THE RICKSHAW RUN: THE BEGINNING

So - here we are, in Goa. Some of you maybe wondering, how have these first few days been going? Well...let me fill you in!

Day 0

Let's rewind back to the 31st of March. We spent most of the day preparing for madness on the 1st. April Fool's Day was the day we were going to launch and set out into the unknown. We pimped our rickshaw and bought all the necessary spare parts incase of any breakdowns we may face on the road. Added a sun visor, two cup holders, some side tassels and a dashboard, why not, right?

The three of us spent so much time trying to pimp thy steed and practice driving that we all forgot to look for spare parts such as an extra head gasket, extra fuel filters, a measuring cup to mix engine oil, petrol and a few extra clutch cables cause none of us really know how to shift gears worth a shit.

As the day began winding down, we got mostly everything we needed, except our measuring cup. We didn't know how much petrol we had left and since it was Good Friday the day before and Easter the day after, we didn't have the option of looking for one as mostly all the shops were closed.

Fun Fact: For those of you that don't know, a huge portion of South India is Christian.

After we had realized that we weren't going to get what we needed, we proceeded to make our way to the dock for the pre-rickshaw run party. We made it to the port and awaited this ferry, according to the adventurists, there were three ferries total with the first one leaving at 6PM. When we arrived, we thought we missed the first ferry, but soon realized 6PM IST (Indian Standard Time) meant "whenever the boat shows up".

So, we're on our way to this island to RAGE prior to starting this adventure - on the ferry, Aakash, Ajay and I all started talking to some of the other teams - we were all nervous as the next person. Once we arrived on the island, there was a band (obviously) along with a really fat Indian man with a tiger painted on his entire body, check out the photo!

Gotta say, the adventurists definitely know how to party. The venue looked amazing and the music was on point as the night progressed. I don't know whether it was the Kingfishers making it bearable or if it was actually good music, but looking back at the videos I think its a little of both. After partying for nearly 4-5 hours, the three of us decided to head back to our hotel to rest up before the big day. We got back, packed up and crashed.

Day 1 - April 1st - April Fool's Day

Leaving the comforts of the JW Marriott in Kuala Lampur on our way to India!

Leaving the comforts of the JW Marriott in Kuala Lampur on our way to India!

The day had arrived, we woke up at around 6:30AM and got ready to leave the hotel with all our stuff, had a light breakfast and then we were off. It's Easter Sunday, and April Fool's day - We arrived to the launch/practice grounds and started to pack up the rick, I flew my drone around and got some amazing videos of all the rickshaws - over 80 teams and 200+ people participating in this "race" for charity. This maybe the dumbest/smart thing I've ever done, but at the end of the day, it's for an amazing cause.

It's 11AM and we're off, Aakash took first shift at driving - just getting to the start line he stalled 3-4 times. All the better considering we were nervous of all the things that could go RIGHT/wrong. Since it was Easter Sunday, traffic was much lighter than expected which made getting out of the city quite easy. On our way out of Kochi, we saw another rickshaw pulled over to the shoulder so we stopped to check and see if they were okay. Within the first 10-15 minutes, these guys had already ran out of petrol. First stop was Coimbatore, at least that was the goal when we left Kochi.

All of us had taken equal shifts driving since Jacqueline [jay-kwell-in] (Our lovely rickshaw) requires frequent breaks to cool down the engine/refuel and routine safety checks (we don't really check anything, truthfully). I began driving after the first stop, I'm pretty sure by now we've already broken all kinds of laws (running red lights, illegal u-turns, blowing past toll booths and driving on highways) which in our defense, we can't read the signs and traffic lights are more like suggestions than rules. The roads were mainly flat until they weren't, the highway was incomplete in many areas that led to diversions into towns, up mountains, and down one-way roads.

In my defense - man with the tiger painted on his body told me to do this.

In my defense - man with the tiger painted on his body told me to do this.

At one point, I was going up a mountain with HUGE trucks and busses coming down next to me within inches of scraping Jacqueline. So, let me paint a better picture. Imagine a one-way road, then imagine traffic going two ways (sounds pretty normal, right)? Then imagine three way traffic, so you hug your shoulder, the other guy hugs his shoulder and the middle which isn't much space is used for passing. Then, you have the dirt shoulders which are mainly used by scooters and motorcycles - If you can imagine that, then you know how crazy Indian traffic is!

While going up the mountain, I was primarily in first or second gear hoping I didn't stall and roll back into a truck, get pushed off the road and have the rickshaw tip or even get run over. I definitely stalled and slammed on the breaks to keep me from rolling back, taking off in first gear up a steep incline with a rickshaw loaded with three western Indians and their luggage is a lot harder than you think. Let's just say we didn't die today, not yet.

Soon after I stopped driving, Ajay took over. Let's rewind two days, Ajay rolled up super confident about his driving abilities and we had ~3 near death encounters with him behind the wheel. Almost ran into the back of a bus, almost got pushed off the road by a bus and then almost got hit by an SUV going through a narrow street. Ajay is just a very aggressive driver in a country where everyone is 1000x more aggressive. I think he quickly learned how to become more of a defensive driver in order to stay alive. I think if we didn't have these moments, we wouldn't really have anything to laugh about. I’ll also say, Aakash wasn’t the safest driver by any means. Even I scared my self a few times, India driving is no joke!

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By now, we've driven close to 150km, about another 40-50km more and we'll be in Coimbature, easy day right? Nope! We stopped at a small town with a fort to stretch for a bit, once we got into the fort it started raining out of nowhere, thunder and lighting all around us. We ran back to the rickshaw since Ajay's bag was on the top with no rain cover and my Jambox was exposed to the elements. Once we got back to the rickshaw, we got Ajay's bag into the rickshaw to salvage what ever hadn't gotten wet. At this point, the rain was coming down pretty hard.

Our Uber driver that dropped us off at the start line was shocked - he stuck around so we gave him a shirt!

Our Uber driver that dropped us off at the start line was shocked - he stuck around so we gave him a shirt!

We had to start driving soon as sunlight was scarce, it was ~4PM and only had about 2 hours left before it got really dark. Our rickshaw's headlights are the equivalent to a cell phone's flash light, nothing strong enough to light up a road in India. Not only were our lights shit, but other drivers at night are only using their high beams and/or they're drunk or both. So, we're on the road and can't see shit, our wiper is shit, our lights are shit and shortly after Jacqueline's [jay-kwel-ins] engine started to sputter like shit. IT WAS NOT GOOD.

Long story short, it got really cold, it was windy and the rain was whipping our face cause of our fancy tassels we hung on the sides (instant regret). We arrived to Coimbature barely after sunset. Aakash had booked the Fairfield (Marriott) and once we arrived, it only made sense to valet the shaw. We were wet, miserable, cold and ready for a shower, food and bed, that was only Day 1.

WE HAVE A RESERVATION - Ya’ll gonna learnnnn today!

WE HAVE A RESERVATION - Ya’ll gonna learnnnn today!

Day 2: April 2nd

We woke up at 5:30AM to get an early start to the day, there was no traffic leaving the city and our road to Bangalore was clear. It was around a 10 hour drive to Bangalore, we got an early start and mainly stuck to the highways. By now, we thought Jacqueline [jack-lin] (when she behaved) would/should have broken down, but no - she was plugging away. This day didn't have much craziness involved other than the few close calls Ajay had.

Routine stops, filled up petrol, waved at locals passing us by etc. You'd be surprised how many crazy looks we get from drivers and passengers, they do double takes and triple takes. Some people can't fathom how awesome our rickshaw is and then look back again to only realize that the driver isn't wearing the normal brown driver uniform. It's this moment that you either get smiles and hand waves or death stares from people thinking it's not funny.

As we got closer to Bangalore, we stopped for fuel one more time before entering the city. At this point, Aakash was looking at rates for hotel in the city and the Ritz Carlton came up. Us being Gujarati and in Hotels, we thought it would be very funny to pull into the Ritz with a rickshaw and then VALET it. I did something similar to this in Hong Kong exactly 5 years ago. We booked it, next thing we know, we're on our way into the city. 15km of driving left and google says it'll take nearly two hours to arrive at the hotel. Bumper to bumper traffic with some traffic lights - for the locals, those lights are more suggestions like I talked about earlier. At about 10-15 minutes from the hotel, I mounted my GoPro to the front of the rickshaw to capture a time-lapse of us rolling through Bangalore while also pulling into the Ritz.

Our bartender didn’t believe us when we told him we arrived in a self-driven rickshaw…he found our rick in the garage!

Our bartender didn’t believe us when we told him we arrived in a self-driven rickshaw…he found our rick in the garage!

