Travelogues & PicturesThe Important Things. 15.10.2010 The Beat Of A Different Drum. 21.06.2010 The Gate To The New World. 30.03.2010 The People Are The Way. 24.01.2010 Of Sinners and Saints, of Showmen and Ghost towns. 02.11.2009 The Courage To Turnaround. 20.07.2009 Moments Of Connectedness. 29.11.2008 |
The Gate To The New WorldWritten in Arrecife, Lanzarote, am 30.03.2010 700 kms over the islands of Gran Canaria, Teneriffa, La Palma and Lanzarote When I came to the Canary Islands last November, I would have never believed that my intermediate stop would turn into an extended exploration of the island. I had initially come to quickly search for a ride to the Carribean. Instead, I discovered a true hiking paradise with a surprising variety of landscapes diverging heavily in geology, climate and vegetation even though all of the islands are of volcanic origin. Now, four months later, I look back on an active time, which has forced me to intensely think about my way and has required some important decisions. On my hikes over Gran Canaria, Teneriffa, La Palma and Lanzarote I met some very interesting people, who inspired me to continue my way in serenity. The following is a report on these encounters. My everyday hiking life is not the focus on this occasion. The reason being that I wrote a number of articles about my island hikes for magazines during my “office” break in Las Palmas. I do not want to tell the same stories again here. I will let you know, of course, when those articles are published but here are some exclusive stories for you. In search of a boat The "Sailors Bar", which enjoys a monopoly position in the sailing port, is a locale for sailors to hang around, but also for several adventurers who have come together from all around Europe to attempt to hitchhike over the Atlantlic. Some of them, like the likeable Catalan Jordi, have already been looking for weeks for a berth on a boat. Others are more lucky and find a ride within a couple of days. It is a question of being in the right place at the right time. Looking for a berth on a ship is exhausting. This is partly because on one round over the piers I meet only a few sailors who are on board at that time and because I do not feel very comfortable in the role of the solicitant, especially because I cannot offer sailing experience. But the other hitchhikers are in the same position, and when on a hot tiring day our motivation has fled, we cheer each other up with some funny conversation or a fresh croissant from the bakery. 77 countries in 7 years Difficult questions After six days I am back in Las Palmas. I again try my luck, but day after day I feel more depressed. The whole story is not "flowing" as I had planned. In addition to my difficulties in seafaring (no sailing experience, and seasick) some doubts arise as to whether I should travel so far at all. What do I really want? Shall I really go to South America? A long journey for somebody who does not use airplanes. Or is it better to stay in Europe? Do I have the choice? Difficult questions! Tired from the boat search I focus again on hiking and take the ferry to Tenerife. A perfect day The bar is exactly the type of bar you look for when you are travelling. A crowd of young, open-minded people, who come together to relax, chat and make music on this Sunday afternoon. Selfmade tapas are offered at the terrace where the sunset over La Palma can be watched. Inside the bar, there is a rousing percussion session going on. It is the perfect evening after a perfect day, everything seems to be in the flow again. I meet Robbi, who has inherited a house from his father in "Icod the los vinos". He tells me about his "Finca alternativa", where, with his wife Nia, he is realizing his life’s dream: live ecologically and pass on the spirit. It sounds interesting, so I visit the couple two days later. At the “Finca alternativa” Back in Las Palmas Temaskal In the evening the moment has arrived: Temaskal. It is an old cleaning ritual from Mexico, which has its origins in the Mayan culture and is still in practice nowadays. The two Mexicans Levi and Jorge, whomI had met the week before, have already finished all the preparations. Keeping to tradition they have constructed a dome-shaped tent with blankets and tarps, held up by a support made of wooden branches that have been tied together. Simliar to a sauna one goes into the tent, where fire heated stones are brought in. “These sweat lodges exist in many old cultures, they are considered to be the first hospitals of the world”, Jorge explains. “It is a mixture of physical and mental lavation. The point is to renew the oftenly forgotten connectedness of humans with earth and to thank nature for its rich gifts.” It would be unable to describe in words the full symbolic richness of the Temaskal. Altogether the eight of us spend more than three hours in the tent during which time Levi shifts the red-hot glowing stones four times. Heat and vapor makes us sweat heavily. At times we cool our skin with Aloe Vera leaves. Led by the drums we sing many old songs in the indian Nahuatl language, which gives the ritual a special magic. Everybody is allowed to rise to speak, if something comes into his mind, for that which he would like to express his thankfulness. After the intense ceremony I am exhausted, but I enjoy the deep feeling of ease and relaxation while we rest under the full moon. It has worked, I feel absolutely at peace with the world. Soon I fall tired into my bed. Surprising Lanzarote Island of luck On the second boat I inquire at I meet Brice, a Frenchman as old as myself, who is living on the water with his wife Alice and his two little children. “Yes, we are planning to go to Morocco”, he tells me, “and principally there is no reason not to take you there. But I want to talk to Alice first. Come back later.” Impatiently I return to the boat in the evening. “All right”, Brice says, “we will go in eight days.” There is no need to say how happy I am about this opportunity! Over the next two days I help Brice to build a new kitchen for the boat. It is a good opportunity to get to know each other. Alice and Brice moved onto the boat last year. “We want to see our children growing up and teach them ourselves”, Alice explains. “That means we have to make ends meet with money from some casual jobs, but the quality of life as a family has increased enormously.” I am impressed by Brices serenity. Day after day he works with his own hands on the boat. It takes as long as it takes. The kitchen shelf we are working on is second hand from another boat. “A new shelf would be too expensive”, he says, “and besides that, the joy in the finished shelf is way bigger if you do it yourself.” Yes, in the evening I am proud of the job we have done. I has been a pleasure. A leap into the dark “Dreams, visions, hopes are not only constructs we make up to escape from an exhausting, monotonous and depressing everyday life and to put ourselves mentally and emotionally in a better world”, writes the German quantum physicist and laureate of the alternative nobel prize Hans-Peter Dürr. “No! Dreams, visions and hopes are the necessary first steps on the way to create our future ourselves. We can do and change a lot more than we think commonly.” Quantum physics have shown, that the mechanistic world view is outdated and that the foundation of the world is rather based on mind than on matter. “The substantiality is not a rigid reality, is is full of possibilities – and it is inside us. It can be modified by us and created newly.” I am convinced: If we get rid of the selfmade barriers in our thinking, we have already achieved a lot. Just like Roland, who strongly believes in the possibility of world peace and who tries to take away the doubts of others with his voyage. Or like Columbus, who strongly believed in the possbility of a sea passage to the west, and who fearlessly sailed from the Canaries into a new unknown world. It is open to all of us, today and anytime: the gate to the new world. Yours, Reinhold. Some Impressions |
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