Post-Liminaries

What we ended up actually doing…

As you can see… we made one or two little deviations from the original plan. The most major of these was a trip to the US of A to check out graduate schools (Nick’s mission) and just check things out and relax (my mission). Aside from that, and the skipping of Colombia, I actually managed to stick fairly close to the original plan… and I even managed to go further south than I thought I would. Below is a grid showing the schedule of where I was and when…

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
11 January

Mexico City

12

Mexico City

13

Mexico City

14

Guanajuato

15

Guanajuato

16

Guanajuato

17

Guanajuato

18

Guanajuato

19

Guanajuato

20

Guanajuato

21

Guanajuato

22

Guanajuato

23

Guanajuato

24

Guanajuato

25

Guanajuato

26

Guanajuato

27

Guanajuato

28

Guanajuato

29

Guanajuato

30

Guanajuato

31

Guanajuato

1 February

Guanajuato

2

Guanajuato

3

Puerto Vallarta

4

Puerto Vallarta

5

Puerto Vallarta

6

Guanajuato

7

Guanajuato

8

Guanajuato

9

Guanajuato

10

Guanajuato

11

Mexico City

12

Mexico City

13

Mexico City

14

Mexico City

15

Mexico City

16

Oaxaca

17

Oaxaca

18

Oaxaca

19

Palenque

20

Merida

21

Merida

22

Merida

23

Merida

24

Cancun

25

Havana

26

Havana

27

Havana

28

Havana

1 March

Cinfuegos

2

Trinidad

3

Trinidad

4

Trinidad

5

Vinales

6

Vinales

7

Havana

8

Caracas

9

Caracas

10

Puerto Ordaz

11

Puerto Ordaz

12

Canaima

13

Los Angeles

14

Los Angeles

15

San Francisco

16

San Francisco

17

San Francisco

18

San Francisco

19

San Francisco

20

Boston

21

Boston

22

Boston

23

Boston

24

Boston

25

Boston

26

New York

27

New York

28

New York

29

New York

30

New York

31

Boston

1 April

Boston

2

Quito

3

Quito

4

Quito

5

Quito

6

Lima

7

Lima

8

Lima

9

Cusco

10

Cusco

11

Cusco

12

Cusco

13

Cusco

14

Salkantay

15

Salkantay

16

Salkantay

17

Machu Picchu

18

Cusco

19

Puno

20

Copacabana

21

Copacabana

22

La Paz

23

La Paz

24

La Paz

25

La Paz

26

Uyuni

27

Uyuni

28

Uyuni

29

Potosi

30

Cochabamba

1 May

Asuncion

2

Asuncion

3

Asuncion

4

Foz do Iguazu

5

Foz do Iguazu

6

Sao Paulo

7

Sao Paulo

8

Sao Paulo

9

Rio de Janiero

10

Rio de Janiero

11

Rio de Janiero

12

Rio de Janiero

13

Sao Paulo

14

Montevideo

15

Montevideo

16

Buenos Aires

17

Buenos Aires

18

Buenos Aires

19

Buenos Aires

20

Ushuaia

21

Ushuaia

22

Ushuaia

23

Ushuaia

24

Calafate

25

Calafate

26

Calafate

27

Bariloche

28

Bariloche

29

Bariloche

30

Bariloche

31

Lanin

1 June

Puerto Montt

2

Puerto Montt

3

Puerto Montt

4

Coyhaique

5

Coyhaique

6

Valparaiso

7

Valparaiso

8

Santiago

9

Santiago

10

Santiago

11

Somewhere

12

Melbourne

…and a pie chart showing the various percentages of transport taken. The numbers indicate the amount of time spent on each mode of transportation in hours. Yes, I spent 228.5 hours on buses and 83 hours on planes. This isn’t even counting time spent in transit lounges and waiting around in bus stations.

Those buses… it would be difficult to choose a “worst movie” that I saw on those buses. There were many which were so bad that I simply tuned out and went to sleep (even if it was in the middle of the day), which makes it difficult to compare. Terminator 3 was laughably bad, mostly because of the sharp and witty dialogue that the governor of California got to deliver. The best movie was easily “El Senor de los Anillos” (The Lord of the Rings), which they showed on my bus ride from Ushuaia to Calafate. Border crossings were interesting… aside from the bribe-for-a-visa disaster on my way into Paraguay, everything went rather smoothly. In fact, the land borders especially were very relaxed. On may 4th, I accumulated 7 stamps – exit Paraguay, enter Brazil, exit Brazil, enter Argentina, exit Argentina, enter Brazil, exit Brazil, enter Argentina. This would have been much simpler if they had just built another bridge at the three borders area between Paraguay and Argentina (at the moment, you have to go through Brazil to travel between the two). There were also many border crossings between Argentina and Chile because bus routes through Patagonia often straddled the border because sometimes those were the only roads which linked certain towns to each other. Most of the car travel was done in Cuba, where we rented a car… and my boat ride from Colonia del Sacramento, Uruguay to Buenos Aires, Argentina was my sole major boat trip.

