My Round The World ride (inc top blagging at Spa & The Ring)

My Round The World ride (inc top blagging at Spa & The Ring)

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neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Tuesday 22nd April 2014
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Has anyone here cycled South America?

I'm looking at routes north from Santiago to San Pedro de Atacama and my choices are stick to the main highway which hugs the coast a fair bit and undulates with a general upwards trend until I reach San Pedro.



Or avoid highways altogether which would mean crossing the Andes twice via passes of 3887 & 4755m and an extra 700km.



I'm leaning towards the Andes route at the moment as it would take me through Argentina and 4755m would be the highest point of the trip by far or will I suffer from lack of oxygen all the way up both passes and wish I'd taken the highway with all the trucks passing me at top speed a few centimetres away while simultaneously letting me know their air horn is working (so a bit like the rest of the world then)?

Thoughts?

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Wednesday 30th April 2014
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Vaud said:
Only just discovered this thread (bad form PH, this should be home page stuff...)
Maybe you should click on the news button on the first post in this thread then. hehe

Vaud said:
I just love this shot. Beautiful.

Thanks, one of my favourites of the whole trip and has won me a new saddle in an online competition for the best cycling photo and the PH photo of the month comp when the theme was travel.

I'm hoping to top it over the next few days when I cross the Andes to Mendoza.


neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Wednesday 30th April 2014
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Laos:






































































neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Friday 9th May 2014
quotequote all
After about three weeks resting up and catching up with friends I finally left Santiago on Monday after waiting a few extra days for the snow to clear and the pass over the Andes to re-open so I could be on my way.

My first day was to Los Andes, approximately 80km north of Santiago then the following morning I made a reasonably early start to try to get to Portillo by nightfall on Tuesday. Due to having my winter sleeping bag and clothes with me once again and being fully stocked with food, Coke & water my bike was probably the heaviest it's been all trip so I was a bit slower than I thought I'd be and rather than risk getting stranded with nowhere to camp higher up the mountain, I played it safe and put my tent up on a patch of grass next to the road just before all the hairpins started and the road really started to rise. I was at about 2,200m above sea level at this point so while it was cold overnight, it wasn't bitterly cold and I was feeling pretty toasty in my winter bag.

My goal for Wednesday was to reach the summit and cross into Argentina and due to the constant climbing, it took more than two hours to reach Portillo where I'd planned to get to the day before so I was right to play it safe because I'd probably have arrived in the dark or at the very least have to set up camp in the dark and the snow and while it was warm in the day, it gets bloody freezing at night. I've camped out in the snow before in Kazakhstan and at altitude in Kyrgyzstan & China so I know what it's like and if there's a warmer option available I'd prefer to take that!

I made the summit early afternoon after stopping for coffee at the hotel in Portillo and seeing one of the best views of the entire trip, Laguna del Inca, a lake just behind the hotel.

The Chilean customs brushed me off with a "you need to go to the next customs, 25km down the road" which caused some confusion once I reached the Argentinian customs because I didn't have an exit stamp in my passport or a form I needed to fill in beforehand but no major drama and I was soon stamped in to Argentina having just cycled over a 3,185m pass. I'm now taking a day off at a backpacker hostel in Uspallata and plan to continue towards Mendoza tomorrow for some steak & Malbec.

The views crossing the Andes really were stunning:




This is about 2km from where I camped and the road really starts to climb now. These are know locally as Los Caracoles or "Snails" where there are 29 hairpin bends to negotiate. I didn't get a particularly good picture thinking I'd be able to get one higher up but no such luck and I really didn't fancy riding back down just for a photo!










Laguna del Inca








Argentina




Aconcagua, the world's highest mountain outside of the Himalayas.







Not my picture but here are "Los Caracoles".


neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Monday 26th May 2014
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Oh cock....


neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Monday 26th May 2014
quotequote all
It's still under warranty so I've emailed the supplier and am waiting to hear what they have to say. Right now I need a postal address in Argentina and need to decide whether to risk pushing on in the hope it doesn't go pop or sit tight but that could mean waiting for several days with sod all to do.

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Monday 26th May 2014
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In Mendoza, Cafayete or Salta maybe, the town I'm in isn't quite as glamorous!

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
quotequote all
As La Rioja was a bit dull and the hostel I was staying in virtually empty I took a risk that the hub would last another few hundred kilometres and have now made it to a lovely little town called Cafayate in the heart of wine country where I've arranged for the replacement hub to be sent.

