Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta municipalidad de espinar cusco. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta municipalidad de espinar cusco. Mostrar todas las entradas

sábado, 21 de julio de 2012

Ed Stafford,the man who walked the amazon



Ed Stafford, the first man to walk the entire length of the Amazon, talks about starvation, machete-wielding tribesmen and flesh-eating parasites.


By Amy Willis

For a 6ft 1 in man, there is a lot less of Ed Stafford than you'd expect. His trousers hang around his hips slightly and although he is bigger now than he was nine months ago, he is still rebuilding the muscle he lost during his incredible 6,000 mile journey from the source of the Amazon in the Peruvian Andes to its mouth in eastern Brazil.


Ed was warned that his two-and-a-half-year trip on foot across South America, which he documented online in a series of blogs and video diary entries, would end in failure and possibly death. But the explorer attempted it anyway, and nine million-odd steps and around 200,000 mosquito and ant bites later he proved his critics wrong.


“I was in my early 30s didn't have any kids, no wife, I wanted to do something incredibly challenging and I was in a lucky position to be experienced enough to do something big and not have those responsibilities,” he says.


Perhaps surprisingly, the 35-year-old former British Army captain wasn’t that fit when he landed at his starting point in Camaná, Perú. He had decided that given all the walking he was about to embark on he would just get fit as he went. But as the months went by and the miles under foot hit their thousands, instead of becoming an Adonis, he found that his muscle mass started to break down and he got weaker and weaker.


"We were slightly malnourished for the whole time,” he says, “We didn't have enough food to actually maintain our own body weight. When we came into each town we were so hungry we over ate and we sort of entered starvation mode."


Lack of food drove him to break their no-hunting policy. Ed recalls one time after two days on low rations when he and his Peruvian walking companion Cho spotted a red-footed tortoise nestling in the leaf litter. They wasted no time worrying about ethics and butchered the tortoise there and then, before roasted it over a woodchip fire in garlic and oil to make tortoise jerky.


They also scavenged for palm hearts, wild tomatoes, nuts, wild bananas and later fished for piranha, narrowly missing a run in with a two-metre electric eel capable of producing a potentially lethal 500 watt shock."I think it can always look out of context and in fact I just adapted to life in the jungle," he says. “We tried to deliberately not hunt but we needed to survive."


Cho joined the expedition six months into the trip, just before heavy flooding pushed them onto the drug-trafficking route through a lawless region of Colombia. Ed had fallen out with his original walking companion Luke Collyer after just 68 days; something the pair had not anticipated.


Everyone in the drugs trafficking region was involved in cocaine production, from the local peasant who grew cocoa leaves, to the people managing the town.
"In the town plaza there is a huge concrete coca leaf, which is the plant they make cocaine out of, and it is not very subtle, they don't try to hide the fact that that is where all the money comes from," he says.


The Colombian drugs trail included "The Red Zone" in Peru where petrified locals believed the "gringos" – including Ed – were trying to kill them to harvest their organs; something which understandably led to some hostile encounters. "As I looked over my shoulder there were no fewer than five dugout canoes heading in our direction – all full of armed Ashaninkas. Many of the men were standing up in these narrow vessels and were armed with either shotguns or bows and arrows. The women among them had machetes," he recalls in his book.


Ed and Cho were marched at arrow point to the village where they had to apologise to the chief for not having sought permission to enter their land. They were lucky; had they been carrying weapons the outcome may have been different.

Other people in the region called him a corta cabeza or "head cutter", running an index finger along their throats as he passed. “It was no doubt linked to the way indigenous peoples have been treated in the past by colonial settlers – but it was sad that such fear existed in these people’s lives,” he says.


But despite the dangers, Ed made it through the drug trafficking zone without too much trouble.
In April 2009, one year into his expedition, he reached the hardest part of the journey: the Brazilian rainforest. With worse flooding, poor maps, and parts of the Amazon rainforest which had never been walked, the threat of failure was overwhelming. Not to mention reports of fierce tribes that had, in the past, killed other British explorers.