Once we got there, Aakash got the rickshaw stuck in the exit ramp where it was half hanging in the road and half into the exit. It was only day two and his gear shifting skills had not been perfected. While we're stuck, he pulled back on the accelerator while in neutral which just led to a lot of revving and people staring at us. Auto Rickshaw's are not allowed into the Ritz for obvious reasons, so once we pulled up, the hotel staff approached us in blazers and suits and they begin to tell us that the rickshaw cannot pull up to the entrance where normal cars unload their passengers. We try to tell them we are guests at the hotel but I don't think they believed us. The Ritz definitely needs to rethink their security polices considering the main entrance has recessed steel hardened poles that come out of the ground as a barrier to stop vehicles from entering the hotel and we entered through the exit that has no form of security what so ever.

After a while, we managed to convince the hotel staff to let us valet the shaw but we still couldn't pull up to the main entrance. They just decided they'll take our bags and walk them all the way to the front, it was hilarious! While entering the hotel, we ran into the RCB (Royal Challengers Bangalore) team, I saw Virat Kohli (captain of the Indian Cricket team) leaving the hotel to the practice field, you could say I was "star struck" even though I don't watch cricket.

The rest of the night was okay - the best of part of staying at the Ritz was valeting the rickshaw. The three of us got showered and ready for dinner and drinks. There was a Michelin rated restaurant we hit up, the food was alright, maybe being tired kept us from really enjoying the food - who knows? It was around 10-11PM when we decided to make our way back to the hotel, Aakash and I were trying to negotiate with a rickshaw driver to take us back. At this point, 500 rupees wasn't much too get back but we knew the driver was trying to take advantage so we were on a mission to win. In the end we got tired of trying to win a rickshaw fare negotiation and ended up taking an OLA (Indian version of Uber). Once we got back to the hotel, all of us we were surprised the rooftop bar at the RITZ was DEAD. We decided to call it a night to mentally prepare for a long ass drive the next morning.

Day 3: April 3rd

Today was the day we literally made zero plans - we were ready to go off the beaten path to find some adventure. We had a general direction planned and that was north, east or west didn't really matter as all we wanted was get off the highways. Getting out of Bangalore was just was wild as getting into the city, but at this point in the trip, according to the WhatsApp Group, no one had dared to enter into a major city except us.

Team SuperCaptainSachinWonderIronSpiderManHulkThor - 1

All other rickshaw teams - 0

Motorcycle Riders: “WTF?”

Motorcycle Riders: “WTF?”

About two hours outside of Bangalore we stopped in a village called Sira - we were refueling for our off-road excursion. The greatest part that I experienced was all the curiosity of people that worked at the gas station, the first thing they noticed was that we had a private Kerala (State in India) plate. They must have thought we were the dumbest people in the world to drive a Rick from Kochi to everywhere we we had been so far (especially for not being locals).

Jacqueline [jack-lin] was all filled up and so was our 10 liter jerry can. We were ready! We drove through the village and continued in a direction that eventually lead to a dirt road. It was here that we took 3 - 4 hours out of our day navigating the back roads of India. I had bought a huge bag of bouncy balls and bic pens to hand out to kids and this was where I made my self really look like an idiot. I saw a few kids and went up to them to give them a ball and some pens. The little boy didn't know what to do with it so I "tried" to show him how a bouncy ball works. I literally threw it into mud while aiming for pavement. I'm pretty sure he got a kick out of it once it actually bounced a few tries later, meanwhile Aakash and Ajay are having laughs in the rick.

I have to say, some of these roads were so shit that we thought Jacquline [jack-lin] may not make it back to a real paved road. With no suspension, nothing to absorb all the bumps, our backs were screwed! So after a while, we tried to find a real road, we couldn't read any of the signs so we just kept going north. After a while the dirt road became a real road, from there we went through a few more villages/towns until we came on to the highway. It was late in the afternoon and sunlight was now a factor to consider as our rickshaw's headlights were a wild card. At this point we still hadn't figured out how to turn them on so our game plan was to always stop before the sunset.

#photography Photo Cred: Aakash Patel

#photography
Photo Cred: Aakash Patel

India has a crazy night driving problem - everyone loves to drive with their high beams on, doesn't matter the type of road you're on, One way, dirt roads, multi lane highways, it was all fair game. If that wasn't already something to worry about, then you have truck drivers who actively drink and drive at night to make things worse. And what can be worse than a drunk truck driver hitting a rickshaw with no lights? A BUS! Those guys are complete assholes, even if they aren't drunk, they'll run you off the road - no shame!

We made it to a town called Davanagere - we quickly found a decent place to say, it was no Ritz Carlton but it got the job done. Once we had parked and settled in, the place we were staying at had a rooftop bar/restaurant. By no means is this place "bougie" but a lot of the lodging in India has their own restaurants so in our case, it was on the roof. We all started off with a round of KingFisher's and 1 led to 3 and so on. Day 3 was a solid day, got to see a different part of India, something that my village exposed me to, but I never thought much of it until this trip. We saw kids and families with nothing, but still content with what they have. The saying "less is more" definitely made sense when you see people living in rural India or anywhere else in the world. It made me realize that if our family had not come to America, I'd be one of those kids, living with what I had, not having the life I now have today - meaning not having seen this beautiful world I've been able to see.

Where are we?!

Where are we?!

Day 4: April 4th

With three full days under our belt, today was the day we started making our way to Goa! We woke up bright and early, nothing new at this point. First stop was Hubballi! Aakash had a family friend that lived there and had invited us to their home for some chai naasto (tea and snacks). It was a good break in between what seemed like crazy distances even while keeping Jacqueline [jack-lin] at max speed. Shortly after this detour through Hubballi, it was now time to get to Goa! (state in India with nice beaches) All I had in my head was a nice red sand beach and a beach front bar, it was within reach, all that stood in our way was a 6-9 hours drive depending on traffic/elevation and a wild animal attack. Some of you are probably wondering, "where are the wild animals coming from"? Our route had us drive through Mhadei Wildlife Sanctuary - prior to entering the national park, there were huge billboards with warnings of tigers, elephants, cobras, and some animals I had never even heard of/seen. I won't lie, that level of possible danger was pretty exciting, we were literally driving a vehicle that can't go faster than your average elephant or lion while making the most obnoxious exhaust sound ever!

This guy tried to give us directions - I was speaking broken Hindi, he was probably speaking Telugu or Malayalam. Same - Same, but different.

This guy tried to give us directions - I was speaking broken Hindi, he was probably speaking Telugu or Malayalam. Same - Same, but different.

Right before entering the national park, we had stopped to refuel. By now our daily routine of keeping [jack-lin] in tip top shape was established. It was here that we made sure to keep our jerry can as full as possible due to the route being very remote all the way till Goa. Neil said he would be in the area by nightfall so the three of us were committed to rallying at the beach later that evening. All that stood between us and glory...a jungle, high mountains and a crazy descent back to sea level! All this had to get squeezed into 9-10 hours of day light, were we worried? Nah! We began on what seemed to be a very long straight road - not a car in sight, maybe no one wanted to go to Goa? I was at the helm, first shift, I was ready for some excitement! After about an hour of driving on said straight road, we began to see our first animal signs for the wild life sanctuary.

The first signs were of some monkey's...big deal! I have monkey's at my house...

Then there was a sign for a cobra, yeah okay...I've heard we have them on our farm...

Then there was tiger! Alright, we don't have any of those in Tranol!

Checked into a Hospital for a bed…

Checked into a Hospital for a bed…

Then Elephants. It was here that I thought, what if we end up on "when animals attack" the only thing my mind was thinking was; "with all the camera's I brought, we could go viral" not like that was the goal but what else do you think about when you've maxed out the throttle in the rick on a very long straight road?

Slowly, the very straight road started to wind, then it became covered by the jungle canopy. Gradually, the sunlight had faded and everything began to look very ominous, if something were to attack, this would be the stereotypical setting of where it would happen thanks to movies, that's how I think it would play out. But much to my surprise, our rickshaw most likely scarred away any thing ferocious. There's a new king of the Jungle, and it was Jacquelin's [jay-kwel-ins] high-pitched monotone EXHAUST! To keep it short, it was a very long and uneventful jungle ride. By now, I'm only about 4 hours into driving. After the jungle came the elevation, this is where it really got insane! Our rickshaw has drum brakes, what that means is when you use them too much, they tend to get really hot. When that happens, you have to let off the brakes to let them cool off, in theory it sounds kinda easy, but its extremely hard when you're thousands of feet high and need to come back down to sea level. This is exactly why people know it's not a good idea to be driving a rickshaw across India, good thing we aren't most people! Getting to what seemed like the summit of the climb up was quite challenging. Navigating between 1st and 2nd gear with neutral in between proved to be difficult, sometimes you'd never know you were in neutral till it was too late. I thought at this point, the hard part was over. The little drum brake lesson I gave you all earlier above didn't really ring a bell for me till I made it down from this drive.

