Ready for School!

My friends are going to start at school in Reception class this week and I’m starting world school! I wish I could see them!

We looked at my books the other day and got things ready. My friend emailed and told me she is getting new school shoes. I’m having flip flops and my new dress that I got in Morro do Sao Paulo.

I have been practicing my numbers all the summer, writing them in the sand and on the and practicing them when we play cards and now I’m doing letters.

Look what I did on the iPhone with Zoe
I did all the things on my own to put in the boxes. Can I show you now?

(Zoe : it was words that end in ‘at’ and ‘en’ – and she had to match up the picture with the word. She did them nearly all on her own)

Zoe finds the ‘word family’ app on Mum’s iPhone again and they snuggle with Dad on the top bunk in our cabin so Lara can show him what she can do…

Here’s what I had to do and every time I complete one I get a dinosaur!! See? I’m starting to do phonics with mummy like at school too and I know that ‘a’ is for ant crawling up your arm! We have seen plenty of ants – they’re very big in Brazil and they can bite.

I really like living in Brazil but I’m starting to worry about forgetting about England!!

Missing School!

Tomorrow we’re going to be in Manaus in the heart of the Amazon. If I was back home, I’d be going back to school tomorrow instead! I’ve been making loads of friends along the journey so far but I’m still missing my friends back home and I wish I was going to see them all tomorrow for the beginning of Year 5!

You can see on the map in my photos how far we’ve travelled in the last 5 days – about 1500km or more from Belem and we’re planning to travel all the way through Peru to Equador by boat.

When we have been on the river so far traveling up from Belem you can’t really see any wildlife except for a few river dolphins but I keep missing them they pop up and back down so quickly!

When we are in Manaus we will be able to go into the jungle and then we should be able to see some really interesting wildlife including two toed and three toed slothes, piranhas, more dolphins and monkeys.

Meanwhile, here are some photos of wildlife we’ve seen so far in Brazil – a ladybird without spots!? A Boa Constrictor lounging above our heads as we sat and had lunch in a beachside cafe! And some mystery shots! Can you guess what they are?

Me and Flat Stanley in Brazil!

We’ve been in Brazil for the whole of the summer holidays and now we’re travelling along the Amazon. We have slept in the boat for 5 nights with one more to go. We will have gone over 1500km when we get to Manaus.

On our last day in Morro do Sao Paulo we had to pack carefully for 3 flights and a 6 day river trip and we sorted out the school books as we are going to start World School when everyone else starts school back home. I wish I was there to see everyone but I’m having a great time!

Did you know we’ve been to three islands? Ilha Grande, Boipeba and Morro do Sao Paulo. I really liked all of them. In Morro we stayed in a lighthouse hotel – with a lovely swimming pool with a funicular that goes up to it! The lighthouse is there behind me on the balcony. The real lighthouse to warn boats is up on the hill!

This year, I’m going to read some of the same books that everyone is reading in Year 3 back at school. I have got ‘Flat Stanley’ with me – an actual ‘Flat Stanley’ not the book, which is on my Kindle! That’s because Miss Place gave him to me so he could travel with me in my backpack and visit some of the places we’re going to!

For those who don’t know, Stanley is a boy in a book who gets squashed flat by a pin board and posted to California to visit his friend! Miss Jane read that story to us in Year 2.

I took Flat Stanley out to see Rio de Janiero! Here are some of the photos of him with us in front of the statue of Christ the Redeemer and Flat Stanley balancing on top of Sugarloaf Mountain!

Can you spot him hiding in the bushes? And can you see him lounging in the hammock when I’m getting the books sorted out for home school in Morro?

Ouch – Gap Year Data Roaming Charges!

We are now out of regular WiFi and are having to use Data Roaming on our phones to access email and the web. Luckily we only have an occasional mobile phone signal as we pass towns on the Amazon so we are not tempted to use it more as it is expensive and it feels strangely good to be completely uncontactable!

We are on Vodafone and they charge a reasonablish £5 for the first 25Mb with a 24 hour use time (UK midnight to midnight). We have managed to stay under this limit until now by mainly doing just email and checking the data used very regularly but today with a 3G signal in Santerem, one of the biggest cities on the Amazon, my iPhone used up 10Mb in 10 minutes when I didn’t think I was using data. 5Mb over the limit and £15 spent at the rip off rate of £3/Mb. Almost as much as we spend on food in a day on our boat! Then Mo did the same and went 15Mb over, cost £45!?! We are going to have to be very careful, all part of the learning experience.

I have heard that iPhones are notorious for running up big bills so maybe we have been lucky so far? What we both did differently was turn on 3G at the same time as data and maybe this was the problem, one to watch if you are traveling.

Vodafone still have the best tariffs for roaming compared to other operators, the others are even more expensive.

