Thursday, December 17, 2009

160 Square Feet of Fun and Opportunity....

Dec.  15, 2009

Tired and burnt from the prior days work, we woke up with hopes of completing the Bouldering Wall.  Unfortunately the wind had left us in a calm of sweltering sun rays, and an ever so slight stench that would periodically make its way over the bordering walls.  It's quite wild to look around at the wall's that encompass this Guarderia (Grade School), double rows of razor wire, leaving one to wonder what we have done to make the outside world create such a prison assimilated atmosphere for our children to grow up in and develop.

We were making great progress on the wall by the time we decided to escape from the sun for awhile and reenergize.  All the plywood sheets were up and we had started adding the holds.  It was during lunch that an amazing experience presented itself.  The family of which my parents have sponsored their daughter showed up to see us.  I looked out the door to see two little kids running towards us with arms open and smiles that seemed to extend past the cheeks on their face.  

Katy, Jeffrey, Sixta, and Padre (who's name I was unable to remember) all showed up to meet our family together for the first time.  Katy, a seven year old sweetheart greeted us with a big hug and a kiss on the cheek.  The family was really excited to see what we were working on and we quickly made our way to the new object looming out toward the back of the enclose property.  The fact that this family made the time to see us was amazing in itself, a day away from the garbage dump for the dad could cost them some much needed quetzales.  It was amazing to see how they responded to the Bouldering Wall, as soon as they came around to the side with the climbing holds they were off the ground before we could even tell them what it was.  A fascination gleamed from their eyes as they inspected all the colorful holds.  Jeffrey, a very energetic outgoing little boy, soon realized the theory behind the wall and was putting up holds faster than I could keep track of.  He would point out where he thought a hold would be good, then I would make a suggestion, leading to him assuring me that his idea was better, pretty awesome little eight year old considering all that he has already gone through in his short life.

We played with the kids until it was time for us to try and get back to work, which by that time we had soaked in our daily value of sun and were slowing down at an exponential rate.  We decided to leave the rest of the work for day three.  Allowing for more time to put up a protective covering system that will guard the wall from the 5 month long rainy season they have down here.

What a great day...

Dec. 16, 2009

We slept-in this wednesday in correspondence to the amount of work that remained on the Bouldering Wall.  We thought that we would need about, well 2 hours or so in order to finish up the projects final touches.  We were in Zone 3 by 1:40pm and still had to go buy some wood and locate a few gadgets here or there.  We did not take into account of corse that nothing really happens in a timely fashion down here.  By the time we were ready to start working we had about an hour before or ride out of the capital was supposed to leave....

Finishing only a few minutes after our pre-set departure time, we packed up our gear and headed to our transport.  Only to find that we were the only ones at the vehicle.  Everyone that had wanted to leave had moved to the climbing wall and were having a blast trying this activity for the first time in their lives.  They originally had mentioned that the wall was too easy, you know, not tall enough, but then I showed them the routes, and that Bouldering focuses more on traversing as opposed to just going up.  They then tried some of the taped routes that I had set, resulting in lots of laughter, and a few individuals rolling around the ground after failed attempts. This light atmosphere resulted in the complete disregard for time, and we were invited to play in a quick match of football (soccer).  Playing four on four we struggled around the field in jeans and flip flops, sweating from the unaccustomed heat.  Everyone smiling, laughing and just having a great time.  Something that really struck me as amazing when I would look around at the poverty that surrounded me.  But this light hearted 15 minute match of football is all that is needed to sometimes lift the spirits, life is all about balance.  A balance of work, play, love, laughter, friends, family, faith, and so much more.  Down here they seem to find a way to make things balance, something that will leave a lasting influence on my life, and something that everyone should strive to find, to find their own personal balance...

-I would like to thank my family for making this a possibility you are amazing and I love you.
Also an enormous thank you to Camino Seguro, and everyone who has ever donated their time to work with this wonderful organization.  This organization is proof that an individual really can make a difference in the world, and help the lives of so many people who risked getting lost in the shadows.





