Ski week under the volcano
SHERWOOD KIRALY
When I first heard of “ski week,” the February school break, I was
scandalized, and launched into one of my when-I-was-a-boy-in-Illinois
speeches, saying that from Jan. 3 to Easter I got just one day off
from school, by God, and that day was spent shoveling the driveway.
Now I’m used to it, and ski week seems as sensible as the All-Star
break.
This year we spent it in Ecuador.
The rationale for the trip was to visit Patti Jo’s nephew Jeremy,
who is marrying a girl from neighboring Colombia, but Patti Jo and
her mother Carol don’t need a reason; they are globe-trotters, eager
to experience life in out-of-the-way places. Our daughter Katie came
to interpret, and I was invited along on the
every-party-needs-a-pooper principle. I like it here in Laguna. I’m
satisfied here. My cries echo down the canyon whenever we leave town.
Ecuador is a topographically beautiful, mountainous, equatorial,
volcanic country featuring centuries-old cathedrals, indigenous
handicrafts and a national dish of guinea pig, served whole, head and
claws attached. Apparently it tastes like chicken. I say “apparently”
because I have yet to try it face-to-face.
When we asked one of our guides why this dish was presented
complete, he explained that for awhile it had been served cut up, but
some restaurants had
cheated and dished up rat instead. In Quito, the capital, we
mostly ate fish, which was quite good.
From Quito we went into the country, to a hacienda that formerly
belonged to Spanish aristocrats. It’s near Otavalo, set in a valley
between volcanoes, about 8,000 feet up. Getting there requires a trip
on a mountain road with hairpin turns and crawling trucks -- your
driver gambles on passing before the next oncoming vehicle comes
around the curve. Katie could read the various
“DANGER” signs but didn’t translate them, sensing we already had
the idea.
One day Patti Jo and Carol went further into the country to visit
indigenous potters, weavers and woodcutters, experiences so
emotionally powerful that
Patti Jo found herself near tears. Katie and I played ping-pong
and shot pool in the hacienda’s game room, which doesn’t sound
Ecuadorean, but we don’t do it at
home. We had a mother-father-daughter horseback ride another day,
under the volcano called Imbabura.
There was no TV, a deprivation for me, but of course we ended up
talking to each other more; I reminisced about shows I’d seen back
when I had TV.
The Saturday market in Otavalo is a kind of Ecuadorean Sawdust
Festival with hand-woven blankets, rugs, tablecloths, hats, native
paintings in the naive
style, and wood carvings. It truly was impressive, and the
bargaining was friendly. Our next driver gambled and won, making it
back to Quito on the mountain
road; I only screamed once.
On Sunday we flew to Miami, then to LAX, with a large, handsome,
hand-carved turtle as a carry-on. Monday I drove carefully to Ralph’s
and got some
headless, clawless chicken. Home.
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