What we should have done is buy a MiFi device that uses a local SIM card for data and gives you a local WiFi network you can connect all your devices to. We had no idea we would spend over 2 months in Brazil and this would have been a good investment! (Vivo looks like the best network for data if you happen to be in Brazil.)

Amazing Amazon – Diary Day 3

I wake at 3am when Ben comes up to use the loo and have a chat, then at 5.30am when Zoe comes up to tell me we docked and people left and arrived and that they have a new hammock neighbour! We take pictures together of the almost full moon as it sets.

I had been thinking about the fact that the kids are free to wander the boat which is pretty small and well contained and I’m especially relieved that no-one abducted or murdered my kids as I slept soundly in my top deck suite and they shared the hammock deck with 150 locals!!

After breakfast, a lazy morning laying in hammocks, showering, snoozing back in the cabin, children running around busying themselves with friends, can crushing, making rope swings… It’s hotter today! Well we are less than 2 degrees south of the Equator. We reach a wider part of the river and after a lovely lunch of chicken meat rice and chips, need to lie in air con cabin – What a luxury! Visiting the public loos and showers briefly, I notice the hammock area near the public loos has been vacated and I consider how lucky we are to have the luxury of suite no 6!
It worked out an extra £160 for the suite for 7 days – best money we’ve spent in a while I think!

We’re now in the widest river I’ve seen, I’d guess its a few km across. It feels hotter and you can’t walk barefoot on the sunny part of the deck – it burns. The kids flag and complain of the heat but they shower in the cabin and feel better then soon after they put on the deck showers and everyone is happy again!!!

Supper is getting a bit boring – meat rice and spaghetti but perfectly adequate – we order two between us and eat the lot but have discovered that cheese and ham toasties are available all day in the bar – so topping up with those is a treat. Another brief stop at a small town sees more passengers leave and new ones hop on. Suddenly a new hammock is up, verging on uncomfortably-close to one of ours! But we can imagine the boat being alot busier and a lot more cramped having read of people stringing their hammocks above yours!! Can’t quite imagine that!

Zoe crashed out in the cabin tonight with Lara. We’ve spotted an odd raised line on Lara’s foot that seems to been part of a bite. Need to keep an eye on that as it looks a bit suspicious as if something could be burrowing around under her skin?! Can’t Google it without any signal which is frustrating.

I headed off with Ben to sleep my first night in a hammock, really not too bad, although hard to get a comfortable postion strategically placed so your head or elbow isn’t bumping with your neighbour and the end of your hammock isn’t bumping too much with the hammock in the overlapping next row! Fun to play a word game with Ben before sleep…. It’s quite bright as the lights stay on but draping a sleep sheet over the bar in the right place works, the air con works a bit too so quite a good sleep, disrupted only by a middle of the night stop for some to depart and others arrive and the occasional need for a reposition when some part of my body feels a bit numb!

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Amazing Amazon – Diary Day 2

I woke a couple of times to the sound of heavy rain and quietly chugging engine. It was cold with our air con switched on. We turned it off eventually but were pretty hot by morning with Lara and me snuggled on the bottom bunk.

There’s no porthole so it was amazing to open the door at 7.30am and see blue sky, river and jungle rushing by outside!

Wow! What a day!!

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Amazing Amazon – Diary Day 1

We boarded the Amazon Star at about 6pm after a day and night of travel from almost half way across Brazil and almost all day waiting for our boat.

It was a bit of a marathon wait! We’d arrived in the docks about 10am direct from the airport to find no boat and no-one who knew anything about our being booked on a boat More

Magnums after Midnight!

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We are in the departure lounge in Sao Luis, Brazil. It’s 2.45am, Ben and Zoe are playing cards and we’re eating Magnums!

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At Salvador and Fortaleza, Ben’s football and rock aroused some suspicion and there were fears the football would be confiscated or cut open! Ben with his suspicious looking stash, maybe it looks like crack?

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Will we still be this lively when we arrive in Belem at 5.15am?! I hope so as we have to head down to the docks, find our boat and load up then head off to buy hammocks and provisions for our 5 day journey. It’s highly recommended to stock up on snacks and aside from having some goodies for us, it would be nice to have some spare for the young kids who apparently perform death defying leaps from their canoes to the boat in order to peddle some local snack or other but apparently are so poor they are grateful for anything the crew or passengers give them. It’s going to be an interesting journey…

Brasilia and Salvador – City hopping with kids

We’re in the idyllic island gem of Boipeba. Mum and Lara, age 4, are swinging in the hammock… its a far cry from the two cities we’ve just spent the last 5 nights in…

Lara : Mummy I want to do a blog

Mum : Ok, let’s see of you can remember about Brasilia? Tell me about losing your hat?