Day 2, one sheet to go,
and 100 more holds to put up.













Jeffrey showing me the proper placement
and form of putting up a hold :)
















Katy... inspirational little girl.
Summer dress, pink slippers, 
and ready to take on the world...
















The Fam in front of the finished wall












What we can only hope will help in the
development of so many children to come...











Wednesday, December 16, 2009

El Basurero, Zone 3, Guatemala City



It's hard to see but there is close to 100 Guajeros in this photo.  











December 14, 2009.

To our luck the wind is up, blowing the overwhelming smell of rotting trash, burning rubber, and methane gas over our heads, all of which is coming from the largest garbage dump in Central America. El Basurero, Zona 3, La ciudad de Guatemala. The city dump consumes over 40 acres in the middle of Guatemala's capital city, and is constantly moving due to the displacement of land and trash by the river that flows out the bottom of the dump. Around the dump thousands of "Guajeros" (those who live off the dump) can be found in their well organized squatter communities. These Guajeros, remove more than 1,000,000 pounds of recyclables and random trash daily, prolonging the life of the dump, and sustaining their families from the money they earn selling the recyclables back to individual vendors. Though, for a day in the dump, where they are exposed to medical waste, methane gases, and trash landslides, and many more hazards, they make around 40 quetzales, or 4 to 5 USD, hard to fathom.

We, My family and I, are down here working with the organization, Camino Seguro (Safe Passage). This organization, founded by the late Hanley Denning, provides opportunities through education to not only the children of the Guajeros but also the parents. The kids have a safe atmosphere in which they can focus away from the hardships of everyday life, and develop confidence through art, reading, writing, and sports. Also the children are provided with proper nutrition, medical care, and are deloused weekly, all these opportunities never existed for the prior generations. The Women's Literacy Program, is helping the mothers in learning to read and write, and now due to a spiked interested a Men's Literacy Program has started that includes 6 fathers.

Our project down here is to build a Bouldering Wall at the Guarderia, located just over 100 yards from the city dump, and amidst the overwhelming community of squatters. The Bouldering Wall will be part of their sports program, allowing for leadership skills to be developed. It is a two sided wall, allowing for multiple uses, on one side we have climbing, but the other can be used for art projects, or even as a scoreboard for their multipurpose sports field located right next to our Bouldering Wall. I really believe that climbing is a means by which so many important life skills can be taught, practiced, and learned. These kids will now be exposed to a sport that kindles personal development. They will see that failure is common, but only a temporary setback, and through practice and hard work, what once they may not have been able to do, they will be able to climb up with ease. Each route set will provide goals for these kids to work towards, with each day they spend working on these goals they will be able to see their personal improvement, and how sometimes it may take an uncountable number of tries in order to reach a goal, but that the goal is always possible.

What we are doing down here is truly minor on the scale of what has been done before us. But I hope that this wall will have an effect on the lives of maybe even just a few of the kids down here, allowing for them to open their eyes up to greater ambitions and opportunities, which are so often overshadowed by the hardships of everyday life....






Our Site Location...

















A little love tap from the sis, while working on the plywood boards.











First sheet up, 6 hours in, day 1.

















End of day one, Finally escaping from the sun behind what is to be the Bouldering Wall!!

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Semester over and another adventure begins...


















Well, I am sitting here in an effort to try and study for my upcoming french philosophy exam, and I realize it has been months since I last wrote... what better time than now to catch up on the past semester. After getting back to Angers, I immediately hooked up with the French Alpine Club, which just so happens to have a great training center in Angers, hmm, how nice.  I have spent the last semester planing my studies around my climbing trips, like any good student should do.  I have had the chance to experience many great climbing areas, some of those being: Angles, Manis, La Gorge du Verdon, Les Calanques, Fontainebleau, and other random sites throughout my travels.  But most of all I have meet some amazing people who share a passion that is recognized across language barriers, religion, and race, that passion being climbing.  As always where you find climbers, you find good people, and I know that this is quite a large generalization, but I'm willing to make it.  There are always those token few rotten eggs that put off a bad odor, but you can't let them ruin your omelet (lame connection to my french philo studies).  Anyway, The following are a few photos from the areas I have been climbing in over the past three months... enjoy..

