Siambretta – Fixing the Broken, Hurt, and Dieing

Picking Up The Papers
There is not a lot of time this morning, after fixing my flat tyre and following Sergio to his mechanics it was already past 10am, leaving us with a couple of hours for both paperwork and buying some tyres. This was not a lot of time.

First off we stopped at the Office of Infractions and Fines to get our list of fines to pay. We were told it would be ready today, so we joined the line and waited. It took about half an hour to get to the front where we were presented with a pleasant clerk who took our paper and returned with the required information. Sergio looked at the paper then turned to head out the door saying nothing. I wanted to know what was on it, so I tried looking over his shoulder but could not see enough. When I asked him, he said there was fines of $70 pesos, then broke out in a big smile. There was not one cent owing. Awesome.

The police station
Waiting at the police station for our numbers inspection.

Our next stop was the other side of central, and we weaved our way through the traffic and rough roads to arrive. I overshot the turn-off first time around and we had to go around the block, but finally we arrived at the police station. We were here to get the engine and frame numbers verified with the information held on the owner’s Title document. Everything went well and we received our document for this after paying yet another processing fee.

Replacing The Broken, Hurt, and Dieing
That was the end of our paperwork for the day, but by now it was moving well on from 11am and I still needed to buy some tyres to replace the worn ones on my bike. Returning once again to the other side of the centre, we locate the same old shop that I had visited on the Saturday. They had tyres but the price of these tyres was a lot higher than the $40 that I had been told about, so the first time I thought I would go elsewhere to get the cheaper tyres. There was no elsewhere, so I came back to get these, which turned out to be cheaper than the few other places that sold them.

While there it seemed wise to ask about some of the other parts that I knew my bike needed. It seemed important to fix the bike up a little so that it would at least be reliable for my intended journeys. So with a list of parts in my head, I started purchasing the important things that the bike had been desperately needing:

  • 2 new tyres for the road and 2 new tubes to go in them
  • New cables for the front brake, clutch, gear changer (2), and accelerator
  • Clutch plates, gasket and seals to install it
  • New kickstart and pinion because the other was welded together and had a really sharp edge
  • Fuel tap that had a reserve position and that did not leak

the pile of parts
The pile of parts.

It was not a huge amount of items to purchase, but by the time I was finished we had a large bag of items to try and drag home with us on the bike. Fortunately I had brought a big bag for just that purpose, and it managed to sit on the platform between my legs for the journey. By the time that we had finished purchasing all of these items the store was already closed up. A big board had been placed over the entry doors and the fan, our only source of cooling during these really hot days was switched off.

It was after 12.30pm and everything was now shut, so we headed back toward home for the siesta. On the way I stopped off to pick up my freshly washed clothes at the laundry service, adding that also to the pile of parts that I was already struggling to hang onto with my legs as we cruised along. When we got back, I dropped off Sergio and set to work on my bike. Now that I had the parts it was time to replace them.

Getting Greasy
The first change I made to my bike on my return was taking that bald front tyre off and heading back to my tyre man to put the new tyre and tube on it. It was a bit of a struggle and he needed some help to get the old tyre off the rims, but I returned with a very cool looking wheel which I then fitted to the front of my bike.

new tyre
Both tyres on the bike were replaced with these new ones.

Next up was changing the cables. Virtually every cable on the bike was broken, breaking, or bent, and it was amazing that they had all lasted for as long as they did. The cables that I purchased were good, but not great, and each one was much longer than it needed to be, requiring cutting down to the right lengths. Each cable replaced changed the feel of that item completely.

The accelerator suddenly felt a lot more responsive when I removed the extra spring that had been added to counteract the old sticking cable. The gears on their throttle-like spinning handgrip finally started to work in the correct position rather than having the clutch lever pointing up in the air most of the time. The clutch immediately felt a lot lighter even though it did not change its behaviour, and although the front brake never really improved the cable was now doing what it needed to do – it was inside that was causing the problem now.

working on the bike
Feeding a cable up the steering shaft.

Late in the afternoon, Lehman wandered over and asked me how things were going. I told him that he could help out if he wanted to, and before long he was carting the rear and spare wheels off to the tyre man to put the new tyre on. Since the back tyre was still good, I swapped that to the spare wheel, which was totally useless. On his return I had finished a lot of my cable work, so we fitted the wheels and he then put together some of the panels that I had removed in the repair process.

