Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • El mapa
  • ¿Todo en bicicleta?
  • Colombia
  • Ecuador
  • Perú
  • Bolivia
  • Chile
  • Home
  • About
  • El mapa
  • ¿Todo en bicicleta?
  • Colombia
  • Ecuador
  • Perú
  • Bolivia
  • Chile
Diarios de BicicletaA bike ride through the Andes
  • Home
  • About
  • El mapa
  • ¿Todo en bicicleta?
  • Colombia
  • Ecuador
  • Perú
  • Bolivia
  • Chile
Written by admin on October 15, 2019

El sábado es por los gallos

Perú

“¿Podrías estar listo a las cinco?” Carlos asked.

I looked at my watch – 4:30. A half hour turnaround? I had just arrived at Carlos’ apartment in Cajamarca. I was sweaty and dirty, hungry and thirsty. Normally, after a long bike ride like today’s, I’d spend an hour lying on my back, decompressing, scrolling through email, Instagram, and the New York Times, before even moving, much less unpack and clean up to go out. But Carlos, a former colleague of a friend of mine, was my incredibly gracious host this weekend. I was happy to be tagging along with him and his friends on a Saturday night, and not about to question the timeline. 

“Si, por supuesto. ¿Dónde vamos?”

“La pelea de gallos. El sábado es por los gallos,” he told me enthusiastically.

I thought I knew what each of those words meant individually, but I looked them up after he left the room, just to be sure. Yup, we were going to a cockfight. 

I didn’t know much about cockfights. I was pretty sure they were illegal in America. I was pretty sure they were widely considered immoral as well. But I didn’t have time to think about the morality of it all. I had to get showered and changed and out the door. 

A half hour later, I was in Carlos’ old GM truck along with his younger brother and their friend, Jorge, on the way to my very first pelea de gallos. As they bantered in the car, I could understand their castellano (as español is called in Perú) when they spoke directly to me, but their conversations with each other ran too quickly and colloquially to follow. Unable to banter, I sat quietly, except when addressed or when I occasionally crafted a question out of the blue. 

“¿Como conoces Carlos?” Jorge asked me.

“Un amigo de un amigo.”

“Un amigo de Carlos es un amigo de mío,” he assured me. I may be in the dark, but I was along for the ride. 

We arrived at a fairly modern, purpose-built stadium outside of town. This wasn’t a hushed backyard meetup as I had pictured – rather, a legitimate business with ticket sales, security, concessions, and a restaurant. We filed into the elevated seating surrounding an illuminated, circular ring of turf. Below us, on the edge of the turf, people who looked to be the high rollers,  mostly men, passed around bottles of pisco and casually walked across the turf to shake a hand or two. 

But they all sat down when the gallos came out. A uniformed boy brought them in zippered cases, the same way you might see a professional bowler carry their ball. Except that when the zipper was opened, a creature emerged, writhing its neck furiously. I had never seen chickens like these. They were thin and lean, with magnificent plumage, especially on their crown, collar and tail. Their eyes shone with fury and thrill.

The owners of the gallos, or “galleros,” stood up from among those who had been seated turfside, and fondled the angry animals as they adjusted to their new surroundings. The galleros let the birds hop around on the ground for a moment, picking then back up when they wandered too far.

“Es su naturaleza.” Carlos explained to me that these types of roosters were naturally predisposed to fighting each other. But they were also specifically bred and trained to be vicious, strong fighters. He pointed to a couple of elderly men in the turfside seats. They were famous in the Cajamarca region for breeding the best gallos, he said.

A man wrote a number on a whiteboard hanging by long strings from the rafters. Arms in the stands vaulted, pointing left or right, indicating their bets. 

“¿1,000 soles?” I asked Carlos incredulously. 

“Si, mucha plata,” he said. That meant three hundred US dollars riding on each bet for this match.

As the galleros cradled their gallos, a chubby referee in jeans, T-shirt and a fannypack, brought them together to start the fight. The two men stretched their gallos toward each other, leaning from their toes, until the gallos were kissing distance. But instead of kissing, the animals pecked furiously at each other’s foreheads as the arms withdrew and advanced, back and forth, inciting fury in the birds, but not letting them harm each other quite yet. A few feathers floated to the ground in a premonition of what was to come. Once the gallos had fully recognized their enemy, the men dropped them to the ground and backed to the edge of the ring. The battle was on.