Oh yes, my next adventure starts friday.  Biking across France (and/maybe/also Switzerland and Italy) from crag to crag in search of climbing, and an experience that will be remembered for a lifetime.  I meet up with my good friend David this coming friday in Geneva, from where we will be taking off saturday on bike to Chamonix.  We'll meet up with his girlfriend there, spend a few days climbing amongst some absolutely gorgeous scenery and then head on toward where ever it is we feel like climbing next, as long as it's within a reasonable distance, that being within a few hundred miles.  We have no set plans for after Chamonix, so I will try and post more often so those who wish to, can follow our adventures.  It's going to be a wild month, and as for now it's back to french philosophy... was it Descartes who said "Je grimpe donc je suis"(I climb therefore I am), ;)



















La Gorge du Verdon, one of the most inspiring areas I have climbed at.







Never a dull moment in the Verdon, throw the rappel, all three, or four of them (double rope) and then hope you climb out before the rain hits...





























Les Calanques, a great place to climb during the winter, as long as the winds not up.






















The bouldering Mecca of France... Fontainebleau... mmm, how I miss the skin I left there...

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Chamonix, just one more run....

Well It's been just over a month since I first rolled into Angers on good ol Doreen.  I took advantage of the week I had remaining before my classes started and headed to Chamonix, France, to get some turns in on the telemarks.  Out of Paris one can hop on a night train and be in Chamonix early the next day with just one small connection transfer train to get up into the valley.  Arriving in Chamonix and stepping off the train I felt immediately back a home.  That is to say, among the mountains.Where I was studying in Spain, Segovia, was right next to a small mountain range but the city itself was completely disconnected from anything that goes on in the higher elevations.  Unlike Chamonix where life is based around the mountains and what the extended weather forecast is bringing for those waiting eagerly to go play in some fresh powder.  I settled into the youth hostel located just outside of town, and prepared for some solid days of telemarking.Day one was absolutely amazing, I was riding on some G3 Rapid Transits, which treated me well.  There was a low hanging cloud-line in the valley making every lift ride beautiful as one broke through the upper layer revealing the peaks surrounding Mt. Blanc.  I got a little carried away the first day and could not stop skiing.  I made the mistake of skiing until my legs no longer worked, an error I would quickly come to regret.  I was able to get a second full day in of skiing before totally killing my quads.  I didn't take into account that I had just finished with a three week bike ride, making my muscles accustomed to slow twitch performance, and then three days later ripping turns in the Alps, the exact opposite of what my body was accustomed to.  What resulted was a severe stretch of my quadriceps tendons, leaving me almost unable to walk by the third day, and a week recovery before I would get any-sort of flexibility back in my legs.  I was amongst some of the best lines in the world, but I was benched, just observing, and imagining what I was missing.  I wasn't to torn up over the fact that I had to sit back and relax in Alps, I mean, If you have to just chill and recover for a while why not surround your self with jagged mountains, and hanging glaciers?  The mountain air refreshed my spirits and I headed back to Angers renewed and ready for the upcoming semester.




Looking out over the glaciated entrance to the Vallee Blanche... 2,800 meters of vert over 17km on the skis!!!













Cloud cover over the valley.















Argentiere Glacier
















Another aspect of the Argentiere Glacier.

Friday, January 30, 2009

The final leg, Bordeaux to Angers!

Angers!





The ten day forecast called for: Two days partly cloudy, One day heavy rain, One day thunderstorms, Four days rain, Two days rain with strong wind.  As you could imagine I was syked to be about to bike through all of it.  The one good thing coming from the storm front was that it was coming from the west creating a south, southwest wind that would aid me along the way. 

