaptor to us which is guaranteed to come in useful somewhere else in the world.
For the technically minded (and for those not – skip this paragraph): the issue with gravity filling a gas bottle is that you need liquid gas to flow from the donor bottle to the receiver bottle. This is done by hanging the donor bottle upside down and connecting it to the receiving bottle with a high-pressure hose, however the receiving bottle has air in it from when it emptied and in order for the liquid to enter the air needs to be displaced. There are convoluted ways of trying to change the pressure differential to allow for this, such as placing the donor in the sun and the recipient in the shade covered with a wet towel BUT the beauty of our gifted adapter is that it allows you to bleed off the air in the donor cylinder while controlling the liquid flow making it a relatively hassle free process.
Of course you could never do this in line of sight of a Health & Safety officer
Beach Camping was great and we could easily have spent Christmas there, in fact our fellow campers and the owners were quite disappointed when we said we wouldn’t and needed to move on. We needed to “move on” for two reasons, firstly with a ferry date secured we need to keep moving north towards that and secondly, we were hoping (against all odds) to find a spot which had perhaps another international Overlander (or two) with whom we could socialize over the festive period. With that in mind we had decided to move to Jijoca de Jericoacoara which is more touristy. Unfortunately our gamble did not pay off, there were no international tourists and the camp was surprisingly empty but nonetheless we did find ourselves in a very nice campsite and ultimately had a fantastic Christmas day full of WhatsApp calls to family as we juggled timezones from Sydney, to South Africa, Switzerland and London and then finally ending with a fantasistic roast pork leg on our mini Weber.
We have spent a number of Christmas away from home now (Malawi, Uganda, Argentina’s Patagonia & now Brazil) and it has been interesting to see the different approaches to this holiday period in each country. In South Africa our Christmas holiday rush (when everyone dashes from inland cities to the coast) always starts around the 16th, in Brazil we learnt it starts the day after Christmas. On the 26th we started to see the campsite full up throughout the day and late into the night, and each subsequent day more and more families arrived until it was bursting at the seams and we felt like we could be camping at one of the very popular KwaZulu Natal south coast spots where guy ropes interlink between sites and there almost isn’t an inch to move. There were no designated sites but Stuart had anticipated a fuller place when we arrived and positioned Mr Jones next to a couple of trees which prevented anybody parking right on top of us, on the one side and on the other we had our hammocks strung out between Mr J and a tree, so overall we had quite a large footprint and some space to move.
Although we had more space than many around Mr Jones and the location itself (on a stunning aquamarine lake) was very nice, we were very “alone in a crowd” and so decided to rather seek out a more isolated spot for the New Year. For this we had in mind a stretch of beach a little further north on which it appeared you could easily wild camp and so on New Year’s Eve we set out to explore. It took a few attempts in the little town of Tutoia to figure out how to get onto the beach with Mr Jones but once we were on it, we could have been on a multi-lane highway with many tracks heading up and down it. Unlike in South Africa, driving on the beach is a very common activity in this part of Brazil. After 15km we come to an area with many tracks heading off into some large sand dunes which is nicknamed “the mini Lencois”. One of the main tourist attractions, called Lencois Marenheses, just north of here is a huge dunefield which has many natural pools that form between the dunes. The natural pools form during the rainy season and make fantastic swimming pools surrounded by dunes. It was one of the attractions Tania had been very keen on seeing but we were concerned that we were too late in the year and that the pools would have dried up, this was confirmed for us at mini Lencois which also has such pools but they were all dry, which a local tour guide who passed by confirmed for us, was because of the season.
We backed Mr Jones up against one of the dunes, grabbed some drinks and climbed the dune for sundowner drinks. Incredibly we still had cellphone signal and so were able to make a few WhatsApp video calls and send messages to wish everyone a Happy New Year. While it was a quiet New Year’s Eve for us, it was an improvement on the year prior which had been spent in a truck stop in the middle of nowhere on Argentina’s Patagonia steppes.
While the location of our New Year’s Eve wildcamp was quite spectacular, the sea itself was not very inviting and so instead of spending a second night there we moved on to the town of Barreirinhas which had two campsites marked on Overlander that promised swimming pools. Barreirinhas is the launch point for all trips into Lencois Marenheses and so we were also expecting an attractive tourist town with perhaps a nice looking restaurant or two. Sadly, we were disappointed on all counts and would have been better off staying at our peaceful wild camp another night.
