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Gyeongju Jiu-Jitsu (Gyeongju, Korea)

Gyeongju, Korea — After Seoul, I traveled to Gyeongju, Korea. The city was a popular school trip destination when I was in elementary school in Korea, and I was excited to relive the memory with my old Korean friends. The city is full of Korean culture and historical attractions from Silla, the old Korean Kingdom. Despite its bygone glory days, the size of the current city is relatively small, and training options in Gyeongju were limited. There I found Gyeongju  Jiu-Jitsu.

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City
Gyeongju is located 370 km Southeast of Seoul in the South Gyeongsang Province. The city used to be the capital of the ancient kingdom of Silla. Often, Gyeongju is referred to as “the museum without walls”, as the city is filled with traditional Korean artifacts and culture. Unlike other cities in Korea, Gyeongju will provide you with a break from bright street lights and fast cars. Instead, you can submerge yourself into a Korean history.

Overview
Gyeongju Jiu-Jitsu is under the Machado Jiu-Jitsu Korea flag, and the affiliated academies are located all around Korea. These affiliated academies frequently holds joint practices and tournaments. The Gyeongju academy offers classes ranging from Gi Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu to Mixed Martial Arts classes, and classes are led by Coach JinDuk Ahn who is a purple belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and an active MMA contender.

As Gyeongju is a small city in Korea, there are limited options for Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu training, and the gym was only established in late 2016. Thus, the majority of the students were fairly young white and blue belts, who are ready to absorb every technique Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu has to offer. 

Unfortunately, When I visited Gyeongju Jiu-Jitsu, the coach Ahn was out of town due to a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu competition. However, students still held an open mat and welcomed me into their BJJ community. Despite Gyeongju Jiu-Jitsu’s welcoming atmosphere to visitors, you might run into some language barriers. Regardless, Gyeongju Jiu-Jitsu will help you wrap up your sightseeing of various tourist attractions and unforgettable Korean cuisines in Gyeongju.

Location
Gyeongju Jiu-Jitsu is located in the heart of Gyeongju, Korea. As Gyeongju is relatively a small town, the public transportation is not as convenient as other cities like Seoul. Although cities in Korea are easily accessible via buses, I would highly recommend renting a car while traveling outside of Seoul. (Google Map: Link)

Facility
Gyeongju Jiu-Jitsu has a spacious open mat with an MMA octagon. The gym also includes men’s and women’s locker rooms and showers. The gym is not fully equipped with weight training equipment, but you could find dumbbells and resistance bands for the strength training.

Schedule
Gyeongju Jiu-Jitsu’s most recent schedule is posted below:

Visitor Fee
The drop-in fee is ₩20,000 (~$19 USD) per class.
<<Exchange Rate: 1,000 won =~$9.4 USD as of June 6th, 2018>>

Tourist Attractions

  • Seokguram — An artificial stone temple made of granite is located on Mt. Toham, and it was designated as a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage Site. The attraction is known for a sunrise viewing spot. 
  • Bulguksa  — Along with Seokguram, the temple was designated as a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage Site. The temple itself was built in 528 during the Silla Kingdom and it includes the Dabotap and Seokgatap stone pagodas. 
  • Cheomseongdae — The oldest exiting astronomical observatory in Asia constructed in the 7th century during the Silla Kingdom. 
  • Donggung Palace and Wolji Pond — An artificial pond that was a part of a palace complex of the ancient kingdom, Silla. Traditional buildings surrounding the pond create an unforgettable view.

Hyperlinks
Google Maps
Facebook

Source
Gyeongju Map
Seokguram
Cheomseongdae
Anapji Pond

USA Camp 2018: Closed Guard Sequences with Kenneth Brown

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the deal.

Lucky for me I have a deal with my wife that when ever we holiday, if I can find a gym, I get to train – and this was her idea (say what!!). So back in early 2016, when my wife and I booked flights to ‘Murica (for a kid free holiday) we planned on going San Francisco, LA and Las Vegas. I knew straight away I wanted to try get a class in, at Kurt Osiander’s gym in San Francisco. I had always wanted to meet the man, after watching his videos – his techniques are good, he always cracks me up and I had heard really good things about his gym. So I made contact early before leaving NZ with the Ralph Gracie gym with a short message including my name, grade, where I’m from and asked if it was cool to drop in for a class. The reply, “we work it out when you get here”. That was enough my Gi  was the first thing I packed!.

Once in San Francisco and the tourist things were out of the way I made contact with the gym to find out class times. I got to the gym early, Kurt was there and remembered me from my message, we talked about NZ, he asked where I trained, who under etc then it was time to train. I stepped onto the mats and the team were all open and chatting. Then it was time to start the warm up.

Whoa. I used to think I could take a hard warm up but this was ‘nek level’. It was hard out continuous cardio, with conditioning drills, followed by some wrestling take downs, which was a whole new experience and cool lesson unto itself! I was confused about about one part of the wrestling drill so asked a question about it, the wrestling coach came up to me and was like “f%ck yeah bro, you grab here, twist to here, push to get a f%cken reaction, shoot under and take him the f%ck down!” I did the technique and he was straight back over “F%ck yeah man, that’s the sh^t I’m talking about!” I loved this place! Once we had gone through all that, I was sweating bullets, it was like Ace Ventura inside that rhino! So I went to remove my rashie. My wife asked me how I had enjoyed the class, I was like “babe, that’s just the warm-up!” All I got back from her was “well good luck”.

Back on the mats, Kurt broke down one technique sequence and we drilled it over and over until it was memory banked. Kurt did the rounds, answering questions, firing out profanity laced “feedback” but it was awesome. Working with my partner to complete one of the drills we were struggling then heard “What the f%ck are you doing man? Don’t f%cken laugh, this ain’t funny” This was literally what Kurt Osiander said to my training partner. He then showed us both extra points and tips for getting the sequence right. It worked! He was an absolute dude. Often I see famous BJJ players in magazines, TV, online etc and I think it would be cool to meet them but I am also pretty dubious that the expectation of them is built up and they will be different in real life. Not this guy. Kurt was exactly as he is in all I have seen and read!  I sincerely believe there is no insults intended from him, it is just the way he talks. There were no personal attacks, nothing directly hurtful, just technical advice, straight and to the point.

I took a lot away from the one class and I hope to get another chance to train with him in the future. Kurt had expressed an interest in coming over to NZ to snowboard and train. We had some time left for a roll before I had to catch a plane and I got to roll against 2 black belts, the first was great fun, like a warm up roll with technical passing and attacks, smiles and jokes throughout and then my last roll was an active competitor and we had a great roll before he got me in a very tight toehold which brought me to a verbal tap. The knowledge I learnt I have since used almost every time I get into that rolling situation. I even teach the same move as best I can!

And as the man himself said to the class “Now go f%cken train”.

“I like to travel and meet people all over the world- and choke them” – Kurt Osiander

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USA Camp 2018: Leg Entanglements with Trenton Cooke

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USA Camp 2018: Closed Guard Gi Attacks with Rich Sab

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USA Camp 2018: Breaking down the Turtle with Joey Carta

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Liguria – Tuscany

Hey guys, I provide you some new stuff from my trip! My 3rd and 4th week from my trip were warm and breezy. Now that I was first time at the sea and eating seafruit, I really start to feel Italy more and more.

