I woke up well before the 6:15 sunrise this morning, Saturday. There was little traffic and I could hear the river outside the apartment. We ate breakfast in the apartment before walking to one of the traditional markets in town, the Feria Libre, a 10-minute walk along the river park and then a few blocks more. It’s a huge market, the biggest in the city, and vendors were selling everything from eggs to clothes to pets. Nathan likes to buy fresh produce there because they have the best prices. It was a very interesting place to wander through.
Brown panela sugar blocks and bags of beansButcher’s standRabbits, Guinea pigs, ducks, chickens and quail for saleAn egg vendorClothing, piercings, even haircuts are availableThere are many vegetable vendorsCloseup of fruits and vegetables
We brought Nathan’s produce back to the apartment, then left again, this time to take the Tranvía to the center of Cuenca. There, we climbed a tower of the Municipal Cathedral of Immaculate Conception for a view of the city and walked inside the cathedral. We ate lunch in a small restaurant adjacent to the central Parque Calderón, and then walked by many stands selling sweets and some selling flowers. The traditional sweets were being sold in stand after stand around the cathedral as part of Cuenca’s Corpus Christi celebration.
Sign about the cathedralThe back of the Municipal Cathedral of Immaculate Conception Front of the cathedral. We climbed the left tower.Parque Calderón from the cathedral towerCuenca from the cathedral towerStands selling sweets for Corpus Christi celebrationEach stand sold so many different varieties of candies and pastriesThe flower marketThe central square and cathedral behind it
After walking around and window shopping the small shops, we took the Tranvía back to Nathan’s apartment. Some clouds looked foreboding and it often rains in the afternoon, but not on this day. After a few hours of lounging in the apartment, we walked to a Chinese restaurant across the street. There was a large noisy group of Americans in there already. We ordered one of Nathan’s favorites, a hearty vegetable and shrimp soup (or vegetable and chicken), ate and then left rather quickly because we couldn’t hear ourselves think due to the large group. But it was good soup.
Friday was our travel day from Mindo to Cuenca. After our final breakfast at Cabañas Armonía, we packed our things and walked to the bus terminal on the other side of town. The 11 a.m. bus left on time, but stopped many more times on its way back to Quito than there had been going to Mindo. At several of the stops, food vendors got on to sell their wares and then got off at the next stop. Nathan bought pan de yuca, or cassava bread, from one of them. The small puffy rolls were still hot and quite delicious. $1 bought 4 rolls, which we enjoyed thoroughly. Our plan was to get off the bus at La Mitad del Mundo, a monument at the equator, and look around there before catching a taxi to the Quito airport. But because the bus was slower than we anticipated, we got off the bus at Mitad and skipped the sightseeing, immediately catching a taxi. We arrived at the airport about 1:30, giving us time to check my bag, eat a quick lunch next to the gate, and board in time for our 3:15 flight on LATAM to Cuenca.
The flight to Cuenca is only 50 minutes long and the baggage claim is speedy and immediately next to the gate, so it was a fast and easy arrival. We exited the airport, walked across the street and caught a light rail train, the Tranvía, to the stop nearest Nathan’s apartment. It cost me $1 for the 15-minute ride and Nathan only 17 cents because of his Ecuadorian resident and 65+ age status. His apartment was a 10-minute walk from the stop, but it had me out of breath because of the 8,300 foot altitude. He lives on the 6th floor of an apartment building overlooking the Tomebamba River. His building has a 24-hour security guard, two elevators, and underground parking (although Nathan doesn’t have a car).
Nathan’s apartment building has the white balconiesThe view of Cuenca and Rio Tomebamba from his apartment My accommodations The Tomebamba River and the park that runs its length in Cuenca
The traffic is busy and noisy, especially on this Friday night. After unloading my luggage, we walked to a nearby Supermaxi grocery store to pick up food and we each got ice cream cones too. Then we returned as it was getting dark, about 6 p.m. I was tired from the travel and high altitude, so after Nathan got a load of my laundry going in his combo washer/dryer machine, I went to bed early. I slept fairly well, despite the traffic noise that continued late into the night.