At this point we were wary of moving too fast as we still had 9 days to go until our ferry sailing date from Belem and only really had one more campspot in mind before we did a couple of days trucking to Belem. Fortunately for us the little oasis and campsite of Camping Encanto das Aguas, lived up to its name. Not only was the location spectacular but the family that own and run it just exuded peace and tranquility, it was exactly what our souls needed.
After wiling away 4 days, it was time to put our heads down for a couple of days trucking to complete the last section to Belem and our awaiting Amazon Ferryboat.
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Two months of slow travel as we work our way up the Brazil coastline from the state of Bahia to the northern most point of the Rio Grande Norte state. In our opinion, some of the nicest beaches in all of Brazil.
After a massive trek across the breadth of Brazil, we ended last month with a few days on the beach which we hoped was going to set the trend for our next few months in Brazil, lots of beach and surf time with short hops along the coast as we did this.
Our first stop was just 50km north but before getting there we went on a mission to find a gas bottle as we had run out of gas for cooking. As with electrical plugs and sockets, there is no standard size for gas bottles or their regulators and the threads required to refill them. In preparing for the South America Stuart had purchased a wide variety of every type adapter he could source both in South Africa and globally in order to make the refill process easier and much to our surprise we have only needed one of these so far, the simple “bullnose” adapter we have in SA for large to small bottles. Brazil is however a different matter altogether as they will not refill anything but their own style bottle and so we knew, from last years experience, that we had to purchase a bottle. Further complicating the process is that the standard bottle size here is 13kg which is way too big for mounting on the back of Mr J but they do also have a 5kg version (different shape to Cadac) that we had been able to fit onto the bracket we have – it was just a case of finding one.
We knew the brand that had this size and had googled a number of their locations/outlets in Ilheus and so were reasonably optimistic that we would find one but after about the 5th fruitless stop that optimism was fading fast as we headed out of town to the factory/distribution centre. As if things weren’t complicated enough, the data on our phone run out (meaning no Google translate) upon arrival at the factory and Stuart was left to try and explain in his “best” Portuguese to the bemused security guard what we wanted and from that interaction we obtained rough directions to a new address which sadly also turned into a failure. As one last resort we headed back to the factory for another attempt and this time got lucky as a manager was leaving and he took pity on us, with the end result being him leading us back through town to another distribution point where we could purchase a 5kg bottle. After what had been a frustrating search, we were left grateful for the kindness of complete strangers.
After parting ways on the side of the road (he even helped lead us out of town), we quickly covered the 50km north to the next campsite, having been there already last year we thought we knew what to expect and so were rather surprised to find a campground bursting with silverbacks and their very large mobile homes.
Based on our past interactions with Brazilians, we expected to be using Google translate plenty over the course of the next days as curious neighbours stopped by to check out Mr J and welcome us to Brazil but strangely in this camp everybody very much kept to themselves and in one week we only had a single visitor.
Last year Stuart had had some enjoyed some quite nice “board meetings” on this beach but this year the wind and swell direction were not playing ball and blowing in some seriously scary looking (&large)Portuguese Men of War, so instead we occupied ourselves with long beach walks and kindle time while lying on the beach. We had still not fully recovered from the long trek across Peru and Brazil so the 7 lazy days spent at Camping Paraiso were exactly what we needed.
As already mentioned we had travelled this part of the coastline already and so had decided to make a relatively quick move up to and past Salvador but first we wanted to visit one beach called Praia Engenhoca, from what we had read and the pictures we had seen it looked absolutely stunning. You approach it via a 30-minute walk through the rain forest to emerge onto a 500m strip of sand which is wedged between two headlands, as an added bonus it, supposedly, was popular for surfing. The only downside being that there was no camping in the vicinity so our plan was to spend the better part of the day on it and then do a 3 hour hop towards Salvador and a truck stop which had a self-service laundromat onsite, this would give us somewhere convenient to sleep and mean one less “admin” task for our time in Salvador.
The walk to the beach, the beach itself and the surfing did not disappoint and we spent a great morning there before hitting the road for what should have been an easy commute to the truckstop. Perhaps it was because he was feeling neglected from having been left up on the road while we enjoyed a tropical paradise beach but Mr Jones clearly had very different plans, when after just an hour he cut-out from fuel starvation. This brought back terrible flashbacks to our time in the Pantanal one year prior, as we hadn’t run out of fuel, he had had a service less than 1500km ago and there were no obvious symptoms for the issue. Over the course of the next 3hours, Stuart bled the fuel system 10 or more times which allowed us to cover a few more kilometers forward each time before cutting out again and just as we were beginning to think we may be spending the night stranded on the side of the road he decided to dismantle and clean the fuel sedimenter in case we had some contaminated fuel. The sedimenter turned out to be perfectly clean but thankfully after re-assembling it, Mr Jones ran for a “record” (at least for the previous 3 hours) of 25km with no issues which allowed us to get to a town and its associated campground. No laundromat for us that night but at least we were safe and could sleep soundly before regrouping in the morning.