Lara : I losed it at that church and it was really nice it was the dark pink one that I always took to school on a sunny day

Mum : What was the church like?

Lara : Don’t know

Mum : Remember what the walls were like?

Lara : No?

Mum : They were all made of blue glass

Lara : Oh!

Mum : Don’t you remember? it was huge, square and really beautiful with the giant light with hundreds of crystals in the middle that Daddy paid R$10 to light for 1 minute!!

Ben :Mum  – it was two minutes. They said one minute but we got two, remember?

Santurio Dom Bosco lit for two minutes by the 2.5 tonne chandelier with 435 crystal lightbulbs!

Lara : Oh yes – I really liked it though. It was a lovely hat – why didn’t you tell me to pick it up?

With Billy Deeter our Brasilia tour guide

Mum : Lara,  do you remember going on that tour with Billy who drove us round?  What would you like to tell your friends about it?

Lara : Nothing, can’t remember anything!

Mum : What about the little church that was the first one in the city. Billy told you the first time you go in a church you can make 3 wishes so we all did

Lara : Oh yes!

Mum : And that little church was 50 years old which is really old for Brasilia and we said that’s funny because our house is nearly 100 years old back home… !

Kicking up leaves outside the oldest church in Brasilia – last recorded sighting of Lara’s hat!

Brasilia is a fascinating capital for a short visit, just maybe not for a 4 year old! I’d compare it to Canberra – a purpose built  seat of government but with better architecture. Built up from nothing in the central plateau of Brasil, it was only founded in 1960 by President Kubitschek, having been built in just 41 months – by architects, city planners and landscape designers according to the winning entry of a competition for best design! It’s shaped like a bird or an aeroplane body and is organised into living sectors along the wings and government, banking, hotel and entertainment sectors through the central body.

The winning design

There are no street names as the locals are proud to tell you, instead there are futuristic codes that indicate different sectors, South or North, that takes some getting used to and apparently confounds Sat Nav!

Brasilia Model City

Brasilia is, apparently, the only city in the world built in the 20th century that  has Unesco World Heritage designation, but it was planned since the early 19th century and its location fixed after Italian priest Dom Bosco prophesied that a new civilisation would emerge in Brazil between the 15th and 20th parallels!

There is a huge beautiful lake hugging the nose and the front of the wings! We had a brilliant half day tour with Brasilia tour guide Billy Deeter, who moved from the US as a boy and has seen the city develop from it’s early days. He told interesting stories of the city and showed us the best sights, making it great for the kids as well as us – well…maybe not quite for our 4 year old, who was pretty eager to stop for ice cream and nothing else really mattered to her that afternoon. But Ben and Zoe were fascinated.  Between visits to different parts of the city, the kids had a fab time in the hotel pool.

Had the Manhatten Plaza pool to ourselves, fantastic view of central Brasilia

We stayed in the North Hotel Sector after a complex negociation in the hotel originally booked in the South Hotel Sector decided it was against the rules to let us stay in a 3 bed room and we must be moved to another hotel. Since the girls have become accomplished at sleeping ‘top and tail’ and we are equipped with a couple of sleeping bags and mats, we would have been fine but we ended up in a lovely suite at a 4 star hotel with a significant discount so no complaints about the rules! We had a brilliant view from our balcony along the ‘centre’ of the city.

Brasilia night fall from our hotel balcony
Brasilia night fall from our hotel balcony

The Cathedral, Palace of Justice,  National Congress and various memorials are all carefully positioned and designed in spacious contemporary styles.

Exhibition Centre with Cathedral Metropolitano to the left
inside the beautiful Cathedral Metropolitana

On our second day, we headed to the Banco Centro Do Brasil housing the money museum which we all loved! Great displays showing the origination of money in Brazil and worldwide, with English transation leaflets, a display of currencies from every country in the world and alot of gold bars!

So much Gold!
At the Money Museum, Banco Central do Brasil

Ben : Oh yes! Mum, I really wanted some of that shredded money. Billy said they gave it out in a little bag when he visited…but we did get some coins!

There is a display of shredded notes, each denomination separated in different glass cabinets,so you see all the different colours. It represented   a fortune of money. Again the kids were facinated!  Our day ended with a trip up the tv tower to the viewing platform right in the city centre where we watched the sun set, then headed down to the huge water fountains where the kids raced around and got drenched!

With the Kubitscheks – beside the tomb of President JK
National Congress – the ‘dishes’ are the Senate and House of Representatives
Looking towards the Government Sector from the TV tower

We had read that Brasilia is a bit of a foodie’s delight and quickly checked out the best reviews on Trip Adviser. In the end we stuck  with the simpler dining options in the shiny shopping mall nearby, as an expensive cab rides out to the lake for a la carte dining on the shores seemed over optimistic with 3 kids under 10 after a day in a hot city and all dressed in our hippy traveller attire!

