Showing posts with label Brazil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brazil. Show all posts

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Back to traveling in Brazil

Well I think it’s been awhile since the last time I wrote but I think it’s time to add a little bit more. I’m still living
my life half in Brazil and half-time in the United States traveling around Brazil when I can and of course in the U.S. as well. it is July of 2018 and that means it’s winter and I am in Brazil. Louise and I have invited our friends Marly and Eda to join us on a trip to the state of Minas Gerais the southern part of Brazil. Eda takes the bus from minados luiz’s Hometown which is about 4 and 1/2 hours away and
arrives at 2 in the morning for us to leave early Saturday morning. we load the car with all our stuff and head up to pick up Marly on the way out of town. It’s a beautiful sunny day as we begin our travels heading towards Uberlandia. A pretty
uneventful travel day through the cerrado filled countryside. There was one highlight in the day as we were looking for a place to have lunch we turned off the main road into a small town. “Tapuirama” The streets of the small town had flags hanging from side to side and we knew that there was a festival going on. It was a little
late for lunch but we stopped and asked directions to the local restaurant. After driving by a couple times we realized it was closed because of the festival. A couple of people had mentioned there’s a small place that serves Marnamix which is a common traditional place where you can pick up lunch and take it to go.
We head down the road and spot a small sign on the opening of the fence, the only thing to identify the house and invite us to come in. What a pleasant surprise.

The aroma of fresh home cooked rice, chicken and beans fill the small kitchen.
The family of the house seem excited to have us and invite us to eat on the veranda so we did not have to take our food and go. 
The lunch is great and although the conversation is Portuguese I understand most of it. We load back up and continue our journey as we have a little further to go Araxa – our first night stop. Araxa is a city of about 95000 people in the state of Minas gerais. It is named after a local native tribe that live there when it was first discovered buy European settlers and means: place from where the sun is first seen. I can only imagine there are incredible views of the sunrise somewhere. 
We arrive mid afternoon and head to the central part of the city to find a hotel. On a boulevard with a newly designed island green space we find the perfect hotel and check in. Not long after we have our things secure and we are on our way, off to look around the grounds of the Grande Hotel Araxa.
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Built in 1944 as a casino by local politicians, the grande hotel is a luxury hotel which has hosted many important regional parties since it was built. Today the hotel has some age, but continues to be a destination for families and parties in the area.  It stands with a large garden and pond in the back and unfortunately a large parking lot in front. We spend some time looking around, walking and exploring both inside the hotel and the grounds out back.  It is truly nice to be out of the car and enjoying the cool afternoon breeze.  Our adventures take us down a winding trail to a small overlook where a bougainvillea is currently displaying its purple beauty wrapped around a gazebo overlook where one can gaze on the pond below.  Behind the gazebo like overlook is a small building which houses a natural spring.  Actually not very eventful as one can get a taste of this natural refreshment but the building is plain and nothing really to see.  There is a second floor but since the bougainvillea is so beautiful it is hard to believe there is anything more worth a visit.  We enjoy our walk and soon it is time to head back to the hotel, eat some dinner and get some rest. There is a museum (Dona Bejos)  we would like to see but it is currently under renovations so we decide to head out in the morning.
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Sunday, September 11, 2016

Eco - Tourism - part 2




 With our guide Sergio in the car and the rest of the day to explore, we head out of Lencois on the same roads we drove into the quaint little town on. We enter Park National da Chapada Diamantina  heading towards our first destination and soon the roads become partially paved and then gravel surrounded by beautiful landscape filled with rock formations, mesas and gorgeous vegetation.  Not sure if the tour guide brought us the most direct way  but we really do not care as we arrive at Enchanted Well ready to explore.   A small welcome center with friendly Brazilians greet us as we find the last spot in the shade to park out car.  We prepare to hike into the cavern just a few meters away.  We put on our hard hats equipped with headlights and set off following our fearless 
img_2398guide.  Into the cave we descent enjoying the beautiful natural wallpaper covering the rocks around.  We come to the Enchanted Well which is a giant sunken pool 120 feet deep with water so clear you see the rocks and other items at the bottom of it.  When the sun is just right,  light coming through the crevices reflects on the water giving it a blue tint.   A delicate ecosystem strives way down here so far below the surface.  Our time is spent enjoying the quiet hidden away treasure and soon we turn back and return to our car up above.  I have to say the hike down was much easier then the return up the winding steps, but I guess that is what one would expect. 