Insects were also a concern: at one point Ed found himself with a botfly larvae growing in his head. “It was like a little pin prick and it can keep you awake at night," he says. "But you can't squeeze them out if they are alive and you have to block off their air hole so I did that, I used a bit of super glue actually and killed it and then squeezed it out."


“Botflies are flies that lay eggs on the underside of mosquitoes," he adds. "The mosquito bites you and the eggs feel the heat of the mammal, or in my case my head, and the eggs drop into the bite and then a small larvae starts growing inside the flesh. It is not serious at all but it is just eating away at the flesh in order to grow."


Progress was slow through the dense jungle but in August 2010, Ed Stafford and Cho finally emerged from the rainforest to attempt the final leg of the journey to the Atlantic Ocean.
Dozens of journalists were waiting for them, having followed their progress through the hundreds of blogs and video diary entries he had uploaded onto his website throughout the journey.


Nine million-odd steps, more than 200,000 mosquito and ant bites each, about 600 wasp stings, six pairs of boots and a dozen scorpion stings later Ed Stafford became the first man to walk the Amazon rainforest. It was, he admits, the best day of his life.


Ed plans on doing another world first in September next year. He is keeping the plan under wraps but says it will be a challenge outside the Amazon. Follow his progress on his website.
Ed has just released his first book Walking the Amazon, which is on sale now.

lunes, 21 de mayo de 2012

V Ecosports Festival of Tres Cañones-Suykutambo 2012


Arequipenian team awarded by Autocolca

by the Colca Specialist


The 29 of April the arequipenian team came back home after two days of exciting competition.


The much awaited river rafting competition between Arequipa and Cusco never took place because the judges couldn´t arrive on time to the event.That was the excuse the authorities gave to the sportsmen but as everybody knows there was an organized clearly seen boicot against the event. The lack of experience and profesionalism of the representative of the Municipality of Espinar Juan Tapia Vargas made the situation even more complicated .


The Festival continued and the people had the oportunity of enjoying intense exhibitions performed by the different teams.


The arequipenian Rafter Gustavo Rondón Alvarez and his River Rafting Team Expediciones y Aventuras did a wonderful show in the river that everybody enjoyed . Kids were the most enthusiastic during the exhibitions. The member of the River Rats Guillermo Rendon Cuadros was there also with a small raft having fun in the river.






The second day Rappeling and Zip Lining exhibitions were really impressive.



The team of Sacred Road Xtreme directed by the well known rock and mountainclimbing instructor Arcadio Mamani Viza gave a a real show to all those who were present there in The Three Canyons of Suykutambo.




Jose Arias suffered a small accident the first day in the zip lining exhibition.


The second day the team was reforced with the presence of Guillermo Rendón Cuadros,the well known Kamikaze Nitro who left the raft inside the hotel and the second day joined Arcadios Sacred Road Xtreme Team.


Everybody there was eager to see the xtreme sports champion performing his favorite crazy maneuvers.


His first jump was dedicated to his fellow Jose Arias who the previous day had an unexpected accident during the zip lining exhibition.


Jose Arias accepted the dedicatory and Guillermo Rendón “The Kamikaze Nitro” performed his favorite maneuver “The Fallen Angel” which provoked the reaction of the locals who considered the most beautiful and xtreme maneuver during the whole Festival,maneuver that was awarded by the people through an intense clapping that lasted after his landing. A picture taken by one of the spectators was chosen to prepare a souvenir poster of the event.



After the Festival all teams came back home happy of the work well done other unhappy because they were unoticed during all the festival such as the kayaking team from Calca-Cusco who were a complete dissapointement specially after all the propaganda done by their representatives.A real disaster!


In Arequipa, Autocolca awarded all the arequipenian sportmen and Dr Freddy Jimenez Rios is now organizing a sports festival in Cabanaconde, Colca Canyon and it seems that we are going to have the option of watching Guillermo Rendón performing the “fallen angel maneuver and other xtreme tricks“in the Colca Canyon! That would be great!That would be massive!


Everybody is awaiting for the press conference in order to have more details about this event that promises a lot.


Congratulations to all the participants and the Colca Specialist will be sharing with you more details about the oncoming events in Arequipa.


The Colca Specialist.