It was my intention to replace the clutch at the same time, but it was already late in the afternoon so I stopped at the cables and other little bits. The one thing that excited me the most was replacing the fuel tap. The new tap now in place has a notch that you can feel at each quarter turn. To turn it on is really easy now, and there is no mistakes possible. Not only that, but there is a reserve position too, which means that there is a little bit left when I run out that I can hopefully use to get to a service station.

more repairs
Working on the front cables in my “open” workshop.

With everything except the clutch now fitted to my bike, it was time to take it for a test run. But rather than head up and down the street, Lehman and I cleaned up and then climbed aboard and headed into town for dinner. It was a great way to celebrate having the new bits and pieces on my bike. I had finally fixed up all of the broken, hurt and dieing parts.

 

Reminders of Where I Am

It has been almost 2 years now that I have been living in Argentina and although life has changed a little from what it was in Australia and New Zealand, it is also very similar in many ways. Sometimes I simply forget where I am.

A friend of mine told of how they try to think of themselves and where they are on the map just to remind themselves of where they really are. Sometimes living in a place seems so normal and yet compared to where we came from it is very different indeed. I find myself in this situation at times.

a family on a motorbike
A complete family traveling on motorbike.

Living here in Argentina there is a lot to compare with home. After all, we have Internet, cell phones, and trucks and cars and bikes. Our bus transport here is better than pretty much anywhere else that I have visited in the world, and most products are available here. They may not be the latest or greatest and you may have to pay a premium price, but they are available.

So there are times when I wander down the street oblivious to where I really am. The clean streets on the newly formed pedestrian mall, lined by large chain stores with big plate glass windows displaying all of their wonderful goods keeps me lulled into thinking that not much has changed between where I was and where I now am.

The Reminders
But then I turn around and see two women dressed in rags, towing in a slow methodical march, a bicycle-wheeled home-made trailer filled with brooms and sporting a small child barely big enough to reach over the top of the two foot sides. They look neither to the left nor the right, but continue forward in their march, exhaustion lining their deeply marked and prematurely aged faces. And I remember where I am.

child in horse and cart
Children looking for paper and rubbish to collect.

Or while traveling on the bus a young child no more than 7 years old climbs aboard and starts handing out little cards with cute messages for lovers. They have no price, only that he would receive a donation if you want to keep them, something that would help to feed him and his many brothers and sisters back at home, wherever that may be. His forlorn face shows the wear of many years working already, even at such a tender age.

Or if I am at an outside restaurant, a small hand reaches up from the side of the table. It belongs to a child even younger still, begging for a coin or two that may be able to buy what he and his family need for the next meal. I can see his older sister working one of the other tables, trying to get around as many as they can before the waiters can “shoo” them away like unwanted animals.

The trucks and cars that pass by, so old and so worn as to hardly be able to keep going. The motorbikes filled up with 2 adults and their 3 children because their parents cannot afford a car. The bicycles that squeak and groan past, ladened with tools and timber, people and parcels, because they are the only transport available. The trucks filled with people in the back tray, trying to get as many as possible in the one journey.

bicycles carrying goods
Riders carrying what they need on their bikes.

These are just some of the reminders. They do not come every day, but they are there to remind me that where I am is very different to where I was. They remind me of the hurt and pain that still exists so strongly in this country, of the unhealed wounds that have found no medicine. They remind me that even though there are many things that are good and getting better in this country, there are many things that must still be addressed and confronted.

They remind me of Argentina, a beautiful country with a terrible past.

truck load of people
A truck loaded with workers heads back home.

grandma on the back of a bike
A grandmother traveling with her daughter.

crowded onto a truck
On the way to a meeting.

horse and cart vendor
Local horse and cart guy selling various goods.

really old car
A very old car still in use on the roads in the city.

 

Living in Puerto Madryn

Arriving in Puerto Madryn at 3pm in the afternoon, I was met by a team from the YWAM base who were expecting me. We climbed into the 4wd and took off out of the city to a place they call the “Quintas”, about 6kms out on the top of a small hill. Here is where the YWAM base is located, on a large section of land with many trees a number of buildings and the essential football field.


Playing football with all of the staff.

It was 6pm that I turned around and left, two weeks later. The base in Madryn has such a refreshing feeling to it that it was easy to stay longer than expected. The family atmosphere, the pleasant temperatures, the gentle breezes, the green trees that cover the property, and the games of football, volleyball and tejo all helped.