Day 14: Bordeaux to Mirambeau (74km)

 It was Saturday the 17th, and as I sat in the breakfast area of the little hotel in Bordeaux sipping on my coffee, contemplating the weather forecast, I decided to ask the owner what he thought of it all.  “Today, it won’t rain today,” responding in a way that would make a non-believer believe, not even showing a sign of doubt in what he said.  I listened to what he said as I watched the live feed images of the storm front hitting the western coast of France, and all I could do is hope he was right.  Finishing my coffee I slowly loaded up my bike and made my way out the front door.  As I had found in Barcelona, the hardest part of such a bike tour is biking out of a large city.  An hour and a half later, and many wrong turns, I was finally on my way out of the city.  Once out of the city the coast was clear, though the always-present storm clouds were looming off to the west.  As they got closer and closer I rolled the hotel owners words over and over in my head, it won’t rain to day I said to myself, trying to give myself some sort of reassurance. About two hours in I took a turn slightly to the east and it was as though I had sprouted wings, picking up the full force of the southwest winds.  This wind that I did not calculate into my time travel cut so much time off that days biking, that it actually put me in Mirambeau three hours before my accommodation was even open.  As I sat reading under the shelter of an awning, with the light sprinkle of rain coming down, I reminisced the words of the hotel owner, and was happy that his forecast was more accurate than the one presented from the use of millions of dollars of equipment.

 Day 15:  Mirambeau to Saintes (45km)

Day two of part three of my trip would set the precedence for all the days to follow…. Waking up to the sound of rain.  As I opened my eyes I heard a refreshing sound, as drops of rain broke against the window.  Then I thought, well, not so refreshing knowing that I will be biking through this all day long.  It was a short leg that day, so I looked at it as a good chance to test out the new biking rain poncho I had bought in Bordeaux.  To my surprise the rain only lasted for an hour or so and then turned to scattered clouds and light winds, not bad considering the consistency of the rain I had awoken to.  I rolled into Saintes, a small historical town, early, around 1:30pm or so, leaving me once again to wait outside for the youth hostel to open up at 6pm.  While I was waiting, I experienced an absolute torrential downpour, five minutes of nothing but rain as an over loaded cloud passed by.  I was happy when 6pm rolled around and I could unload into the shelter of the hostel room.  I set out my equipment to air out and then checked to forecast for the 19th… Heavy rain, Strong wind…

Day 16:  Saintes to Niort (70km)

 I woke up on the 19th and to my surprise I heard nothing, it was absolutely calm, no rain against the window, no wind battering against the side of the building.  I immediately jumped out of bed and rechecked the weather forecast for the day.  The forecast had not changed, but as I looked out the window I could make out patches in the clouds where the sun was trying to break through.  The night before I had decided I would spend an extra day in Saintes to wait for the weather to blow by, but looking at the promising conditions out my window I decided to load up and hit the road.  I knew my weather window was small, and that I would have to really peddle hard in order to try and beat the oncoming storm.  I made it almost 30km before the first set of rain clouds finally ran me down.  Due to the fact that the clouds were mainly moving from west to east, I thought I could get out in front of them, just to the north, but as luck would have it, the wind changed coming from a more southern direction pushing them right on top of me.  Day three was a full day of come and go rain clouds, which all in all was not as bad as what I thought I was in for.

 Day 17:  Niort to Bressuire (62km)

 Another day of morning rain and scattered clouds.  The ride was not hard, but I definitely noticed the slow decline in strength that was creeping up on me.  The rain, wind, and January temperatures were slowly getting the best of my body and wearing me down, bit by bit.  Once in Bressuire I was only two days from my goal, and was starting to see that all so glorious light at the end of the tunnel.

 Day 18:  Bressuire to  Doue-la-Fountaine (46km)

 I woke up to believe that I was in for yet another day of constant drizzle and wind, but to prove me wrong the weather took a turn for the better.  As I got up I could see that it was raining outside, but by the time I had my bike loaded and was on the road the rain had passed and the sky’s had open up.  I could not believe it but it was actually warm enough to ride in just my winter biking bib and a long sleeve jersey, absolutely incredible.  I knew I did not have far to bike so I slowed down my pace and soaked in the incredible sunny winter conditions I was experiencing.  I rolled into Doue-la-Fountaine nice and relaxed after such an enjoyable day on the saddle.

