During the summer (Dec-Feb in
The trip back home was the most eventful part though. We’d picked the day of a transportation strike to visit the camp, so once we’d hiked back to the river, crossed it on the river swing, clamored back up the hillside, we couldn’t find a bus to catch. We waited and waited, hoping. After my friend started talking about needing to stay near this one home we’d seen and not walking down the road (which I was thinking would be more fun than standing around), I realized we probably didn’t want to be out on a rural highway alone at night.
Since the sun had already set, we decided to go into high gear. Our only hope: hitchhiking. I rolled up my sleeves so my blindingly white skin had the best chance of literally blinding drivers off the road. ;) After waiving, jumping and miming our problem to 20 different drivers, we were getting desperate. The truck that finally stopped? I think I almost pulled it off the road myself. Our angels of mercy were seven guys heading back from a day of work in a big, beat-up farm truck. I was glad for a chatty, native-Peruvian companion, and that God held back the rain until just after we got inside the truck!
3 comments:
Wow! What an amazing adventure! That river swing looks so fun! I'm glad you got have a such a good time at the camp. I'm thankful that God was watching out for you on your trip home. :) Love ya!
Hello Friend! You need to update this thing more often, I'm in the middle of Sudan and I can manage... what's your excuse? =P
Oh, wow!! I can't believe you did that, Amy!! that is soooooo cool, I am totally jealous! :-) In a good way! I am so glad you caught a ride coming back - what a crazy trip! I think I remember Dad saying he had to hitch a ride like that with dark coming on out in the middle of nowhere - I think he got caught in the rain, though.
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