After Torino I went further to Genova, where at first I was astonished about the big cruiseships that were in the port. Everybody knows that they are big, but did you see them once live? They’re ridiculously huge!

In Genova I found a BJJ gym, but since the professor has backache and doesn’t roll anymore the team is taking it easy with sparring and nobody showed up to the saturday class, so I spent the rest of the day wandering around Genova and having some nice looks over the city.

Genova is a really special City, the streets are really narrow and the structure of it is literally build around the port. The motorcycle in Genova is much more convenient than a car and I never thought I’d struggle to find my vespa in a parking lot, cause there are thousand of them everywhere!

The next day I did a trip to the famous cinque terre, some 5 villages near the beach, where car’s are not allowed. An area with 4’000 resident’s seeing 2.4 Million Tourist’s per year. I trekked all day long along the coast and since BJJ is the only sport I do, my legs hurted on going upstairs the next 3 days…

After Genova I had an 4 hour ride to Carrara with the vespa, where I met an old school friend of mine who coincidentally was around there at the same time. Carrara is known as a marble mining area and the Art’s University and that’s pretty much it. My friend is a photographer, so he took me around the marble mine’s that were pretty astonishing. This were some hidden gem’s, that most tourist won’t know about it. 

On another day he took me to the “Boca de la Luna”, where art’s student do grill & outdoor party’s. Being surrounded by tall wall’s gave me a beautiful feeling, but it wasn’t good to capture it on photo. The scenery was like a hidden place where you’ll find an enlightened buddha who gives you the deepest, philosophical advice to become world champion in BJJ. Or where you find an endboss of a game.

Speaking about BJJ, Carrara had also a little gym, led by a blackbelt. Michele was an amazing guy, he was so happy that I visited him and when he saw that I was struggling with single leg-x guard, he just showed some passing and submission techniques on the other day from this position to improve my BJJ. I came 30 minutes late, because I thought it started by that time I arrived at the gym and Michele and the other student’s WAITED for me to show me the techniques!!! How amazing is that?!

After Carrara I drove to Lucca, where I found a host on Couchsurfing. He usually doesn’t host men alone, but since he saw that I do BJJ, he wanted to learn some moves because he work’s as a police officer. The most amazing thing about him was that he had an original sized sword of the Anime “Berserk” made of steel (Sidenote: one of the most amazing Anime’s. If you didn’t watch it, poor you).

Lucca is really near from Pisa, so I checked that out. I thought: “well, it’s just a leaning tower…”. But the place where that tower is situated is huge. The cathedral and the chapel next to the tower were astonishing and then i recognized why Pisa is known all over the world.

In Lucca there was also a BJJ gym led by a blackbelt. When I asked him: “How much do I need to give you for the Trainings?” he replied: “A hug”. Even though I was hugged enough around my neck while doing sparring with him, I hugged him. Share love whenever it’s possible, right? ;) In the evening he then sent me a message: “Whenever you’re in Lucca again, my gym is your gym”. Oss Professor!!

See you next week

OSS

(c)ChristianGraugart Visit 2011 (2)

Not Your Traditional BJJ Travel Blog

OK, I have to start out by saying that this is not your “traditional BJJ travel blog” (if there is such a thing) but a BJJ travel blog it is, nonetheless! If I were to create my own category, this would be, “A BJJ Travel Blog With a Lot of Background Stories.” So, keeping that in mind, this blog will read more like 33% memoir, 33% present day (as it relates to the story) and 33% or less of me actually traveling.

If you just stick with me, I promise this will make sense as you read. At the same time, I’m under no illusion that there will be hundreds or even dozens of people reading this so I’m really mostly doing this for myself (haha). Oh yeah, I should probably mention that this is a blog with a fixed lifetime, set to end after my trip.

A couple weeks ago, I purchased round-trip tickets to Bucharest, Romania. My wife and I lived in this city for almost four years, but I’m actually not going to be spending very much time there if I can help it. I’ll be meeting up with my former student, Alexandru “Sandu” Birlea, and attending a BJJ summer camp in Sozopol, Bulgaria. This camp is put on by Tudor Mihaita and Absoluto BJJ, who are based in Bucharest, but this is also not the main highlight of the trip for me. What I’m really looking forward to is getting back on the mats with the Moldovans again.

I last left Moldova in October 2014, after helping some friends to set up an “Eco-Village” in a small town about a half hour from the capital. I last saw Sandu a few days before I left as he set out into town for a night out. Back then I thought that I would be able to return a little sooner than I’m currently anticipating, but that’s just not how life went. All of this is in the past of course, so I’m super excited to be returning!

So, as a rough plan, I’ll be getting into Bucharest sometime hopefully in the afternoon of the 9th. I have no idea how I’m going to make it from Otopeni airport, down to Sozopol as of yet, but this is not something that you really have to plan for this far in advance when you are traveling in Eastern Europe. This has been my experience thus far, anyway, and I’m banking on there not being any major changes over the past 4 years.

I’ll be in Bulgaria for the duration of the camp (4 days) and then we’ll be in Moldova for a good five days at least. This is by far not long enough to do much of anything in Moldova. I won’t even be scratching the surface of getting the full Moldova experience, but this is how it has to be, at least this time around.

Lastly, I may have a couple more days in Bucharest, prior to my flight, so I’m hoping to maybe see a couple people before I have to get back on the plane and go home. Bucharest is a great city to hang out and party in, so long as you don’t mind cigarette smoke. My tolerance for hard partying and choking down second-hand smoke has deteriorated over the years, but I’m still curious to see what’s changed since I left.

That’s my trip in a nutshell!

So why Moldova? (BTW, where’s Moldova?) Who’s this guy Sandu and what’s so great about him? Stay tuned for some more background stories, coming soon!

*Note: the featured image is (C) Christian Graugart from his trip to Moldova in 2011.*

how’d I get here.

My name is Bryan Russell, I was born in the 80’s which is rad in itself, but, I am also a father, a husband, a lifelong martial artist and I have also undergone 5 open heart surgeries.

I basically had a crappy heart valve that resulted in having to have both my valves replaced. My 1st surgery was in 2000. I then had to have the same surgery again in 2008 after the first failed (WTF).  I then had to have a tube inserted in my aortic artery in 2011 due to it becoming dilated, in fact, the doctors exact words were “it’s like a balloon that has filled up with water that is going to pop”.  If this wasn’t bad enough following this surgery I had a major bleed in my chest wall, that was literally bleeding onto my lungs suffocating me internally (the only person who picked this up was my wife, who tried to tell the nurse something was wrong but wasn’t listened to!!). This resulted in emergency surgery to stop the bleed and save my life (thank the Lord!).

Should be done now right?  That’s were you’d be wrong!! Just to kick me when I was down, a blood clot from the bleed had travelled to my brain. I had a STROKE. When I say stroke I’m talking full on sloppy face drop – like Sloth from Goonies.  Yay, why not.  This was the worst thing that I had ever experienced. I couldn’t talk, motor skills were gone, actually all I could manage to say was one word and they were usually swear words!  The hardest part was I was there mentally, I just couldn’t get the words to flow.  It felt like a month but it was only a week to get me to normal again.  I went home following this surgery, only to find out that the valve had started to come loose, all due to an infection from the emergency surgery. So why not another surgery to reattach the “button” as it was called, I was getting use to this….while all the time the earth quakes were happening in Christchurch. Luckily only a small after shock, while I was on the table!! (I mean why not I’d survived this far).