 Day 19:  Doue-la-Fountaine to Angers! Last day (40km)

The date was January 22nd, the final day of my first solo bike tour, and winter bike tour to boot.  Needless to say I was ready to bike in whatever conditions I woke up to.  Due to such glorious weather the day before, I think Mother Nature wanted to have one last go at me, so she threw a day of rain my way for me to finish off my voyage.  At this point the rain was no bother, it did make navigating a bit difficult due to the fact that I had to keep stopping to clear the lenses on my glasses, and I did get lost for just a short bit on the outskirts of Angers.  But, as I rolled into Angers stopping at the cities entrance sign, an overwhelming sense of accomplishment overcame me.  There I was, alone, after traveling over 1,000km solo on bike, and I could not help but shout with joy.  I was not shouting anything in particular, or to anyone, and I’m sure all the people around looked at me as though I were crazy, but I had to release all the emotion I had inside, and all I could do was shout out with enjoyment.  Barcelona, Spain, to Angers, France, I had done it.  It has been an experience that I will remember for the rest of my life.  Along the way I have met many wonderful and interesting people, whose stories I shall not forget, nor the kindness that they have shown me.

 Thank you to all those who have supported me throughout this trip, your words of encouragement not only helped me along my way, but fueled my heart and soul.






Praying to the weather gods.







Two days to go...








Outside a chateau in Bressuire.


 



Gotta love it when the sun comes out.  The second to last day of the tour, just outside of Doue-la-Fountaine.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Wind, Fog, Rain and Snow, gotta love biking in January.

(Carcassonne freshly dusted with snow)

I am currently writing from a small little hotel located in the heart of Bordeaux, France.  It is day eleven of my journey and I have met many charismatic people and experienced the extremes of Frances January weather.  The following are just a few accounts from the last week or so...

Day 4:  Narbonne to Carcassonne (56km) January 7th

I started out the morning with the traditional nervousness I attain while suiting up for the ride.  I got a feel for the temperature when I went from one building to the next in order to grab a bite to eat before hitting the road.  The woman who served me breakfast asked in french, "are you the one with the bike?" and I responded "yes," to this I received a mixed look of pity, hope, disbelief, and are you crazy.  She went on to tell me what I already knew, "you know its really cold to be biking, and the wind is really strong today?"  I knew, but at this point I was hoping that I could just crank out the low kilometer count of only 56.  She wished me luck and we said our goodbyes.  In the first ten kilometers I knew I would be in for a full day.  The wind was a direct headwind and a strong one at that.  I made it an hour before having to add layers due to the wind chill, which at 10am was actually not that bad, I would say -5 or so.  I was concerned when the wind started picking up and I still had a good 40 kilometers to go.  Yes an hour and a half in and I had only achieved 16 kilometers, not bad considering what I was about to experience.  I made it to a small little town, Lezignan-Corbieres, where I decided to buy a little lunch to try and re-energize, at this point I still had hope of making it to Carcassonne.  Outside the little shop I ran into another biker who was obviously content to see me out in the weather conditions.  We engaged in conversation for a bit and he filled me with encouragement, the always happy cyclist outlook.  He also was the first person to mention "Le Canal," which I will bring up later. Well an hour after departing my friend, I was face to face with a constant wind of 25 to 30km/hr with gusts up to 50km/hour, I know these numbers due to the fact that I did a little research later.  The gusts were so strong that at various points along the way I would be on the shoulder and instantaneously be pushed to the center of the lane doing my best to regain control of the 100 plus pounds that I was peddling.  At one point I remember going down a hill and the wind actually was strong enough to bring me to a dead stop.  The back breaker was when a gust almost threw me into a 5 foot deep ditch! that was it, I had it, I got off the saddle and decided it was to dangerous to try and keep biking, it would be better to just walk the bike.  I was still 26km away from Carcassonne at this point, a little set back, and also very impressed with the power of mother nature, she definitely made her presence known.  About one kilometer into my now trek, I was coming up to a crossroad, and that's when I saw the old silver station wagon with a trailer!  I started to run my bike as fast as I could toward the cross road hoping to catch the drivers attention. Coming up upon the car I found an older French woman sitting in her front seat referencing me with a look of bewilderment.  "est-ce que vous etes fou?" (are you crazy?) were the first words out of her mouth.  All I could do is replay "yes," and somehow try and work a ride out of the ordeal.  She finally broke and said I could try and figure out a way to get my bike on her trailer.  She was a very wonderful person, offering me some fresh tea she had made before going out that day.  By all the random parts and gadgets scattered around the interior of her car, as well as the mixture of fresh soil and farm utilities, I would guess she was a old time farm girl.  She never warmed up to me completely, which could be due partly to my physical appearance, sometimes not widely accepted.  But she, my savior, drove me the remaining 25km to Carcassonne, where she left me at a down town city bus stop, gave me a package of crackers and sent me off on my way.  I would go on to find that the hostel I wanted to stay at was closed, finally finding a place to stay I settled down for the night. That night brought a fresh coating of snow, and needless to say I decided to take a rest day.  I would later find out that January 7th brought some of the worst storms that parts of southern France had seen in two decades, so I do not feel to bad for catching a ride.  

