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Oct. 3 - 19, 2005
Rio de Janeiro - Ilha Grande - Parati - Ubatuba
Air travel has never been easier.
Our flight - Lisbon - Madrid - Rio - didn´t require removal of pedals,
rearrangement of handlebars or even packaging of our bikes. It was just a
case of deflating the tyres and rolling them on. What´s more, they arrived
intact, on the same plane and awaited us as we retrieved our panniers to
the sound of live jazz saxaphone music. |
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Rio de Janeiro - what a magnificent port of entry to South America. We
couldn´t have dreamed it better. Where oranges are green, limes are yellow,
birds fly backwards and butterflies resemble flying carpets in the city
jungle. And we´re not talking concrete jungle here. Wedged between
glorious, white-sand beaches, a national park full of rainforest, and huge
granite monoliths, Rio stretches for about 60 km in easily digestible
segments. Its population of 10 million enjoy its extensive jungle areas
and leafy, shady gardens and parks, when not working out on the beach -
jogging, surfing, cycling, or playing volleyball or football. They´re an
active lot and strut their stuff up and down the proms of Ipanema and
Copacabana at all hours of the day. |
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View of Rio´s
many beaches and downtown from the Sugar Loaf |
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Downtown Rio |
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The Sugar Loaf
monolith |
Tropical flowers
abound |
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It´s a land of
plenty when it comes to food. All you can eat BBQs cost a mere 5 Euros per
person. Dickey-bowed waiters parade their mini-spits of sizzling beef,
pork and chicken from table to table, while the guests stuff their gills
till their arm pits bulge! (as Bill Bryson would say) And what´s more, you
can have the same procedure with pizzas... the best being the banana,
sugar and cinnamon, or the white chocolate and strawberry pizzas for
dessert. |
Best cuts of beef sell at 4€/kg
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Considering even the favelas (slums) have internet access and
satellite TV and that we spotted a homeless woman conversing cheerfully
on her mobile phone from her cardboard box on the side of the street, Rio certainly has earned
its title - the marvellous city. |
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Leaving Rio on a Sunday was perfect timing. All the major drags along the
beaches were closed to traffic and we had a 60km spin between joggers,
pedestrians and cyclists to our first campsite. Exiting such a big city
couldn´t have been easier or more picturesque. |
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Life on Copacabana
and Barra de Tijuca Beaches |
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To date, cycling
on the main coastal road south towards Săo Paulo has been safe and quite
pleasant. The wide hard-shoulder is very welcome and most of the traffic
seems to be on the motorway. This Costa Verde (Green Coast) is true
to its name, with hundreds of beautiful, tropical islands dotting the
coastline, and jungle covering the steep mountainsides of the Serra do
Mar. |
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Since
this is probably the only stretch of tropical coastline we will see for
the next year, we decided to have a week´s holiday on the gorgeous,
vehicle-free Ilha Grande, exploring some of its 100 beaches and
numerous jungle hikes. The pictures say it all... |
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Ilha Grande |
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Banana tree on
Ilha Grande |
Washing day on
Ilha Grande |
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Underwater crawly |
Kurt exploring the underworld... |
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The trading
harbour town of Parati retains a lot of its former charm in its
colourful houses and cobblestone streets. |
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Parati |
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Ubatuba, situated on the Tropic of Capricorn, has got to be the
friendliest town in Brazil. It´s no surprise that it was the venue for the
first peace treaty on the American continent. Signed in 1563, it solved
the dispute between the native Indians, the French and the Portuguese and
paved the way for the unified Brazil we know today. |
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Santa Cruz Church,
Ubatuba |
Herbal doctor,
Ubatuba |
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We´re not the only
cyclists out here either...Jose, from Rio, is en route from Buenos Aires
to Bahia in northern Brazil on his low tech bike with neither brakes nor gears... |
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...while
Anne-Laure and Christophe, from France, are finalising their 18-month
world trip on their articulated tandem. |
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Now, as we leave
the Tropics and head into the Sub-Tropics, the state of Săo Paulo awaits
exploration. The Costa Verde now becomes the Costa Azul (Blue
Coast)... but just to make you feel a little bit better... due to
persistent rain these past couple of days, it looks more like the Costa
Cinza (Grey Coast)! |

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On the Tropic of
Capricorn |
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