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Aakash is in the back with the Osmo (camera stabilizer) taking videos and Ajay was chillin, probably hoping that I didn't kill all of us (secretly, we probably all thought that about about each other's driving 😂). We began rolling down a decent grade, nothing to crazy yet. We were getting sandwiched in between big trucks, all it would take is our brakes going out to rear end the truck in front of us or a truck rear ending us and then going flying off a cliff. There was no real good outcome if anything had gone wrong, our brakes were the only thing in that moment keeping us alive! It was in some long stretches between downhill turns that I remembered something I learned in high school automotive class. Engine Braking! Engine braking is the process of down shifting and having the engine work as a power-absorbing air compressor to slow down the rickshaw as a worst case scenario. Coming down was definitely a marathon, took a lot of focus, timed foot braking and engine braking. When my footbrakes were starting to become un-effective, I'd let gravity speed me up to a decent speed and slowly drop the clutch in first gear to slow the rickshaw down. Trucks were flipped over and traffic was moving at an incredible pace, one that I was kinda scarred to keep up with. Slowing down meant drivers behind me going crazy, speeding up meant potential death. Neither options were good. It was a nail biting drive, in retrospect, it was a thrill! In the moment it was nothing but pure focus and fear. By now I had realized today was my super long day of driving, we made it down the mountain to some more reasonable terrain. I had driven for 7 hours, Aakash had volunteered for the last 90+ minutes to get us to the beach. The sun was about to set, it was a race against the clock! I got in the back, fired up my "get shit done" playlist and we were off. Neil had landed and already found a beach front bar, now it was for us three to get there in time to watch the sunset.

Just as imagined!

Just as imagined!

As we were coming into the Anjuna beach area, we hit a bit of traffic. By now the sun had already dipped below the horizon, but within a few minutes we had found Neil. He had a beer in his hand, peering out at the ocean with his feet up. "You guys just missed it" he said. We all sat down, grabbed a beer and started to unwind. We decided not to stay too long since it was getting dark and we had to park our rick at the hotel, Neil hopped into the rickshaw with us. It was a tight squeeze, Ajay was no longer allowed to sit anywhere besides the middle seat in the back, he wasn't able to keep [jack-lin] balanced. Once we were all in, it was dark out, we hadn't done this before. I whipped our a flashlight we brought (military grade) this thing was BRIGHT! We pointed it down to the ground to use as a head light, didn't work too well as even the brightest flashlight wouldn't be able to light up the roads. We even tried to clip it to our visor, no luck. We were driving in the dark trying to follow google maps on Neil's phone. We couldn't see anything, I was blaring music from the back seat, we're going straight cause that's what the phone says and also, we're on a MUD road.

Aakash: Neil, where's the hotel?

Neil: dude I don't remember this, it was daylight when I got there

Raj: Alright, let me hop out and go look around

Aakash: ....

Ajay: ...

Neil: it says keep going straight.

Aakash: I think we're stuck in a ditch

Raj: Yeah, we're stuck - this isn't a road!

Us at the end of everyday so far…

Us at the end of everyday so far…

By now we've gotten stuck and unstuck at least 3-4 times. We start seeing some faint lights and a gate on our right, Neil yelled "that's it"! So we drove on an uneven surface which seemed like a washed away mud road and finally made it. Google was actually right, we just didn't want to accept it cause we were lost in the middle of nowhere with no light. We checked into the hotel and got showered and ready for dinner. We tried to go out and rage but it was the low season in Goa, by the time dinner was over, the beach had shut down. The adventurists held a party in Goa, but it was over 100 miles away to the south, couldn't have made that. We decided to call it a night, tomorrow was going to be another long day. It was now time to convince Neil to come with us. Mumbai was on the way and how much better of an adventure than adding another Neil to our roster. By morning Aakash, Ajay and I will get a yes!

That's the beginning folks, there's a lot more to come! Stay tuned, up next is Kohlapur, Pune & Mumbai!

THE RICKSHAW RUN: PROLOGUE

Wow, I have to say that the way we (Aakash, Ajay and I) started this trip can only be described as Legendary! It was March 23, 2018, Aakash and I are at the Airport and at this point Ajay is already in the air beating us on our race to Japan. At this point Aakash and I are LIT (obviously), I was waiting on an upgrade to business class and Aakash was plugging away at work, however I don't think he accomplished much.

At this point, the three of us had already floated the idea of purposely missing our flight to Jakarta to spend 24 hours in Tokyo. As some of you know, that is exactly what happened, but it was in no way intentional, or was it? Aakash and I were sitting in the United club having some dranks among other hors d' oeuvres. While waiting for my upgrade, I saw that our flight was delayed 40 minutes, at this point Aakash and I got very EXCITE! We only had an hour long connection in Tokyo and this 40 minute delay started a chain reaction which led to a three hour delay.

At this point, I got confirmed into business and had to leave my boy sitting in the back of the plane by himself - in my defense, he can sleep anywhere so I didn't feel as bad. By now we had taken off for Tokyo and we were definitely not going to make it in time to catch our connection. After-all, it had worked out the way we wanted! At this point in all the excitement, we had forgotten that Ajay was already in the air and he had no idea we won't be arriving for the connecting flight. I logged onto the internet in the middle of the flight to send him Facebook messages letting him know what happened.

Long story short, we arrived in Japan and we found Ajay waiting for us. At this point he has had two Japanese Strongs (more on this later) and he dropped ~$1k to spend 24 hours in Tokyo. Time to rage, right? Obviously!

This is where things started to get crazy, or great!? Ajay and I were back in Japan in the summer of 2017 - while there my boy Michael Herman was stationed in Yokohama. We went to go grab dinner with him and it was there that Ajay and I learned about Chu-Hi's. A Chu-Hi is a local Japanese drink made with Sochu and a stimulant. A "STRONG" is a Chu-Hi that's been commercialized and mass produced made available on every street corner at the local 7-ELEVEN. Anyways, back to the story! The three of us had just arrived in Shibuya (not our first time) and me being the genius that I am, Ajay and I convinced Aakash to try a STRONG.

For a mere $1.50, it's almost dumb to not drink STRONG, it's the equivalent of a 4-Loko but much more over the top. So we grabbed these drinks and thanks to Japans fine open container policy, the three of us began to huddle up and drink in the middle of the street. This is where we ran in to some locals and had great conversations. Just a few words were exchanged here and there, Miami Heat, Lebron James, Chicago Bulls, Rajon Rondo - the list goes on. After this, we decided to go to a Club called "The Womb". If you've read my blogs prior, you'll know that I apparently frequent this club when I'm on this side of the world.

Let's fast forward a few hours, it's approximately 2-3AM. Aakash has brought us to Golden Gai (bar street) which used to be old brothels now converted into niche bars. It was here that the night really began according to some. We got beers, and then the bar tender gave us welcome shots of cuervo. Apparently I had left the bar to grab some cash to settle the tab, it was here that I was separated from my boys due to the fact that I couldn't remember what street/bar we were at.

I was LOST! You may think "oh no, he's lost in a different country, he'll prolly die!!" well, lets just say I wandered for 4-6 hours, saw the sun rise, got some coffee and sat on a curb Face-timing my fambam. Pretty tame right? Well, that's Japan.

Our flight was later that afternoon, we had to get back to the hotel to shower and get ready but Aakash was no where to be seen. After waiting about an hour or so, he comes back and he's back very EXCITE albeit 5 hours too late. After taking a quick navy shower, we were all back together trying to hash out what had happened. The only thing that we could all come to a conclusion on was that we don't think we paid our bar tab. After a 24 hour bender in Tokyo, it was time to make our way down to Jakarta. I have to say, from here we tried to keep it as tame as possible since we were definitely hurting, some more than others. Off to Indo we go!

To keep this short, Jakarta was fun for the 24 hours we were there, nothing like Tokyo but amazing in it's own way. As the capital city of Indonesia, we found it hard to find things to do/see. Even finding restaurants turned out to be a lot harder than expected. As for Kuala Lampur, I have to say, I liked KL much more than Jakarta. In 72 hours, we were able to explore one of the largest Hindu Temples (Batu Caves) see the Petronas Towers and we went to a botanical/hibiscus garden all while trying not to repeat Japan. Lots of street food was eaten everywhere and it was all delicious, especially the mango sticky rice!

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Now here we are in Kochi, India. Yesterday was the day we got to see our well crafted Rickshaw. I have to say, the "Rembrandt's of India" sure know how to paint! Our rickshaw was a beaut! Hulk somehow grew a mustache that wasn't on the original design, Iron Man looked like his face was just beat in by the Hulk and Katrina Kaif and Deepika Padukone look like they were made for a comic book like the rest of the rickshaw. I can't say that I'm surprised, I actually was hoping they'd botch this up as it would be much funnier, and they have!