Over breakfast the following morning, we made the decision to push forward, given that he had run so well for the last part of the previous evening and see how far we could go. Our logic being that either the problem would rear its ugly head quickly and then we could turn around and come back to the small town we were in, to search for a diesel mechanic or alternatively it would take longer to appear and that would allow us to get closer to the BR101 ( a main arterial road in Brazil) and its associated truck support garages scattered all along its length where we were more likely to find an expert diesel mechanic. 5 hours later we found ourselves driving into the outskirts of Salvador and even confident enough to risk the traffic so that we could go searching for a butchery and supermarkets. It remains a mystery as to what the actual issue had been but Stuart surmises that a small air leak must have appeared at the seal of the sedimenter and by removing and reinstalling it, this inadvertently fixed the issue.
Walking to Praia EngenhocaPraia Engenhoca
As we had been in Salvador a year prior there was no need to spend time doing touristy things and so as we often do with big cities we focused on getting jobs done and acquiring items we don’t usually find in the smaller towns. After a very efficient but busy day we were ready to head north and into what would now be new territory for us, unfortunately we had inadvertently picked a holiday to do this and it felt like every “Salvadorian” was headed in the same direction, at least for the first 100km or so until we had got far enough away from town for it to make sense as a day trip.
We had in mind a wild camp spot on a what we thought was a relatively deserted peninsula but upon arrival realised that the picture and review in iOverlander had been a bit misleading, however not to be deterred we headed further along the peninsula on some deep sand tracks. 99% of the time we do not need the 4×4 capabilities that Mr Jones has but when we do use them or need them they are invaluable and this evening was one of those. The sand tracks took us past a few villages and into a large coconut palm forest where we could back-up against the dunes for an idyllic camping spot which we nicknamed “Coconut Alley”. Sundowners on the sand dunes overlooking the ocean with nobody around for many kilometres certainly made up for the issues and stress of a few days ago.
Leaving Coconut alley we were hoping to find another “long stay” venue were we could be stationary for a week or more and so this meant a 6 hour day in the car to cover the 370km it took to get to a small village called Coruripe were we found a very well organised campsite. It is not a recognised surf spot but upon arrival it appeared to have some pretty decent waves out front at high tide but the high water can potentially hide unknown dangers such as rocks and reefs so if there are no locals to “guide the way”, Stuart always waits for a full tide cycle to pass where he can observe the water both at high and low tide before deciding whether to surf. Some rocks did become exposed at low tide but having observed their positioning he felt comfortable to hit the water alone and over the course of our stay had a number of really good sessions, even if he was the only one in the water each and every time.
Another advantage of the campsite was that it had pretty decent WiFi which meant we could watch the Springboks in action at the Rugby World Cup. Although it did require some “out the box” thinking as to how to get a decent video stream with the final solution being us video calling family via WhatsApp and having them face their device towards the TV. Where there is a will there is a way! Both the quarter and semi-finals were nerve wracking affairs with the Springboks prevailing by only 1 point in each case which meant some very intense time in front of the screen and probably had our neighbours a little bewildered as to what was going on.
The day after the semi-final we were up way early (5:30) and quickly on the road for a short 60km into the relatively large town of Maceio hoping to get haircuts and shopping done. When seeking out services such as a hairdresser or perhaps a smarter supermarket, Google is an invaluable tool for us. Firstly, using the search engine for finding options and then following that up with the maps but not so much for the aspect of navigation but rather for reviewing photos and in particular the “street view” photos. With street view we can rotate the picture to get a good idea of what the neighbourhood looks like and even more importantly what the parking situation is, the latter being important because of Mr Jones height. Google maps is also usually pretty good at showing the business operating hours which we had overlooked as it never occurred to us that every single hairdresser and barber in this town is closed on a Monday. All was not lost however as we at least did get to confirm that we would be able to easily park Mr Jones in the area and that the salons looked pretty decent.