Days 5 through 7: Carcassonne to Toulouse

Due to Snow and ice conditions I decided that it would be safer to take the train from Carcassonne to Toulouse, only a days loss of riding.  I would go on to spend two days resting in Toulouse.

Day 8:  Toulouse to Castelsarrasin (58.2km)

After the storm on the 7th, I was a little hesitant to get back on the saddle.  Thinking on it later, riding alone in the middle of winter without the means of camping can be a bit of a dangerous endeavor.  But the eighth day of my journey rolled around, the 11th of January, and it was back on the saddle.  The day was not to cold, and best of all, no wind.  A low fog had settled in and insulated the region I would be riding in.  I will take fog over wind any day, though I do miss the scenery, it turns a would be amazingly gorgeous ride into more of a grueling crank it out, geat'r done stage, before everything gets soaked.

Day 9:  Castelsarrasin to Agen (50km)

At this point I decided that smaller distances would be better, since I have the time, why not take it.  A smaller distance also plays in my favor if bad weather is to roll in fast.  Another day of fog was all that was to be found on day 9.  I did however finally get to peddle part of the Canal I was starting to hear so much about.  Le Canal du Midi, is a famous boat canal that runs all the way from the Atlantic, connecting at Bordeaux, to the Mediterranean sea.  I road along it for 13km or so.  It is a perfect place to ride, very safe due the fact that there are no cars, but it is more of a summer route.  The possibility for ver glace or black ice next to the canal is a risk that I did not want to take.  It is quite curvy, and the possibility of ending up in the canal is not except-able in January.  









Le canal du Midi, no ice but plenty of fog.



Day 9: Agen to Marmande (58km)

Not much to report about this day.  A day of fog and a forecast of rain.  About 30km in I saw the first signs of hail so I kicked it into gear and made it to Marmande before the weather set in.

Day 10:  Marmande to Bordeaux (90km)

This proved to be the most enjoyable day of riding since I was in Spain.  I started in a thick fog, which presented itself as a field of hanging water, soaking me completely.  Two hours into the ride I would be rewarded with sun and no wind, drying me out entirely and leaving me to a perfect ride into Bordeaux.

Day 11: Rest day in Bordeaux

So yes, like I stated at the beginning of this entry I am in a little hotel located in the hart of the city.  Tomorrow I will take another day to prepare for the last leg of my tour.  320 some odd kilometers remain between me and Angers.  Up to this point I have come over 640km.  only 1/3 of my trip remains, but the weather has turned, and turned toward the side of rain, and lots of it.  As of right now, I plan to make the ride from Bordeaux, to Angers, in a six day push, but I have a feeling that it will end up being 8 days or so, until my tires set rubber on the streets of Angers....