Tejo is a game a little like bowls, but played with flat round discs that you throw at the puck. The person with the closest disc gains a point for every disc closer than his opposition until a winner is declared at 15 points.


Playing Tejo under the trees.

Most of my time was spent in the base with the other 14 staff members there, although at times we headed down together to the beach to simply hang out for a couple of hours. Mike’s ute is very useful for this purpose, squeezing five or six inside, and the rest pile on the back for the ride down.

Being a protected port, there is no surf here, but rather the beach is part of a huge bay, and the sand slopes off gradually into the cold but not freezing water. On the beach we round up bunches of strangers and play a game of football (soccer) while others play tejo on the sand.


The beach of Puerto Madryn.

There are plenty of people on this beach, tourists and locals alike. After raining and being cold and overcast for much of the new year, the first good day of sun and warmth saw the beach packed to capacity with people. The following days, even though there were plenty of people around, it never seemed to be so busy again.

So after my relaxing time in the base of Madryn, I am now on the road again. A delayed bus from Puerto Madryn has left me late in Comodoro Rivadavia where I hope to catch the only bus for Chile that leaves at 7am in the morning.


The road through the Patagonia to Comodoro Rivadavia.

The office opens at 6am and since it is currently 3am I am undecided as to whether I should look around the city a little or head back and join the dozen or so other people sleeping on the floor of the terminal. Maybe I will be able to do both… there is still a little time left.

Time to look around.

The 24hr Barcaza Journey

The journey was not too far, but by boat it would take me 24hrs to arrive at the destination port. From there I had a further 6 hours on a bus to get to my next destination of Puerto Montt. As I was fast discovering, travel in the southern parts of Chile was not suited to tight schedules. The boat that I was now on only made this journey once each week.

the boat arriving
Watching the boat arrive in the early morning at the port of Cisnes.

boat anchored at port
The boat anchored at one of our last ports.

misty clouds over the water
Clouds of mist hugged the edges during the early morning.

Continue reading “The 24hr Barcaza Journey”

The Magic of Puerto Cisnes

A smallish fishing village situated in a protected cove of the Chilean archipelago and shadowed by a large mountain behind, Puerto Cisnes has a relaxed and casual ambience about it. The pebbly beach and scattered fishing boats in various states of repair all add to the atmosphere, as does the scent of fish hanging in the air.


Looking back on Puerto Cisnes from a boat in the harbour.


A fisherman and his dog in a boat stranded on the beach by the outgoing tide.

Walking along with the girls who had managed to find me as I was arriving on the bus, we pass dozens of old fishing boats. In some we see old weathered seamen busy working away on their vessels. Some are painting, others cleaning, while others have sections of their boats in pieces, and are repairing them.

Other “old salts” were standing around in pairs or in groups, with some leaning on their boats, engaged in various conversations. Most were puffing away on a pipe or some type of cigarette. Smoking in these parts is very common, and with the cold air the smoke lingered around the same area for a while in a translucent cloud, highlighting its source.


Some of the many boats gathered in the tidal creek.

After following the road that hugs the beach for a while, a sandless beach filled instead with various styles and sizes of rocks and pebbles, we turn to head uphill and into the housing section. Only two blocks later we arrive at our destination, the home of a lady that I only ever addressed as “Pastor.” This is where I will be sleeping while in Puerto Cisnes. For now it is only us, the rest of the team are not yet here, as they were still in the Internet Cyber shop where they discovered that I was arriving less than half an hour ago.


The far end of the road that hugs the beach is also the road into Puerto Cisnes.

The House
This house, tired and old from the outside, is also tired and old on the inside. But it feels like home. My bed rests on the upper floor of this steep roofed house, and my feet almost touch the sloping ceiling. Holes line the area around my feet, the thin paper-board ceiling not having the strength to withstand so much touching. The laddered stairs leading to the living areas below, has old and worn, rounded steps that make the journey slippery and dangerous without maintaining concentration and a firm grip on the handrails. There are no bedrooms downstairs, so all who stay for the night become acquainted with the dangers.