Once we had completed our shopping we backtracked on ourselves a little bit to a smaller village where we hoped that perhaps we could spend a few days at an “estanciomento” which was located just back from a popular surfing beach called Praia do Frances. An estanciomento is a parking lot and along the coast they often offer toilets and showers for people coming off the beach, in the case of this one it was well documented to have an area for motorhomes and even provided electricity hookups. It was certainly very popular and we have stayed in a few others before but for us, this one, felt very crowded and a bit dirty so our hoped for longer stay quickly become a one-nighter.
Stuart was up with the sun to join a few locals for a dawnie session in the surf before we headed back into town for haircuts. With fresh new haircuts we hit the road for what should have been a short hop up the coast hoping to arrive in time for lunch, but when that didn’t appeal we tried the next spot and then the next spot and so forth (all free /wild) ones until we resorted to heading for what sounded like a nice formal camp but turned out to be a big open patch of sand (with nice bathrooms). As we did not feel like paying R280 for that, we went another 10km up the road to another option that also sounded nice to arrive and discover he wanted R400 for nothing exciting but parking under some trees with an iffy bathroom and a solid hike down a steep hill to get to the beach but as it was by now dark we had no choice than to cut our losses and stay. To add insult to injury, Stuart managed to reverse into a tree in the dark while trying to position Mr J, thankfully the tree was rotten and the metal guards we have over each light lens worked, so there was no permanent damage to Mr J. On the positive side the scenery on the drive was quite good and while checking out the free camping spots we had stopped at a number of very pretty beaches.
The following morning having perused iOverlander we found a pousada (guesthouse) that offered Motorhome camping/parking which was just down the road and headed there. It was a little cramped but right on a pretty “Tania friendly” beach (no waves), had a nice vibe from the other campers and most importantly had decent WiFi which we considered essential as the Springboks were due to play New Zealand in the Rugby World Cup final that coming weekend.
Once the springboks had prevailed and become the first team to win 4 Rugby World Cups we once again pointed Mr Jones nose northwards for what was now a recurring theme: “ a short hop with a number of failed attempts at finding a decent camping spot”.
This time we ended up free camping in the city park of Macaraipe along with many Brazilian snowbirds in their vans and a large number of homeless people, which for us felt very much like squatting. Travelling the way, we do puts you in touch with all levels of society and generally helps you realise and appreciate that we are all cut from the same cloth no matter your status in traditional society but one thing we have not been able to get used to is this style of urban camping. Perhaps we would feel differently if we had a van or Motorhome where you could retreat easily into your little bubble and lock the world out but that is not sustainably possible with Mr Jones setup and also not the lifestyle we want.
We did however have a pleasant afternoon, when a German chap who lives in town drove past and recognised the South African flag on our number plate and stopped by for a chat.
Needless to say, we hit the road fairly early the following morning and just as we had done the night before ended up free camping but this time in a spot that felt far more natural and acceptable to wild camp at, even though it was only 15km outside the major city of Recife. The difference was, it was just above the beach, nestled in a grove of coconut trees with the nearest residences a good few hundred metres away and most looked like holiday homes and therefore empty. Recife is the only area in the entire South America that has a history of recorded shark attacks and has in fact for the last decade imposed a ban on swimming or surfing at many of its beaches. Therefore Stuart had no expectation of surfing but when not long after we arrived a number of surfers arrived and the water got quite busy, he decided to join them. Later that day when we went for a sunset walk along the beach we come across signs which banned swimming to the left side but not the right – we did wander if the sharks had themselves received notification of which side of the designated line they were allowed to swim and thus avoid interfering with the surfing activity.
Brazil has a public holiday called “All Saints day” at the beginning of November and once we had shopped in (and passed through Recife), we sought out a nice campsite where we could stay off the roads for the long weekend, which we found in the beautiful campground of Vida Lida. Apart from the super friendly owners there was lovely grass underfoot which made a welcome change from sand and we made sure to make the most of this feature by giving the inside of Mr Jones a good clean.
The other reason for staying put over the long weekend was that it would allow us to “fall into the window period” where our visa could be renewed and the next town, Joao Pessoa, supposedly had a very efficient office of the Policia Federal where we could do that. And it certainly was an easy process, we even had time afterward to find a self-service laundromat and get to our campsite at the lighthouse by mid-afternoon. A fun little fact was that the lighthouse is located on the eastern most tip of South America, which meant we have now visited the continents eastern, western and southern most extreme points as well as passing through its geographic centre in our travels.