I've been here over a week now with each day being a kind of groundhog day where I don't do much except drink the local Torrentes and Malbec and go to the market each evening with some of the other hostel guests to buy half a cow and some veggies each night to cook on the grill in the hostel garden. I have managed to squeeze in a few Bodegas for wine tasting and a goats cheese factory plus a bit of trekking in a valley in between all the drinking though. Life's pretty tough sometimes eh?! smile





























@HereBeMonsters It's aluminium so I don't think so plus I don't fancy stripping and rebuilding the wheel just for a few days before I have to do it all over again when the new hub arrives.

@Xpuffin Thanks for the offer of help again but as it's under warranty CRC have already sent me a replacement free of charge.

@Minemapper Thanks for the offer but it's getting delivered to the hostel I'm staying at in Cafayate.

@AJS- The overall journey in terms of countries was roughly planned at the start but plans change all the time and in terms of the day to day stuff I make it up as I go along.

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
quotequote all
I noticed the other day that Condor Cycles mentioned me on their blog. Fame at last!

http://www.condorcycles.com/latest-blog/around-the...

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Monday 16th June 2014
quotequote all
The latest news on my broken hub is that a replacement was sent out from the UK on 28th May and is being held in Cordoba either by the post office or customs and I'm expected to collect in person. Cordoba is a 2-3 day, £62 round trip by bus. Is it just me that thinks this isn't a great system? What do the locals do?

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Tuesday 17th June 2014
quotequote all
I stand corrected. It's actually a £90 round trip to collect a £32 hub. Deep joy.

Anyone coming to northern Argentina in the next few days?

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Tuesday 17th June 2014
quotequote all
It's a 1,500km round trip and the rental bikes in this town aren't something I'd want to ride 50km never mind 1,500. I'd also need to take all my camping gear because of the distance between towns so I'd need a bike with front & rear racks or at the very least rack mounts. Then there's the £10 day rental charge....

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Tuesday 17th June 2014
quotequote all
The collection point is 750km in the wrong direction and the bikes / bike shops in Cafayate are all a bit basic. The blokes at the bike rental place in town got very excited when they saw I'd got nine sprockets at the back and "XT". Ooh what luxury! All the bikes I've seen only have 5/6/7/8 sprockets.

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Wednesday 18th June 2014
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Usget said:
Bloody lightweight, scared of a little ride like that hehe

Loser cruiser it is then!
How about you fly out to Argentina and join me, then I'd be less scared?

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Wednesday 18th June 2014
quotequote all
Any idea how? I have to collect in person & show my passport as proof of id. I'm planning on catching a bus at 2pm (6pm UK time) so any chance you could let me know one way or another by 5:30 UK time?

Thanks.

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Wednesday 18th June 2014
quotequote all
Thanks for at least trying anyway.

Let me know if there's any more info you need like where the parcel's being held, the tracking number, delivery address etc.

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Wednesday 18th June 2014
quotequote all
I should add.... I'd rather delay my trip to Cordoba by a day if you think he's in with a chance than spend $1100 AR & 2 days on a bus if I don't have to.

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Thursday 19th June 2014
quotequote all
Hats off to the Global Shipping Manager at Chain Reaction Cycles for the effort he's been putting in to get this resolved. thumbup

The latest is that he's managed to persuade Argentinian customs to deliver it to the hostel I've been staying in for the past couple of weeks. I'm not getting too excited just yet and won't until I physically have the hub in my hands but it's starting to look like I won't have to spend a couple of days on the loser cruiser. smile

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Thursday 19th June 2014
quotequote all
Watchman said:
One Q... you *can* lace your own wheels, yes? smile
Can't everyone? hehe

I think the main reason this hub cracked after just 5 months is that after lacing it up myself in Melbourne, the LBS I took it to wouldn't let me finish it off on their jig "for insurance reasons" and probably put a bit too much tension in the spokes.

neilski

Original Poster:

2,563 posts

237 months

Thursday 26th June 2014
quotequote all
Still no hub after a month of waiting. frown

I wish Argentinian customs would make their mind up. A week or two ago I was told I had to collect in person from Cordoba (750km south) then heard it would be delivered to the hostel in Cafayate I'm staying at now I might have to collect it from Salta (180km north), which is fine as it's my next destination but it's the complete lack of any decent information that's so frustrating.

Cafayate's nice but a month of not doing much but drink loads of wine and eat massive steaks is starting to get a bit repetitive.