Bike travel, commuting and more

Panamericana

Ecuador summary

Walking among iguanas

Walking among iguanas

A list of things we saw, tried and experienced

Again, we have been for barely three weeks in Ecuador, so pretending to get a complete and fair image of the country is unrealistic, but we’ll still try to summarize here what we saw and what was our impression of the country.

Route

After crossing the border In Tulcán, we took a bus to Otavalo, since we wanted to avoid the climb to Ibarra, that Rubén from Xtreme Bike in Ipiales had warned us about. After Otavalo, we cycled very close to Quito, where we took a taxi for the last kilometers to avoid the difficult approach by bike to such a big city.

Street selling in Ecuador
Street sellers in a traffic light. Most people can’t access an “office job”

After that, Susanne was unhappy with the traffic, the noise of the trucks, and the dangerous riding on the Panamericana. The problem in Ecuador is that as soon as you leave the main roads full of traffic, the surfaces deteriorate quickly and the gradient of the climbs gets much tougher.

Bus ventilation in Cuenca
Most buses drive with the motor open. Not sure if it’s fashion or a need for extra ventilation

After a week break in Galapagos, we continued by bus to Cuenca. From there there are three possible border crossings with Perú, but with the excuse of COVID two of them remained closed at the time of our trip, so we could only go through Huaquillas, in the coast. This crossing is not the safest, and it means you get into Peru on the coast, which is not only boring due to being a busy highway in the desert, but also does not have the best reputation in terms of safety. So we just took a series of buses to go from Cuenca into Perú.

Ecuador was again mostly a bus affair

Food

The food in Ecuador was not completely different to Colombia, but at the same time it was. It is similar in the way that the typical menu includes a soup as starter, and then some kind of meat, usually with rice.

Set menu in Tulcán
Set menu with rice, fried banana and some meat

On the other hand, because we traveled mostly following the Andes and we didn’t go to either the coast or the Amazon side, with a much milder climate, the diet did not have as many exotic fruits or vegetables as in Colombia. But it had more pulses like lentils or beans.

Selection of beans in Otavalo
A selection of beans in the Otavalo market

The chicken, as in most of Latin America, is still the king among meats. They call it “Broaster” when they serve it deep fried with batter like you can find in KFC. Talking about it, Ecuatorians are quite US-friendly and they love American food chains like KFC or McDonalds.

KFC Ecuatorian style
Lentils in KFC. I like it when they try to appeal to the local taste
Eggs in Otavalo
Was anyone looking for eggs?
Artisan ice cream in Tulcán
Some artisan ice cream, just a thick frozen milkshake on a wooden stick
Ecuatorian encebollado
Delicious encebollado

For cooking, obviously olive oil is very expensive since it is imported, so soja or sunflower oil are used

Margarine block in Ecuador
Directly to your arteries. But it does not need cooling
Mix of olive and sunflower oil
Oil cuvée from sunflowers and olives (?)
Toasted corn
Corn snack. Sometimes served as appetizer while the food arrives. Delicious
Local Ecuatorian gaseosa
Local “gaseosa”, a cola despite the yellow colour
Ecuatorian bananas with cheese
Food market is the best. Here some “maduros con queso”, banana with cheese

Sometimes the names of the food were confusing. For example something similar to the mexican tamales is called here “Humitas”. It’s typical for breakfast and made with corn. There are sweet and salty ones.

Humitas in Quito
Humita, the Ecuatorian version of tamales

Of course we also ate some sweets and delicacies. Hot chocolate was good, but eating chocolate was nothing special, although much healthier than in Europe as it has way less sugar. Coffee, disappointingly for a neighbor of Colombia, is usually just a cup of hot water and a jar of instant coffee to help yourself. Understandingly, I didn’t drink much in Ecuador.

Chocolate seller in Cuenca
Our chocolate provider in Cuenca
Nutella with locks
Nutella, an expensive delicacy that needs to be protected
Ecuatorian Pilsener beer
Tasting local beer, mixed with fresh limonada

Cycling in Ecuador

As mentioned, roads in the country divide between the excellent and very busy or the quiet but with poor surface and crazy climbs. However, we saw more cyclists than we expected, specially roadies. It might be the Carapaz effect, the local hero that has won a few important races and lately the gold medal in the Olympics!

