From there we made our way via a crazed taxi driver to the second most recognisable spot: The huge double humps of the Sugar Loaf monolith. A cable car whisks seventy five people at a time up to the first perch, and then another takes you to the summit which is almost a thousand feet above the pink sand beach below. While we were on Sugar loaf an immense tropical storm blew in that sent the sea eagles careening and the bamboo and banana trees bent at forty five degree angles, with their parasitical orchids nearly touching the ground. The warm, fierce rain passed us by in just twenty minutes, and we watched it roll over the city and up to the Christ for forgiveness, before it disappeared into the mountains and rain forest beyond.
Back on terra firma, we took another psychotic taxi that zig zagged through the streets and sidewalks at about 100 mph. I thanked Christ when we reached our hotel, and took a long relaxing swim in the roof-top pool. Then later it was out for more bars and bossa nova until the wee hours.
The next day was very hot and sunny and we decided to make it a beach day, along with every other Carioca. We first walked the length of Copacabana, which takes over an hour at a fair clip. I was made well aware of my Gringo status, as every one of the hundreds of beach hawkers tried to sell me sun hats, glasses, bikinis, sarongs, beach chairs, beers, pineapples and jewelry as we walked along the promenade. Curiously, they left Freddie alone...and he can speak Portuguese! When it was time to settle in a spot for the day, we chose lifeguard tower number nine on Ipanema Beach. A young dark skinned girl with a wide smile and a tiny bikini escorted us to a place on the sand with two beach chairs and an umbrella. She explained (in Portuguese) that she would be our hostess, and she brought us cold beers, shrimp skewers and iced coconut water regularly through out the day. She chatted with Freddie and told him that she was sixteen years old, and that she lived up in one of the nearby favelas. She worked on the beach for twelve hours a day and then went up to the little bar that her mother runs to work another four hours into the night. She does this seven days a week through the summer months so she can study during the school term. Despite her difficult life, she was one of the sweetest, happiest people I have ever met. We could all learn something from this sweet sixteen year old. Of course I tipped her more than double the modest sum of our bill, which is the right thing to do for hard working people in a developing country.
After a few beers the mood on the beach became more and more social and it wasn't long before we had a gaggle of new buddies around us. Along with some locals, we met Eddie from Chicago and Josh from New York, who were great fun. We spent the rest of the day laughing and drinking in the bright white sun with our new found friends. We had to be at the airport at 9:00pm that evening. The only thing that made leaving Rio tolerable was knowing that this was just day three of our three week holiday in South America. Yes, there is more to come....