Downstairs, there is carpet on the floor that is looking a little tired, but it warms the feet nicely in this cool summer climate. A fireplace in the lounge room provides a good amount of heating for the house downstairs and although it also heats upstairs for a short while too, the heat escapes through the thin ceilings. Broken tiles arrayed around the base of the heater indicate the layout of the original tiles they had come from. Nobody seems to notice their broken state even when standing on them. After all, they still serve their function.

In the morning I discovered the shower. Freezing cold ice water poured out of the shower head. There was no possibility for hot water in this shower. It did not exist. As I stood under it, I felt chilled to my bones. This sort of treatment could only be accepted during the mild days of summer. During winter it would become unbearable. The only way for a warm wash is to boil some water and mix it in a bucket.


The Pastor’s house located behind the church.

But even with all of its defects, the house oozes a comfort and peace throughout. From the moment I entered I was able to fully relax and be natural in that place. The girls tell me that many houses in Chile look tired and old on the outside, but when you enter they are mansions. This house was an exception to that rule. However it was warmer than many places much richer.

The Pastor
The lady whom I knew only as “Pastor,” became a pastor of the local church after moving to Puerto Cisnes with her husband many years ago. During the early years here, her husband was the pastor in this small fishing based port town, but he died suddenly, leaving her and their three very young daughters.

The church rules stated that the wife of a pastor could continue his work should he die in the middle of his pastoring term. The choice lies with the lady as to whether she does this or not. This lady chose to continue the pastorate. It was not a very easy choice for her, but she did not realise that at the time.

Being a pastor’s wife does not mean that you understand the workings of the church or how to even run one. In fact she had taken little notice of the details, assuming that her husband would always be around to take care of them. He wasn’t, and in the midst of her grieving she took up the role of trying to pastor the thriving church.


The beauty of Puerto Cisnes.

For many people a female pastor is hard to take, and there was a great deal of resistance from both inside and outside the church to her leading. She also found the role much tougher than she ever thought it would be. Confiding in me, she said that if she had known before how hard it would have been then she never would have chosen to do it. The number of people in the church reduced dramatically during those early times. Eventually it reduced to the faithful few who chose to remain.

Over the hard years she has seen both the church and her daughters grow. Now one of her daughters is married and another one is just about to leave home. She will be going to university in one of the bigger cities in the north. Within a few months from now only one of her three daughters will still be at home.

In this family, money is scarce. There is no man to earn money for the household, and the money from the church only supplies part of what is needed. So to make up the difference, this tough yet gracious lady goes out and works in a house every day. Her task of cleaning and cooking for the children there, acting as both nanny and maid, supplies her with a small but adequate earnings each week. Enough that the family can live adequately with their basic needs catered for. Luxuries still have to wait.

The Beach
As the sun slowly headed for the horizon, I slipped out of the house to take some photos of the sunset. With a beach full of fishing boats it seemed the perfect opportunity to capture the orange rays of the fading sun. So armed with camera and tripod, I wandered down the two blocks to the road along the shore and slipped down the embankment to the beach.


Two boats near the creek ready to leave on the next high tide.

A tidal beach with a gentle slope that shows a great deal of land at low tide and virtually none at high tide, it was filled with fishing boats of all sizes and states of repair. Decaying boat frames, large boats and row boats, smaller fishing boats, and power boats all in various colours of orange, red, yellow, green, blue and more. They were scattered all along the length of this wide beach. Some boats, normally floating and anchored, had been left to sit high and dry while the tide waned low.

The beach had no sand, but little rocks and dark coloured, rounded pebbles covered its surface. Negotiating this surface was much easier with shoes than barefoot, as I discovered earlier on. There were some patches along the length of the beach that consisted of something resembling coarse sand or ground shells, but these patches were few and far between and quite restricted in their size.


The nearest thing to sand was next to the tidal creek.

Just beyond the beach, anchored in the tranquil waters of the picturesque harbour, a great many boats of various sizes, shapes and colours rested quietly. Long thick anchor ropes ran out from trees down along the rocky beach surface reaching deep out into the harbour to the boat they secured. At one of these trees stood a cow, covered in coils of rope all over its head. It gave me a bewildered look as if to ask why it would be hanging out at a tree on a beach amongst fishing boats. I joined it in its confusion.


Looking out over the bay from one of the trees on the beach.

As the sun crept lower to hug the horizon and began to create a blazing red sky that reached across the water, I busily took as many photos as possible. It was a beautiful end to the day with deep orange reflections off the water looking over dark silhouettes of boats and an occasional bird wading past in elegant obliviousness to the beauty of their surroundings.


