Sunday, January 30, 2022

Days 1-3: Quito


Day 1: RDU to Quito

We flew from RDU to Miami and then on to Quito.  The forecast was for rain all week, but it was clear when we arrived at about 3:00 PM. Quito is in a high valley between two mountain ranges, and offers some spectacular views on approach.

Quito from the air

The city has about 3 million people, and is strung out in the valley in a narrow band running from north to south.   It actually extends well beyond the top and bottom of the map below.  There are 3 main parts of central Quito: (1) The historic district, near "Church of the Society of Jesus" on the map, (2) the Mariscal Sucre area (restaurants and entertainment), near the Hilton Colon Quito on the map, and (3) the central business district, near the Quicentro Shopping Mall on the map.  We stayed in the Dann Carlton Hotel, which was about 3 blocks south of the Quicentro Mall.

Since Quito is at about 9,000 feet, it doesn't get really hot, even though it's virtually on the Equator. In fact, it can get darn cold, even in the summer. 



Day 2: Free Day in Soggy Quito

Our "official" tour didn't start until the next day, so Monday was a free day.  Unfortunately, the promised rain arrived on Monday, and it poured all day (and only got up to 53 degrees Fahrenheit).  The rain was so bad that it caused a landslide (near TeleferiQuo on the upper left side of the map) that killed several people.  We decided to tour the city on one of those double-decker tour buses--fortunately the upper deck was enclosed.  Except for brief stops at Basilica del Voto Nacional and Panecillo Hill, we didn't get off the bus.  

Our hotel (the reddish building)

Quicentro Mall, the largest mall in Ecuador, near our hotel

Central Quito

Some shops in the Mariscal Sucre District

The Historic Center is a UNESCO World Heritage site, with a number of churches and buildings dating from the 1500s.

A view over part of the historic district

Basilica del Voto Nacional

South of the Historic District is El Panecillo (Panecillo Hill), with a huge statue of the Virgin Mary.  The statue can be see from virtually everywhere in the Historic District.

Panecillo Hill with statue at the top

Eventually the bus went to the top of Panecillo Hill, which offered some nice views (as nice as the weather would allow) of Quito.

View from the top of Panecillo Hill

Statue of Virgin Mary, built in the late 1950's out of aluminum

A wider view of Quito

Street view in the Historical District

In the modern business district

After we got off the bus, we went to the Quicentro Mall and then walked back to the hotel.

Did I mention that the weather sucked?

The street that our hotel was on

They do have taste in Quito


Day 3: A real Tour of Quito and the Mitad del Mundo

Today was the first day of our "official" tour.  Our arrangements were for a private tour from Quito to Guayaquil, so we spent the next several days with Patricia who was both our tour guide and driver.  She was a great guide.

The weather was much improved, going from cloudy in the morning to sunny in the afternoon, with a high in the upper 60's.

The first part of the tour involved a lot of the sights we had seen from the bus the previous day, but this time we went inside a few of the buildings.  First, we went back to Panecillo Hill.

Hillside near Panecillo Hill

A clearer view of Quito than we had yesterday

Virgin Mary is still there

A view of the Historic District

We then drove to the Historic District and walked around, going into various churches and other historical buildings. 

A street in the Historic District

House of the Gigantic Empanada

A shopping street in the Historic District

A view of Panecillo Hill and the Virgin Mary statue from the Historic District

A shop selling confections and pork skins

A woman selling what appears to be potatoes

The Church and Convent of St. Francis, which dates from 1537

Inside the church

Another view inside the Church of St. Francis

The Convent Grounds

A view from the top of the church


We stopped at a cafe near the church, which sold that all time favorite, Hot Chocolate with Cheese



A pedestrian street in the Historic District

Golden doors of the church of The Church of la Compañía de Jesús (we couldn't go in)

The Church of la Compañía de Jesús, dating from 1605

Presidential Palace

Statue in the center of Plaza de la Independencia (Plaza Grande)

Patricia (our guide) and Brenda in the Plaza de la Independencia

Restaurant sign in the Historic District.  Prices are in US Dollars

After touring the Historic District, we drove to the Mitad Del Mundo (Equator or "Middle of the World" monument, about 15 miles north of Quito, and took obligatory pictures of ourselves in different hemispheres.

Looking at the east side of the monument.  The yellow line is the equator.

On the west (oeste) side--I'm in the northern hemisphere and Brenda is in the southern.

As it turns out, they have discovered that the Mitad Del Mundo monument isn't really on the equator.  The actual equator is about 900 feet north.  So, they built a museum at the "real site".

The Real Equator

On the "real" equator

Testing whether you can balance an egg on a nail head at the equator.  I could; Brenda couldn't.


Next: Days 4-7: Otovalo, a Homestay, Banos, and the Avenue of Volcanoes