Once we registered, we received the key to our steed! We began to test drive it in circles before taking it out on the road, the three of us are quite sufficient in driving this contraption we'll call home for the next two weeks. After we were done testing out our rick, we had a brief engine talk (re-rigging your steed 101) to help us during the numerous break down's we'll have. Later in the evening we had a much more formal Q&A along with a presentation by The Adventurists and Cool Earth, it was here in the slideshow when things got funny, take a look!

And there it is folks, we have survived the journey up until now, today we have one extra day to test drive/pimp thy steed and tomorrow, April 1st/Easter/April Fools Day we begin on a 14 day adventure across India. The only thing that stands between us an glory: multiple break downs, getting into some shit, and anything else the roads of India can throw at us. LET'S GO!!!

Stay tuned for the next post as I'm sure shit will have hit the fan. Also, look out on Facebook/Instagram for updates and the Rickshaw run website where there will a live map to track progress!

Last Discovered Continent

2016 has come to an end and I have to say it's been a great year! Lots of high's and low's but overall, it's been solid. Why? Lots of traveling, and I mean A LOT! First trip was to Machu Picchu with Brandon and Kyle followed by a trip to Aruba for my 24th birthday with Justin, Andrew, Krista, Bullens and Jackie (new friend). It doesn't stop there, just a month later I made my way to Munich for an early Oktoberfest with my good buddy Kyle Woodward from elementary school. Immediately followed by a weekend trip to Maui, changing jobs and another weekend trip to London and Paris with my mom over thanksgiving and finally the long awaited trip to South America for part dos including ANTARCTICA! Yes, THE white continent known for its vast glaciers and ice bergs the size of some states and even countries!

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Before we dive straight into Antarctica, this trip starts the day after I signed a new apartment in Chicago, after living on the road for four months continuously, it was time to have a home again! It's December 7th and I'm in Chicago packing all of my gear for Antarctica, I'm second guessing myself, that I'm forgetting something, so I ask Beena to look at what I've laid out and she doesn't react the way I had hoped she would. How could she? Everything I thought I needed fit perfectly on my bed, with quite a lot of space left over for more gear obviously.

Birthday Catch!

Birthday Catch!

I decided it was enough for me, I emptied my bag that I use weekly for work and packed everything away into just that one small carry on. One month of travel with only one small bag, now you know the reason for questioning myself. With less than 24 hours left before departing for Buenos Aires, I began to mentally worry. What could I have been thinking about? EVERYTHING! I couldn't get over the thought that I'm 24 years old and I'm about to hit my 7th and final continent! "What is life?!" was the main question rushing through my mind. Not only that, but what's next after? After stressing about the future long enough it was time stop and go to sleep, I had an early flight the next day so some real sleep after spending 4 months on the road out of hotels, airplane seats and couch's was much needed!

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The next day I made it to the airport, boarded my plane to Miami and there I was...off to the end of the world! The feeling was overwhelming, during the entire flight I couldn't stop thinking about all the trips I had taken in the past. Everything was coming back so vividly, good times and bad. It was all of that, which led to this! After landing in Miami, I had about an hour to kill before my 10 hour flight to BA, only made sense to grab a Cuban sandwich and a corona! Good thing that I ate the cubano cause the airplane food was terrible! I landed the next morning in Buenos Aires and my nerves had quickly died down, it was time to figure out how to get past the language barrier and find a way into the city. All the ATM's were completely empty and I completely forgot to get cash while I was still in the US. After wandering aimlessly looking for a functioning ATM I wandered into a cell phone store and bought a SIM card for my phone. Some people maybe thinking "why the hell would he be wanting a SIM card when he has no money to get into town?" I'll tell you why, first of all they take credit cards which means I now have a way to find a way into the city! How so? UBER!

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The SIM card saved me, I quickly got an uber and made it into the city to my hotel. My problems weren't done there, as Argentina's economy is in shambles, most of the ATM's were empty, no one trusts the banks with their money, so as soon as they are refilled people empty them out ASAP! It took a while to find an ATM that did spit out cash and when it did, I took out as much as I could! Buenos is a very credit card friendly place but as much as it is, doesn't mean it's like every where in the US, the cash was definitely necessary!

Brandon was due to arrive later in the evening since his flights were delayed so I then started exploring on my own. While I was in Maui, I met a girl from Argentina, her name was Florencia. As I was flying in I sent her a message to see if she was around to get lunch, she just so happened to be in the city before heading to Brazil in the evening. Had a fantastic time seeing her again! After the reunion I went around Buenos Aires to some very questionable places. This economic collapse had kept people on edge, you never want to have your backpack on your back as someone could come behind you and cut it off, you also wouldn't want to walk around in public with your cell phone out since the possibility of someone swiping it was very high!

Summit of Mt. Haleakala - Maui, Hawaii

Summit of Mt. Haleakala - Maui, Hawaii

I wasn't that impressed with BA, it may have been because I came during a holiday that just so happened to run through the entire weekend Brandon and I were there. The immaculate conception de Virgin Mary, I'm sure you understand what it's all about. After Brandon rolled through it was time to rage! It started out with the free bottle of Vino that was in our room followed by a completely fabricated business celebration anniversary which led to a free bottle of champagne. Quickly after, it was time to go get food, I had managed to talk Brandon into Paella. I found a solid spot in the city and we were off, when we arrived we were given free glasses of more champagne! We were feeling pretty good by this point, the free champagne was just bonus.

The Paella was fantastic, I don't think it could have gotten any better according to Argentinian standards, which are mediocre at best! The Paella you can get in Spain puts Argentina to shame! But, if you want a quick fix...not a bad place to go! After dinner, it was time to experience the Buenos Aires night life, I found a club and we were getting pretty excited, I had told Brandon that South American folks don't start to party until at least 2-3 AM but we still went anyway. By this point it's already midnight so we gave it a shot. When we arrived, we began questioning our choices. Parking lot was empty, no one was around other than the bouncers, we went up to the entrance and asked for prices. Bottle service was $30 bucks (cheapest I've ever found). We go inside and found a nice spot with a bucket of ice and a nice bottle of champagne, however there were only around 20 people there.

London & Paris with my Mom!

London & Paris with my Mom!

As we got closer to finishing the bottle, Brandon was already on cloud nine, he was in the middle of the dance floor trying to start the party, no one joined him. At this point we had given up, after over 24 hours of flying and very little sleep, it was time to call it a night. We had an early flight to Santiago Chile in less than 6 hours so we decided to go back to the hotel.

I had set an alarm to wake us up the next morning but I may have accidentally turned it off right as it rang. I completely forgot to actually get up. Brandon about an hour before our flight came up to me, woke me up and asks, "Hey Raj, what time is our flight?" I said "9:45" Brandon responds "it's 8:45"! Yeah, we quickly threw things into our bags and started to scramble. We had already checked into the flight the night before so we still thought we had a shot of getting there. We were in a cab by 8:50 and hauling ass to the Airport. As we arrived to the airport, we went straight to the departures where we had to do immigration, with our electronic boarding passes, we thought "we made it!" At Immigration we head and saw some Spanish words followed by flight "canceled". Brandon and I were told to go back to ticketing to get rebooked. When we got there, it's already 9:20. We knew the flight was most likely boarding. The ticketing agent told us that the flight was not canceled, but it was just a simple flight number change which messed everything up in their system. She reprinted us new boarding passes and Brandon and I started to Jet back towards immigration. Right as we are about to go through immigration towards the gates, their computers all shut down. We were stuck in immigration not knowing what was really going on.

Welcome to the End of the World

Welcome to the End of the World

After 3-4 translators later, we learned that boarding had stopped due to the technical malfunctions. We were saved! Thirty minutes later, we get through immigration and our flight board says "Last Call" so much for not boarding! Oh well, we made it and were on our way to Santiago! I was really looking forward to Chile, not only because BA was so boring, but I also had another reunion with a really good friend that I made while I was in Thailand. Luis and I met on the ferry while going to Koh Phi Phi and after, we managed to stay quite inebriated the rest of the day, I even told him about my Antarctica trip which was well over a year away at the time. Now it was time to see him again, and the reason I was in the area; Antarctica!

We met up with Luis once we had settled in and started to roam around the city, as any reunion we celebrated with the one thing that brought us together...beer! Soon after lunch and drinks we went to the highest point of Santiago, took in all the great views and had a great walk down. Tonight was the night to catch up on sleep, the following night was when things got wild! The next day, Luis met up with us again and the three of us took a bus to Valparaiso, which so far was the highlight of our trip! The city was rich with so much culture that BA and Santiago seemed to lack. After a day trip, we went back to Santiago, said our goodbye's to Luis and then Brandon and I and I went out to dinner. We both weren't having as great of a time like we had in Peru. We were debating on going out since it was our last night, on our way back to the hotel, we wandered into the W hotel. At this point, we had officially decided to just grab drinks and then call it a night. Right as we walk in, we hear club music. Brandon makes it his mission to find where the music was coming from.