It sounds odd but after each surgery, I was getting better and better at recovering. I had been through heart surgery before and I knew it was very invasive and dangerous but I had been through it, knew I could do it again and what to expect.  I became determined to get better as fast as possible.  My rehabilitation was hard but I had the support of friends, family and an absolutely amazing wife to whom I owe everything to, raising the kids through this difficult time whilst also studying herself.  Rachel and the kids were a huge factor for me to get back on my feet. I was back home within a few weeks and back walking around. Eventually running thanks to friends and within 6 months, I was back on the jiu jitsu mats!!

Why go back to the mats?  This was my normal life before I got sick, my goal was to get my life back.  I needed this, I needed jiu jitsu, I wanted my normal back. This was not an easy path but nothing worth getting in life is easy.  There is no easy fix, no blue/red pill like the Matrix movie.  If you want something, you need to work at it. There was a story I heard a while back, where an upset child in an airport was crying after saying goodbye to a loved one at the gates.  A stranger simply walked past, put a hand on their shoulder and said “Things usually get a lot better”.
True words.  Things do usually get better.

“I love fighting. It’s who I am” – Maurico “Shogun” Rua

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Lombardia – Aosta

Hey BJJ Globetrotters

Let’s start where I ended my last post!

After Milano I went to Torino. I met my fahter in Novara to drive together the last piece. Well in Torino I was at my aunts home with her husband, their familie and all my other relatives (Italian’s have a pretty big family when there is something to celebrate), cause my lil cousin had her first communion. So the house was always full, without having the privacy that the average rich person is used to have. Instead of having privacy I had many conversations with young and old and shared some time with a part of my family that I didn’t really know before. At the end of my staying in Torino I left with more love and a bigger family that I had before!

 

 

And I trained. Every day. Even though I got injured on my finger and my neck (again! damn injuries never leave in this sport) I searched for an osteopath and he cracked me in 10 minutes on the right spots, now i’m good to go. So about the gym: Officine Jiu Jitsu led by Leonardo Santoro and Giuseppe. Leonardo taught me so much on every training session, because he knew I was only there for 1 week, so he tried to improve my BJJ where he could. Once a white belt asked me to do a sparring and Leonardo said: “No Christian, today you just roll with colourbelts” (in fact I rolled veryday just with colourbelts) and I thought: “Fuck…” After my 5 days, when I wanted to pay my entry fee, he got angry and didn’t want to receive the money. A true Globetrotter spirit in this gym with many addicts that train twice a day (how the fuck do this people earn money?!). And they even took me to an openmat to Asti, so I could establish a little relationship with the other fighters.

 

 

After Torino I went up to Aosta to meet again with the Mountains and the bad weather from the Alpes. I suddenly remembered, that I don’t miss the wather from Switzerland. Rain rain and rain again. In Aosta a girl named Ro hosted me from couchsurfing. She had to work much and couldn’t spend some time with me, but her dog was always home with me and I went for some walks in the nature. Pizza al taglio (pizza’s sold in slices, common thing in italy) was also good in Aosta.

Officine had in Aosta a Purple Belt named Andrea (like in Lecco, ha!). They were already warned from Leonardo, that the sneakiest, most skilled blue belt from Switzerland was coming to kick some asses :P They were welcoming, even gifted me a bag as a souvenir and Andrea always asked me if I feel okay and really tried to make my stay as comfortable as possible! In the last day we even went out to a Pizzeria and had dinner together.

As my trip started with many worries and doubt’s, they slowly are vanishing. Of course they still exist in the background, but the vibe, the love and hospitality that I receive from the people I met already turned them a bit down. Now I’m heading back to Torino. After Torino a 4 hour trip to Genova awaits me on the next day. I’ll tell you how it was. I can tell you already, that my ass will hurt a lot! :D

Greetings Christian

Panama-ah-ah-uh.

May 7, 2018

Flew into Panama City, via Houston, via Denver, starting in Reno? Why Denver to Houston? Kind of a challenge, adding what seemed to be a few extra hours. More importantly, it reignited my fear and loathing of the Denver airport. DIA is a modern miracle, but it sucks to fly into or out of. Forget about the frequent thunderstorms, snowstorms, of the fact that it is about an hour drive from Denver. Focus on the fact that an airport this huge has 1, no joke, 1, line for security. The very sight of the line fills me with dread,  and reminds me of the time I missed a flight for an interview in Idaho which would have changed the course of my life in pretty significant ways.  

Had my future employer not been paying so poorly, and therefore so desperate to get a decent candidate, my life would have been very different. I drove down to Denver, and back in the day before 9-11 and TIA and all that crap, if you were a United flyer, you just went to security. You could grab your boarding pass and go through security at the same spot. This is before you could check in while you were in line via the miracle of internet connectivity, but it was almost there. The line was always long, but you showed up at the airport, a mile north of Denver, hopped in line, and checked in at the front of the line, assuming you did carry on. Checking luggage was for tourists.

Bin Laden changed all that, and I hate him for it. I didn’t know, because without text alerts, I don’t know anything, that you had to check in at the United desk. So, cutting it close already, I get to the front of the line only to be confronted by a high school drop out demanding my boarding pass, plus my I.D. I brush him off, I’m a United frequent flyer with a United credit card, don’t you know. This lower level functionary had the temerity to insist that I go back to the United check in. The DIA terminal is layed out in a way that is thematically consistent with the way the airport is distanced form Denver, ie a long fucking way away. So I book it, more of an expedition than a jog, and in spite of frantically waving my arms and glowering, I’m forced to wait like a normal person. The gate agent condescends to me, metaphorically patting my head while explaining that OF COURSE they changed their policies, and after much tut tutting, she prints my pass.

Now I run back to the gate, more arm waving, more glowering, more ignoring of my most insistent verbal and non-verbal demands, and I’m in line at security not being able to sneak to the front, having to remove my damn, now stinky shoes, and then on down to the overly familiar trains.

The trains, the fact that they are needed, serves as a trigger that DIA needs more than one security line. Long story short, already missed that turn-off, but I missed my flight, and had to reschedule my interview for a job that I did in fact get, and moved to Idaho for. Should have known then, based on their willingness to accept that I missed my flight, that this was a fly by night outfit. However, I would never have moved to Boise, never had that whole experience, went to Burning Man, met all my great friends, met my wife. I probably would have found something in Denver, and had kids with some ultra-runner from Golden, and maybe learned how to fish. Dunno, hard to say, but I’m glad those crooks at DBSI were fine with hiring someone who would miss flights, in spite of the fact that traveling was a pretty big part of my job.

That said, I almost missed my flight to to Houston, which normally would be a totally acceptable outcome, but in this case would have sucked pretty bad.

How do you miss a connecting fight when you have two hours and no delays, in fact the Reno to Denver leg arrived early? Simple. You leave your favorite hat on the plane, insist on going back for it, jump on the wrong damn DIA train, which deposits you mercilessly OUTSIDE of security.

So, yes, DIA and that damn single line. I had plenty of time to grab my hat, jump on the tram, and get back to my gate, but NOT to go through security again, jump on the tram, and go two stops. For once, Jen was paying attention to her texts, and was busily schmoozing the gate agents so they wouldn’t leave without me. She didn’t have to pull the old fall down and fake a twisted ankle at the jet bridge entry, but it was close.

