Home | About SAE | Help Out | Site Map | Search  
| Contact Us  

South American Explorers.org

SOUTH AMERICAN EXPLORER
Summer 2005, Volume 79

Editor
Don Montague

Associate Editor
Maya Rao

Poetry Editor
Mary Tabakow

Contributing Editors
Daniel Buck
Dominic Hamilton
Christopher Holmes
Federico B. Kirbus
Carolyn McCarthy
Anne Meadows
D. Bruce Means
Patrick Joseph
Maralyn Polak

Design Director
Jeff Miller

ITHACA HEADQUARTERS
Executive Director

Aidan Makepeace

Assistant Manager
Tim Rosenberg

BUENOS AIRES CLUBHOUSE
Managers

Marcie Ley
Frank Wilker

LIMA CLUBHOUSE
Manager

Tanilee Eichelburger

QUITO CLUBHOUSE
Manager

Christine Lakits

CUSCO CLUBHOUSE
Manager

Lucy Bertenshaw

Paralegal Without Portfolio
Craig Sorensen

Advisors
Hilary Bradt
Jean Brown
Nelson Carrasco
John W. Davidge III
Eleanor Griffi s de Zúñiga
Paolo Greer
John Hemming
Jay Hutchings
Forest Leighty
Joanne Omang
Victor Miguel Ponce
Rob Rachowiecki
David Smith
Virginia Smith
Gerald Starbuck
Humberto Valdivia

 

SOUTH AMERICAN EXPLORER
Summer 2005, Volume 79
- Buy this Magazine

In this Issue...

Kites, sarcophagi, travel writing, sailing, and organ snatching - stories and history, legends and advice; this issue is packed with information useful for those on the road, and those entertaining and interesting for those safe at home. View the contents of the magazine online, or order a copy to curl up with!

Communing with the Dead
By Kevin Revolinski

When the winds drop, the beautiful, giant creations with their jutting flags swoop out of the heavens like whirling death stars and come crashing to the ground. Onlookers occasionally get nicked, or worse, but this time no blood flows, no one loses an eye.

I had come early to see the giant kites fly on All Saint’s Day. Every November, the community of Santiago Sacatepéquez, Guatemala gathers in the town cemetery to decorate the graves of loved ones, feast on picnics, and fly homemade and often enormous kites, some over five meters in diameter. Read Full Story...

The 300th Anniversary Scots-Darien Expedition
By Dr. Stewart Redwood

The ill-fated Scots colony of Caledonia in the Darien isthmus of Panama was Scotland’s last attempt at forming an independent colony at the end of the 17th century. Dr. Stewart D. Redwood, a Scot living in Panama, describes the expedition to mark the 300th anniversary of the Darien Venture.

The full moon set in the west as the sun rose over our yacht in the mirrorcalm waters of the magnifi cent natural harbor of Caledonia Bay, which was surrounded by mountainous jungle. The absolute silence of the tropical dawn was disturbed only by the gentle splash of oars as the Kuna Indians set out for the day in their dug-out canoes, or cayucos, grinning silently as they held fishing lines in their teeth, and the eerie cries of howler monkeys far off in the jungle. Phil, the captain, lay asleep on the cabin roof, cooler than below-deck but wrapped in a sheet against the chitras, small biting insects like no-see-ums or Scots midges. We talked in whispers, and it felt like sacrilege to shatter the silence with the Avon dinghy’s outboard motor as we set out to explore the bay. After months of planning and a three-day sail from Colon, we had fulfilled a long-held ambition. The date was November 4, 1998: exactly 300 years since the day that the five heroic ships of the Scots’ Expedition sailed into this harbor and established the colony of Caledonia on the Caribbean coast of modern Panama. Read full story...

Dark Tales in Latin America
By Benjamin Radford

The idea of having parts of one’s body removed is frightening enough; no one looks forward to an amputation or surgery. Even people who must undergo surgery do not necessarily want the affected organ or part removed, just the malady itself. The idea of having a body part forcibly taken is much more horrific. This is the basis for the organ snatching urban legend, and references to it are common. The 1978 film Coma, starring Michael Douglas, depicted unethical doctors taking organs from the comatose. A 1991 episode of television show Law and Order titled “Sonata for Solo Organ” featured the theft of a kidney. According to Barbara Mikkelson of the Urban Legends Reference Page, the show’s writer said he had heard it from a friend, and the friend assured him that the story was a true account that had come from a newspaper. More recently, a 1992 fi lm titled The Harvest involved a screenwriter in Central America who uncovers a black market in kidneys. Organ-snatching was also an element in Walter Salles’s acclaimed 1998 Brazilian fi lm Central do Brasil (Central Station) in which a young boy escapes an “adoption agency” that actually uses children for their organs. Guillermo del Toro’s 2001 Mexican horror fi lm El Espinazo del Diablo (The Devil’s Backbone) also makes references to bodily theft when a character suggests the fate of a missing boy: “They sell the blood to rich people to cure their tuberculosis.” Read Full Story...

Builders of The Lost Tombs
By Araceli Rivera

Clawing their way through the dense vegetation, they zigzag up the steep slopes. It had taken several days to reach the cliffs. Now, inching their way up over the crumbling limestone along narrow ledge above, they move slowly in the morning light, towards the towering funeral statues perched high over the valley. Fragile structures of wood and clay, these ancient tombs of a mysterious people crumble under the repeated blows of the grave robbers. As dawn breaks, nothing remains of the imposing tombs but a few scattered bones, pottery shards, cordage, pieces of basketry and scraps of cloth left to mark the site of a lost archaeological treasure.

Many of the best sarcophagi of the ancient Chachapoya (Cloud People) stand beside immense waterfalls up to 100 meters high in la ceja de la selva, the eyebrow of the jungle. A dense cloud forest thrives at this altitude in the mists overlooking the Amazon rainforest below. In the high humidity, ideal for orchids and bromeliads, wood rots and flesh decays. The sarcophagi of this zone and the mummies within them have managed to survive, a testimony to the skill of an ancient people. Read Full Story...

Discovering The Equator: The Politics of Travel Writing
By Marnie Binder

In the year 1735, amidst the rapid expansion of scientific knowledge that occurred during the Enlightenment, two young Spaniards, Antonio de Ulloa and Jorge Juan y Santacilia, set out to measure the equator and determine the true shape and size of the Earth. The expedition chose the province of Quito in Ecuador to take measurements of the globe, where they spent 10 years recording their scientific discoveries and encounters with natives. What established their reputations for all time, however, were the two travel narratives that subsequently emerged.

The first work, A Voyage to South America, was published in 1748. The second, Secret News about America, followed a year later. Both texts offer considerable insight into the use of travel narratives as historical documents, as few would disagree that all historical texts are biased in one way or another.. Read Full Story...

 

 

 

About Us | Site Map | Contact Us | Advertising | e-Newsletters | Magazine | Maps | Guidebooks | Discounts | Jobs | Volunteer | Store | Travel Insurance | Bulletin Boards | Travel Advisories | Trip Reports | Info Sheets | Donate | Clubhouses | Countries |

©2005 South American Explorers