Getting Back (12/6/07)

20 hours, 10 time zones, 5 months… we look surprisingly well-rested

Luckily, Santiago de Chile is not actually as far from Melbourne as Mexico City is… at least not by the “civil aviation metric”. The flight from Santiago, Chile to Auckland is a mere13 hours, and the time from Auckland to Melbourne is only 4 hours. Adding transit time… the total travel time is only 20 hours. Our plane from Auckland to Melbourne got delayed because engine 2 was overheated or something. I also got my toothpaste confiscated… damn. I guess my plans for taking over the world with an almost-empty container of toothpaste will have to be put on hold for the time being. Unsurprisingly, I was held up in Australian Customs because I was asian. Just because I wasn’t surprised doesn’t mean that I was not also livid about it. I eventually got through customs who, after thoroughly searching my bags, determined that I wasn’t as dodgy as the colour of my skin apparently suggests. Getting home was very pleasant indeed and when I went out for lunch later that day, I caught myself saying “gracias” to everyone and stopped just short of starting my order with “quiero comer…”

I can’t quite believe that 5 months is over… blink and you’ll miss it. When we left, we spoke almost no Spanish and had no idea what we were going to be doing next year. Now we speak some Spanish (although Nick’s is head and shoulders above mine… just like… his head and… shoulders) and have definite plans for further education in the USA. Not only have I learned a great deal about the many countries I visited and people I met along the way, I think I learned much about myself as well. I hope people who have been following this journal can make it to the little homecoming gathering, it should be good.

..oh and PLEASE don’t ask me “so Daniel, what was the best thing you saw in South America?”, because that is way too hard a question…

Miscellaneous Stuff

Front Pages

Those who have followed danielyeow.com from the beginning will know that it has undergone three major facelifts since its launch in January 2004. The most recent one was inspired by a belated attempt at an April fool’s joke which was carried out on a whim and completed in four hours while I was sitting around in a hotel in Lima, Peru. Of course, I had a dilemma regarding a suitable front page image. It was to represent the “main story” of my life at the time, which of course, was my travelling. I thought I’d include an inspirational quote and a nice panoramic photo of some sort. They are included below for your amusement. Click on the images for the full-size versions.

The skyline is, of course, New York. It would be more readily recognizable if the twin towers of the World Trade Centre were still there… but anyway. The quote and the image don’t really have that much to do with each other.

After a while, I thought that maybe I could use an image that linked with the quote in some way. When I came across these railway tracks in the middle of nowhere just south of the Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia, this quote from Robert Frost immediately came to mind.

The wonderful landscapes of the Costa Verde, south of Rio de Janiero, inspired this photo. It is a quote that I’ve always liked and one which I paraphrased in this little speech that I wrote to inspire my “troops” prior to the first “Stand Up For Your Rights” comedy night in Melbourne.

The mere thought of climbing the volcano Lanin made this quote pop into my head. I originally intended to take a nice panoramic shot from the summit (the view of the Andes range is supposed to be spectacular from the top), but alas, I never saw the top… not even from a distance, due to some rather awful weather. This photo was taken just after we got off the mountain and I realised that visibility had improved enough to take a photo.

Desktop Backgrounds

The wealth of great landscape shots from this trip gave rise to some desktop background for my laptop. Click on the images for full-size versions (1366 x 768 pixels, which is, funnily enough, the resolution of my laptop’s screen). If you would like one of these for yourself, email me your desktop resolution and I’ll do one up for you.

Canaima National Park, taken from the air. There was actually a bit of photoshop work done to this to remove bits of aeroplane from the corners. Impressed?

The Chaco in Paraguay, just outside Asuncion. The sun was setting, my 50 hour bus adventure was starting to kill me and I could barely hold my camera steady because the quality of the road was questionable. This is a bit of a freak shot in that it came out so clearly…

The mighty Iguazu Falls from the Argentine side. The image is nice, but the main reason it is included is because it reminds me of the few days after I learned of my admission to Columbia University when I was in a sickeningly good mood.

The famous Copacabana beach in Rio de Janiero, Brazil. 10 second exposure demonstrates the quality of the Canon CMOS sensor especially in regard to low-light photography. Didn’t actually work that well as a desktop background because of the dark bits which made the text under the icons difficult to read.

Another freak shot which just grabbed me while I was reviewing my photos from the day. You can’t tell, but I’m lying on the roof of a boat in the Costa Verde, south of Rio.

My first sunrise at the end of the world. Ushuaia provided a wealth of opportunities for brilliant landscape shots. Again, due to its darkness, it didn’t work very well as a background.

Near Ushuaia, lake Fagnano. It was so cold that I almost couldn’t be bothered taking my gloves off to operate my camera. I’m glad that I did. I am so pleased with this photo that I am considering entering it into photography competitions.

I just don’t learn do I? Didn’t work as a desktop background at all… but it is a wonderful shot. 30 second exposure at about 5 in the morning.

8am at the park ranger “base camp” near the base of Lanin, the volcano that beat me. I guess this is what the whole “red sky in morning, shepherd’s warning” this is all about. (The rhyme goes something like – red sky at night, shepherd’s delight, red sky in morning, global warming)

Playing with my circular polarizing filter, I managed this freak shot out the window on the drive back from Lanin. The p-filter is just wonderful, it makes any picture that includes a bit of sky look brilliant.

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