Failed cycle lane
A badly designed cycle-lane ends abruptly in a kerb with no warning
Hotel innen patio in Tulcan
We look for the hotels with nice innen patio to park bikes, motorbikes…

Many cities try to introduce cycle lanes, but as it happens in Spain, the designers are not cyclists themselves and you see it in the mistakes or impracticability of some of the lanes. The car is king, and here they are big. The good side is that many taxis have bike racks at the back in Quito, and in the countryside the pick-ups will take your bike wherever you need to. In Buses you can carry the bike but you will have to negociate the price with the bus driver and his luggage pal.

Homemade child seat, often seen in Galapagos
Chinese electric car, a copy of the Suzuki Jimny, apparently with very poor autonomy
Galapagos always ahead: here a bike carrier behind the public bus

Other miscellaneous stuff

The first thing you notice when you go from Colombia to Ecuador is that the latter is a much richer country. Not only everything is more expensive, but roads are much better, people drive bigger cars and infrastructure in general is in better condition. The negative side of it is that you see bigger inequalities in society.

High plug in Hotel
Sometimes there are only plugs for the wall mounted TVs!

While in Colombia most people had a similar enough status, in Ecuador you can see the very rich and the very poor in the same street. This is also the first county where we can see the class difference between criollos (mix of indigenous and Spanish people), indigenous, and others.

Job posting in Otavalo
Job posting in Otavalo. Only for indigenous women
Multilingual sign
Multilingual sign in Otavalo, where many speak Quichua
Building site in Otavalo
Abandoned building site

Another difference is politics. In Colombia most people did not talk much about politics, even though we were in the middle of an election. I guess the years of violence make people more reserved about their own preferences. In Ecuador everybody talks about their preferences, which are easily split into two. Those in favor of former president Rafael Correa, and those strongly against him. For some it was a hero, for others a traitor that ruined the country. I let the reader decide.

We travelled a lot by bus, and people seem to do it too. It is quick, convenient, and relatively cheap. Our only problem is that they usually show movies with the speakers on instead of forcing you to use headphones, and normally they don’t care if there are children on board. Most movies were pretty violent. Also, drivers seem to have a predilection for Liam Neeson, we didn’t know he has made so many cheap movies, we watched at least 3 in which he was the only recognizable actor.

Bus cabin isolated from passengers
Most buses separate the driver from the passengers with a glass cabin
Broken toilet
A common occurrence, a broken toilet
A must in South America, the toilet paper goes in the bin, not the toilet itself
Toilet paper in public bathroom
Before you go into your cubicle for your business, remember to pick enough paper from the dispenser

Ecuador uses the American dollar as currency since the beginning of the XXI century, as a way to stop the frequent monetary crises and inflation shocks. That makes the country more expensive than the neighbors but still affordable.

A cooperative ATM, this one from the Police. Usually foreign cards don’t work there

They seem to spend a lot of money on infrastructure, and the airports of Quito and Galapagos were quite new and good, as well as the bus terminal in Quito. The downside is that apparently the country is heavily in debt with China, which is a bad partner to owe money to.

Galapagos airport
Fancy airport in Baltra, Galapagos
Lonely dogs in the attic
Many people have dogs, but they don’t get much attention. These ones spend the day locked in the attic
Boiled water vending machine
A vending machine with boiled water, to avoid plastic bottles. We use a filter though
Football is popular on TV, but on the street the people love playing volleyball
Not many playgrounds, but when we found one, they were great!

In conclusion, we really enjoyed our visit to Ecuador. We were a bit too early, still on rainy season, so the clouds would always appear in the afternoon, and it’s a bit more expensive than the neighbors, but still worth it. Galapagos was definitely a highlight.

A religious shrine on the street, for a quick pray while you are going shopping

2 Comments

  1. Katherine G

    I’m very pleased you liked Ecuador 🇪🇨. Cosas buenas, cosas, malas, pero Al final disfrutaron de su estadia. Un viaje que aun no termina y que aun les falta mucho por recorrer. Bye bye Ecuador… que les vaya bien en Peru 🇵🇪

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