So, off to Houston, where I remembered my hat but forgot my travel pillow, and then to Tocumen, aka Panama City airport. No, seriously, I wasn’t drinking, at least not a lot. I think I had a glass of wine in Houston. Still, my head was not screwed on straight. Probably had something to do with the 5 a.m. departure from Reno.

After that, things seem to be settling down. Customs was surly as always, but efficient, with no extortion attempts made, like when  you go to Mexico and get to experience La Mordita, the little bite, and every turn. Also absent were the 500 guys pretending to be airport employees who are really time share salesmen. Our driver from the hotel Las Clementinas was waiting for us, super helpful, and didn’t try to sell us anything. Excellent. Life Pro Tip: If your sales pitch has to include pretending to be something, anything, but what you are, ie a time share salesman, then maybe your product is not being well accepted by the market. Bait and switch at that level has to be bad for the soul.

We head to Casco Viejo, the old part of the city. Not the original part, that was burned down by Captain Morgan. Yes, the Captain Morgan of shitty spiced rum fame. Image result for captain morganOne of my earliest “couple” events with my beloved Jen was a wedding in Sun Valley, where she was ordering double Captains and diets. She was kind of cross eyed. Maybe because we were staying with my friend Julie, who had a big place in Sun Valley, where not one but two of my exes were also staying. Anyway, Jen is not the only one who has suffered melt downs at the hands of Captain Morgan, just ask Panama City.

The thing about Casco Viejo is that it was the fanciest part of Panama City, or PC, as some people try to call it. Not sure if that’s a thing yet. Anyway, it was then put into the old Real Estate cycle, and all the rich people moved out, and the poor people, mostly squatters, moved in. Then, Panama, which actually has some money since it charges like a million bucks to use the canal these days, started to invest there, and now it’s kind of like a hot, sweltering Midtown, or the bowery. Hipsters, gelato, roof top bars, some really great food, and boutique hotels. It’s kind of THE place to be. Las Clemintinas is right in there. Really nice property, without being all five star and hermetically sealed about it. Our room was right on a big patio area, and the back looked out onto a pretty run down alley that had locals living in these kind of ad-hoc junk show homes, some little local restaurant that was both iffy and really popular, and one of three gourmet/hipster burger bars on the block.

Image result for casco viejo

The other thing about Casco Viejo is that it is pretty easy to get lost on the narrow streets that go in all kinds of directions, and if you go a few blocks the wrong way, things get pretty favela on you pretty quick. Panama City, as far as Latin American capital’s go, is pretty nice. I’m not sure it’s any sketchier than half of Oakland before the hipsters moved in, or the neighboring junk shows that the hipsters pushed the old residents in to. Still, not the place for 51 year old white guys to be wandering around in looking for some extra toothpaste.

Which is exactly what I did. So, I’m terrible at directions. I drift off after having the first turn described, and even then I’m lucky if I make that one right. So, the super helpful desk guy tells me to go to the Rey supermarket, like a block away. I walk out, promptly go the wrong way, but hey, I’m just kind of exploring anyway, so why not. I find a really pretty bar on the shore, a few blocks down, really nice, great views of the sunset over the towers of Panama City. Walk right past the Chino (aka, convenience store run by the descendants of Chinese rail and canal workers), which had what I wanted, go up the hill, and only then do I look at google maps. Hmmm, where is el Rey? Oh, there it is. I walk a few more blocks, ignoring the fact that things are definitely getting funky, and the sun is setting (no, really, ONE cocktail, seriously), and find El Rey. Not what they described, but it’s a grocery, and they have most of what I need, so I grab it up and head on out.

Make another wrong turn, the streets are full of people, all of them locals. It’s kind of grungy, shanty town, definitely not the tourist section. I’m pretty okay with that, although I’m starting to think that I should try and not look clueless or easy pickings. Definitely not getting any closer to where I need to be. I haven’t seen a craft beer or artisanal anything in about ten minutes. Finally, I walk past a couple of cops. They look confused, and concerned. They wave me over. They are very well armed. Some confusing Spanglish ensues, they point towards my hotel, which is exactly where I thought it wasn’t, and seem really reluctant to just let me go on my way. Clearly, my bulging biceps and obvious pajama wrestling expertise is not making them concerned for the locals, but for me. They waive a police car over, and for the first time, I get in a cop car without handcuffs.

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Reading up on the neighborhood, I guess some of the people that are being pushed out by the gentrification don’t much care for the hipster coffees, Dutch wobble step dance parties, or having their homes turned into boutique burger houses. Go figure, sounds kind of like that codger from Reno who’s always yelling at me about parking.

One of the things that makes Panama so intriguing is the canal, and what that means for the country. First off, there’s definitely a big professional class in Panama City. The country doesn’t depend on tourism, or farming, or other extractive activities to run their economy. Unless of course you view the fees they charge to cut across their Isthmus extractive. I’ve heard it runs from $.87 U.S. for a guy who swam it back in the fifties, to up to $1 million, if you go through the bigger, improved, never seen a boat so big canal. Canal pilots, who run those ships through the canal, and the big lake that was created as part of the canal process, make $300k a year. Think about that in a part of the world where $300 a month is considered living large. Also, there’s all the other professionals, engineers, workmen, administrators, etc, that keep the thing running. All Panamanians. There’s a ton of money that flows through here, plus, there’s some shady tax haven stuff going on that’s been in the news, so they’ve  got international business stuff as well.

The other thing that the canal does is keep things on an even keel. 5% of all the goods shipped by boat in the world comes through the canal. That’s a lot of stuff going from the east to the west, less going the other way, especially now with our well thought out tariff policy, and stuff going mostly north/south. You want that Chinese made Walmart item, that’s a canaling. Grapes from Chile? Yep. Pretty much anything you get on the West Coast that didn’t come from the U.S., or Papua New Guinea (shrunken heads anyone?), came through the canal. So, China wants it working right. The U.S. wants it working right. Canada, well, who cares, really? What are they going to do, register a firm but polite request for someone to take a peek? Seriously, how do these guys do hockey? Anyway, the whole world has an interest, and a right to use, the canal. So, they all take a very dim view of anybody messing with it. Which is probably why Jimmy Carter, who was busy ruining America by trying to make us use centimeters, gave the canal to the Panamanians without too much hassle. I’d imagine just about everybody, from OPEC to Oslo, told him he’d better not let the canal fall into chaos. Imagine how much more expensive that IKEA desk that you can’t put together would be if it had to go by reindeer train from Sweden?

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The other thing about Panama is that it is in the tropics. Rich, sultry, green, lush, hot, fucking hot, humid, which means that my personal eco-sphere is hot and humid, and fetid, and well, stinky. It’s May, the beginning of the wet season, and Panama City is a sauna in which somebody just put too much water on the stones. For people from places that are not here, ie where I’m from, it’s really humid. I lived in Dallas for a few years too many, and it  was humid. Panama is more than humid. At least in May in Panama City.

We stay at a little boutique hipster hotel in Casco Viejo called Las Clementinas. Really nice place, we get a big room with two beds. Jen loves having two beds. It’s not that I thrash about in my sleep, snore, talk in my sleep, steals all the covers, or have night terrors. It’s that she does, and she’s sweet, and worries about how I’m doing whiles she goes through her nightly activities. So, she loves having her own bed. However, she’s sensitive to my theory that sleeping in separate beds, in spite of the obvious benefits, is bad for a marriage, and she appeases me while we’re home.

