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Monday, August 25Location: SantarΘm, Parß, Brazil Today's weather: 28░C. Today was my first day in SantarΘm. I woke up at about 5:30am, still onboard the riverboat which had arrived at the dock several hours before. I carefully stowed my things back into my backpack, then struggled with the knots in the ties that were holding up the ends of my hammock. Eventually they came loose – allowing me to take the hammock down then spread it out on the deck so that I could roll it back up and hitch it into the straps on the back of my backpack. Most of the other passengers had already left, so this made my task a whole lot easier since I wasn't constricted by space or constantly bumping into other passengers. Finally, I hauled up my heavy backpack and eased the straps over my shoulders. My knees almost buckling under the weight. I staggered to the front of the boat and up the small gangplank onto the docks. I blinked in the strong sunlight beaming down on me as soon as I got off the boat. I walked from the docks to the gates, where I was let out by a smiling security guard. Politely refusing the offers of taxi drivers, I walked across to the bus stop and
settled in a comfortable position sitting on the curb beside the dusty road. This was my
second time in SantarΘm, and I knew that there would soon be a bus to take me to take me
into the centre of SantarΘm where I would be able to find a hotel, have a shower, change
of clothes, and shake off the effects of river travel. Although still only 6 o'clock in
the morning, it was already hot. Sitting next to me was a dock workers, aged about 50 with
olive skin that had gone dark and leathery from years of working in the hot sun. He was
also waiting for the bus, probably keen to get home after having worked a night shift.
Fortunately he was in a happy mood, and was a little curious about me – a lone
foreign stranger dwarfed by an enormous backpack. We soon attracted the attention of a stranger who hopped out the passenger side of a VW
combi van that was passing by on the road opposite us. He was thin, with thick curly black
hair, and an olive complexion. He was unshaven with the looks of a gypsy or lost circus
performer. He was dressed in a dark shirt, colourful loose-fitting cotton trousers with
ties around the waist and ankles, and old leather sandals. What drew my attention most of
all were the remains of a cheap plastic watch tied with colourful cloth around his ankle.
I instinctively took a tighter hold of my bags as the stranger approached closer. He
wasn't threatening, but he looked so strange. I honestly didn't know what to expect. I
exchanged glances with the dock worker, who just raised his eye-brows and grinned.
Eventually the stranger stood in front of us and knelt down. I climbed the steps at the back of the bus, waving goodbye to the stranger, then squeezing through the turnstile with my backpack. I grabbed a seat near the front of the bus – taking my backpack off as I sat down. The driver gunned the motor, and the bus took off with a sudden lurch. Moments later, we turned into the unpaved backstreets of the town where we bounced over rough bumps and splashed through muddy puddles. The driver then slowed down, and we crawled along at a snail's pace while he fiddled with a radio mounted on the dashboard, glancing up every thirty seconds to check that we weren't about to hit anything. The scene outside the bus windows was mostly a series of run-down old shacks, mixed in with a few newer houses. The new houses had paved areas out front, separated from the road by wrought-iron fences. Along the sides of the road were people walking or riding on bicycles. The bus made several stops where passengers got on or off. The driver yelled and waved to people through the side window. They yelled and waved back – with everyone seeming to know him. The bus then stopped, while a second bus pulled up alongside. The two drivers yelled out to each other, with our own bus driver saying things in a very dramatic voice. I couldn't understand the conversation since it was all in Portuguese – but, moments later, we were all being herded out the doorway and onto the second bus. The second bus took us the rest of the way into town, while the first bus remained behind in the middle of the street. As the bus got into the middle of SantarΘm, I anxiously watched out the window looking for familiar landmarks. Having accidentally left my guidebook behind in a taxi in Manaus, I was now on my own without maps or a list of places to stay. Finally I saw a place that looked about right. I got off the bus and trekked off in the direction in which I remembered the waterfront. All around me, the markets were beginning to open – shop assistants were raising rollerdoors, hosing the narrow sidewalk, and arranging displays. Before long, I was standing in front of the Hotel Alvorada where I had stayed on my first visit to SantarΘm. The hotel is in a run-down old building close to the waterfront. There's a camera shop below, while the hotel is upstairs and accessed via a doorway off the street which leads up an old wooden staircase. The hotel isn't fancy, but its about as clean as you can expect for a cheap hotel on the Amazon, and oozes character. The people who run the hotel are nice, and the guests are generally pretty friendly (and certainly interesting). Being close to the waterfront, there are plenty of interesting happenings nearby. Marco? Reception. Room. First day in SantarΘm. Wandered about the town. Arrival at hotel. Small room, with a musty smell, R$10 per night. Visit to the tourist office for information about the town and region. Photocopied notes. Offered help at the museum. The people were very friendly. White-faced monkey sitting in a tree in someone's backyard Lunch at Gaby's churrascuro. First night sleeping. Difficult to sleep in the heat. Cowboy next door loudly playing Brazilian country & western music. |