First Steps in South America!
3 months into my backpacking journey I have made it to South America! Last time I wrote here I was in my final days in Vietnam. Since then I spent a month traveling through Cambodia and the Philippines. We celebrated a New Years festival on a tropical Cambodian island (where the local teenagers poured baby powder all over our faces), visited Angkor Wat at sunrise, went to a rat museum in Siem Reap, went scuba diving with turtles and swam with whale sharks in Cebu, and visited my extended family who hosted us in Manila and Cebu City.
After a quick week of rest in the states, I flew into Quito, Ecuador alone to meet up with some homies. My youngest brother Zach had been living with a host family in Ecuador for a few months teaching English, and my hometown friend Tommy had been backpacking his way down through Central America and into Ecuador as well. We all ended up meeting up in a small mountain town in the Andes called Baños. The three of us, along with some friends Zach met on his program spent our days together zip lining, white water rafting over class 4 rapids, eating some of the best empanadas I have ever tasted, and exploring the town going to salsa bars at night.
Zach and I are currently on a bus to Cuenca, Ecuador, a small colonial town where we will stay the night with his host family before beginning our journey south into Peru. What was supposed to be a four hour bus ride is now 10 hours for us because of landslides blocking the roads. 3 months into my adventure marks my halfway point. I now begin the next chapter of my journey, exploring a new continent as I venture south across Peru and then eventually into Brazil and Colombia for the next three months.
Scenes from Quito
White-water rafting in Baños
Zip-lining in Baños
The bus from Baños to Cuenca
ABOUT ME
Hello! I’m Jacob (or Jake), a 23 year old traveler and hiker exploring the world, writing guides and documenting my experiences as I go. This blog is an archive of my adventures, photography, and guides for my favorite hikes and destinations around the world.
LATEST POSTS
Elephant Falls (Thác Voi) Guide
Cost: $2 USD Duration: 1-2 hours Commute: 45 minutesElephant Falls (or Thác Voi) is my favorite waterfall in the region around Da Lat. It is huge and majestic to look at, and you are able to descend and climb around the rocky bottom area and get right up next to (and...
Final Days in Vietnam
The last time I wrote in this journal, Kenzie and I had just arrived in central Vietnam. In just two weeks, I have beheaded a chicken in Phong Nha (which a local lady then fried for us and served with peanut sauce for lunch), scaled Mua Peak and boated through caves...
Best Things to Do in Da Lat
Da Lat is one of my favorite places in all of Southeast Asia, and my favorite stop in Central Vietnam. With quality hostels as cheap as $1.50 a night, waterfalls to explore around the countryside, and a maze bar to get lost in at night, it is a backpacker’s paradise....
Best Things to Do in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)
Ho Chi Minh City, otherwise known as Saigon, is a dive into chaos… or an endless river of beeping motorbikes. I was told by a local that there are about 10 million people living in the city, and probably 15 million motorbikes (which is completely absurd). I loved my...
Update 1.5 Months in: A Hole-in-the-wall Haircut
We have just arrived in Phong Nha in the middle of a rainstorm. The gentle rain patters steadily around the courtyard as I sit in our garden guesthouse. It is our first real day rained in. We have been working our way north through Vietnam after flying into Saigon two...
Getting a Scuba Certification on Koh Tao
Duration: 3-4 days Cost: $320 USD Best Time to Go: Year roundCHOOSING A DIVE SHOPKoh Tao is one of the best places in the world to get scuba certifications. Certifications here are among the cheapest in the world (around $320 USD for an open water course), and there...