img_2430Our time cave exploring is over and after a quick snack it is on to our next destination.  Down the dirt roads once again,  through color full little towns with their historic churches we travel.   We end up in Mucuge Bahia which is the location of our next stop.  On the edge of town in front of the "great wall" (a grand embankment) sits Cemetery Santa Izabel.  Filled with  Byzantine style tombs all stark white standing gloriously against today's blue sky.  These artistic tributes to those who have gone before us are primarily from the early 19th img_2436century when outbreaks of cholera and smallpox came to the town and prompted the citizens to bury their dead  outside the city limits.  As we stroll through the tombstones,  it is easy to identify which years the epidemics were more devastating as the number of deaths are higher.   If you have not already figured,  I find cemeteries to be calm, quiet and full of great art.  The Gothic style tributes of this cemetery do not disappoint me as they are truly an adventure in itself with detail surprises throughout.   We spend a little over an hour exploring all these ancient creations. 




img_2477It is a couple of kilometers from Mucuge and that is where we head next to enjoy lunch at a local restaurant on the corner of the town square.  After lunch,  we do a little exploring of the small town and get some great photos.  Settle by Portuguese immigrants in the late eighteenth century,  traces of indigenous occupation prior to the present day inhabitants have been discovered in recent years.  It is one of the oldest settlements in the region filled with outstanding characteristics and img_2479
historic colonial mansions of Portuguese style.   A thriving community of the Brazilian diamond rush era,  its population hit approximately thirty thousand  and was an important commercial center in the nineteenth century.   Diamonds were discovered in the caves around the city which created it as noteworthy city worldwide and it is said that it had and embassy of France within its city walls.    (thanks Wikipedia)  
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img_2512Soon it is time to leave Mucuge and to head to our final stop for the day the "musue vivo do Garimpo (Living Museum of Garimpo).  It is a short drive and soon we arrive at the museum on the banks of the Mucugê Creek where the first diamonds were found in Bahia according to legend.  Hike the short trail to a nice history center filled with artifacts of the diamond era and local traditions.    Diamond cutting tools, 
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measuring scales, mining tools, and typical clothing of the time are just a few of the artifacts displayed.  After our time in the museum we head outside and hike along the creek where the water is red from the minerals.  The creek is full of small waterfalls and surrounded by the same amazing landscape and greenery we have enjoyed throughout this reagion.  The falls remind me of Sioux Falls although there the rocks are red, not
the water.  It is getting l=to be late afternoon so we head back to Lencois for a good night sleep as tomorrow is another travel day onto Salvador.  This area would definitely be an part of Brazil I would visit again to see more of the amazing waterfalls, caves, and other natural wonders still left unexplored by me.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Scenic Sunday June 2015 - Goiania Brazil

I apologize as it has been a while since I last blogged but as usual life has gotten in the way. I found myself in downtown Goiania and realized it has been a while so I decided to do a little film of downtown Goiania for you to see.  Hope you enjoy.. I will try and do more filming around the city and share.

