On the way in there was a tropical storm and we got soaked to the skin, as did EVERYTHING in our rucksacks and my phone which is now semi-broken. The rain didn't stop all day so we decided to leave the following morning and not do the tubing which was a bit of a shame. However, the hostel we stayed in had mice and dirty sheets so we were quite glad to leave. But that meant spending the next two days walking around with stinking bags of wet clothes. Nice. Here's a couple of videos of the rail-bike thing...
Yesterday we were in a town in the coffe growing region called Salento and we decided to go horse riding. I was so scared beforehand that I nearly threw up. There were eight people in our group and most of them had ridden before. The horses were actually quite small (as you'll see from Lydia's pictures) but when I got up onto mine I freaked out and nearly started crying. So the lovely guide held the rope of my horse the whole way round.
I hated the first fifteen minutes, but after a while I got used to it and really liked it. We rode for about three hours through the countryside and the views of the coffee plantations and surrounding mountains were amazing. Lydia's horse was quite excitable and wanted to gallop nearly all the way round and eat everything in sight so she suffering from some bruised ribs today. I'm walking oddly from gripping the horse so tight from fear and Cand is in a fair amount of pain too.
We got the overnight bus to Bogota last night and arrived at 5am so we're pretty tired. Going to stay here another day and then head up to San Gil for some white-water rafting.
Ciao xx
LOVE that video! You guys look like you're having fun. IT MAKES ME SICK. Nothing beats near death experiences when youre travelling! How long were you on that guy for? Also, what was the tubing you missed? Same kind of thing they have in Laos?
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It was about 20 mins, awesome fun. Yeah the tubing is meant to be like Laos but without the bars. It was just too wet. Rafting today though!
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