The night was just beginning, we needed to get amped so we went to the W hotel bar and starred prepping! In doing so, we met a local who ended up joining us for a night of complete madness! The three of us went downstairs and paid our cover and boom, we were at the biggest party in the city! Brandon was in his usual raging mindset and for those of you who don't know what that is, you'll just have to ask him yourself! Let's just say he was in search for the nectar of gods. Overall, what ended up being a somewhat boring trip ended up turning around quick! I ended up leaving an hour or so earlier than Brandon, right as I got back to the hotel I passed out.

After about an hour, I woke up and Brandon comes in with room service. I quickly passed out again but woke up two more times and all I could hear was Brandon puking in the bathroom. It wasn't until he woke up that I found out he ate ceviche and chicken alfredo at 5 am. As we got ready to leave, the receptionist helped him recall some more events such as playing the Piano for the hotel guests. Some guests even asked if he worked for the hotel and the receptionist responded "no he just came back from partying, but I heard him play and he's good when he's sober and even now." Then she began telling me what he had originally ordered, first it was a burger, then he canceled the burger when he saw ceviche and the alfredo. Quite funny that he was reminded of what happened from the hotel staff.

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It was now time to go back to BA, we had one more day to kill before Justin came into town, and the three of us began our trip down to Fin Del Mundo (the end of the world aka southern most city of the world) USHUAIA! Before that, we still had a day to kill, so we took a ferry into Uruguay, a small town called Colonia! As soon as we got there, Brandon wanted to take a lame ass tour bus, I managed to convince him to keep walking, within 5 minutes we found a shop that rented golf carts. Problem solved, time to go off the beaten path! We got a map and hit the open road, first stop was a beach side play ground, Brandon really wanted to climb a tree to reminisce his younger days, he climbed out to a very flimsy looking branch and just sat there. In my mind I knew he was thinking "damn, I probably shouldn't have done this" because anymore movement would have most likely broken the branch. Brandon then decides to jump, he lands flat footed and hits the ground hard. He's like "it didn't look that high, man that hurt!" Followed by "God! I'm getting old" there's an excellent GoPro video for anyone's amusement if they'd like to see it.

Shortly after, we began exploring the rest of Colonia, we walked around the old city and climbed up a light house, overall it was a solid way to spend the day. We did have a huge problem though, we were done seeing everything by 2pm and our ferry didn't leave till 8. We took a few more laps around in our golf cart, we even tried to get lost but it was practically impossible! I did manage to find a road that lead to a Sheraton Resort & Golf course so we both decided it was time to hit the driving range. I'm not that great at golf and neither is Brandon but it was a way to pass time so we gave it a shot. We rented two drivers and got two buckets of golf balls and walked out to the range. As Brandon pretty much went through most of his bucket, I saw something huge take off from his direction! It was a line drive right down the middle of the driving range, for a while it didn't register and I thought "Damn son, don't hit them so hard, you're making me look bad!" Then I actually looked at him and noticed that his driver no longer had a head. I look down range and there's a huge piece of metal, I couldn't stop laughing, he literally broke that shit!

He then began telling me that the lady who gave us the clubs gave him a "weak" driver. No way you can make this shit up! You can see the look in his eyes "I'm not paying for this driver, NO WAY!" So as we walked back inside, I gave my driver back in one piece to soften the blow, then Brandon hands back the pieces and the lady just looks at us, she probably wondering "huh, I'm pretty sure this was one piece when I gave it to you." Brandon then began to message all of his Spanish speaking friends on Facebook asking them how to say "you gave me a weak driver." The lady was trying to call her boss but she couldn't get a hold of anyone so she came back to us, at this point we had google translated "the driver was weak" and she just decided to let us go without paying. We both ran out of that hotel quick! Fired up the golf cart and gunned it out of the resort area. There was an immense amount of laughter followed by "wtf do we do now?" So we continued to try getting lost by taking random roads not knowing where they go!

It became apparent after a while that getting lost was no longer feasible so we then began our search for a beach front bar, we found one in minutes and our time pass problem was solved! We stayed long enough to kill time, how could Colonia be this small? For dinner, we had some fantastic shrimp and avocado crepes, my mind was blown! The time had now come, to return our golf cart and make our way back to the ferry to go back to Buenos! After a very long delay, we were back in the city, it was our last night so the thought of raging came across our minds. We went back to the hotel and Brandon wanted to nap till 1-2 AM so we'd be ready to go out but instead we both didn't wake up since we never actually set an alarm.

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The next morning, we waited for Justin to arrive! It literally took him close to 4 hours to get from the airport to the hotel. He even ditched his cab about a mile from the hotel and began walking! Once he arrived, it was now time for the real adventure to begin! We had to transfer to the city airport to catch our domestic flight to Ushuaia. Once at the airport, we caught up with Justin over beers and burgers at the hard rock restaurant. Fast forward through boarding and flying, we all had window seats. I had told Brandon and Justin they should stay awake as the mountains surrounding Fin Del Mundo were some they didn't want to miss! As soon as the clouds cleared, it seemed as if we were about to land on a different planet, the landscape was so picturesque. Rivers and mountains in every direction! Even the town of Ushuaia looked like something you'd see in a movie or imagine while reading a book. The three of us had two days here before I went on further south to Antarctica, it was time to explore!

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Since we arrived pretty late in the day, we checked into our hostel which was pretty good for one at the end of the world, it would have been much more boring for those staying there if we hadn't showed up! After checking in, we went to dinner, drank a lot of good beer, walked around town, went to the only bar in town, drank with probably every person that drinks in town and then bought our own beers and went back to our hostel. At this point, the only place we could drink was the common area, we show up and it's a hot box and everyone is whispering! By far the most dull hostel I'd ever seen. At this point Brandon, Justin and I walk in with nearly 9-10 beers and everyone is just staring at us! "Yeah, we're the stereotypical Americans, we like to drink and have fun" that's what's probably going through all of our minds. We sat down and started talking among each other with our not so quiet voices.

After ten minutes, people started joining our conversations and then it was poppin! We started making tons of frannnns, hours of chatting and meeting new people and it was time for bed! The next day, we had to check into the Arakur Resort, probably the fanciest place in all of Ushuaia! This is where my entire expedition was staying before we had left the next day for Antarctica. It's 9 am and I check into my room and also meet my roommate. He's quite interesting. He was from India, in his mid fifties, traveled the world and has by now set his sights on the elusive white continent. We were all there for the same reason so I thought rooming with someone older, more wise would be good for me...then shit hit the fan, but not all at once, it came in increments.

Antarctic Camping

Antarctic Camping

As we checked into our room's, my roommate (he who shall not be named) wanted to hang out with us, we took a shuttle into Ushuaia and as we're getting off, he asks if we should start drinking. Brandon, Justin and I were a little hesitant because it was barely 10 A.M. After going through two bottles of champagne, we decided to split off from my roommate and hit the national park. After spending close to four hours hiking around, we went back to town, bought some duty free booze for the three of us back at the hotel. As I walk into my room, my cabin mate has already drank through a pint of whiskey and is halfway passed out on his bed. By now, I'm thinking he noticed I had a bottle of Double Black. I stepped into the shower and as I got out, he had already looked through my bag and asked if he could join us when we cracked open the bottle. I thought "what the hell, we'll be in Antarctica together so why not". After going through the first bottle, we started on a second. I'm sure by now, my roommate was LIT!

I went back to my room and fell asleep and so did my roommate, but a few hours later, he ordered a bottle of wine at 5AM. The hotel refused to deliver alcohol that early but he somehow convinced them. The server comes into our room, at this point I'm sneakily looking at what's going on while acting like I was still sleeping. The server uncorked the bottle and attempted to pour some wine into a glass, my roommate refused the glass and thought it would be more efficient to drink straight from the bottle. At this point, I was in shock, as soon as the server left, my roommate attempted to walk back to his bed with the bottle and immediately fell onto the floor. An actual person sleeping would have woken up so I couldn't act like I was sleeping cause he just face planted on the floor. He surprisingly saved the bottle. I managed to help him get back into bed and tried to take the bottle away but it didn't work, he had a vice grip around he neck. At this point I showered, packed my bag and left it outside of my room for the hotel staff to take to the ship and immediately went to Justin and Brandon's room.