Friday, January 30, 2015

Eco Tourism Part 1

So, we wake up in Seabra, have breakfast at the little hotel,  and we are on the road by 8:00.  Down the same tree lines road with pot holes and oversize trucks to maneuver.  As we drive along we get our first views of Chapada Diamantina National Park which our destination Lencious sit on the edge of.  A beautiful park approximately 15,000 square miles in size filled with natural beauty just waiting to explore.. OK... time to learn... Chapada means "a region of steep cliffs" in Brazilian Portuguese and soon we begin to see these cliffs  with plateaus above as we drive down into the valleys. Unfortunately on our journey we did not encounter any Diamantina which refers to diamonds found here in the mid 19th century.  
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Around 8:30 we stop at an abandoned gas station next to Pai Inácio Hill.  1150 meters above sea level this massive rock structure protrudes high above the  forest-covered valley.  Folklore says it is named for Inacio,  a slave who fell in love with a might colonel's wife.  When the colonel found out about this love,  he contracted hit men to dispose of Inacio and they ended up chasing him through the forest until he was trapped on top of this rock formation.  Instead of coming down and being killed,  Inacio decided to jump using his lovers umbrella to pass by the hit men.  People say he was seen running through the valley after his great leap but he never came back for his love.  Well,  on today's journey we do not see Inacio, but we do see a peace bus parked at the
abandoned gas station and its inhabitants walking around enjoying the day.  They are traveling through Brazil and invite us to take photos,  We ask them about hiking up the Pai Inacio Hill and they inform us we just missed the driveway leading to the path going to top.  After a few photos of the landscape with and without the bus.  We hop back into the car and retrace our journey the 1/3 mile to the dirt path with a local vendor setting up shop at the point where it connects with the asphalt.  We don't get far up the little dirt road and we come to a closed gate.  The sign states the path is closed until 9:00 which is actually just right around the corner.  Do we wait or do we head out.  I guess the view above is simply spectacular, but
when we ask the vendor about details,  he states that you never know when they will come to unlock the gates.. It could be 9 or it could be 11,  you just never know.  We decide there are other things to see so we move on passing the idle bus once again.  In hind site, I wish we would have waited around a while.  I have seen photos of the view from the top and I think the day would have been perfect for a climb.  It is however, one of those things that cannot be changed now and I have added it to my must do next time list for this area.     

We arrive in Lencois (with an accent under the c and above the o . Len-soys..) and lodging is our first venture of the day, but before I write about this I will learn a little about this city of approximately 10,000 residence.  Referred to as the gateway to the Chapada Diamantina because of its location it was once known as the Capital of Diamonds.  As you can guess, this region was settled after the discovery of diamonds in the area.  People flocked to this small mining town in search of fortune.  Once a wealthy area,  the economy was stagnant for many years as the diamond boom ended and the soil around was not very rich.  Fortunately over the last several years,  eco-tourism has brought this area alive again as many visitors from all over the world come to explore the amazing waterfalls,  long winding trails, deep canyons, crystal blue water pools and complex of limestone caves.  Well,  back to our journey.  It seems when we travel we do not make advanced reservations and end up sleeping where we can find room. In Lencois we travel up the cobblestone streets where it dead ends into the Hotel de Lencois  We stop to take a look and
although we think it is not in our budget we decide to ask anyway.  As we wait for assistance I have to admit that I am hopeful it is something we can manage.  A beautiful pool, courtyard and dining area seem to complete the hotel overlooking the town.  To our surprise we hear about a wonderful eco room (ceiling fan - no air conditioning) which would fit the budget, but before we are able to book, they needs to see if the current guest who is supposed to check out today will be staying additional time or not.  It may be a while so we take the opportunity to look at a couple more hotels and then venture back as we find nothing else to our liking.   Excited about the possible room we make our way back only to be disappointed as the current guest has decided to stay.  Back on our quest,  we travel back down to the main market area where we saw a guide post for tours early and decide to stop.  Luiz inquires about cost and ends up booking a guide for the day.   His name is Sergio and he will join us for the day. Although we are still searching for our hotel he squeezes into the car and informs us he knows a good hotel.  Down the bumpy streets we drive and soon we turn onto a narrow car lined street.  Ok, the hotel is not quite as nice as the one we had found but the price is good and we are anxious to get the rest of our day going so we unload our bags and set out for an adventure under the direction of Sergio...
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Tour Guide Sergio
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Peace bus - Brazil
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Ants made of rocks.. Hotel of our dream!
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Old City Hall - Lencois Bahia
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Inside the dream hotel..
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