We have a big shower, two beds, a fridge, coffee maker, a little balcony overlooking the strangely popular Fonda Piri Piri, French doors onto a second story patio, which overlooks the courtyard to the restaurant. I drink Rum, or Coffee, or coffee and rum, on this area, and enjoy.

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 First day we get picked up by Ancon Adventures, and head up to the jungle town of Gambo, about half way up the Canal. We jump in a little boat which seats about twenty, like a Cadillac from a Athens Georgia party, and it’s just us, the captain, and the guide. We zoom around the national park that was created to keep anybody from getting to or living on the water ways that are part of the canal. It’s full of peacock bass, birds, crocodiles (we’ve heard), and monkeys. Love monkeys. We see three kinds, including the black kind, the kind with a white face, and the kind with white faces but red backs. Very enviro. If you want to be fancy about it, Howlers monkeys, red cowled tamarinds, and capuchins. They’re like little children. So cute when you’re out of range of their poo.

We decided to stay in the Canal area, instead of heading back, and in spite of spending a lot of time looking at an empty channel, it was worth it. We got to the locks around noon, and there’s not much there besides the locks, and a small museum about the locks. The short story is that the locks fill with water, boats go through about  half way, then the locks empty some water, and the boats go the rest of the way. It is, in fact, way cooler than that. It’s kind of a long process, but pretty damn neat. You should really google it. We watched a biggish boat go through. There is a new lock system, and we saw a boat go through from a distance. Biggest boat I’ve even seen, and I grew up near San Pedro, Port of L.A.

One of the benefits of being all sweaty and gross is that nobody wants to sit near you. Either that, or it’s kind of low season, and things are quiet. I don’t who else was staying at our small hotel, but it seemed about half full. Jen scored us a reservation at a super fancy, six table restaurant, kind of a Thomas Keller goes to Panama place, which is supposed to be three months’ lead time, and it was mostly free of drunken Brits.

Second full day we did a walking tour of our neighborhood. Hipster beer bars and a lot of early Panamanian history, pretty sweet. It always kind of amazes me how much into history Jen is. She loves this kind of thing. Undeterred by my brush with death from the night before, we head out, and this time I get most of the turns right. Casco Viejo has old battlements, hopefully better than the ones before they let a cheesy spiced rum huckster burn their town, really old churches, of course, and even a gun placement named for the nuns. Catholics. Defend the faith is taken quite literally.

It pours rain, while we hang around a place famous for having an arch that didn’t fall down, which recently fell down. Then it clears, we have lunch at a little bar with the second best ceviche I’ve had in two days, and view some art work taken from the former dictator of Panama. It’s mostly really nice post-impressionist paintings of nude women and fish, but I see a carved dog a la Joey tucked away in the back.

We survive the trip, and have a late dinner by Jens’ standards, aka the first seating, at Donde Jose. It’s eight courses of haute cuisine inspired by Panama, and it was really fucking good. Second best razor clams I’ve ever had, and I’ve had Razor clams at Clamata in Paris. Tiny little place, six tables, wonderful service, and the Jose is not afraid of smoke in his food. Total Top Chef kind of stuff, but in a very non-pretentious style. Little Panama style tortillas, but with smoked cheese. Chinese steam dim sum with pork belly. Razor clams. Very cold tuna crudo, two kinds. Chicken, three ways on the same chicken. Smoked, fried, bbq. Duck skewers a la street food. Two desserts. One a riff on cappuccino with goat cheese and croutons, and the best thing of all, a Panamanian shave ice with dried fruit. That last one was really, really amazing.

Wake up, coffee, not so much rum, maybe a little, since I have to drive, and we leave to get a rental car and head out of Panama City. Ummm, don’t drive in Panama City. Ever. It’s like driving in NYC, but you can’t read what few signs there are. Ugh. Plus, they have a really strange toll road system, where there are only two toll roads, near the airport, but if you get on them, there’s no way to pay the tolls unless you have a toll pass electronic system. I don’t know what happens if you drive on these without the toll being paid correctly. I don’t want to know.

We leave Panama City behind, after a few miscues, and start driving SouthWest, out of town. We’re heading to Valle Anton, which is a high country town about two hours away. It takes us four. We got on the right roads, pretty nice! The highways are good, the towns pretty similar to any highway small town, and we only had to bribe one policeman. To be fair, I think I was going too fast, not sure, since it’s in kilometers, but he seemed pretty sure of it. $20 later, we’re back on the road.

During this time, we find out that we have finally won the battle against t-mobile, and have unlocked the tablet we paid off two years ago. Cell phone companies have brought us amazing technology, and tied it all to the worst impulses of the human condition. We started trying to unlock the tablet weeks ago. T-mobile would claim they couldn’t find the information on our old account, sent us a helpful link telling us to use an app that wasn’t loaded on the tablet and no longer available for download, and then just stone walling. Ten calls later, they refer me to an on-line hacking company, telling me it would be free of charge. T-mobile can’t unlock a tablet they sold us, and locked themselves. Got to be honest, they’re still probably the best. Verizon let somebody steal a cell phone by hacking my Verizon account, charged me for the cell phone and the service, and then refused to refund the money because I hadn’t noticed that my auto-pay, paperless bills were incorrect. I’m currently with AT&T, who had previously disconnected my phone early when I wanted to switch, charged me to reconnect it to correct their error, and then reported me to the credit companies when I disputed the erroneous charges. Magic technology, brought to you by the biggest bunch of scum bag grifters.

So we pay somebody to hack the tablet, it doesn’t work, I pay somebody else, and now we have an unlocked tablet, running a Panamanian Sim card I bought for $3 from the Chino. That’s a store. Not a person. Plus, I’m not making a racist slur against Chinese people, who run most of the convenience stores here. I guess it’s like calling the local grocer a bodega? I hope it’s not like calling my local 7-11 an Apu. I guess that’s not okay now.

So, after slipping the officer a $20, we arrive in Valle Anton, which reminds me a lot Arenal or Monteverde. It’s in the mountains, almost 4,000 feet high, significantly cooler, and really pretty. We stay at the Golden Frog, named after a small amphibian that is pretty endangered. It sits in the extinct caldera of a huge volcano, and is green, and lush, and not sweltering. In fact, I have to wear a layer at night.

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The Inn is run by a German kid, and his Czech partner, and it’s been here a while. It’s really great. Again, totally reminds me of our place in arenal. We have a big room, pen with a patio, an amazing view of the valley. It’s got a pool, casual restaurant with great food, a pool, a bar, a table that is, in my view, a pool table, but a billiards table according to the German. It sits in a big green, jungle and lawn property. Not fancy, not catering to the super rich, just really nice. I love these kinds of places. Give me a well run family owned ten room inn over a W hotel anyday.

We get here, chill out, have dinner. Jen is super stoked, that makes me happy, we don’t do much but stare at the jungle, and I drink rum. Awesome. BTW, Jen is currently obsessed with Filet Mignon. They have it, it’s pretty damn good, I have ropa vieja, it’s really good.

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We get up in the morning, way earlier than you’d think, in fact too early for breakfast. I’m a little bummed they don’t have a coffee maker in the room! Nor a fridge, or cups or even water glasses. Hmmm, weird. They do have all that about fifty steps away, so I don’t think I’ll bitch. Even though I just did.