My little goat friend who was a local resident at one of the farm houses I stayed at.


















Fresh morning frost/dew










One knows that they're close to Bordeaux when the earth turns a reddish color, glazed in fields upon field of grape vines.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Barcelona, Spain, to Angers, France.... the start...

Well it's January sixth and I have just finished with my third day of peddling. A cold windy day in southern France. The Plan is, as of now, to bike from Barcelona, Spain, to Angers, France, where I will be studying this coming semester. The route I will take is more or less 1,030 kilometers or 640 miles. I have from when I left, January fourth, tell the second of February to complete my journey. This being more than enough time to physically make the ride, but the problem is that it is January, and yes it is cold. So far it has only been a bit cold and windy, no rain, no snow, which I am sure at some point I will encounter.

Day one: Barcelona, Spain, to Girona, Spain (105 km)

January fourth presented perfect weather for biking. The only problem was I was a bit unsure of my route, or at least of how to actually get out of Barcelona. After about an hour or so I was successfully in the outskirts of Barcelona and was fortunate to find another biker who had taken me under his wing in order to make sure that I got headed in the right direction. We biked together for a good 12km before parting ways in a small pueblo called Mataro. From there it was on to Girona. The riding was a bit more difficult than I had expected. This is the first time I have toured with a full load on my bike. After six hours on the saddle I was happy to see that I was approaching Girona. Once in Girona I needed to find a small street where a pension was located, cerrer sequia, a street which apparently everyone in the town had never heard of, everyone except for one old lady with a dog. Now when this lady first approached me she was on her way to recycle two bags full of wine bottles, and when she first asked me if I needed help with directions I thought I could smell the alcohol wafting off her breath. I was a bit hesitant to follow here for she seemed a bit off in the mind, but my interest was sparked, that being an interest in her story and to see if she actually knew where the street was or if she was just in need of someone to talk to. To my amazement about 10 minutes later we were at the street I had asked to find, and we parted our ways, myself thanking her for her help, and she thanking me for translating from Catalan to Castilian. Finally making my way to the Pension I had found on the Internet, I walked in to find that they had given the room, which she said I did not need a reservation for, away. lucky within a half hour I found another place that was actually cheaper and in a better location. Girona itself is really quite a nice city. It is very decorative, everything is covered in lights for the holidays, and there are about four different little artisan markets spread throughout the city.

Day two: Girona, Spain, to Le Boulou, France (74 km)

Day two was great, and ended up being a lot easier than I had expected. I had heard the night before that a large cold front was coming in so it was absolutely necessary that I make my way into France. That being because there is a mountain range that separates France, from Spain. In making my way to the mountains and the boarder I first stopped in a small town called Figueres, home to the Dali museum. Unfortunately, with my bike I was unable to enter and was left to admire the architecture from the outside. The mountain pass was really not bad, that is going from Spain, to France. If one where to try and cross going from France, to Spain, they would find a bit of an obstacle in front of them. for once one crosses over into France, it is all down hill until getting to Le Boulou. Le Boulou is a very picturesque little mountain town,  from which it is very easy to see the snow capped mountain range the Pyrenees.

Day three:  Le Boulou, to Narbonne (86km)

I woke up to a nice brisk grey morning that quickly turned to a clear cool sky.  I was making great time, but was a bit concerned about the weather.  For two days the people I had spoken with talked of a huge cold front coming in, what I didn't know was this would be my last day before the winds actually presented their full force.  Day three ended at a Fast hotel just south of Narbonne, where I could re-energize with some food and shut-eye.  I could definitely feel the effects of peddling with so much weight, my quads were starting to burn and not recover quickly enough, this is why I decided that at the next stop, Carcassonne, I would spend a day without riding.  Little did I know what I was in for on day four...
Kilometer total after three days, 265.















Doreen, all loaded up in Barcelona, ready for day one.

















Outside of the Dali Museum in Figueres, Spain.











Just over the pass and into France.

















Le Boulou, as stated in the picture, 

















The street where the family run hotel was located in Le Boulou.