Some birds searching for their evening meal.

A Day with the Team
My plans were that I would arrive in Puerto Cisnes in time to spend some good time with the team there from YWAM Puerto Madryn in Argentina. It didn’t work out that way in the end. With all of the bus connections, and missing my bus connection to Puerto Cisnes the same day I arrived in Chile, then by the time I arrived at Puerto Cisnes, the team had already arranged to move on to another port town a couple of hours north.

The only thing was, true to the transport style of southern Chile, there was only one bus leaving for the small town that the team was heading for each week. And it left the next day. So it ended up all of my travels that we had just under one complete day together. Fortunately I had arranged with the lady Pastor to stay one extra night before I too could depart. My transport was to be a boat heading north.


The bridge where the girls found me.

So the next day we all bought our tickets and then decided that it would be cool to go exploring the local creek. This is the one that travels under the bridge where the girls met me only yesterday. One of our group had seen a trail leading off down the side of the creek the other day and wanted to explore along it to see where it would lead us. We all agreed it would be a bit of fun.

This trail was wide and easy at first but quickly turned narrow and overgrown. Being adventurers we all pressed onward. At one point the trail split with one path leading upward. After first exploring this one we came to an open field leading onto people’s houses. Wrong way. We returned back to our original pathway and took the low route.


Some fishing boats a long way upstream in the creek.

The further we went on this path the more wild it became. At one point it was filled with water, requiring careful stepping along the edges to keep our boots dry. Then it was like a rainforest, and filled with beautiful ferns and mosses. All of this eventually gave way to rocks… rocks that turned out to be a reinforcing wall along the edge of the stream that we were following. This then suddenly became a dead-end, with thicket and brush too thick to continue onward. So we went back.

Not all the way however. Just to the point where we could climb down from this rock wall on which we were standing, and get alongside the creek. From here we selected a place that seemed reasonable for a crossing and, still with the desire for adventure coursing through our veins, we removed our boots and stepped into the freezing cold water.


After I had crossed, it was time for the others.

It was so cold that by the time I reached the other side of the stream, my bones were aching. Somewhere during the crossing I had managed to wet a part of my jeans even though they were rolled up pretty high. Now that I was across, it was time for the others to take their chances. We moved the bags over first, then each one removed their boots and rolled up their jeans.

Girls are generally at a disadvantage in these sorts of things compared to guys because they are often shorter. The water levels of a creek are not discriminatory, and one slip will wet even the most carefully prepared. I guess that is why the two girls ended up with such wet jeans. Although there were no major slips, their jeans were wet from the knees down.

It was only once we had started crossing that one of the girls looked upstream to discover to her horror that only two hundred metres further upstream there was a bridge. Here she was, standing knee deep in super freezing cold water, and a bridge was only moments away. By then however it was too late. She was committed to the crossing.


The bridge only meters from where we crossed over.

Afterwards we all headed up to the bridge to admire its sturdy construction and to ponder on how useful it would have been had we found it before attempting our river crossing. I was not convinced however, since in looking for an adventure and not finding it in the trail, I at least felt as though I had found a little one in the river crossing. I was content.

On My Own Again
By the time we returned back to the house, it was time for the team to pack up and head off on their bus. I followed them down to the bus point and waved them goodbye, then returned to the house once again. There was nobody present when I returned, so I headed up to the Internet and waited for a machine. With only one small Internet place, it was often busy and there was a waiting time.


The team from Puerto Madryn heads for their bus.


Everyone squeezed into the small bus, with some old lady enjoying the photo opportunity.

After returning from the Internet, I was let into the house and started chatting with those present. After a while I headed back out to take some more sunset photos of the beach. It was my last night in this beautiful and very interesting small town. Dinner was ready later on, so I sat down with the family to enjoy the extensive range of foods available on the table.

It was during dinner that I heard the story of this amazing lady Pastor and her daughters. The one who wants to study will be choosing nursing if she can get into university. At the small local school, she had not been able to get the entry grades that she needed to enter university, so this first year away is a year of study and pre-entry exams. This will get her the papers and results that she needs to continue with her dream of nursing.

After a lot of chatting, and with our dinner already starting at a typically late hour, it quickly ran past midnight and was time to head to bed. This was the last time that I would see this family. In the morning I rose early and was out the door to reach my boat before it left. I should have heeded the advice I was given.