On the way to dinner at the Mall, Brasilia!

Mum ; Ok, so what do you want to talk about for the blog then ?

Lara : Don’t know! Mum where are my Barbies?

A little later….

Mum : who remembers where we went after Brasilia and how we got there?

Zoe : We went to Salvador and we stayed for one day. The first night we looked for a sushi restaurant but it had turned into a different
restaurant so we had pizza there!

Ben : we went to the city – I remember we went in this huge elevator from the old high town to the port and then straight back up! And the town was all cobbled streets and really old – its one of the oldest cities built by the Portuguese. We got a bus to the old city and a taxi back – the man said 20 Real but Dad asked him to use the meter thingy. It came to 18 real and Dad gave him 20 Real with the tip!

I watched the meter going up  the whole time and I thought we would have to pay more – in the end Dad said it was still better because he would have to pay him a tip on top of the 20….!

Mum – Lara do you remember in Salvador ?

Lara – Can I go swimming?

[Salvador is a huge city. We flew in late afternoon – an easy 1 hour flight from Brasilia.  We immediately noticed that we were in a warmer climate, each stop we’ve made since Rio, it gets a bit warmer, we took a £35 taxi through the sprawling city to the smaller city beach resort of Barra, said to be one of the few ‘safe’ districts in Salvador and to a small simple pousada tucked away and securely gated.

We had just two nights before we had arranged to head south to Boipeba so the following day decided we should look at the city. The obvious destination was Pelourinho, the colourful, cultural, centre,  another Unesco declared World Heritage sight. Very different from Brasilia. Lonely Planet describes Salvador and Pelourinho as having an energy and unadorned beauty that few cities can match.  It also lists under ‘Dangers and Annoyances’ the city’s reputation for theft, mugging and pickpocketing, so we were a little paranoid and after leaving everything bar a little cash back at the pousada we set off somewhat nervously to catch a bus to the ‘Pelo’.

From what I’d read, I expected music & dancing on every street corner, huge bustling noisy, colourful crowds. But it was deserted – turned out it’s quieter on Sunday’s but it was also Fathers day!  Police presence still quite high, perhaps more noticeable due to lack of crowds and after a wrong turn that look us into some too quiet streets and rapid u turn, we felt much more comfortable wandering around, but like we missed out on the real experience.

The highlight was looking around the Igreja e Convento Sao Francisco, completed in 1723, simply dripping inside with gold and with a simple convent courtyard with a series of fresco where Martin, Ben, Zoe and I spent a while working out the proverbs and wise sayings  and searching for the distorted faces of cherubs and angels with dubiously large ‘organs’ painted by disgrunted African slaves who were prohibited from practicing their own religions.

This is a city that needs more time or might be easier to get to know without kids. We didn’t give it that much of a chance, although chatting and emailing with new friends with young children who we met in Boipeba who stayed in and around the Pelo before and after their island getaway, its possible to enjoy alot more!

After that R$20 ride back to Barra, we wandered along the unbelievably crowded city beach – I think many of the folk normally in Pelo might have come out for Fathers day! We went into the oldest fort and lighthouse in Brazil containing a small museum of Brazil’s nautical and lighthouse history – Ben fascinated and eager to look at everything and the girls happy to run around and play hide and seek. Another brief paranoid moment for Mum and Dad when they strayed briefly out of sight!]

Mum: The next day we had a long  journey – who remembers that?

Ben – taxi – then ferry – then car –

Leaving Salvador on the ferry to Bom Depacho and on to Valenca and Boipeba

Zoe – Mum! Remember when we saw that cow and you said ‘I think it’s actually buffalo’ and Lara sat up and said  ‘Where’s the Gruffalo?!’

Mum – and the lovely speedboat ride was after that?

Lara – yes, I was standing right at the front!! Mum pleeeeeease can we go swimming now?

Speedboat from Valenca to Boipeba through the Mangroves

Get Jealous

I happened upon the blog of another family gap year on the travel blogging site Get Jealous today. The Bremners have an 8 and a 9 year old, are starting in Africa and will be heading to South America as well. Very impressed with their morning PE, looks a lot more strenuous than our aqua-gymnastics earlier today.

I have been wowed with Mo keeping up her running, barefoot on the beach most of the time. I am thinking I need to use or lose my running shoes (luxury item!). That said I beat Mo in our Heart Olympics on the beach this afternoon much to Mo’s surprise, I’ll probably need a week to recover. Our running track was pretty cool with MMBZL branding even if the construction was accidental.

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Get Jealous, what a great name for a web site! I may have to read to get some ideas?!?

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