Intro
I’m still holed up in La Union, where the rhythm of the town is currently dictated by the intermittent showers that slick the paved streets outside my window. My mood is as flat as the heavy grey sky, mostly because my head feels like it’s been packed with damp wool from this persistent cold. It’s a stationary day, a forced pause where the only thing moving fast is the liquid draining from my nose.
The Ritual of the Pit
- I started the morning at a local pollería, seeking out a bowl of caldo de gallina to steam the congestion out of my sinuses. The smell of oil and galvanized steel from the hardware store downstairs followed me out into the street, a metallic perfume that seems to define this block. While waiting for my broth, I watched a group of men in the courtyard beginning the heavy work of the Pachamanca. This isn’t just cooking; it’s an excavation. They were heating stones until they glowed with a dull, subterranean heat, then layering them with damp earth and thick grass.
- The texture of the charred stones and the damp, heavy soil being shoveled over the meat and tubers was hypnotic. There’s something deeply grounded about watching lunch being buried in a hole in the ground. It made my own task—trying to breathe through one nostril while sipping salty chicken water—feel particularly small. The rain started to spit again, turning the dust of the preparation area into a dark slurry, but the pit kept smoking, a private volcano in the middle of the neighborhood.
Digital Maintenance and Distance
- By mid-morning, the physical world felt too demanding, so I retreated to a local jugería. I sat there with a glass of orange juice that tasted more like sunlight than anything I’ve had in weeks, and dialed Germany. For an hour, the sounds of the Peruvian highlands—the honking of mototaxis—faded into the background as I talked to a friend back home – sitting in the sun because rain had a pause. It’s a strange dissonance, hearing about life in a German city while looking at a wall of stacked crates and a woman peeling a mountain of pineapples.
- The rest of the morning and also parts of the afternoon was a slow grind of digital housekeeping. I sat in my room, the dry rasp of tearing toilet paper providing a rhythmic soundtrack to my work. Every few minutes, I’d reach for the roll, manage the latest surge from my sinuses, and go back to the screen. I updated the blog posts and dragged the cursor across the map on my website, tracing the line I’ve carved through the Andes. It’s a lot easier to move a digital icon than it is to haul 55 kilograms of steel over a mountain pass, especially when your lungs feel like they’re full of wet sand.
The Pork and the Escorts
- The Pachamanca finally emerged from the earth in the early afternoon. The sweet potatoes were the clear winners—dense, caramelized, and tasting of woodsmoke and soil. The chunk of pork they served me was absurd, a massive, salt-crusted slab that was far too much for one sitting. I ate what I could and wrapped the rest in foil; that grease-stained package is currently sitting on my nightstand, a salty insurance policy for the evening’s hunger.
- At 5:30 PM, I needed bread. The landlord’s two children, who seem to have adopted the lone cyclist in the upstairs room, insisted on escorting me. They didn’t just give directions; they led a formal procession to the bakery, skipping ahead of me on the sidewalk and pointing out every puddle. After dropping them back at the hotel, I went on a desperate hunt for greens. Finding a cucumber or a carrot in La Union on a Sunday night is like searching for a specific pebble in a rockslide. I finally found a small, dimly lit store that had a single, slightly soft cucumber. I bought it like it was a trophy.
Satire and Tissues
- The night is ending in the same way it began: horizontal. I’ve set up a small station on the bed—bread, the remaining cold pork from the pit, and my prized cucumber, peeled and sliced. I managed to find a stream of some German satire shows, ‘Heute Show’ and ‘Extra 3.’ There is something incredibly grounding about watching comedians tear apart European politics while sitting in a room that vibrates every time a heavy truck rolls past the hardware store downstairs.
- The pile of used tissues in the corner is growing, but the air in my room is finally starting to feel a bit thinner, a bit clearer. I’ve got the pork, I’ve got the bread, and I’ve got a roof that doesn’t leak. The bike is leaning against the wall, clean and ready, waiting for the moment my body decides it’s finished with this stationary phase. Lights out at 10:00 PM.
Overnight
I stayed at a local hotel in La Union, positioned directly over a hardware store. The industrial smell of the shop below and the central location made it the perfect spot to disappear into a head cold for twenty-four hours.
Reflection
When you are sick in the mountains, a single cucumber found on a Sunday night is a greater victory than a fifty-mile climb.