I had been advised that the boat was always late and that it was not such an issue to get there early. However, being the first time that I had even seen a boat enter the harbour, I wanted to be sure I made it there and did not miss it.


Boarding the boat in the morning.

Well, I certainly made it. The boat was one hour late and then waited in harbour for one and a half hours while they loaded vehicles. Then a truck drove on and they unloaded all of its timber onto the decks one plank at a time.


The truck and the timber that was unloaded for over an hour.

There had been plenty of time to have been able to say goodbye. I was sorry that I had missed that opportunity. Now I was moving on and had no idea if I would ever return here again. I did leave a note however, and was very glad that I did. It said thank you.

Now my boat adventure was about to begin. I was on my way north, travelling once again. How I love to travel.

More photos of Puerto Cisnes


As the sun reached lower it broke through the clouds with this display.


Looking at the sun over a small stream of water flowing onto the beach.


The gentle waves of boats in the harbour.


Watching the sky through a puddle of water on the beach.


Boats waiting quietly in the early morning.


A quiet morning over Puerto Cisnes.

New Year’s Eve 2006

New Year’s Eve in Puerto Madryn, Argentina was a joy. After a family dinner together with the staff of the YWAM base there, we all waited for the key indicator that it was New Year… countless fireworks sounding off from the distant city.

You see, where the base is located is a number of kilometres from the actual city of Puerto Madryn. Situated on a hill, we were able to wander over, past the limited collection of houses in this area, and get a clear view of the city and the range of fireworks that continued to explode above it.

watching fireworks in Madryn
Standing on the hill watching the fireworks.

After more than 20 minutes of watching, the fireworks still showed no sign of slowing down. Eventually we all started heading back to the base where some fell into bed and others continued with the festivities of the night.

I fell into bed.

Coyhaique to Puerto Cisnes

On arriving in Coyhaique, I was expecting to catch a bus straight onward to Puerto Cisnes. Unfortunately my bus was late and I missed the connection. Unbeknownst to me there was another bus that I may have been able to catch too, but after heading into town to search for some money that bus had also left. I was now stuck in town until the next day.


The township of Coyhaique, Chile.

As I moved through Chile, I started to discover that the state of transport in the South was really designed for the casual traveller. Most things only departed once per day (or twice at most), and for many destinations it was only once or twice per week.

Another area that I was still unfamiliar was in the Chilean peso and the exchange rate. I had neglected to look at the change-over from Argentine pesos and so was trying to take a rough guess based on hearsay. During this period of ignorance, I manage to purchase an icecream for almost $6 pesos Argentino (worth about $3 pesos there), and spend thousands of Chilean pesos. It was only in arriving in Puerto Cisnes that I gained a true appreciation for how expensive Chile really is.

Before moving around too much more, I went searching for a bed. Not wanting something too expensive, the first place I tried looked like a pub with some rooms out the back. It was somewhat better than this, but the price seemed acceptable and I moved in straight away. The accommodation section was separate to the pub, and while I was there the only people in the pub were the owner and his mates, playing cards and using rocks for their bets. It reminded me of some old English pub with the men seated around the table, smoking and drinking beer and chatting as they played their card games.


The Pub/B&B that I stayed in at Coyhaique.

After a night in Coyhaique and a super cold shower (a product of not turning on the gas heater just outside the bathroom door), I headed out for the morning to look over the town. Every shop is shut and people are few and far between. It seems a little strange to me, but because it is a Sunday I figure that this is what Chile is like on these days. After all, it was my first time in Chile for quite a while and I was still reasonably unfamiliar with the place.

It turns out that today was Election day and it is illegal for there to be any public gathering anywhere. So even the churches were closed up. I never learned about this until later. Instead I wandered around the town taking photos of anything interesting. Unfortuately, except for the huge rock mountain that overlooks the township. there was not much else to see. So after wandering around for a while, I slowly worked my way back to the bus station where I jump into the front passenger’s seat for the four hour journey.

The Bus Journey
The driver was a Christian who lived in Puerto Cisnes, and when he found out that I loved photography and was also a Christian, he offered me the normally reserved position in the front seat. Not only this, but he also stopped at various places along the way so that I could get a good photo, slowing down every time that I wanted to take a shot. Due to mainly to the rain, it was hard to take good photos during the journey.