“¿Como termina?” I asked Carlos. “¿Con muerte?” Is one of these gallos about to die? I wondered.

“No siempre, pero frequentemente.” There was a time limit, he explained, which spared some of the losers.

Initially, the gallos glared at each other, the feathers on their necks unfurling like the crown of a cobra. I imagined them hissing but all I could hear was the shouts of the crowd. Then, with a blur of feathers, they clashed, beaks meeting necks in quaint but violent pecks. Occasionally, wings flapped furiously and the battle momentarily levitated a foot above the ground as the gallos tried to attack from above. The pot-bellied referee monitored the birds closely, but only intervened when one of the gallos used its claws to pin the other to the ground. He then tenderly pulled the two birds apart, to a fresh start. The use of claws broke the rules, apparently.

Meanwhile, the galleros screamed fanatically on the sidelines, as if the birds could hear their encouragement. As the two gallos struggled, one eventually started slowing its pecks. A disinterested glaze coated its eyes. The other kept pecking and pecking, pushing the weaker gallo backwards with each blow. Eventually, the referee blew his whistle and the owner of the stronger gallo threw his arms in the air, hugging his friends, while the losing gallero slumped back into his seat. 

“Ha muerto?” I asked Carlos if the gallo, still standing, but motionless, was dead.

“Ya no. Pronto, possible.”

Sensing my concern over the fate of the dying gallo, Jorge assured me that its death was humane by comparing it to other regional cockfight practices. In Lima, he told me, they attach miniature knives to the claws of the gallos so that they can stab each other. 

“Esto es cruel. Eso es normal, la naturaleza.”

Carlos gave his brother money to buy beer. He came back with one large bottle, and one small plastic cup. Carlos filled the cup for himself and handed me the bottle. He swallowed it in one gulp, dumped the remaining foam and backwash on the ground, then handed me the cup.

“¡Salud!” he said. This is how we drink beer in Perú, I guess. I repeated his actions and passed the cup to Jorge.

As the fights continued, somewhat similarly to my untrained eye, Jorge and Carlos debated particulars of each fight, each gallo, and each gallero. They argued about the best way to stabilize the gallo’s weak ankles – carbon rods or the spine bone of a certain fish? They commented on this gallero’s breeding prowess and that gallero’s misfortune. They occasionally threw up a finger in one direction with a bet and locked eyes with another spectator across the ring who had pointed in the opposite direction, to seal an informal wager. How can they tell which gallo is stronger? I wondered.

“Esto es un lugar donde la palabra es más importante que la plata,” Jorge told me, commenting on the trustworthiness of a stranger across the ring to follow through on his bet. 

Moments later, beer was flying in the air over the turf as a group of men tried to pry a shouting, gray-haired borracho from a younger, well-dressed caballero. The commotion stalled the show for ten or fifteen minutes as all the men from the turfside seats shoved and shouted in an effort to solve which man had the right in whatever bet they had made. 

“La pelea de personas,” Jorge observed. 

Eventually, the old borracho was expelled from the turf and came up to sit near us in the stands. The remainder of the night, he shifted schizophrenically between shouting insults and apologies at the caballero on the turf who he believed had defrauded him, even trying to make another wager at one point. The caballero ignored all entreaties. 

Gallo after gallo, my attention span waned since I wasn’t attuned like my hosts to the nuances of fighting technique or the local gossip surrounding the galleros. We left after midnight, having been there for over five hours. To my relief, we stopped at a late night kitchen for pollos a la brasa and Inka Kolas. 

“Fútbol mañana a las nueve,” Carlos told me. 

“Tal vez,” I said. All I could think about was sleep. I mumbled the excuse that I didn’t have shoes I could play in, other than my slick, rigid soled bike cleats.

He didn’t seem to accept my excuse, though, because I woke up to a text from him at nine the next morning, as promised.

“Hola Brian. Vamos a fútbol. Estamos abajo.”

