02/03/2026
Riding a motorcycle in South America is one of the bucket list items many people who ride aspire to. I wouldn't say it was high on my list but it was certainly in the top 10. Riding across most of the Continent seemed like a lot for a first time endeavor. After getting recommendations from others to consider Ecuador, I looked into it.
Ecuador is a relatively small country with diverse topography. Amazon jungle in the east, high Andean mountains at the center and coastline to the west. When a riding buddy, Derek, expressed interest in going, the die was cast. We booked the flights, arranged bike rentals in Quito and developed a route. By the way, Derek is the son of a good friend of Elise and mine from Veterinary School.
We set up 11 days this January. The rainy season. The rental shop assured us that if we hit rain we could easily divert a short distance to escape any deluge. This proved to be false.
We began in Quito and spent 6 days exploring small Andean towns including Apuerca, Mindo, Alloroquin, Sigchos, Isinlivi, Angamarca and Salinas. We met many wonderful people along the way. We saw Llamas, cattle, donkeys, and dogs EVERYWHERE. Spectacular views as we crested 14,000 feet in elevation.
BUT...RAIN! Seemed to be unceasing. And with it thick fog and hail at higher elevations. Derek and I made the decision to head West to the coast and to sunshine. Eight hours of riding and we went from 40 to 80 degrees. Fog and rain to sun. Got to snorkel and swim for three days before heading back to Quito.
The way back confirmed why we diverted to the coast. We spent the last 100 miles climbing sharply in elevation through switchback after switchback while battling, rain, fog, truck/bus traffic. We were very happy to reach the hotel in Quito.
The trip was the definition of Adventure with all the sights, all the weather, issues with electronics (GPS, Bluetooth coms, laptop, satellite messenger unit), dead batteries and sunburn. But this is what exploring the unknown by motorcycle is often about.
My friend Jim Blais says you have to learn to be comfortable with being uncomfortable. And this was certainly true on this trip. Derek and I went into the trip a bit naive and came out the other side a bit wiser and filled with experiences that we will never forget.