Breakfast is awesome, typical euro style, plus eggs and pancakes. Rather than take a pancake caused nap, we head out for a hike. Drive through town, ignore Google Maps’ suggestion I go up a dirt road (I was wrong, it was fine on the way back), find the trail. It’s got people suggesting we hire a guide, we don’t, but we pay a few bucks to the cute school girls, and I, apparently, steal a hand colored map. Jen says the girl who was coloring them by hand in pencil expected money. I just grabbed and went. Typical. #whiteprivelege #modernconquistador. Douche.

The hike is pretty standard jungle hike, maybe not so hot, no roaches or land crabs. Steep AF, lots of tree roots, really beautiful stream and some middling waterfalls. It reminds me of Hawaii. Or Costa Rica. Not surprising, but a good thing.

The top is something else. I have told the story before of Jens’ lack of fear in the face of heights, and my abundance of reasonable caution. When faced with falling to my death, I feel like I’m being prudent. We climb up to the top of the sleeping Indian woman, at the rim of an extinct volcano, and peer over the edge. It is truly a freaking knifes’ edge. About 100 feet down in the jungle. Just sheer rock, not oven those steep slopes Hollywood types are always sliding down into a river. Wowser. Amazing. We can see a big beach resort, I think Playa Coronado, off in the distance. The other side is Panama countryside. Gorgeous. Sweaty, but not that bad, about an hour up, but we see clouds rolling in, and it’s time to turn around. I give the nice young girl a dollar, thank her for the map, and we find our car, unmolested, and head back to town, with Google still trying to send us down dirt roads.

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We stop, accidentally, at another tourist location. This one is zip lining, which we skipped. Been there, done that, this one seemed kind of small compared to the Costa Rica one we did so long ago.

Cool little waterfall, called El Macho. They charged us $5 each to walk on an elevated walkway and to see their kind of disappointing waterfall. Jen makes the point that we’ve seen a lot of fabulous waterfalls for free, and so maybe this one just evens up the cosmic tab a bit. I’m unconvinced, but hey, it’s $10, and I’m kind of a cheap bastard, but not that cheap.

This time we accept Googles idea of driving down the dirt road, and it’s not too bad, and it is much quicker, and we’re back at the Golden Frog for the afternoon deluge. Lunch at our inn, since it’s now raining so hard that you couldn’t really drive in it, plus the food here is awesome, so why not.

Blog 2

Golden Frog was awesome, and cool, and peaceful, but Valle Anton not really a candidate for the ex-pat life. Maybe a second home if money was no object. Bryan and Janet could have a beach house, and we’ll have a mountain house, and go back and forth. No surf, no diving, no jiu jitsu, it kind of doesn’t make it on the list.

So we head to Playa Venado. Baby brother Eric was right. I knew he was when he said, but this time he was more right than usual. I can totally admit this since it’s unlikely he’ll read this far.  

Anyway, this time, as is often the case, he was correct. Google Maps, which works better here than I was led to believe, says it’s going to take four hours to get from Valle to our little beach at Playa Venada. Eric says add 25%. Right on the money. Six hours. Part of the problem is that Google doesn’t account for speed traps, of which there are many, dogs lying in the street, which are even more numerous, or having to pull over and breathe deeply to calm yourself when the local busses pass you on blind corners.

This not Andean Bus Plunge territory. The busses are numerous, new, clean, white. They don’t drive insanely fast. The real issue is that I have no idea what the speed limit is. I was going 100 kph when I got pulled over. That’s about 50 mph. That’s a rare speed limit. More often the highway is 80 kph. Through the cities or highway towns, it slows to 60. This is actually fairly clear.

The problem is that when you’re on the smaller roads, there are little towns, and the speed limit is rarely mentioned. You’ll see reducidar su velocidad, or something like that. But to what? And, unlike on the bigger highways, you never see resumar su velocidad. So, I’ve slowed down for the kids and the horses and the dogs, but to what? And for how long? Then there’s the construction. Part of the road is clearly new, easy sailing. But there’s signs that say the road is under construction, or broken, slow down. To 20. 20 kph. Less than 10 mph. The road is good, why go at a crawl, but is it a $20 trap? Don’t know. I err on the side of caution, and it takes me almost 8 hours.

We finally get there, and much like our trip to Costa Rica in the early rainy season, there’s nobody around. Villa Marina, which doesn’t have any kind of a Marina, is really pretty. Cabanas, with a central rock lined pool, steps to the water. The beach is a huge, grey sand crescent, with big rocky islands on the edges. We’re at the far end of the beach, and there’s no other camps or resorts until about ¼ mile. You walk down the beach, past jungle and sand, to where the hippie/surfer/yoga spots are. There’s a fair bit of construction going on with at least one larger resort going in, but it’s quiet. The surfers are in larger numbers, hanging out, living the dream. Later at night, they are a lot more active, partying, but where we’re at, it’s just us and a couple of Panamanians out for the weekend.

To get here you drive through a lot of small towns, some bigger towns, and the ex-pat favorite of Pedasi. Pedasi is pretty cute, you could see it being pretty buzzy during high season. It sits a little inland, but there’s a beach, and a local fisherman bar, about five minutes down the road. There’s even an ex-pat bar, with a bunch of Americans in the forties to sixties hanging around nursing tequila hangovers. I’ve been told that many of the ex-pats just hang out here, pretty isolated from the Panamanians. I could kind of see it, since not only is there the language and culture, but this is more of a farming area, and the people are farmers. There seems to be a pretty vibrant middle class in Panama, with people driving newer cars, going on weekend beach trips from the city, everyone on cell phones, but Pedasi isn’t where they go. Lots of beach resorts closer to Panama City, but the beaches here aren’t the swim and get drunk listening to loud music kind. Funny note for later, dark skinned Hispanic people still need to use sunscreen. Saw some sunburned Panamanians later on in the trip. Good to know.

The beach is quiet and safe, very shallow, and I hear the waves can be good. Not much swell while we’re hear, but enough for the new surfers to be out trying to catch the beach break, which is long and slow. I’m tempted, but I planned poorly, and we don’t really have enough time. We arrive late, and we have a dive scheduled in the morning.

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The dive setup is kind of fun. We meet Kerri, who turns out to be a divorcee from Dallas, at the local gas station. We drive down to the beach in Pedasi, and load into a small panga from the beach. 15 minutes later, we’re at Isla Iguanas, a beautiful little island that was used for target practice by the US navy in WWII. They still find unexploded bombs here occasionally, and Kerri says it really messes up the dive business when they have to cordon off the island. The first dive is okay. Lots of life, but the reef is mostly rock and trashed coral. Locals used to come here and drop anchors in the coral, plus bleaching and other eco issues, and the reef is pretty broken up.

Second dive is much better. We dive off some big mushroom coral heads, and we see turtles, and sharks. Moray eels, which are one of my favorites, are so plentiful you start ignoring them. They used to fill me with terror. Snorkeling as a kid, plus watching The Deep, in which a huge moray bites the villains head, left with me with an unwarranted fear of these big dummies. Now I love them. The dive ends tragically as Jen can’t find her favorite shoes, which somehow got lost between the beach and the boat. Go figure. She buys a pair of croc knock-offs, which are even for crocs, horrible, at the local Chino. Later on she tries vainly to give them away. Nobody, not even shoeless street vagrants, will take them. They may be poor, but they have their dignity.