I wrenched myself out of bed and pulled on my stiff bike shoes. Can’t say no when I’ve got a local host!

The road leaving Leymebamba winded up into the mountains with many switchbacks. Peruvian roads (the paved ones at least) have had very gentle grades compared to Ecuador and Colombia.
Traffic jam
This looked like it would be a nice spot to spend the night… if I hadn’t just seen those horrific mummies
The road climbed into a fog and I was a little sluggish from the week off in Lima and Cusco.
The vegetation grew thick as the top of the pass was a páramo-like environment
The top of the pass was 11,800′. I couldn’t see it, but I was about to dive 9,000′ over 35 miles to the bottom of a canyon.
I thought it would be quick but the cold temps and intermittent rain made me continually stop to thaw out my fingers.
The road contoured a cliffside most off the way down.
Eventually, I got to take off my jackets as cacti lined the road in the tropical depth of the canyon
Down to the town of Balsas on the Río Marañon
I had hoped to hit Balsas around midday, buy some provisions and start making my way out the other side of the canyon in the afternoon to find a campsite. I underestimated both the climb from Leymebamba and the 35-mile descent to Balsas, where I arrived around 5pm.
The bottom of the canyon was buggy, so instead of camp, I found a hospedaje in town. Bad choice. It was tough to sleep in the stuffy heat. No running water, either.
The next morning, a group of men worked to clear a landslide from the road that connected Balsas back to the carretera. This must have happened overnight. Fortunately, I could simply step over it on my bike.
The bridge over the Marañon
Construction was close to finished on a new bridge. Not sure why they needed another.
It was a long, windy climb back out of the canyon, cacti to clouds all over again
Eventually, I look a left turn on a dirt road. This road was only on 1 out of my 4 mapping apps, but I’d found a note on the “iOverlander” app, an opensource campsite locating app, that said there were good camps along a dirt road and that bicyclists could avoid climbing by taking this road.
It’s dirt and it avoids climbing?? Seems improbable, but I was pretty bored of the pavement by this point.
Contouring around the mountain, instead of going over top like the pavement did, it actually did cut out some climbing and passed through some nice little towns and landscapes.
Bringing me eventually to Celendín, a town known for its hats.
Big hat spotted
There’s another
Up here in the mountains, the tuk-tuks are fully enclosed as compared to the open air jungle tuk-tuks.
The next day, I started with some dirt roads that wound past rock formations that resembled cemeteries
Up some switchbacks over the town of José Galvez
But eventually rejoined the highway for the majority of the day, which was now two lanes again and pretty dull with the exception of a raucous Saturday animal market in the rural settlement of Cruz Conga.
Cajamarca is situated in a broad valley beneath rolling hills
It is best known for its Inca history, being the location of the first conflict between the conquistadors and the Incas, resulting in Atahualpa’s capture and execution
I think this is Atahualpa?
But before I could learn too much about Atahualpa, I found myself at the coliseo de gallos
The gallo case on the ground.
Ready, set…
…hiss!
The next day, a less controversial sport
After which, we went out for ceviche and chicha de jora, a fermented corn drink
After which, we went to a festival to find guarapo, a fermented sugar cane drink
The festival’s mercado was packed
In a parade, people were playing the clarín, a traditional horn which seems unnecessarily long
And dancing in costumes that seemed more ridiculous than traditional
Eventually, I escaped the party so I could check the tourist boxes on my last hours in Cajamarca
Like the beautiful plaza de armas
And the rather boring Ransom Room – the room which Atahualpa promised the Spaniards he’d fill with gold in exchange for his release.
The Spaniards took off with the gold back in the 16th century, so now it’s just a pretty boring room.
And a few heroic depictions of the slaughter and capture
Staircase to the mirador above town

Archives

  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019

Calendar

May 2025
M T W T F S S
« Mar    
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  

Categories

  • Bolivia
  • Chile
  • Colombia
  • Ecuador
  • Perú
  • Uncategorized

RSS ¿Dondé he estado montando?

Copyright Diarios de Bicicleta 2025 | Theme by ThemeinProgress | Proudly powered by WordPress