After he managed to stay drunk throughout the entire morning, he somehow made it to the ship after causing a huge scene at the hotel. I was gone at this point, roaming around in Ushuaia. As I made it on to the ship, we had started our safety briefing and my roommate was nowhere to be found. I thought "maybe he didn't make it". I head to my room after the safety demonstration and muster station drills and my roommate is already passed out in our cabin. By now, the ship staff already knew he was drunk so they called a doctor and some police officers to test his blood alcohol level. Let's just say it didn't end well, he then got escorted off the ship and was taken to the hospital. While the outcome was not great, he was a safety hazard on the ship. If he managed to stay drunk while crossing the drake passage (the roughest seas on earth) he could have easily fallen off if he had wandered outside on deck. There were 9 police officers and two doctors that led him off the ship, and yes I have a video. The entire ordeal was a shit show!

At this point, we were delayed two hours and had a long journey across the Drake, bad weather was expected and the quicker we could leave the better we would have been. By now, I had met my other roommate, he was MIA during all of this because he was smart enough to get his own room at the hotel. His name was Troy and he was from SF, we got along great! We now had two days between us and Antarctica, time to make some new friends! For the longest time I thought I would have been the youngest on the ship but on the first day I met another guy in his 20's. His name was Blake, lived in Canada and it was his last continent all at the age of 23. These two days at sea we had some amazing lectures by the expedition staff, learned about the early expeditions to the white continent and the huge whaling industry that was also present in the early 1900's. We got our expedition parka's which looked amazing, they were also super warm! I'm pretty sure this was way better than any of the Canada Goose shit people in Chicago are wearing.

7/7 - DONE!

7/7 - DONE!

The days went on, plenty of good food, booze, and friends! On the third day, we started seeing our first ice bergs. The anticipation had built by now that seeing any sort of ice was astounding. Little did we know that the ice we were seeing were small ice cubes compared to the colossal tabular ice bergs and mountains we'd see in the days to come. As much as I'd like to write about Antarctica, I believe the pictures I took will tell a much better story. Let's just say there were millions of Chinstrap, Adelie and Gentoo penguins EVERYWHERE along with Leopard Seals, Whales, and crazy big birds. We were able to get off the ship twice a day for hiking, zodiac cruises and camping. Our night of camping was quite awesome, we dug into the snow under the mid night sun, laid out sleeping pads and slept in bivvy sacks (sleeping bag covered with a water proof liner) with millions of penguins all around us. I have to say, it was pretty hard to sleep when all you're thinking is "wow, I'm in Antarctica, thousands of miles away from home, at the bottom of the world, camping on ice. Antarctica was definitely a game changer, all 7 continents are crossed off for me. I'm pretty sure I'm the only person from Mount Vernon, Kentucky to have done this. Next up is a weekend in Cuba, look out for the next post!

To the End of the World

Ahhhh, the day is here! I am currently in Charlotte getting ready to board my flight to Miami where I will then board another flight to Buenos Aires. It's been five long years since I've thought of taking a trip to the end of the world, and now all of a sudden it's crept up on me! I managed to pack a carry on bag of items that should suffice...lets hope. I'm sure as I make my way down to Ushuaia (southern most city of the world), a lot of the gear that I packed should keep me warm, but lets not forget that it's also summer down there!

My quarter life goals are winding down, after Antarctica I will have traveled to all seven continents before the age of 25. While that feeling of accomplishment is beyond amazing, I am also worried about what the next part of my life will be. What goals are next, will I finish them all like these? I know not a lot of people my age have these types of goals but now that I'm about to finish off this last continent, I'm already trying to plan for my dirty 30!

Before I get too far ahead, I'm focusing on getting through this adventure as it maybe my most daring yet! Colder, drier, and windier than anywhere else on the planet, Antarctica is so extreme and remote that it barely feels like it’s part of Earth at all. But it’s that very otherworldliness that appeals to the adventurer in me. Painted in shades of white and blue, the landscape is as beautiful as it is forbidding; monstrous glaciers, saw-toothed mountains, colossal icebergs, and fields of ice that stretch on forever. But as barren as it looks, life – specifically penguins, whales, and seabirds found a way to thrive there. The journey to Antarctica will be long, but the memories earned, eternal.

A storm equivalent to a category two hurricane

A storm equivalent to a category two hurricane

As with Semester at Sea, I also have some crazy anxieties about reaching the white continent! One in particular is crossing the Drake Passage, the roughest waters on Earth! I didn't get sea sick on SAS like a lot of people but then again we also tried to avoid a major part of the storms. Crossing the Drake is dangerous, not to be underestimated as it has taken the lives of many that have tried to cross through in the past. Me being curious, I looked at the weather forecast for the Drake on the day I leave and it did not look pretty. This is all the better as I would love to have a great story to tell. Following in the footsteps of some the greatest explorers in the world like Sir Ernest Shackleton and Roald Amundsen, I wouldn't want it any other way

A storm of 970 mb is expected, thats the equivalent of a category 2 hurricane. With the storm current going through such a narrow passage, I've been told to expect nothing short of 30 ft waves. NO.BIG.DEAL! After going through two hurricanes, the Drake Passage and Antarctica can't stop me! No, but for real - this looks like it's going to be crazy!

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Pre-Trip Anxieties:

  • Was this a good idea? (Of course it was)

  • Should I bypass Dramamine?

  • What will I do for 13 days?

  • Did I pack good enough? (I don't think so)

  • How crazy will this storm really be?

  • What's next once I get back?

I plan on dropping off the face of the earth Dec 16th at around noon, no communication what so ever!

Look out for the post Antarctica blog as a lot of these questions I have will be answered!


Camino De La Muerte

Amazing 20+ hour bus ride to La Paz

Amazing 20+ hour bus ride to La Paz

This story starts in Cusco Peru...Brandon, Kyle and I have just finished hiking up Machu Picchu by taking the Salkantay trail and now it's time for another adrenaline pumping adventure; Death Road! Kyle is leaving us to go back to school at this point, it's me and Brandon for just a couple more days. I had managed to convince my Asian counterpart to risk life and limb to bike down the infamous death road with me. It didn't take much persuasion, next thing you know, we're both on a 14 hour bus ride to Bolivia!

By now, I've learned Brandon sleeps every chance he gets, we're on this fantastic bus after sleeping all night and this guy falls asleep within 30 minutes of leaving. I don't get it, we had such great views of the Peruvian and Bolivian peaks around us and Brandon is peacefully slumbering away. We had an 8 hour trip on the first day and around 6-7 hours the day after. We stopped at Lago Titicaca, the highest lake in the world. We were only spending the night so we decided to stay at a hotel to rest up before possibly dying while biking the most dangerous road in the world. The hotel was fantastic, the best part was the sunrise we saw while we were eating breakfast in the morning before entering into Bolivia.

Eating breakfast while watching the sun rise on the highest lake in the world - Hotel Libertador Lago Titicaca

Eating breakfast while watching the sun rise on the highest lake in the world - Hotel Libertador Lago Titicaca

We leave the hotel and get back onto another bus, at this point we have downgraded from what was a great bus to a third world clunker, it was all apart of the South American experience! On our bus ride into Bolivia, Brandon and I met a couple that was traveling around the world for a year, and they just so happened to be from Chicago! They sold all of their stuff shortly after getting married, quit their jobs and began their travels. Can't wait to hear all about their adventures once they return to Chi-town early next year.

Our bus pulled up to the Bolivian border, they told us all to get off with our passports and make our way across the border into Bolivia, this was just as bad, if not worse than what we did to get into Cambodia. All we have is our pocket wads of cash to get our visa and a passport. We did however forget to print extra passport photos for our visa so we ended up getting ripped off by a little boy with a printer and a camera, talk about an excellent business model! So we casually walk across the border, no big deal, we had officially entered Bolivia! It was now time to hop back onto the bus and make our way to the capital city of La Paz, little did we know the entire country only has around 300 miles of paved road so it was quite a bumpy ride.

a sip of pisco to calm the nerves and a few drops to please the gods

a sip of pisco to calm the nerves and a few drops to please the gods

After around 7 hours of driving, we were finally in La Paz! At an altitude of 12,000 ft, just walking around required a lot of energy and oxygen, thanks to our hike to Machu Picchu, we were doing better than others. We checked into our Airbnb and it was fantastic! It was in a luxury high rise on the 19th floor, we had views for days! After settling in, it was time to mentally prepare as the next day we were about to descend a mountain that could likely kill us.

