Thursday, December 10, 2009

Jericoacoara

Jericoacoara
Getting to Jericoacoara (or just simply "Jeri" as all the cool kids call it) proved to be one last slog. The final part of the journey being in a open sided truck with benches on it. We made our way down dusty tracks, which decreased in width until we were eventually driving along the beach. It was like sitting on a washing machine and I lost count the number of times I bashed my head off the roof while suspended in mid air. Just as sunset was kicking in we rounded a corner and Jeri appeared oasis like before us. I'd heard lots of good things about the place and they all proved to be true minutes after clambering out of the truck. There were no real streets, just paths covered in sand. Horses roamed the main "street" which was littered with restaurants, bars and little Caipirinha stands which sold cachaca or vodka mixed with every imaginable fruit. Just out of the truck I was approached by a tout offering a place to stay in a pousada. Being tired and easy going I just said "sure" and followed him. This proved to be an extremely wise decision as the tout in question was called Itamar and from what I have seen and heard since, owns the best pousada in Jeri. A small house with a big communal dinner table, 2 comfy sofas, loads of board games, a big TV with lots of DVDs and hammocks were liberally sprinkled everywhere to ensure you didn't have to walk too far before falling into one.

I stayed 10 days with Itamar and various Slovenians, Estonians, Canadians, Italians, Germans & Americans and must say that it was definitely the most relaxing time since perhaps the Little Corn Islands. My days consisted of getting up late, having some coffee (made by Itamar), retiring to my hammock for a read and a snooze, down to the beach, sunset from atop the massive sand dune, followed by dinner (also normally made by Itamar or one of his friends) and Cocktails (once again served up by Itamar before we hit the town. His favourite being cachaca, pineapple and mint).

So as not to atrophy I decided to learn to Kitesurf. With my Slovenian sidekick we persuaded Cale, a chilled Canadian to show us the ropes. So for 3 days we sat in a lagoon and let ourselves be dragged around by a 7 meter square kite which would fly around the place like a banshee due to the extremely high winds found in Jeri from August to January. In all other "extreme" sports (I hate that expression, but let's face it there is an inherent difference between badminton and snowboarding) you can drop the method of propulsion (windsurfing, wakeboarding) or just fall over (snowboarding, mountain biking, surfing), but in Kitesurfing you are actually physically attached to the kite and letting go won't do too much good (depending on the kite). Controlling the kite is easy enough - pull the bar right, kite goes right. The only tricky part is if you turn right and the kite goes from being on your left side to your right side, you will effectively be putting the kite in the full force of the wind for a couple of seconds. This lead to hillarious (for the bystander) and decidely painful consequences as Slovenian and I did 3 meter backflips in the air as the kite yanked us out of the water and tossed us into the air. After 3 days of battering and brusing we finally managed to get the hang of it and I was up on the board for at least half a second. This is not a sport for instant successes.

But after all this excitement and relaxation it was time for something else, so one afternoon slightly bored I booked a flight to Rio for the next day. Nothing like improvising.

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