Friday, October 30, 2015

We spent yesterday in Quito submitting our applications for resident visas. Our flight left at 8:40 and arrived at the Quito airport around 9:30. We were supposed to meet a facilitator, whom we had never met, at the government office to complete and submit our applications. We were told several times that it would take 2-3 hours to complete and submit the apps. So rather than booking our return flight at 2:30 (we all know that if you tempt fate it will bite you in the rear), we booked the return to Cuenca for 6:40. Lots of time to get 'er done and relax. I forgot to mention an integral component of the timetable. The trip from the Quito airport to downtown Quito is a one hour cab ride. And these cabbies don't diddle around to run up the tab. It is pedal to the metal.
All that being said, we arrived by fast moving cab at the government office around 10:35. We were met by an English speaking Ecuadorian gentleman who looked to be in his twenties. He greeted us by name, introduced himself, and told us that he worked with Andrea the facilitator we supposed to meet.  He then took inside the office that had around ten clerks attending numbered stations. There were around sixty (I wasn't counting yesterday, never do an Jueves ((Thursday))) people sitting and waiting their turn while each station had a customer. Our facilitator led us to station #3 where he caught the eye of the clerk. She reached behind her and grabbed a thick folder that she handed to him. This was our application packet. He opened it and had us sign in a few (no counting on Thursday) locations. We did and he handed the packet back to the clerk and then led us down to station #6. Here the clerk was serving a woman so the facilitator stayed off to the side for a few minutes until the clerk was free. At that point we moved in, presented our passports, information was entered into his computer, and our pictures were taken. Andrea joined us just prior to our picture session. She speaks no English, thus the associate.
Once the pics were a wrap and the director yelled 'cut', Andrea told us that we were done and that t would take 45 days to process our applications. The whole process took ten minutes. So we decided to scoot back to the airport and see if we could get on the afternoon flight. Andrea's husband drives a cab (keep it in the family fight?) so she called him and twenty minutes later we were on our way back to the airport.
This driver knew a way to avoid all freeway congestion of the city (which can move very slow). We exited Quito by way of very long cobblestone switch-back two lane road. It was very scenic, with little traffic. It probably didn't do good things to the suspension system of his cab considering the cobblestone surface and speed he was going, but sure got out of Dodge fast. We got the airport around 11:50 to find that the afternoon Cuenca flight was full and our next option was the 6:40 flight that we were currently booked on.
So we spent the afternoon at the airport hanging out. We weren't up for two more hour long cab rides. It was fun and educational. Well maybe neither. The chairs were not exactly home style cozy but at least there were chairs. We ate at restaurant and the prices weren't too horrible considering we were a captive audience. We later returned and sat in the bar. We had noticed on the menu earlier that while their drinks were fairly pricey (imported American booze), their wine was $11.00 a bottle. So it must be very affordable by the glass also. With this information in hand, we ordered chip and guac y vino blanco. The chips and guac were good as was the vino, so I got a second glass. When done I kindly asked 'puedo pagar la cuinta po davor' (may I pay the bill please). The barman brought the bill $44.00. What!!! Where did that come from? Turns out the wine is $11.00 a bottle and $9.36 a glass. Airports go figure.
We just finished our first Cuenca thunderstorm. I don't think that I have ever heard thunder that loud.
Oh yeah, the thing that I wanted to note was; because we have to wait 45 days on our visa apps, we can't leave the country. Well we can leave, we just can't get back in. The ninety days on our passports expires soon and so we can't come back to Ecuador on our passports for 180 days. But because we have applications for resident visas, we can stay until those apps are resolved. In a sense we are now hijacked in South America. Maybe they'll make a movie.

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