One of many waterfalls along the roadside.

The drive took us through rainforest running down into wide snow-fed streams, so clear that you could see the bottom rocks. Our road hugged the edge of mountains and hills as we wound our way along the edge of these amazing streams of crystal clear water. From one valley up over a ridge and down into another we went. Half of the journey on sealed roads and the rest on dirt.

As we wound our way onward, everything I saw reminded me of New Zealand. The road hugging the rivers, the rainforest scrambling down the slopes to meet the river, the incredible green, the constant rain, the breath-taking beauty. It was amazing.


Winding alongside the rivers.

After passing rivers, lakes, forests, mountains, and farms, we finally start winding our way along a large lake until we can finally see a small town lying ahead of us. We had made it to Port Cisnes. The late sun carressed the large lake with a glistening beauty and illuminated the township with a yellow tinge. It was 8pm and there were still a couple of hours of daylight left to the day. Now that I had arrived however, I had another challenge ahead of me.


A farmhouse that reminded me of New Zealand.

Finding the Team
The town of Puerto Cisnes was a lot larger than I had first expected. This meant that the Puerto Madryn Outreach Team could be anywhere. It looked like it was going to be a bit of searching to find them. I let out a short prayer that God would at least let me see one of them walking along the road or something so we would be able to catch up.

There is no bus terminal in Puerto Cisnes, so our bus driver was dropping people off at their doors. This meant that we were zig zagging all over town. I figured that this would be good as it would give me more of an idea of where to start looking for the others. But then as we crossed over an old wooden bridge two girls jumped out in front of the bus, waving and shouting. It was the team.


The two girls waiting on the left side of the bridge. Only their heads are visible over the railing.

Well, it was two of the girls from the team. They had all gone to the Internet and only just received my email telling them that I was heading their way. So these two girls volunteered to come down and try and find me. If I had been in the back I don’t know if they would have been so enthusiastic in stopping the bus. However I was in the process of taking a photo, sitting in the front seat, and wearing my YWAM North T-Shirt. I guess I could not have made it any easier for the girls to recognise me.

So it was on the bridge that I got off, having finally made it to meet up with the Outreach team.

Other photos of the journey…

Gauchos (cowboys) riding along the road near a small town.


Cattle farm about half way along the journey.


Many cycle tourists travel through this area during summer.


Our dirt road, filled with potholes, hugged the river tightly for a long time.


Passing over another ridge on the sealed section of road.

Is There A Seat Available Sir? (Heading for Chile)

The bus from Puerto Madryn was late. One hour late in fact. By the time we arrived in Comodoro Rivadavia, it was already well past midnight. It was from here that I would be taking my next bus over to Chile. After a wander around town to see what it was like, I returned to the bus station, found a patch of floor, and settled in for a few hours of fitful sleep.


The long road through the pampa from Puerto Madryn to Comodoro Rivadavia.

Sometime before 5am, the volume of noise was so much that I could not sleep, and it seemed futile to lie on the floor and just pretend. So after getting up and going through all the morning routines I could manage in the public eye of the bus station, I found myself waiting around another hour before the ticket office opened for my bus.

Assessing the Situation
As I waited a lot of people gathered around this booth. I started to become worried that there would not be a seat for me with all of these people waiting to buy a ticket here too. It was around 5.30am that suddenly everyone disappeared. They all literally walked out the door. I stood there alone next to the ticket booth, thankful that I now had a better chance at getting a seat. Then I started to wonder why almost twenty people simply walked out the door… and where they disappeared to? Then I began to worry that perhaps they knew something that I didn’t.


Others also sleeping out by the bus terminal.

So after slipping out the door, I found a large crowd of people standing around a bus heading to Chile. Being a little confused I pushed my way through the multitudes and found the driver. After a couple of questions he told me clearly that the bus was totally filled and there was no room for anybody else. He also mentioned that if I had not purchased a ticket then it was impossible that I would get on his bus. This worried me quite a lot – would there be a seat for me on the next bus due in only one hour if all of these people had pre-purchased their tickets?

Actually, I was not expecting that there would be two buses heading to Chile. The only information given to me was that there was one bus that left twice a week. Incredibly, I had decided on a whim to leave Puerto Madryn on the very day that would get me here for one of the bi-weekly buses. But now I needed a seat, and the more I saw and heard the more impossible it seemed that I would get a seat.

