The game was in Recife which according to Google and TomTom is about 3.5 hours away. Since there is a lot that TomTom doesn't know about driving in Brazil and we don't know where the heck we are going in Recife, we left Pipa at 6am for the 1pm kickoff.
We made it almost all the way to Recife without much trouble. We successfully stopped for gas and a game of breakfast roulette. Much of Brazilian breakfast involves a baked pastry loaded with something. We suspect the shape might mean something, but we haven't cracked the code yet.
After 200km of driving, I'm saving the Brazilian driving details for a separate post, we finally started to see signs for the stadium. Unfortunately, at 11km the traffic stopped completely dead. Eventually everyone got out of their cars to wait, and it was obvious that with the exception of the truck drivers, most of us were heading to the match. Finally, the police decided to let the traffic go, but we never did figure out why it stopped in the first place.
A bit later, we saw signs for the FIFA park and bus area, which was a huge relief because we were a little concerned about having to improvise parking.
Arriving at the stadium was really cool. It was about noon, by the time we got there and there was a lot more energy around the stadium than in Natal. People were mingling, music was pumping, and beer was reasonably priced.
We found my friend Kirk from Maryland and hung out with him and his new British buddies before the game. Stupidly, I forgot to take a picture of us all!
The stadium is great with no bad seats. Jon had decided to root for Italy out of his love of a visit there a few years ago. I was pulling for Costa Rica because they are an underdog, they are our soccer neighbor in the conference, and their star forward is an Arsenal player. The crowd was pretty equally split, with the majority of the Brazilians supporting Italy. The Costa Rican fans were definitely more rowdy, often breaking into song to cheer on their team.
We made it back to the car with no issues and even got on the highway and a away from the stadium pretty easily. What we didn't expect was that we would hit horrible traffic at every city and town along the single highway that connects Recife to Natal.
I think we spent about two hours stuck in traffic getting hungry and grouchy. We could occasionally hear matches on the radio, but our Portuguese isn't strong enough to catch anything but GGGGOOOOOOOOOAAAAAAALLLLLL!!!!
Sent from my iPhone
Looking forward to your posts! They are fabulous! The Allreds are following with interest. Any luck cracking the breakfast code yet? Safe travels!
ReplyDelete