It's 6am and Brandon and I are awake and ready to go! We find out where our group is leaving from and head that way to eat some breakfast, this could have been our last meal so we ate pretty good! Yungas road was calling our names and taunting us, as we approached the starting point, it started to snow. We were at 15,000 ft above sea level, the weather was unpredictable here. As we start getting dressed with water proof jackets and pants the snow starts to thicken, Brandon and I just start staring at each other and instantly high five, no words were necessary to express our excitement! We strapped on our GoPro's and got into formation, before taking off our guide gave us some Pisco (alcohol) to make a prayer to patchumama (mother earth) to protect us as we go down this treacherous mountain. We first had to say something in Spanish, pour pisco on our tires, pour it into the earth followed by a big swig to take the edge off! Nothing says "dangerous" better than getting drunk at altitude before biking down a mountain nick named death road.

High up in the Bolivian Andes

High up in the Bolivian Andes

And so it began, the first few miles down were on a paved road, we picked up a lot of speed here. Snow in my face, wind in my hair...my blood was pumping for sure! What were were seeing coming down this mountain looked like it was straight out of a movie, overcast skies, blizzard conditions, wet roads and a bunch of adrenaline junkies zooming past cars, it couldn't have started any better! As we approach the starting point, the road goes from paved and first world level to muddy gravel third world level almost instantly. At this point, we still have a mix of snow/sleet/rain, and it's coming down! The only thing that stands between us and the finish line is 41 miles of winding cliff-sides, a 15,000 ft descent, raging waterfalls and DEATH! No big deal, right?

Strikin the pose

Strikin the pose

We started out slow at first, we needed to get a feel for how the mud and gravel would shift under our tires. It also didn't help that the Europeans ahead of us were playing it super safe, we were trying to test death road - we wanted speed! We stayed back a bit until we saw a girl completely wipe out in front of us. As we were going down a steep hill, she accidentally hit her front brakes and flipped forward with the rear tire coming around to only hit her in the back of the head. She ate shit for sure! Nothing better than curb stomping yourself with a bike. Brandon and I jumped off our bikes and went to go help her up, her boyfriend just kept rolling downhill until he realized she was no longer behind him...what a guy! After a while, when our backup bus showed up, we loaded her bike and sat her down...she was done! Brandon and I got back on our bikes, looked at each other and said, "can you keep up?!" It was a race, what we had just seen didn't sway us at all, we were still desperate to race down the mountain, we started hauling ass! Within 2-3 minutes of taking off, Brandon almost hits a pickup truck that's coming up the mountain as we're going down and almost takes a tumble off the cliff. Good thing he was on the inside of the road, otherwise I would have seen him fly like superman to his demise.

Death Road Squad

Death Road Squad

The rain went from a slight drizzle to full on monsoon, I start to loose my sight as my sunglasses are covered in water and the dirt kicked up from the tires started to seep into my eyes. At any moment I could have gone off a cliff, instead I took off my sunglasses and decided to wing it. I couldn't think of what I wanted to do with all of this in my face, I wanted to hit the brakes on my bike but I was just trying to not steer off the side of the mountain, so I let the gravity speed me up. I was blinking like a mad man to get the water and dirt out of my eyes, it got really bad, no wonder there are so many deaths on this road. The conditions were horrible, and it wasn't just the rain and the mud, we also had to cross through waterfalls falling right onto our bikes which could have just washed us away off the mountain.

There were times where I began questioning myself..."why did I do this?" "This is terrible!!" But for some reason all the excitement was still there, and I was just thinking how amazing these gopro video's would be. After hours of going down this mountain and trying to stay alive, we made it! Death road definitely left it's mark on me mentally, I'll never forget how awesome and crazy it was to bike down. The downhill part was hard physically, going back up riding on the bus was worse mentally. After we showered and ate lunch, our bus had to go back up the mountain, this is where a majority of the deaths occur as the bus looses traction or gets washed away with loose mud or the numerous waterfalls we had passed. Fortunately for us, we made it back in one peace but not without a nail biting ride all the way back!

Brandon was going back home the next day, once we got back we ate dinner and tried to rage but we were so tired it didn't happen. The next morning he left and I was in La Paz all by myself, I had no idea what I was going to do for the few days I had left so I booked a flight last minute to Salar De Uyuni, the famous salt flats of Bolivia! I spent a night in Uyuni and did a day trip out to the flats, it was just an endless desert of Salt, it paled in comparison to biking death road!

Officially reached elevation higher than Everest Base Camp

Officially reached elevation higher than Everest Base Camp

After I came back the next day, I signed up for a 14 hour summit attempt of Mt. Chacaltaya, I've always wanted to climb above 5000 meters in preparation for a Himalayan peak so I thought I'd give it a shot. Since the ozone has depleted much more over South America than in other parts of the world, there was barely any snow, I climbed up this mountain wearing a hoodie and jeans since that's all I had packed. Chacaltaya used to once be the highest ski resort in the world at 18,000 ft. But now it's an abandoned mountain were people like me try to summit. The climb was terrible, I was not prepared in anyway other than the acclimating I had done in Peru and La Paz. It took around 15 hours for me to reach the peak of Chacaltaya, my head felt like it was going to explode. I couldn't breathe, there was no oxygen getting to my head so I only stayed at the summit for ten minutes before deciding to turn around and head back down. The views were phenomenal, I had just climbed a peak higher than Everest base camp! I now know that when I go to Nepal, I'll have to push my self to go higher, the goal now is Island Peak at around 22,000 ft, for that though, I'll need to train!

We've reached the end of my trip, sudamerica part uno is done, part dos starts in December where Brandon and I will continue our shenanigans before I set sail to the end of the world!

Stay tuned, Pre-Antarctic post is coming soon!

Step, Step...Breathe!

After 3 years of failing to blog my past adventures, I've come to a conclusion that once I'm old and senile, I would like to take a walk down memory lane and read about said adventures, knowing that the photo's I've taken will only make me want to remember more!

It's 2016 - I am currently living in Chicago (or out of a bag) and "working" for IBB Consulting as a "Consultant" in Philadelphia! Oh yeah, you've already worked at IBM, and left after 18 months cause things weren't jiving. Congrats, you've made it this far...now on to the travel stories!

It's been ten long months since I started planning Machu Picchu, I got two of my good buddies (Brandon & Kyle) to come with me up the Salkantay Trail! It was March 25th, the day to leave for Lima, my 40 lb bag is packed and MRE's are ready to go! I have my knives, flint, first aid kit, and all my other survival gear in check. I arrived at the airport, and with almost 24 hours of flying time ahead of me, I started drinking some screwdrivers to kick off vacation the right way. First hiccup of many - I land in Jacksonville Florida and my eyes start feeling dry so I hit up my cousin Beena (optometrist) to ask what was going on with my eyeballs. She didn't respond quick enough so I thought huh, let me wash them out with some solution (quick-fix). Little did I know (selective hearing) she told me the new solution she gave me was a hydrogen peroxide solution and that it required 6 hours to clean and be usable. I go into the men's restroom, wash the contact in my hand, pour a few drops in my right contact, pop it in and then boom! Seconds later, my eyeball is on fire. I'm screaming like a child in the airport, crying, trying to keep my eye open and take the contact out. Nothing seemed to be working. I took a ton of water and tried to wash it out, somewhere along the way, the contact wasn't in my eye anymore. My eye was blood red, not a white spot visible anywhere.

After wiping my tears and walking out of the restroom, people began to stare at my eye as if I was turning into a zombie from the walking dead. I don't blame them, that shit looked whack. A few hours later, Beena finally texts me back and says "OMG...WHY WOULD YOU DO THAT? I TOLD YOU THAT THE RED CAP IS BAD". Clearly I didn't hear her, so according to her diagnosis of me taking a picture of my eyeball with my phone, I may have very well burned my cornea. My adventure seemed it was over before it even began. Not only did I burn my eye, but I missed my flight to Lima so then I had to fly to another airport to catch my connecting flight to Peru. What a day!

It only made sense to continue drinking, what else could have possibly gone wrong? I was half blind anyways...thankfully nothing else did go wrong and I finally made it to Lima at 6 am the next morning, over 24 hours of continuous traveling to just go a little south of the border. Kyle and I arrive at our hotel with Brandon passed out on the bed with one eye open and the other closed. After solo raging at a night club in Lima on his own (since my contact incident made me miss my flight), he was out cold while still creepily staring at us.

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A few hours later is when the adventure began, we got on a flight to Cuzco, going from sea level to about 12,000 ft. I knew altitude was a big issue when it came to these kind of hikes but I never thought too much of it until I had to start walking up there. We were constantly out of breath and it felt like my jugular was going to explode. Fortunately, there was a quick and easy fix to altitude symptoms and that was Coca tea. (Cocaine leaves)

Obviously we tried to rage, the clubs in Cuzco were hit or miss. They'd play good music till mid night and then all of a sudden you'd get some weird ass Peruvian high school band playing the bongo drums lip syncing to N'SYNC or something worse. Not only was the club scene quite horrible, you also have an absurd amount of drug dealers offering you anything and everything so you can still "have a good time". It was quite hilarious just walking around, mainly for all the weird stuff people started to offer us.