Is There A Seat Available Sir?
It seemed futile to wait around at this bus when I still did not have a ticket, so I headed back into the bus terminal for the ticket booth. To my surprise the lights had been turned on and there was somebody inside, even though it was still 20 minutes before their scheduled opening. But shockingly, a man was now standing at the ticket window, waiting to purchase a ticket. I was in a mild state of panic. If by some miraculous chance there was going to be a seat it would probably be only one or two, and that man may secure the very last one.

Stopping in front of the only other ticket window for this booth, I stared at the only person in the booth as he was working away in the back office. The moment he stood up and looked our way, I shot out a question to him, “Sir, is there a seat available for the 7am bus to Chile?” Then I waited.

He looked at me for a moment and then said, “no,” so definitely that my heart sank towards my shoes. Here I was stuck in some town for at least half a week before there was any chance of getting to Chile. I did not know what to do. My mind started to race with all of the possibilities that may exist to try and get me to Chile a little earlier. Hitching, walking, buses via other routes, or bus-hitch combinations all started flooding my mind.


Some of the hundreds of oil pumps in the pampas of Argentina.

Are You Absolutely Sure?
In the middle of all of my scheeming and planning came a very clear thought, “There is a seat for you on this bus.” With the thought also came a certainty that I really would have a seat on this bus even though it contradicted everything I was thinking and that I had seen and heard. So because of the certainty welling up in me I leaned over the counter and looked directly at the man once more, asking, “Are you absolutely certain that there are no seats left on this bus?”

My confidence shook him for a moment, and he replied that he would check on the computer, just to be sure. I waited patiently as he started up the computers and logged into the system that would tell him. While he was waiting for the computers to start, he attended the other man who had been at the other window. The man who I saw only moments before as competition for whatever slim chance there would have been to secure a seat. Now I was not so concerned, as I felt completely certain that I would have a seat. Even with this certainty inside me, my head was still worrying about him, but to my relief, he only wanted a ticket to another place and for another day. There would be no conflicts with him now.


Our sealed road turned into a dirt one as we got further from civilization.

After finally being able to check the computer, the office clerk looked up with a somewhat quizzical face. “How many seats did you want?” He asked me, to which I replied, “Just one.” He shook his head as he told me that there was only one seat available. I was as thrilled as he was surprised, and gladly recieved my ticket. I was going to Chile after all.

The Icing on the Cake
It was only the night before that I had shot off a couple of prayers that God would find me a seat on this bus, and that He would also make it a window seat so I could take photos. Now that I had my ticket in my hand I was so thankful that I could even be on the bus that it never occurred to me to ask where I was seated. Being the last seat, I was expecting that it would be right up the back of the bus on the aisle next to the toilet. It wasn’t.

Climbing into the bus after most had already boarded, I started looking at the seat numbers and was really surprised to see that my seat was located in the second front row. This was wonderful, but to put the icing on the cake I discovered that my seat was also the window seat. Now I could take my photos too. It was all just so unlikely.

Some people would say that it was luck, or even coincidence that all this happened, and maybe they are right. I prefer to think that God really is involved in the details of my life. In any case, I had a great journey to Chile and enjoyed every moment of it. Below are some of the photos of my journey…


An old patagonian farm house.


The Argentine – Chilean Border.


Our dirt road continued in through Chile.


Reaching the mountains turned the brown lands into a lush green pasture.


Winding our way down into the valley of Coyhaique, Chile. My destination.

Turning Tables into Workstations

Ever since I arrived in the YWAM base in Ituzaingo, I have enjoyed the use of these wonderful outdoor tables for everything from chatting with friends and eating lunch to working with my computer using the wireless Internet that you can access from there.


There are five of these awesome tables here.

One of the things that became very obvious to me quickly was during the National Conferences where everyone was crowded around the tables with their laptops, all plugged into the few outlets that were available to them for power. Most had extension leads and power-boards and there were always people that had to give up because of an exhausted battery and no place to plug-in.

So it seemed to me that the best thing we could do was sort this problem out and fix up the tables with lights for night time and power outlets for computers, chargers, CD-Players and what-nots that people want to use them for. With this in mind, we set to work and came up with this result.


Nico and Ramon preparing the gear to put on the tables.


The finished product, with one light and two power outlets.