Back to Venao, and I met John, a transplant from New Jersey, via Colorado, who runs a surf/jiu jitsu camp. Jen, for some reason, decides not to join me for drinking and talking about Jiu Jitsu. Weird. I get some good info on moving down, on this spot, and it goes on my list for places to really think about. He’s got a good connection to a Panamanian businessman who owns the camp, and is looking to develop the resort more, while wanting to keep it low key. Surfing, diving, chilling, jiu jitsu. Works for me. We make a play date for the next morning.

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I show up the next morning, and he’s got a sweet setup. Good size space on thick tatami mats, no puzzle junk, and we play. He’s smaller, about 150 lbs I guess, and very flowy. Tricky. Good. His wife is a purple belt, about 5’ on a good day, and tough. Like me, she plays a big persons’ game in a smaller package. I love it. She and I go a bit harder, but keeping it fun. I try to footlock her. I don’t know how. Great time, really welcoming, and it gave me a good feel for the slow down life.

After that, I have to wring about ten pounds of disgusting man-juice out of my gi, and try to hang it to dry, which is unlikely to work. Pack it up, and head out onto another Panamanian guessing game, aka, how fast do I go? The Eric rule of 25% holds, and six hours later, we’re at Santa Catalina.

This town has a very bohemian/surfer/crack shack vibe. There are way more euro/American surfers and divers, hanging around town, living in hostels. Don’t see any white sand beaches, places to lay around, no sun bathers. This is a tough, big surf break, and the jump off to Isla Coiba, the hot spot for diving in Panama.

The Island used to be a penal colony. When Noriega got booted by Bush and his political prisoners got set free, Coiba became a nature preserve. The locals stay away, partly because it’s the law, partly because the island has a bad juju sort of reputation. Because of this, and no building allowed on it, it’s truly amazing. No fishing either, and we see tons of stuff, including a giant jack or tuna, sharks, rays, eels, again with the eels. Also, I think I saw two octopi. It’s hard to say, since they camouflage so well.

The things are simply amazing, btw. Thank god they don’t live long, or we’d all be working for them. Also, I don’t get how they end up on menus. If you see a Pulpo, it’s usually a big deal. I have no idea where there might be enough of them in an area for them to commercially available. One of the things I do while diving is try to guess whether I can eat the animals I see. Also, whether they can eat me. Speaking of which, I saw a ten pound lobster. I’m not sure I would win that fight.

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Jen skipped the dive, having poked a hole in her dry suit, which renders it un-dry, and having trouble clearing her ears. Although I won’t know about it for another ten days, this is when she decides that dry suit diving is not for her. Since she’s flooded, gotten squeeze rash, had uncontrolled ascent, and some other dry suit b.s., this is a good choice. Dry suit diving requires a certain level of nerding out that she just doesn’t have in her. Thank god.

We stay at a cool little compound in a double bungalow, run by a Panamanian Chef and his Swiss wife, and they’ve got kitties and puppies and little kids, and Jen makes friends with them all. They’ve also got a ton of bugs, many of which get into our room while we’re loading in, and Jen does not make friends with them. In fact, she goes to war, and hundreds die. She can be ruthless, especially to June bugs and flying ants.

It’s gorgeous here, although there isn’t much a beach, and although I dig it, it’s off the list. Too remote, the surfing is too high level, there’s no Jiu Jitsu.

It’s time to turn around, realizing that we really don’t have enough time to do it right. This trip had a very specific purpose, to do a quick reconnoiter trip, more so than a vacation really. I also realize that my refusal to pay an $80 drop off fee is biting me in the butt. I definitely wanted to stop in at some of the beach resorts nearer to Panama City on the way back, and that’s what we’re doing, but now that I understand the lay of the land a bit more, I’m less enthused. I’ve also figured out that flying from David to Panama City would have been really smart. We’re skipping the whole northern part of the country, including Boquette, and the whole Caribbean side which is supposed to be awesome.

 A big part of the plan was to be within driving distance of the International Airport, and to be honest, Santa Catalina is too far, and Playa Venado is almost. Once the construction over there is done, and I’m more comfortable with speeding and not getting pulled over, it’s within range. However, direct flights from Denver with a quick connector to the airport in David makes more sense. I kind of wish we’d gone up that way, and maybe will. Another time.

Heading back down, you really notice how much is going on. We stay in a B&B run by a friendly gay Argentinian guy, a few doors down from where General Noriega had a place. He tells a funny story about how Noriega got deposed by the Bush army, somebody pilfered a hat rack, and gave it to him. He later became friendly with one of the Generals’ daughters, who came by for a visit. Kind of a low-level bird cage farce ensues, with he and his partner trying to hide the hat rack, or disguise it, so the Noriega daughter wouldn’t notice. I imagine Nathan Lane throwing capes over the thing. It probably wasn’t that good.

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This is a resort area that caters mostly to Panamas’ wealthy and wealthy adjacent. The guide books describe high-rise hotels and condos, of which there are many, and a quaint fishing village that’s left over from the by-gone days, a pastoral scene of the old ways. The thing is filled with friendly people, but it’s a dump. Open air shacks, communal tables made of washed up trash, no power, no water. Not exactly quaint. I’m not really big into giant beach developments, but if that’s progress, well, good for them.  Not that I’m against more traditional ways of life, but when the tourism board passes off poverty for quaint, I kind of think that’s wrong.

I’ve been working on this off and on for a month now, and to be honest, if you’ve made it this far, I thank you, but I also get that I’m running out of steam, so let’s just say this. Do not drive in Panama City. It’s like New York, but on steroids. It’s a big, bustling city, and the drivers are not crazy. The traffic and the street layouts are. It’s kind of like the way I describe learning to drive in Los Angeles, which is where, I did in fact, learn to drive. You do things there that are dangerous, that would make most people cower in terror. You do things that maybe you’re not proud of, and there are unspoken rules which must be followed, or the  whole thing breaks down.

In Panama, street merging has nothing to do with the lights, the legal niceties. If you don’t careen into oncoming traffic, cutting off cross traffic and forcing them to slow in a way you would never do here, well, you’re doing it wrong. Doubt that? Well, I started to pull out, lost my nerve, and for the first time in my entire trip, was yelled and honked at.

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In spite of that, and after doing about ten laps, we got to the place to drop off the car, and that went way easier than I thought. I was worried about the horror stories about Panamanian, as well as other countries, rental cars. We had some small issues with the air dam since we ended up doing a river crossing, but I fixed it with a bobby pin. Honestly, I don’t think I was the first one to make an on the road repair to this particular item. We grab a cab, after negotiating a $12 fee to the airport.

Traffic is, well, Panamanian. It takes over an hour to get to the airport, Heavy traffic, construction, crazy drivers. It’s pouring, and I mean pouring, rain most of the time. When we get to our airport hotel, which is like a little slice of generic Americana, might as well be the embassy, I give the driver $20. Hazard pay, and doing the drive myself would have taken off ten years from my life. I couldn’t justify being tight fisted with the guy, so I overpaid him.

I don’t know if the screwing we experienced at the airport is worth a story. I’ll just say that I’ve never boarded, and then had to deplane, until this one. I’ve never had a flight straight up cancelled until this one. I’ve never had to go through immigration twice, get my bags back through BOTH sides of a foreign countries border control until this one. I’ve never spent nearly 12 hours in an airport with no idea of when or how we were getting back, buying internet access in 90 minute increments. You get the story. An early flight and a late arrival stretched out over two days, and we ended up flying out of Los Angeles the next morning. At least the hotel we didn’t want to stay in was nice.