Today, Thursday, we decided to go on a popular cable-suspended tramway ride and hike a trail to waterfalls. First, we enjoyed the lodge’s breakfast of watermelon, scrambled eggs and a small “pancake” of ground cassava with cheese, served with pineapple juice and hot tea. Then we headed out under a gray sky to take a taxi to the tramway at 8:30 or so. We were their first customers and we had to wait while a worker was grinding or polishing a part of the metal tram car. It was a little unsettling to be the first riders after a “fix” that required someone wearing a welder’s helmet. The far-side tram operator rode with us as the tram car traversed high above the river canyon below. But everything went smoothly and reached the far side in about 3 minutes.
Tram car crossing the river valleyA diagram of the tramway, hiking trails and waterfalls
We started hiking downhill to the first waterfall. The temperature was in the sixties, very humid, but not raining. And we had the trail to ourselves. It was wide but fairly steep with steps. By the time we reached the third or fourth waterfall, I was quite sweaty and my glasses were continually steaming up. Nathan’s camera lens was steamed up too. So we decided to return to the top without seeing all 5 waterfalls. But we got some good exercise and saw some pretty falls. As we hiked back up, we met several hikers starting the journey down. At the tram station again, we watched the tram car go back and forth a few times while we rehydrated and cooled down. Then we took it back across the canyon. The operators had called our taxi driver already to come pick us up, so he arrived a few minutes later to take us back to town. The whole adventure took about 2 hours.
A section of the trail to the waterfallsNathan at one of the fallsSome of the vegetation along the path
In Mindo, we stopped at the bus terminal to buy tickets for tomorrow’s ride back to Quito. Then we went to a little restaurant for lunch. Nathan had chicken and rice and I ordered a caprese salad of tomatoes and cheese with basalmic vinegar. After lunch we headed back to the cabaña and relaxed on the porch. It began to rain not long afterwards and didn’t stop all afternoon and evening. We didn’t feel like walking to a restaurant in the rain, so we ended up eating protein bars to stave off the hunger pangs ‘til morning.
Wednesday started very early, about 4:45 a.m., because I had booked a birdwatching tour that would start before dawn. A birding guide, Sandy, and her driver David picked us up in her Chevy SUV in front of our lodge/cabañas at 5:20. Nathan and I were ready: him with a camera and me with my binoculars.
Our first stop was a place in a protected forest where the bird that I really wanted to see, the Andean Cock-of-the-Rock, displays every morning during breeding season. After a 30-minute walk uphill in the dark, over a stream crossed by a 2-log-wide bridge, we reached the lek, the display place, which remains in the same place every morning. It was noisy with spectacular displaying males, about 15 per Sandy’s estimate, and 1 female who gets to choose the male that appeals to her the most. Wow, what a show of crazy-looking red birds! We were mesmerized watching the males display in the trees, while they watched the female and each other. Whenever the female flew away, the males suddenly got quiet, but became animated and boisterous again when she returned. Sandy took a digiscoped photo with my phone of one of the males and the duller female.
A male Andean Cock-of-the-Rock at the lek
Two more groups of birdwatchers arrived while we were there, one French-speaking with their guide and a pair of Spanish speakers and their guide. We stayed for about 30 minutes, then hiked back toward the start, onto an open hilltop, in order to spot other types of birds. By this time, the sun was up, so seeing the trail and birds was much easier. Sandy used her expert listening and song recognition skills plus her scope to find many new species for us, including a pair of Golden-headed Quetzals, Swallow-tail Kites, Rufous Motmots, and several others. It was great!
Sandy finding birds after sunrise
Next, Sandy and David took us to a birding site called San Tadeo, where the owner keeps fruit and nectar feeders stocked to attract hummingbirds, tanagers, and other birds. The owner also provided coffee, tea, fresh fruit, granola, yogurt, toast and hard boiled eggs for our own breakfast while we watched the birds. Between bites, Sandy identified all the birds that were coming to the feeders, including many of the numerous hummingbird species in Ecuador. And the stop was located on a hill overlooking the town of Mindo, so we had a beautiful view. It was another super experience.
San Tadeo birding site overlooking Mindo
The final 90 minutes of the tour took us to another high location at which Sandy hoped to find toucans for us. We didn’t see those, but did see the interesting Barred Puffbird, vultures, a Common Potoo, Golden Olive Woodpecker and many other birds. We also met her son, who was guiding a group of British birdwatchers in that area. The tour ended back at our cabaña about 11 a.m. It had been an excellent birding experience.