The renewal/extension of our visa means that we have received an additional 90 days and allows us to stay in Brazil until the end of February 2024 if we so desire, but most importantly it means that we can continue to enjoy the slow pace of short hops up the coastline and this is exactly what we did when we left Joao Pessoa. Forty kilometres out of town we almost however didn’t take the turnoff to the little village of Barra do Mamanguape as it was just a little dirt road through sugarcane fields, but thankfully we did as an hour later we emerged on the edge of a beautiful estuary. As we were debating if it would be okay to camp there, a local approached us to welcome us and tell us that it was super tranquilo and seguro (tranquil and safe) and we were welcome to camp under the nearby trees.
Enjoying the tranquil vibe at the estuary
After a fantastic evening and night next to the estuary, we seriously considered staying another night but with no facilities and after Stuart looked around and didn’t find a freshwater tap where we could perhaps fill up and obtain shower water, we sadly departed. We have a 60 litre “clean water” tank in Mr Jones which only ever receives filtered water and while we could use that for dishes and showers we prefer not too. In addition we have a bumper tank of around 12Litres and a loose bottle of 6litres which are filled with general water and are used for cleaning purposes. Until now this has been sufficient as often when we wild camp there is a fresh water source nearby from which we can easily refill but in drier parts of the world and in particular on coastlines we have found we could do with more general-purpose water capacity. Stuart has been scheming for a while on how we could increase our carrying capacity and thinks he has a solution, it is now just a case of finding somewhere that can build a tank as he wants it.
Leaving our idyllic estuary camp we headed to the small fishing and surfing town of Baia Formosa with high hopes for a long stay but somehow both of us expected to be disappointed, thankfully we were both horribly wrong as from the moment we arrived, we felt at home and welcome. During the week it is a tiny fishing village with a big surfing culture, thanks to it being the home of current Olympic gold medalist and past World Champion – Italo Ferreira. On the weekend it transforms into a busy tourist destination with many surfers and other weekend tourists flocking to enjoy the waves, beach bars, buggy and quad bike tours on offer. In total we enjoyed 12 days there and just as we felt the locals did, breathed a big sigh of relief when each Monday rolled around and the tranquilo vibe returned.
A more well-known beach and surf destination is the town of Pipa which is roughly only 30km up the coast from Baia Formosa but before going there we needed to go a bit further into the bigger city of Natal in order to re-supply our groceries. In Brazil the majority of shopping is done at large warehouse like stores (similar to Makro in South Africa) known as attacado’s where you can get everything from wine, to household products and fresh fruit and vegetables. These do however tend to focus on the mass market and so the quality of meat is not great nor is the selection of more luxury items like jam, etc. For these items we prefer to visit a supermercado in the better parts of town. In Natal Tania thought she had identified one such supermercado which looked like it had parking that would accommodate Mr Jones but when we got there we discovered this not to be the case and while circling the block to see if there was any alternative entrance to the parking, Stuart spotted a gym with street parking available directly in front of its entrance and coffee bar. The main risk for us in big cities is having Mr Jones broken into while we are not with him, so the opportunity to park outside a busy gym with many people coming and going was too good to pass up and we quickly claimed the spot. Naturally Mr Jones immediately garnered attention, meaning a number of free car guards, and when we come back to him after shopping, a number of the gym bunnies were eager to ask about our travels and because we were in the more upmarket/professional part of town could even chat in English.
Pipa unfortunately turned out to be a disappointment. We had been hoping that given that it is a well-known tourist destination, we would perhaps bump into some fellow travelers and that it would also have some funky restaurants, with perhaps even some live music, where we could enjoy an evening or two out. Sadly, it seemed to have neither. We did however enjoy a few nice days on Praia Amor (the beach of love) although Tania did have to conquer her fear of heights getting to and from it!
From Pipa we piggybacked our way up the coast for a week with a number of short hops to end the month of November in the little village of Touros. There is not much in Touros apart from a lighthouse and a number of lovely rock pools which become exposed at low tide and are perfect for sitting in while enjoying a glass or two of white wine, if low tide happens to fall over lunchtime, which it did for us. For many Brazilian overlanders though, it is probably better known for being the point where the BR101 starts or ends depending on the direction you are going, as could be witnessed by the many stickers on the road sign designating this fact. Just like South Africa’s N2 highway, the BR101 runs along a large portion of the Brazil coastline, in fact 4765km of it, and was the first “major” road we drove on when we first entered Brazil in April 2022.
We, on the other hand, still have 2000+ kilometres to go until we reach the end of our journey along Brazil’s coastline, but that will be December’s travel diary.
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