Cuzco was fun and Monday rolled around quick! Time for our hike to begin, it was 4 am, Brandon, Kyle and I are all packed, we head out of our hostel and we're waiting outside for a bus to come pick us up and take us to Mollepatta (trail head).

As we're standing there for nearly an hour waiting for the bus, we see two drunk/high Peruvian guys having their own little UFC street fight. One kept screaming like a girl and the other kept throwing punches. Both guys were bloody head down, skin missing and probably some concussions. Only thing we could do was stand and watch. I didn't want to end up on Nat-Geo's locked up abroad! A few minutes later, the police show up and the first thing they do is they jump out of their pickup, take their nightsticks out and start beating both guys heavily. There was no peaceful way of ending this, not for the cops or even the two goons trying to claim a UFC featherweight belt. Both got beat to a pulp and then hauled off to jail or even worse - prison!

What a way to start hiking huh? We're on the bus, approximately two hours in we see a towering snow capped mountain, Salkantay was staring back, just teasing. Once we arrived to the base of town, we hopped off the bus where we assumed would be the start of the trail, and obviously...we were not even close. What happens next? Brandon, Kyle and I all decide to hop into the back of a delivery truck with a bunch of locals sitting on bags of rice or other supplies for shop owners in the remote parts of Peru. It was about an 30-45 minute ride which ended up being one of the best/craziest idea's that we had, we were standing in the back hanging on to a wooden beam as we navigated along the mountainside and treacherous cliffs. We finally arrive to the trail head, and none of us can stop starting at Salkantay, and we're just a few miles away from the base of one of the highest mountains in Peru. Mentally we were ready, physically not so much.

The plan was simple, follow everyone, but with out a guide...and survive Everyone we saw had a guide that setup horses to carry their heavier bags, we decided that the only way to hike up Machu Picchu was to hike with all of our supplies on our backs. Not only was the altitude already kicking our ass, we had 40lbs of clothes, food and other supplies strapped to our backs. I wasn't really enjoying it, Brandon was walking at a Manhattan pace and the altitude didn't seem to bother him and Kyle didn't say much but I knew he was suffering with me. He also had tons of fruit flies all over him so I have to say I was doing a little better than he was.

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After around 8-9 hours of continuous hiking on make shift trails and very narrow natural bridges, we get to camp. Now since we didn't have a guide, we weren't setup to stay under a camping area with a roof but a guide named Willy saw us suffering all day, so he held a spot open for us to pitch our tent. We were among the last to get to camp, the guide and his crew had already setup camp for their group of travelers which left the three of us to do everything for ourselves. We also did not have any sleeping pads which meant it was just us, our sleeping bags, a very thin layer of the tent and a frozen mud floor.

Camp was setup for night one, it was now on to hike some more. It was supposed to be a mild hike up to the base of Mt. Salkantay, but my body wasn't ready for it. I couldn't breathe, my heart was racing and I had the craziest headache and no cocaine leaves, it was game over for me! I got about half way up, never made it to the lake (probably the highlight of day 1, but what do I know? I never made it up). I had better things to do like make oxygen choices since we didn't spend enough time in Cuzco to acclimate. Brandon however was the first one up there, he was making all sorts of friends while Kyle and I were getting passed up and soon I told Kyle to go on and leave me behind. I waited for all the stories once they got back, till then I had to focus on not passing out due to the lack of air.

Spitz and I had a moment

Spitz and I had a moment

Day Two!

I decided to get a horse to carry all our shit, I even got a horse for myself! No shame to my game. The second day was the hardest day, we went up about 4,000 ft in altitude in a matter of hours which made the previous days conditions a whole lot worse, but the views on day two were some to literally die for! My horse managed to kick me off twice, once almost over a cliff and the other over some huge boulders and both hurt just as equally! There was going to be a third, but I decided to jump off because we were also on much higher, more narrow cliff. He was in a racing mood, anytime another horse came up and tried to lead, mine would take off like it was racing the Kentucky Derby.

At about mid-day we reach the true base of Salkantay, we're approximately 15,000 ft high up at the base of a snow capped giant! Here we make a prayer to Patchumama (mother earth) to keep us alive through the next part of a very down hill journey! We stacked rocks, took some phenomenal photos and began our decent down. My knees were absolute killing me, after two ACL reconstructions I knew that one day doing things like this will be completely out of the question, might as well do all the crazy shit now!

After seeing the mountain, the rest of the downhill trek wasn't as glamorous, we went from 20 degree weather to lush rain forests and 70-80 degrees in a matter of hours! Brandon was almost an hour ahead of us, pretty typical by this point! He's already at the camp and here Kyle and I are trying to dodge mules and donkey's carrying bags along some more very steep and dangerous cliffs. When we get to camp that night, everyone is eating a nice hot, cooked meal and the the three of us americans had our MRE's and nothing else, pretty much shit in a bag that self cooked. Everyone was so mind blown, but little did they know there was nothing good about eating an MRE!

Day 3

The easiest day throughout the entire trip! It was completely flat, all jungle and 8-10 hours long and we ended the day Yeah, that's about it! Oh yeah, we turned up at the some hot springs for most of the day and then had a phenomenal party at our camp site. Inka tequila shots for only a quarter! Someone also had a great idea to put some strobe lights and loud speakers at this camp site so not only do we have a bonfire, but we also have a raging outdoor nightclub! Lets just say, we got turrrrnnntt! I'm sure there was a hangover the next day, but did that really matter when we were hiking one of top 25 trails in the world?

Day 4

Finally, it was the day we reached Aguas Calientes (translates to hot water). It was the base of Machu Picchu and it's definitely known for it's hot springs. Today was the final push to base camp! We grabbed our bags, the horses were gone, and now it us just us, and a three hour hike uphill next to a train track. After crossing plenty of bridges, raging rivers and walking in a torrential downpour, we made it to Aguas! I have to say I couldn't have been happier to see civilization. A shower was much needed so I made an executive decision to skip the hostel we planned on staying at and instead called Chase concierge to book me the closest 5 star hotel. Honestly, 5 stars in Peru is really a 3 in the United States. It was a lot better than what a hostel would have been, but lets be real...the hostel would have been much more fun! After showering and decompressing we toured the town ate some really good food that wasn't a military ration and settled in quick to ascend Machu Picchu in the morning.

Day 5

Ahhhh, today was the day, it was 5 AM and the sun was about to rise in Machu Picchu - we were ready! There was an option to take a bus up to MP which was a 15 minute ascent approximately 5,000 ft up or a two hour hike. Kyle and I took the bus, we were over hiking. Brandon on the other hand was a SAVAGE, he was up at 3AM ready to hike, by the time Kyle and I woke up, Brandon was long gone! After arriving to the gates of Machu Picchu, Kyle and I frantically start searching for Brandon since I was the only one with an international cell phone (thanks to IBM), we couldn't just call or send a text with our location. It took us a minute to realize that we had beat him up mountain, he showed up about 10-15 minute later and I'm pretty sure he was drenched in sweat and STANK!

The park opened it's gates and everyone started to rush in! At this point it was still dusk, plenty of clouds and not a ray of sunshine in sight. As we began walking in, you start to have this feeling of walking back in time when the Inca's were at the height of their power. All these stones predate a lot of history, to date no one know's how these rocks were perfectly carved and carried up such a high mountain. One would think that all of this was fake, it looked too good to be true! All conspiracy theories aside, it was a great feeling to be walking through this ancient city. Incan history says that King Patchucutec (he who shakes the earth) waved his staff and made stones fly up to Machu Picchu to create the city, now we all know that's not true but you really couldn't make this shit up like the Incans. As the sun began to peek out of the clouds, the city started to glow, the colors of the stones changed from a monotone gray to an almost gold color. It's the typical "HOLY SHIT" moment people have when they see something dope!

The rest of the day we spent hiking the city, Brandon once again disappeared on a crazy hike up to the Sun gate, on the other hand, Kyle and I were trying to take some amazing pictures but were constantly photobombed by the Asian posse that rolled up in their tourist buses with their selfie sticks. I kid you not, these fools were wearing heels and all sorts of jewelry, lets also not forget their hello kitty back packs. We shortly peaced out after getting our photos and then hiked to the Sun gate to meet with Brandon, this is where Machu Picchu was originally discovered by Hiram Bingham in 1911. He didn't have google to help him find it, let alone know what he was looking at so props to him.

It's been a long five days, it was now time to leave Machu Picchu and put it in the rear view, Brandon and I had plans to head towards Bolivia to bike death road and Kyle was headed back home to finish school. Can't say that I was entirely happy throughout the entire trip but loved experiencing every minute of it with my boys.

Stay tuned for Bolivia!!