We walked to a restaurant in Mindo for lunch of lentil soup, rice and fried chicken, and then returned to our cabaña’s porch to relax for the afternoon.
Nathan on one of Mindo’s streetsThe city park behind the Mindo signThe entrance to Cabañas Armonía, where we stayed
I had also signed up for a night walk, hoping to see some of the nocturnal creatures of the cloud forest. So after eating dinner in town, I waited outside the cabañas to be picked up at 7 p.m. for the walk. It was already dark by that time, since the sun sets about 6 p.m. Nathan sat out this tour. A young man driving his white Toyota pickup collected me and another pair of young tourists and drove us to the walk location, back on the same dirt road we had been birdwatching on earlier in the day. The young couple were Ecuadorians from Quito who spoke Spanish and English and the guide was a man of about 40 whose English was just ok, not great. We were given small flashlights and followed our guide on a hillside trail into the night.
During the 90-minute walk, we saw numerous species of very small frogs, millipedes, fruit-eating bats, a kinkajou, small scorpions with bioluminescent spots, and a huge forest cockroach. No snakes, which suited me fine. It was a misty, still night and when the bats flew by, we could feel the breeze they generated and hear their wingbeats. It was a fun experience but not as great as the morning birdwatching. When the driver took us back into town at about 9:15, to our lodgings, it was raining.
A beautifully sunny day dawned in Mindo about 6 a.m. after a good night’s sleep in which I was able to recover some of the sleep I lost the day before. It was a lovely morning to sit on the deck before breakfast to listen and look for birds in the garden. So that’s what I did.
Thick garden vegetation draws in birds in front of our cabin.
Breakfast was served starting at 7:30 in a large dining room in another building on the property. A group of 10 young people and their leaders, here on a missionary trip, were also there. Our meal began with a large glass of watermelon juice, tea, and a slice of perfectly ripe pineapple. Then they brought eggs, cooked to our order, and a chicken empanada each. The empanada is a filled pastry that’s deep fried to a lightly crunchy perfection. It was a very good meal.
We wanted to visit the Mariposario, or butterfly house, which Nathan recommended after going there on a previous visit. We decided to walk, which Nathan had also done previously, although most people take a taxi. So we started down the dirt road following a sign to the garden of butterflies. But after about 30 minutes of walking, spotting birds and butterflies along the way, Nathan realized we were on the wrong road. So we turned around and walked back into town. It had been a pleasant walk, over a rushing river at one point, even though it was the wrong way.
Nathan and I walking out of town.The river we crossed along the way.
In town, we found a taxi stand and asked an older taxi driver to take us to the butterfly house. He only spoke Spanish, which gave me the opportunity to practice the Spanish I had been learning for the last 4 years. During the 10 minute drive we had a really interesting conversation in which he talked about the transformation Mindo had undergone over the last 30 years, from overgrazed farming area suffering drought and sick cattle, to a reforested preserve focused on ecotourism and which had greatly benefited both the residents and the native birds and animals. I was so happy to be able to understand and talk to him in Spanish! It was very gratifying and educational. And the taxi fare was only $3.
The butterfly house was really nice too. We spent about 2 hours there, walking through the inside and outdoor butterfly enclosures, relaxing on benches next to the path, and feeding some koi fish in a few ponds. The same taxi driver returned to take us back to Mindo, which we had asked him to do. On the return trip, we talked about the difficulties COVID had posed for his family making a living due to the government’s policy that prohibited work and even local travel around town. I’m sure he was talking slower than normal so I could follow what he said, and I know my Spanish wasn’t great. But it was so fun to be able to have the conversations.
The Mariposario, or Butterfly House
We ate savory crepes for lunch in an open air restaurant when we got back to town. Mine was chicken and mushroom, with a delicious passion fruit shake (batido in Spanish) to go with. After lunch, we walked to El Quetzal, a lodge and chocolate tour host. We went on a 1-hour tour of how they make specialty Ecuadorian chocolate. It was interesting and we got to try a few samples too.
Nathan, a cocoa pod, dried cocoa beans and other chocolate products
We finished the afternoon in town by treating ourselves to frozen yogurt in one of the shops. As we walked back to Cabañas Armonía around 3:15, it thundered distantly and we felt a few raindrops. A good time to return to our cabin.