Posts Tagged ‘Brazil’

Leaving São Paulo

The first stage of my trip came to a fitting end this morning, when I left Brazil mysteriously on a flight I can’t recall. My memory dims to black at about 2am last night, in an abandoned hotel (now a psuedo-legal dance club) with ghostly decor, ominous staircases, and the vaguely sinister vibe of the Overlook Hotel from The Shining. (I think they were playing New Order, but I might have invented that). The reel picks up early this afternoon, under merciless fluorescent lights, in line for passport control at the Ezeiza International Airport on the outskirts of Buenos Aires.

When I first arrived in Sampa I made a list of all the tourist sites and museums that I intended to see, and ten days later that list is still sneering at me, triumphant, having survived with barely a scratch. There’s no doubt in my mind that I’ll return to São Paulo at some point, though of course it’s impossible to say when. For the moment, though, I’ll be spending the next month living more or less in Buenos Aires, taking Spanish lessons by day during the week and travelling on weekends. There’s a greasy Israeli girl at the computer next to me, cackling loudly. I need to go to bed.

04

05 2009

The right angles of São Paulo

If you were to lock an unimaginative eight year old in a room for several months with an infinite supply of Legos and nothing to eat but bread and Adderall, the São Paulo cityscape is pretty much what you’d end up with. São Paulo is a city of evenly spaced squares, obedient rectangles, and rows of parallel lines which, when they’re feeling a bit naughty, intersect at perfect perpendiculars with other rows of parallel lines. Being in a country as charmingly anarchic as Brazil, it’s really odd to see this sort of geometric regularity– so odd, in fact, that I didn’t even notice it until I climbed to the top of São Paulo’s skyscrapingest skyscaper to get the Mount Olympus view of the city. As you can see, much as chaos may reign over Brazilian life, its empire does not extend to the architecture of São Paulo:

30

04 2009

Idle days in São Paulo

I think it’s safe to say that the past three days of my life have been a bigger waste than the 7500 or so that preceded them. Aside from sleeping, eating, and doing a bit of desultory wandering through the metro system, I haven’t really seen or accomplished anything earth-shattering since I left Manaus. In my defense, though, my physical exhaustion from the jungle and the intimidating enormity of São Paulo haven’t exactly gotten me fired me up to go exploring. I’ll give the city its proper due over the next few days, but in the meantime, here’s what I’ve learned:

1- As the most populous metro area in South America, São Paulo is ridiculously large and complex. It doesn’t seem to have any single defined center– instead, it sprawls out indefinitely in all directions, with district following district in an endless succession of noise and confusion. I’ve been wandering the streets for a couple of days now, and I haven’t even begun to make sense of it.

Street map of Sao Paulo

Simplified street plan of Sao Paulo

2- The Liberdade district is home to the largest Japanese population in the world outside of Japan itself– it’s a totally pleasant place to walk around (or “stroll,” as the kids say), but aside from the novelty of seeing Yakult and yaki soba in Brazil there isn’t much of interest there. All the streetlights are painted bright red and shaped like halves of torii gates, though, which is beyond adorable.

3- The São Paulo Museum of Art is extremely legit– I’m going back tomorrow to go through it properly, but at the moment their entire bottom level is given over to a special Vik Muniz exhibition (Vik Muniz being a Brazilian artist famous for creating images from unusual materials such as dust, thread, scattered sugar, dry pigment, chocolate syrup, wire, plastic bugs, toy soldiers &c &c– I would post a couple of pictures but I don’t feel like getting sued. Not that anyone actually visits this site anyway).

4- This has nothing to do with São Paulo, but Chelsea did an incredible job of suffocating Barcelona today, proving that it is indeed possible to shackle the monster for 90 minutes. The match was taut, tense, and fluid in the midfield– scoreless but very entertaining. The return clash at Stamford Bridge should be fun.

28

04 2009

Some photos from the Amazon

I meant to work these into my last post, but as you can imagine internet connections are infuriatingly slow in the middle of Amazonas. In any case:

Sunsets were beautiful because the slow waters of the Amazon reflect light like a mirror.

Sunsets were beautiful because the slow waters of the Amazon reflect light like a mirror.

The Rio Negro meets the Rio Solimoes; the Rio Negro is the largest blackwater river in the world, flowing slowly and dark with decomposed plant matter; the Solimoes is fast and muddy, originating in the Peruvian Andes

The Rio Negro meets the Rio Solimoes; the Rio Negro is the largest blackwater river in the world, flowing slowly and dark with decomposed plant matter; the Solimoes is fast and muddy, originating in the Peruvian Andes

We stopped off in a little, remote town along the way-- during rainy season all the houses are separated by at least .5 km of water... in other news, capybaras are mad cute

We stopped off in a little, remote town along the way-- during rainy season all the houses are separated by at least .5 km of water... in other news, capybaras are mad cute

My intrepid guides

My intrepid guides

These things were absolutely everywhere, some as large as small frisbees... you kind of get used to them after awhile

These things were absolutely everywhere, some as large as small frisbees... you kind of get used to them after awhile

This is called a jungle

This is called a "jungle"

These are basically what we used to make our shelters

These are basically what we used to make our shelters

Smoke in the leaves

Smoke in the leaves

26

04 2009

Brazilian Amazon

It’s past midnght. Our flashlights are poking tiny pinholes in the darkness. Silently we stalk through the jungle, tiptoeing slowly between the trees and sinking our boots deep in the clay-colored mud. Our food rations exhausted, we keep our eyes riveted to the ground, looking for little furrows in the leaves. To my starving imagination, every vague pattern in the dirt is an animal trail– the footprints of a paca, a tapir, a wayward armadillo. My stomach is audibly growling; my body is sore and wet. Still nothing. Every muscle tense with anticipation. We hear the scream of a distant macaw. A flurry of bats’ wings overhead. Then nothing but pregnant stillness. The blade of my machete glows pale blue in the moonlight– I run my fingers gently up and down the handle, feeling its cold texture. Then, suddenly– the gunman spins around and hurries back to us, his face hardened into a look of restrained panic.
– “Jaguar.”
– “How far?”
– “Not far.”
– “And what the f*ck do we do if it comes”
– “Keell it.”
We press on, blindly, weapons poised. Little distinction between hunter and hunted.

