Saturday, January 29, 2011

BRAZIL


Firstly, I want to clarify that we did in fact sail down the Amazon River in our ship to get to the port in Manaus. I know a lot of people were confused about that when I was talking about it before I left because it doesn’t seem like a big ship would be able to fit in a river, but it fits in the Amazon at least. Most of the time we could see land on the sides of the river, but a lot of the time it was very far away. The river itself is a muddy brown color and there are a lot of huge floating land masses moving around it that make it hard to maneuver big ships. We had to pick up a Brazilian pilot along the way to steer the ship because I guess it can get really tricky if you don’t know the river. We heard that at one point the ship missed hitting the bottom by like 18 inches or something. Anyways, one of the things I liked about the Amazon River was that it was the smoothest sailing we’ve had since leaving Nassau. There was really no rocking at all—sometimes you could barely even tell we were moving. That was definitely a nice change for me because I had gotten sea sick in the beginning of the trip so it was heaven to be on the river! The only bad thing about it was the bugs. Huge. Massive. Bugs. There were beetles the size of my hand and moths the size of birds. And lots of mosquitoes, of course. Fortunately, the bugs were worse on the river than anywhere else I went in Brazil.

I stayed in Manaus for most of the week and got to know the city pretty well despite the fact that I couldn’t understand anything the locals were saying. There were really only a handful of people that I encountered that spoke any English at all. And we soon learned that Portuguese isn’t anything like Spanish because people rarely understood any Spanish either. The city itself is really dirty. There are literally no trash cans anywhere. People just throw their trash down on the street and then workers come by late at night and pick up the huge piles of trash.

On the first day we just walked around and explored. There was an entire street shut down and they had hundreds of different carts selling random things all over the place. One of the things that we thought was really funny was that they sell women’s lingerie EVERYWHERE on the streets. Literally everywhere you looked there were piles of underwear and bras being sold. It was the strangest thing.

We also saw the opera house, Teatro Amazonas, which is one of the main attractions of Manaus and probably the prettiest building in the entire city. It was built during the rubber boom when the city was very rich so it stands out from most of the city, which is now pretty run down. We actually got in for free to see an orchestra perform so that was really cool. Inside the building is even more beautiful than the outside. 

On the second day, I had a SAS trip that went to Presidente Figueiredo, which was a 2 hour bus ride outside of the city. First we hiked through the rainforest to a huge cave.  The cave wasn’t really anything that exciting but the rainforest, itself, was really beautiful. We didn’t really see any wildlife though. Then we drove to a different spot to some waterfalls and ate at a local restaurant. The food was pretty good. I really liked the rice dishes but the meat was way too salty. We were supposed to go tubing down the rapids but we didn’t end up having time because it took so long for us to get our food at the restaurant. Then we went to the “zip-lining” part of the trip, which was really just one zip-line across the river and then one back. It was fun but I was expecting it to be through the rainforest and a lot longer, but oh well.

I spent the rest of the trip exploring Manaus. One night we went to this Samba thing which was a big rehearsal for Carnival with live music and dancing. It was a lot of fun. It made me wish that we were there for actual Carnival but it’s not till next month, unfortunately. We did some other cool stuff too.. I’ll try to write more when I think of things and have more time.

2 comments:

  1. SO I had a whole long comment written but I pressed the wrong letter to confirm I'm not a computer so it deleted everything.

    To sum it all up:

    BUGS=NASTY
    THEATER=COOL
    ZIPLINING=COOL but disappointing that it wasn't longer.
    SALTY FOOD=NOT SO COOL
    LINGERIE ON THE STREETS = Where's the mystery in that?

    =) Glad you weren't seasick. Miss you.

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  2. Love your updates Brittany! Keep them coming! :) Are you able to post any pictures on your blog?

    ReplyDelete