Monday, November 30, 2015
Day 16 - Nov 30
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Day 15 - Nov 29
Saturday, November 28, 2015
Day 14 - Nov 28 REST DAY
After a bit of sweat and tender loving care I tucked the bike away for its needed rest. Then I headed up to the town. It was the cutest town complete with a town square and musica being played in the square. Pretty neat!!! I ate lunch in a little restaurante where the menu was in Spanish and the waitress spoke nothing but Spanish. It was a pleasure ordering. When I would ask a question with all sorts of signs and gestures, she would explain it again in Spanish but this time with a little more emphasis. She was the cutest thing. She would smile and I would smile and I was going to get a surprise! It was kind of fun. For some strange way and reason she would come back and talk to me in Spanish and I would talk to her in English and we would both just laugh, neither really understanding the other but kind of communicating. Makes for an interesting experience non the less.
It has been the nicest of rest days with no hurry, no hassle and above all a siesta!
Day 13 - Nov 27
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Day 12 - Nov 26
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Day 11 - Nov 25
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Day 10 - Nov 24
Monday, November 23, 2015
Day 9 - Nov 23
We started out of Granada by taking a dirt road through the barrio. It was a sharp contrast to the town that I experienced yesterday. We road through the area where the locals lived. It was quite sad. Here are some pictures of their homes:
There were kids wandering around naked, dogs that were half starved lying along the road and insects flying about that were thick as fog. The houses were ramshackle and thrown together for the basic of shelter. Stagnant pools of slimy water perfect for mosquitos breeding were prevalent. There was an old woman who was laboriously dragging a bunch of wood through the dirt to use for cooking. It was a scene that painted a world much different from the other "city" we experienced.
Once we were out of the city section the road was dirt and sand with sections of deep mud because of the rains of the past day or so. It made for challenging but fun cycling. This is the part I will put in my favorite saying/life motto:
I put this quote in here to help explain or reason out the event that took place as a result of the challenging mud conditions. As I was moving through the dirt road area that had been transformed into a mud pit, there appeared a section of the road completely covered in muddy water. I tried to ride the fringe of the area to keep from going straight through the deep puddle. I road up on the high side where there was a small ridge of mud. As I was moving on the ridge it gave way sending my front tire out from under me. This sent the bike into the puddle and me flying. I hit a tree that's had been cut off catching a couple of the stub branches in the chest, thigh and hand. That in turn flipped me and landed flat on my back in a couple of inches of slimy red mud water. I laid there for a minute and took inventory. My first thought was, Michael your luck has run out...
My index finger was no longer pointing in a straight direction. My ribs were causing me a disconcerting amount of distress. And my thigh was doing a bit of complaining as well. My mental and subsequent physical inventory showed a dislocated finger, bruised but not broken ribs and a contusion to my thigh. So up I stood, popped the finger back in place righted the bike and proceeded on my way. I was operating under the guise of ... it is better to get things moving than to give the assaulted body parts time to stiffen and hurt. I know what you are thinking, I did check in with the medic when I got into lunch. He confirmed the ribs were not broken and finger function normal but swollen. So I was still able to ride and finish the day.