Posts Tagged ‘martica lalinde’

Colombia 1/6/2010 – Coffee Park

Friday, January 8th, 2010

Breakfast and the Jungle
Pato’s parents (Amanda and Alvaro) came over and we had breakfast with them. I was so fond of them. Pato showed us the equipment they use to harvest coffee.

Then Pato, his mom, Juan and I took a ride into what they called the forest. It is national preserve and looked like a jungle to me. We needed the 4-wheel drive of Pato’s Trooper (a vehicle of nastalgic value as he’s had it for 26 years). We walked and looked at the trees, plants and flowers. It was dense and lush. Then we headed back to the house, packed up and headed for the coffee park.

Alvaro, Pato, Amanda, Juan - At pato's House

Alvaro, Pato, Amanda, Juan - At pato's House

Juan & Pato with the Trooper in the Jungle

Juan & Pato with the Trooper in the Jungle

Plantain Trees and a Wasps Nest

Plantain Trees and a Wasps Nest

Pato Giving Us a Tour of the Jungle

Pato Giving Us a Tour of the Jungle

Coffee Park
The Coffee Park is a huge attraction which is part museum, part botanicals garden and part amusement park. It’s expansive, neatly kept, and full of options.
A View of the Coffee Park Land

A View of the Coffee Park Land

We went through a museum which showed the history of the Colombian coffee trade and how coffee is harvested and prepared. We took a train around the park. While it moved along a “house band” played music and it was like we were part of a partying brigade.

Where as Bogota is in the mid 70′s during the day and a cool 40 or 50 degrees at night, it was 90+ degrees and very humid in Armenia where the park is. We had to wear hats and seek shade.

We took a photo with a classic of the Armenia region, a Willys. Willys are a kind of Jeep. They are like taxis but it is a fixed price for  the price for as many people and as much cargo as will fit on them. So it’s common to see Willys driving along the winding roads completely weighed down with huge loads balanced precariously. They stack the cargo high and people grab on to any bar or bumper they can find. We saw one on the road in front of us with at least 14 people.

Juan & I on a Willys in the Coffee Park

Juan & I on a Willys in the Coffee Park

 Coffee Park

Dinner in Bogota
Pato took us to the airport and we flew back to Bogota where we had an elegant dinner with Juan’s dad and Martica in a pretty area called Usaquen. The restaurant was called Habemus Papa (We have a Pope). It’s another area that has beautiful Christmas lights in the square.

Bogota, Colombia 1/4/2010- Food, Family & Friends

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

I woke up and Juan’s housekeeper, Roselia was here. She prepared a traditional Colombian breakfast for us of arepas. They are like a thick pancake and there are many varieties of them. The ones we had at breakfast had cheese inside them and we topped them with another kind of soft cheese on top. We had fresh juice from guanabana. They are green on the outside and the meat inside is white, producing a milk-like color.

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Arepas

guanabana juice

guanabana juice

We answered emails and lounged until Juan’s father, Juan Guillermo Lalinde and his wife, Martica came over. We had a really special and fun visit with them. Roselia made us a traditional Colombian soup called Ajiaco. It contains 3 kinds of potatoes, chicken and corn. The toppings are avocado, capers, and a kind of cream. We had passion fruit juice as well. We finished lunch up out in the sun on the terrace having coffee and cocados, which are coconut candies.

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After lunch we went for a walk and went to a mall. We bought some plane tickets to fly to Armenia tomorrow. Then we strolled some nearby streets and window shopped. We went to an ice-cream chain called Mimos for a mango Popsicle which is served with salt. And we had a mango ice cream frappe too.

We walked from there to the home of Mauricio & Nancy Betancourt and their two girls Ana and Maria (6 and 8 yrs old). We had such a sweet visit. At first I wondered how we’d communicate because I speak so little Spanish and the girls are learning German in school. But before long I noticed we were talking and playing.

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The girls wanted me to stay and have a sleep over with them and they were coming up with really creative ways to make it possible. It was really cute. Nancy and Mauricio prepared a beautiful table of traditional afternoon foods for us. We had hot chocolate, a different kind of arepas which were absolutely delicious, and some other types of pastries. Then the girls showed me their artwork.

Mauricio drove us back to Juan’s. The hospitality and welcome I’ve received here from Juan’s family and friends has been really amazing and humbling. Also, all of the people we encounter are very courteous. All of Juan’s family and friends are incredibly warm.

Shortly after we returned from Nancy and Mauricio’s, another friend of Juan’s, Marcela picked us up. We went to an area which is like the Gaslamp District of Bogota. We sat and had a couple of glasses of wine on the patio of a restaurant called Isola. Then we went on to dinner at an Italian place called DiLucca. It was fun conversation about world travels, government, family relationships and life in general.

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It was after midnight when we headed home. It’s been a full and wonderful day.