An eternity ago, back in Manaus, I had asked around and gotten in touch with a freelance guide named Jungle Boy who specialized in survivalism. The plan we hashed out was simple: meet up with an indigenous guide (a hilarious little bugger named The Captain) who had a rough feel for the area; take a leaky wooden boat down the Amazon’s flooded tributaries until we found a perfectly obscure, unexplored stretch of wilderness; tether the boat and set up a base by the shore; then trek inland as far as we possible could in ten days. Carrying only basic supplies, miniature hammocks, an old rifle, and three machetes, we spent several days hacking a narrow path through untouched jungle, making knife gashes in tree trunks as we passed to mark our way. Progress was slow and difficult, as every step required us to cut through dense tangles of trees, vines, branches, and roots– some spiked, some twisted, some as hard as rock. The sun glared down on us ferociously. A layer of filth coated our skin with a slimy sheen. Ants crawled inside our clothes and bit our bodies; mosquito bites covered literally every square inch of exposed flesh; my head was swollen from the five simultaneous wasp stings I had suffered on the first morning, four on my scalp and one on my upper lip which made it somewhat painful to speak.

– “Do you think,” I asked Jungle Boy towards the end of our first day inland, “that anyone has ever been here before?”
– “No,” he answered immediately. “Not a chance.”

Because we had decided against bringing tents, we had to spend our afternoons constructing makeshift shelters for the night. The designs grew increasingly complex, but the simplest was a sort of teepee made from chopped wood and palm fronds. This first required us to find an appropriately spaced triangle of thick trees, then to clear the area between them with our machetes while keeping a careful eye out for snakes and tarantula dens. Next, we each cut down a medium-sized tree, measured out the correct distance, then fastened it horizontally to one side of the triangle at a height of about 2.5 meters, knotting it with vine. The walls and roof of the structure were formed with colossal palm fronds, each an absolute minimum of 12 meters high, which we sliced down and collected from the surrounding forest. This step was by far the longest, as each of the 80 or so palm fronds had to be individually cut, dragged to the shelter, and jammed upright into small holes in the ground, turned inward to form a canopy. When all this was done, we had to quickly string up our hammocks, tend to our wounds, then set out searching for food in the premature darkness of the jungle. On the fifth night, feeling inexplicably ambitious, we cut down, hauled, and fastened 10 large trees and about 85 palm fronds to form a rudimentary house. We camped there for two nights, fishing for pirhanas by day, and keeping a wary watch for jaguars at night by the light of our dying fire.

Nighttime in the jungle is primal and terrifying. When the sun sets on the Amazon, it doesn’t matter if your eyes are open or closed: either way, all you can see is pure, infinite blackness. This complete lack of visual input makes sounds much more intense– every shriek, squawk, growl, call, and cackle explodes savagely in your eardrums. The haunted-house ambience of the jungle, combined with the effects of malaria pills, makes nightmares long, cinematic, elaborate, and extremely vivid– I felt like I was lending my brain to David Lynch for four hours every night. I thought the Heart of Darkness effect was just a metaphor, but for me it turned out to be real– your brain really does tunnel into some dark burrows when night falls on the rainforest.

Here in Manaus I’m showered, shaven, well-fed, recovering. I just charged my iPod and ate a bowl of açaí gelato as big as my head, but being back in civilization still feels weird, and a little disconcerting. I’m hoping this is just a temporary aftereffect of the jungle, because in two days I’ll be heading to Sao Paulo– from unexplored wilderness to a city of 11 million in the space of five days. Right now I’m going to calm my nerves with some cheap Brazilian beer; I’ll add photos when I find a decent internet connection. Hope you didn’t miss me too much.

23

04 2009

Belem

Yesterday I made the first of what I can only assume will be many tactical errors on my trip. I arrived in Belem with the thought of setting off immediately by boat down the Amazon, in hopes that spending five days on a hammock in mosquito-infested humidity would… give me a feel for the jungle? Actually I don’t know what I was expecting, but for some reason it seemed like the right thing to do at the time. (Impulsiveness is probably my worst flaw and my greatest asset when traveling.)

In any case, because of the holiday, no boats were leaving for Manaus until Tuesday, a schedule which would have killed off about half my time in the Amazon. After wandering the city for two hours attempting to find an internet cafe that wasn’t closed for Easter weekend, I finally bit the bullet and ducked into a travel agency to buy plane tickets for Manaus. Now, I’m trying to resist using this blog for random hating– every day on Ipanema beach in Rio we saw a 350lb black dude wearing a pink fluourescent string bikini, and I let that slide–  but the woman behind the desk extinguished whatever dwindling embers of hope I might have had for the human race. If your imagination is depraved enough, try to picture a cross between Charlie Weis and Sally Struthers as she appears on South Park, with the mental agility of a defective tortoise. After 25 labored minutes, I managed to get on a morning flight to Manaus, which is where I am now. I’ll spend tomorrow finding a good agency for jungle trekking, then hopefully set off properly on Tuesday.

Until then, happy Easter!

12

04 2009