Better don't escape


Our hitchhiking to Salta did not start successfully. After three hours waiting on the road towards Paso Jama, the most Northern border crossing from Chile to Argentina, we figured there was no traffic at all. When finally a private car stopped, we thought about a marvel, but it turned into a nightmare. Suspiciously watched by a Chilean couple we embarked upon following dialog.
"Where do you go?"
"To Salta, like you." We did not seem convincing. "We are two Europeans travelling to Salta."
"Do you have passports?"
"Yes, we can show them to you." I was about taking mine out, when the driver said,
"Do you have your exit stamps from Chile?"
"No. We will get them on the border of Argentina."
"No, you won't. You have to go to the building of Customs (Aduana) in San Pedro to get your exit stamp. On the Argentinian border is no Chilean immigration office. You need this one here." He showed us his exit paper. We swallowed.
"Well then, it seems we have to go back... Thank you, though."
That happens if you do not read travel guides, nor sleep in hostels. The car left, and we walked back to the Aduana building.
After a while of bad mood, we found peace again. While waiting we enjoyed the company of our new dog friend, and just let the day be the day it was. Around six sun set and it became terribly cold. I needed to put my long undertrousers and shirts for not freezing to death. I asked the Aduana to help me find a room for changing my clothes, since the public toilet was locked for no water was available. It turned out an odysee of our modern world in which no one seems to understand the need for a woman to undress in a closed room. "What a shame for humanity!", I throw them in their stupid faces, left, and undressed right in front of the Aduana building. That is what they wanted, that is what they got. For the change of the upper part of clothes I prefered to disappear out of sight. Still visible, indeed, but not from the street nor any Aduana worker, rather from everyone living around. Our little dog friend was then the one who cheered me up. He accompanied me, hoping I would never leave him alone anymore. It broke my heart, and turned my madness into love. If I only could have adopted him...
Around 7:30pm, after 8 hours waiting, Lisandro, a biochemic engineer, appeared. He was going much further than Salta. At the same time a French couple appeared, needing a ride for the bus would not take them with their strange luggage (a huge wooden box). We had to be quick. Good for us that the soldier watching the Aduana building all day long connected us to Lisandro before the others were close. At around 8pm we finally turned our back towards San Pedro.
The passenger joining us was actually the Italian, who broke his promise and escaped from us in San Pedro. He was altitude sick, and now needed urgently someone to deliver him further downhill. Funny indeed. Escaping does not pay off, a lesson he for sure had learned that day. Lisandro was amused. We left him finally in Susques, a small town about 130km far from Paso Jama on the Argentinian side.
Our search for a bank machine brought us to Purmamarca. Once we found the cash dispenser we decided to forget about Argentinian Pesos. The reason were three travellers wound up like worms in their sleeping bags, laying criss-cross on the ground of the cash dispenser room. There was no way we would enter and wake them up. They have had the perfect idea for surviving the difficult weather conditions in this town.
In San Salvador de Jujuy Lisandro invited for tea and sandwich. Since all sandwich have either meat, sausage, or cheese inside, we got cranola bars instead. It was a great feast, at three in the morning. We felt warm, since Jujuy has much milder temperatures than the heights we had traveled through. The gas station where we stopped felt like back home in Europe. Toilets where you do not have to pay, a nice area to sit and eat, prices untypically low for gas stations, simply fantastic. Our spirits were lifted up, staying awake was easy now.

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