First entry

Hello hello to the wonderful world of BJJ Globetrotters!
So I feel an introduction is needed. My name is Graeme and I am a white belt from Ireland. I have been training BJJ for over a year. I started in Checkmat Wimbledon but have managed to hit 30+ academies across Europe and North America since I started. 
For the last 15 years I have lived in the deep south of the USA, Ireland and the UK. I am now on a trip around the world starting in London, passing through North America, hitting up Australasia and finally settling in Melbourne. This blog will be a bit of a chronicle of my adventures and, hopefully, will provide some level of light reading and entertainment for you wonderful people!
 
So I have been away from my flat in London for a total of 3 months now. I will endeavour to cover the time between then and now in the coming blogs and then moving forward will keep everyone updated as I go. 
This entry will likely be quite a sad one. I began writing it on the plane ride back to Canada from the BJJ Globetrotters USA Camp in Maine and will finish it as I pass through Toronto and on to Calgary in the next day or so. 
To say that it was one of the most life changing events I have encountered would be an understatement. 
 
To begin, while I was planning my 9 month trip across the globe I found the USA Camp online. It seemed a little far fetched to think that I would be able to make it but after a few vodkas and a curry it suddenly became a reality. Thanks in part to my long suffering, recently JiuJitsu-widowed girlfriend, Sarah as she encouraged me to go. I will never be sure what her grand plans of Toronto freedom were for this 5 day period but I have to say that I am glad she gave me the kick in the backside to book it. 
 
I was sent the link for the FB group and then we started the carpool plans with fellow campers. 
Ivan, Shawna, David and Justin were all great to meet and incredibly friendly. Team Extreme hit the road to Camp Manitou in our Dodge Caravan and managed to drop ALL of the kids off at soccer practice. 
The camp itself was excellent. I was genuinely expecting the child sized beds and urine smell that Christian described from the first ever USA camp but was sorely disappointed by awesome cabins, friendly staff, great food and, above all else, a ridiculously friendly group of guys and girls who all had the same objective for the week. (to choke me out it seems) :)
 
The training and instruction was great. I benefitted from the workshops in the theatre almost as much as the several hours of rolling each day. 
Having never met him before, the opportunity to join Christian on his holiday was one that I wouldn’t have ever expected to be as amazing as it was but here I am sitting in Calgary with the Post Camp Blues. I will definitely be making every effort to make it to a couple of camps next year. 
 
That is all for this entry so I will bid you all a fond farewell. I am off to try find a bear to armbar in the Canadian wilderness. 
 
G

USA Camp 2018: Lapel attacks from half guard and the over under pass with Brad Wolfson

      UPCOMING CAMPS


USA Camp 2018: Back Turtle Attacks with Devin Powell

      UPCOMING CAMPS


USA Camp 2018: Mount Attacks with Joey Carta

      UPCOMING CAMPS


USA Camp 2018: The Underhook with Eric Bydairk

      UPCOMING CAMPS


USA Camp 2018: Rolling with injuries with Jeremy Loflin

      UPCOMING CAMPS


Blog 1

For 9 months now I’ve been travelling full time around North America in an RV with my girlfriend, exploring the continent while training Jiu Jitsu along the way. Travelling for this long, in this way, comes with a lot of unique experiences and challenges. So many that blogging about the entire journey we’ve had up until this point seems daunting. Fortunately we are not done travelling. This is now a sustainable lifestyle for us that has no end date in sight for the time being. I’ll be continuing to travel and train all over the continent and hopefully keep this blog updated regularly, so long as I have an internet signal within reach.

Ryan Mountain 5457 ft., Joshua Tree National Park, California. No internet signal.

We began traveling in Southern Ontario (where we are from) and made our way down through the United States. Although the plan was to make our way South at a comfortable pace, the cold weather approached faster than we had expected. This forced us to head South sooner than expected. Although we did have to rush passed some things we wanted to do, I was able to find multiple gyms to train at along the way.

Clifford Fonseca, Owner and Head Instructor, Jiu Jitsu Nation. First gym I was able to stop at in Tennessee.

We arrived on the northwest side of Florida and stayed here a few days after discovering what is now the most beautiful beach I’ve ever been to — Grayton. It’s in a small village located in the Panhandle which means beautiful clear water and vibrant white sand. Had there been a gym in the area that I could train at, it basically would’ve been impossible to leave.

Grayton Beach, Florida

Grayton Beach, Florida

We continued travelling along the southern US border — Texas, Arizona, Nevada etc. The desert was amazing. Not as I’d expected. It was not flat, sandy stretches out to the horizon, with tumbleweeds blowing in the wind. It was mountainous landscape with constantly varying degrees elevation. Cacti and ancient historic sites with all kinds of interesting things to see. We stayed quite a while in Arizona. Aside from me finding a gym that I absolutely loved, there was so much to do. Although the local people made me well aware of the torturous heat here in the summer, I could definitely imagine myself living here in the winter.

Josh Rodriguez, Black Belt Instructor, Gustavo Dantas JiuJitsu Academy, Tempe Arizona

Hiking through Saguaro National Park, Arizona

We then made our way back up the West Coast — California, Oregon, Washington — all the way to British Columbia, Canada. We also spent some significant time in California. Needless to say, fantastic Jiu Jitsu training and one million and one things to do and see — Balboa Park, San Diego Art Museum, Santa Monica Pier, Seal Beach, La Jolla and the Pans BJJ tourney to name a few. We continued to slowly make our way North, back across the border to Canada. We then of course traveled from British Columbia across the prairie provinces back to Ontario.

Joao Paulo Faria, Owner and Head Instructor at Alliance Jiu Jitsu San Diego, California

Travelling along the Pacific Coast Highway (PCH)

This route took us about 8 months to complete. We stayed in any given location for a couple of days or a couple of weeks, depending on weather, things to do, and training in the area. I don’t usually have a set time I’d like to spend at a gym. If I happened to find a gym I enjoyed training at, I would spend a couple of weeks there. If there happened to be all sorts of things to do and see in an area, we would spend as much time there as we’d like.

Lone Tree BLM (Bureau of Land Management) land outside Lake Havasu, Arizona

The Venetian, Las Vegas Nevada. We spent both Christmas and New Years in Las Vegas.

So 15 States, 5 provinces and about 10–12 gyms later and we’re now back home in Ontario. We will be visiting friends and family we’ve missed over the past few months and taking care of some things that couldn’t be done in the United States at the time. We are still living in our RV as we bounce around between seeing everyone and I will be training the whole time in different gyms as we continue to explore new places.

Lake Louise, Banff Alberta. Stopped here on the way home.

Narcisse, Manitoba. Still working on my nighttime photography. Didn’t think I had time to get the tripod out..I had an hour lol

When the cold seasons return, we will head out again and continue to follow the warm weather to travel, train and explore. I’m going to continue to update this blog regularly, even now, since we see so many cool places and meet so many interesting people, it would be a shame to not share these experiences with others.

Visiting the Sutra Baths overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, California

Making the decision to live out of an RV and travel full time was very difficult for me. I enjoy structure and routine, which is the complete opposite of this lifestyle. However, once this option started to become a real possibility for us, I knew that throwing myself so far outside of my comfort zone would likely lead to some valuable personal growth and life experience. So far so good.