I haven't done this in a long time, blogging while I am still on the trip. Today though, I have a couple of hours to kill and have nothing to do, so thought would give this a try again.
This trip seems to have been due for a while now, for more than one reason. This is my first real solo trip since 2013. There were a couple of trips where I was traveling by myself for a few days and not with a friend, but not for the whole trip. I found traveling with friends so much easier, despite making tiny adjustments to accommodate their preferences. I realized though I was getting used to that and didn't want to lose the habit of traveling solo. For me at least, solo trips always comprise of this nervous energy, which is a mix of apprehension and excitement. It definitely makes me get out of my comfort zone more. One obvious advantage and dis-advantage of traveling with friends is that I don't feel the need to go and meet new people anymore. I still love doing that on my trips, but when I travel solo, that almost becomes a need. I don't want to be lonely and it gives the extra push to go and talk to strangers. Also, traveling solo makes even regular things a bit more adventurous and/or difficult, like getting to the bus stop to catch an overnight bus at 11pm tonight.So yeah, me traveling solo on this trip was definitely needed.
The second reason is that, I haven't gotten around to going to South America until now. Finally, I am here in Ecuador, South America.
About the trip itself, I landed in Quito on midnight of Saturday the 19th and it was around 2pm by the time I got to my bed in the hostel. The city is quaint in it's own way. It's the highest capital in the world, at an altitude of 2850 meters. The ride to the hostel from the airport was beautiful. The roads were super clean and new. It offered the sight of lit houses on the mountain, as it went up and down. The driver pointed out to the changes in altitude, shown in the display of the car. Also, there were kilometers of buses lined to the side of the road. The driver explained to us that it was because of a pilgrimage - around 40km, that people had come from all over Ecuador and even Colombia and those were the buses that carried them here. We even saw a good number of pilgrims who were already walking on the other side of the road, that was now blocked for vehicles.
On Sunday, though I planned to wake up early enough to get the free breakfast at the hostel, I couldn't get out of bed before 9 AM. Got ready and out of the hostel by 9:45 and just walked around centro historico, the historical part of the town. After getting some breakfast - coffee and a street snack and walking around without a fixed plan, for almost an hour, the pressure to use my time more wisely/effectively just grew. That's when I found a couple of old men playing guitar and singing and as I listened to them, that feeling calmed down. They performed and sung beautifully occasionally joined in the singing by a few members in the audience. I watched that for almost an hour and got back to my hostel.


