Intro
The Lima sky was a flat, leaden lid today, holding the humidity down against the pavement of Pueblo Libre. I spent the morning off the saddle, navigating the city’s heavy air on foot before the reality of my bike’s mechanical state finally caught up with me in a shop in Callao.
Ceramic Sex and Hunter’s Feasts
- I started the morning at the Larco Museum. To be honest, I usually find archaeological commentary a bit dry—lots of theories about shards and burial rites that don’t quite land. I was drifting through the halls until I hit the erotic pottery section. It’s hard to stay bored when you’re looking at Moche teapots shaped like couples in the middle of a sex act or ceramic jugs where the handle is a giant, anatomically detailed penis. It was an amusing, blunt contrast to the usual hushed museum atmosphere.
- By 1:15 p.m., I made my way to Restaurant Bolivariano. Santiago, who I’d met weeks ago in Chacas, had invited me for lunch. I expected a quiet table for two, but I walked into a room of forty people. I sat across from Ricardo, one of Santiago’s employees and a downhill rider. We spent the hour talking gear and gradients while the smell of herb-covered masa madre focaccia I’d picked up earlier wafted from my bag. The kitchen served an off-menu lomo saltado made with dove meat provided by the hunters at the table. It was lean, dark, and rich, a world away from the standard chicken version I’ve eaten a dozen times this month.
The Logistics of Departure
- After lunch, Santiago took me to see his private stash of vintage cars and his wine shop. I walked out with a bottle of Pisco and a red blend tucked into my pack, feeling the weight of his generosity. I spent the next hour at PlazaVea, the local supermarket, stocking up on gifts for the flight back to Germany: jars of olive tapenade and bags of salty plátano verde chifles. Carrying the haul was fine; getting it back to Callao was the problem.
- Google Maps insisted on a specific bus number, but three of them blew past me without stopping. The humidity was starting to make my clothes stick to my back when the guys from ‘Wheeles’ bike shop called. I couldn’t quite follow the technical Spanish over the phone, so I gave up on the bus and hailed an Uber. I needed to see what was happening with my rear wheel in person before I left the country.
The Mechanics of Trust: Stripping the Rohloff
- Walking into the shop was a shock. My bike, which has been my only fixed point of reality for months, was being systematically dismantled. The mechanic pointed out the gritty texture of white salitre—salt crust—that had crept under my handlebar grips and corroded the aluminum. Then came the hub. The Rohloff is supposed to be a sealed vault, but they found broken screws on the lid, likely from the vibration and the coastal salt air.
- I stood there in silence, listening to the rhythmic metallic ping of the spoke wrench as the mechanic loosened the tension on the rear wheel. One by one, the spokes came out until the hub—the expensive, complex heart of the bike—was sitting isolated on the workbench. It felt invasive to see it stripped like that. By 7:15 p.m., I left the shop with the hub tucked into a padded bag. It felt strangely heavy, a dead weight in my hand instead of a rotating part of a machine. Trusting a shop to have the bike ready by July is a gamble, but seeing the internal damage made it clear I couldn’t have ridden much further anyway.
A Final Supper in Callao
- I got back to the Casa Ciclista in Callao just as the light was failing. The vibe there is always a soft landing. I put my herb-covered masa madre focaccia on the table, Fernando brought out some ripe avocados, and the other guests finished a massive pot of cream cheese pasta with broccoli. We ate together, the conversation drifting between route plans and gear failures.
- The rest of the night was a blur of cardboard and tape. I spent two hours packing a single box for the flight to Germany, sealing my backpack inside. I had to store my panniers in Fernando’s wardrobe, where they’ll sit until I return in July. Fernando helped me wrap the whole box in stretch film, the plastic screeching as we pulled it tight. It’s a weird feeling, leaving the bike in pieces and the gear in a closet, but the box is closed and the Pisco is packed.
Overnight
I stayed at the Casa Ciclista in Callao. It’s an ‘invitation’ stay run by Fernando, providing a vital communal space for cyclists to wrench on bikes and share meals before flying out or heading south.
Reflection
A Rohloff hub looks surprisingly small and vulnerable when it’s not laced into a wheel.