A crooked bridge between El Tablon and La Chaquira:
The Magdalena River valley in its splendor:
“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines, sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” -Mark Twain
The Magdalena River valley in its splendor:
Jam session in the Hare Krishna temple in Neiva:

Tree tomato, a fruit that makes a really good juice:
Sunset in San Agustin:
The church in the main plaza in San Agustin:
No need for a caption...


Backing up a bit, the three necklaces are the result of me having a clogged up ear in Taganga and not being able to play my cello. I call them the Taganga collection and yep, they are all up for sle. The yellow and red one has a big piece of Colombian amber, the brown one has acai seeds from Brasil and a serpentine stone from the Sacred Valley, Peru and the black/rainbow necklace has a symbol of Tahuantinsuyo carved out of gray onyx, also from the Sacred Valley, Peru. They all have more stories, but those are to tell in person, not here :)

t little town, super chilled out and right now, pretty cold.
So this is Quebrada Valencia. The picture does it no justice, as usual. The waterfall itself continues up into the jungle and there are several pools to swim in. Of course there are next to no tourists. That´s because to get to Quebrada Valencia, you have to get off the bus at the correct bridge. Yep, no sign, no town except for the few houses far inside the jungle, but when you do get off the bus you enter into a completely different world. First you walk alongside a small
Right now is fruit harvest season. There are mangos, avocados, bananas, guanabanas, pineapples, etc. in abundance. I tried to do my part to not let very many go to waste. I estimate that if I would have eaten that quantity of organic fruit in the United States, it would have cost me approxiamately $40 a day, and probably wouldn´t have tasted nearly as good! 

In Quebrada Valencia lives a man named Alex. He is from Bogota and would probably best be described as a hippie. He has been living there since the 70´s and now has created some projects that are using the land that was once overgrown with coca plantations and converting them to cacao plantations to produce organic chocolate to export. In addition, the people that are doing the labor are people who were displaced from their homes because of the war and violence. These people come down from the mountains because the paramilitary make threats against them. Once they come down from their communities to the civilized world, they are left without any form of survival, most of them having spent their entire lives without electricity, running water, money, or concepts such as theft. Their lives are turned upside down. At least now, 20 families will be taking part in this project and will be able to continue their lives in the mountains.
From Alex´s house it is a 20 minute walk to the beach, which was deserted for the most part. The waves were pretty big, but we walked for about 40 minutes to the west until we found a little fresh water lagoon that was really close to the ocean. There were a lot of palm trees, really pretty turqoise water and a really hot sun. Here in Colombia, I reapply sunblock about every hour.... and I still get a tan. 
I also played a concert for my favorite tree. Hey... the jungle deserves a little Bach too, and if I drag a cello around all these countries, there has to be a good reason, no?






