The Best hiking trip in Ecuador: Exploring from Ibarra to Cubilche!

Visiting Ibarra and specifically, Cubilche, is a well-kept secret for hiking experts and enthusiasts. But keep reading for how I discovered it and how you can too. This should definetely be on your 2021 trip itinerary to Ecuador.

One of the best 2-for-1 deals in Ecuador for backpackers doesn’t have anything to do with finding great vegetarian restaurants in Quito’s old town. It is instead the undervisited but outstanding city, Ibarra, and then topping it off with a literal mountaintop adventure of Cubilche, all for minimal time and budget.

For those smart few who push themselves to go a little farther up the highway past Otavalo to Ibarra, the less-visited capital of the province, they would still miss a jewel of an opportunity not peering around the corner.

Tip: When traveling by bus in Ecuador, read this for tips on staying positive and handling confusion over fares.

Hiking in a pocket!

Behind Ibarra is a little “pocket valley”, containing villages that are locally known for making exquisite artisan embroidery, as well as the best access points for mountain hikes.

I call the valley a pocket because it literally sits at the hip of Ibarra so you have to go into the city’s front door and then exit the side kitchen door. This pocket valley is tucked behind the domineering mountain Imbabura, so you would never run into it in the natural line of traffic.

But for the more adventurous backpacker, all you have to do is walk a few blocks from the Ibarra bus terminal and you’re on your way to some serene volcano trips, plus seeing up close and personal the people that make Ecuador’s unforgettable hand-crafted embroidery.

All doable in less than a 48-hour agenda from Quito!

How do you get to the Cubilche hiker’s paradise?

You can get to the pocket valley from Ibarra’s Parque Germán Grijalva, which is just a couple blocks east from the main bus terminal. In the park are buses that go under the name La Esperanzeña. These buses climb the ridge along the valley up a cobblestone lane not wide enough for two buses to pass by each other, but in fact, they do!

There was standing room only as I scrambled on the bus, with lots of villagers going home from selling or buying at the Ibarra markets, so the area behind the driver was piled with sacks of potatoes or clothes, upon which I could add my backpack and use it as a seat.

The village of La Esperenza winds its way along the side of the ridge and finally comes to a dusty little square. At first, I thought the barrio San Pedro, about 10 minutes into the journey, was the middle of La Esperanza, so I got off only to find out that the real town square was another 15 minutes farther up the hill. So I had to wait for another bus to come along and this time I got smart enough to tell the driver to let me off at Casa Aida, which he knew well and is one of the main draws to La Esperanza, and indeed the bus driver stopped right at the front door.

Day 2: Discovering the living road to Cubilche!

The next morning, after Aida made me a fantastic blueberry stack of pancakes (Ecuadorian style, made with no baking soda which is practically forbideden in the country because it too closely resembles the appearance of cocaine), I walked up the cobblestone lane toward the neighboring village of Paniquindra. Farmers were ploughing their cornfields as they listened to radio music drifting across the valley while passing motorcycles and pickups transported passengers, water, and milk up and down the hill. They were scenes from a placid village life I remembered only from storybooks as a child.

Then I got picked up by the police!

Not to worry, it was just Policeman Morrison, as he liked to call himself, and he was simply traveling up the road and stopped to offer me a ride. In his back seat was a traditionally dressed indigenous woman who was able to recommend the exact place to let me out for the climb to Cerro Cubilche, or the summit. We all had a nice conversation for the few minutes it took, and I was happy for the respite.

The two choices for Cubilche

In climbing to Cubilche there are two options, one to the Cerro (mountain peak), which is great for views of the southern part of the valley as well as passing over the ridge and hiking down to the other side. The second option is to the volcano crater, in which you can admire a perfectly circular lake. It became clear that I had to make a decision about which option to commit to about three-quarters of the way up, but the one to the volcano takes about an extra hour longer than going to the Cerro. I chose the Cerro as I was a little concerned for time, but then by the time I got to the summit, I visually spotted another trail from the summit to the volcano, it’s just the paths are somewhat less clear.

View of the Zuleta valley from Cerro cubilche
Photo by Kali Kucera, 2016.

Either climb, to the Cerro or to the volcano, treated me to vistas that were absolutely amazing. I could see all of the city of Ibarra, the historically significant lake Yahuarcocha, the Chota valley, and the mountains rising to Tulcan, and that was just looking north!

Be advised, the path is difficult for normal day hikers, but it is not dangerous. There’s lots of visual stimulation along the way, from curious plants and flowers to hummingbirds and fields of green wheat. I didn’t see a single hiker after I left the main road until I got to the summit where two folks were coming down off the Cerro and were going to try hiking down to the other side of the range.

After making the additional climb up to the volcano and seeing the pristine and a bit eerie Laguna Cubilche, I had decided my camera was full enough of pictures, and my drinking water was a little less than half empty. So I called the scale of Cubilche a victory and started the trek back down, finding out that going down is way more difficult on the legs, feet, and knees than coming up.

Now here’s the other really cool find. People know how much I hate highways, and worse, having to retread steps I’ve already taken. But from the village of La Esperanza, you can actually go back to Quito without going back through Ibarra and Otavalo the way I came. Score one!

On top of that, the back roads between Ibarra and Cayambe awarded me some of the most beautiful countrysides I have come across in Ecuador. It’s really sublime stuff!

Hikers in Ecuador: Discover Cayambe Valley

From La Esperanza, I hopped on the “24 de Junio” bus that had the placard in the front window that said “Cayambe”, which also goes through Zuleta and Olmedo. Several of these buses pass by but check AndesTransit.com to see when one is convenient for you.

I left from in front of Casa Aida in La Esperanza, and this time there was hardly anyone on the bus, at least at this point. From there, the bus wound through the forested hills out of town on our way to Zuleta, an amiable hamlet that is also Ecuador’s capital of embroidery and also the home of former president Galo Plaza. If you’re here on a Sunday, you can hop off the bus near the library (Biblioteca) and check out the market, where you’ll see lots of women wearing the famous colorful embroidered clothing, and of course selling napkins, tablecloths, and shirts using their same perfected and painstaking skills.

Getting back on another passing bus to Cayambe, I continued on out of the Zuleta woods and into the wide-open dairy and potato fields of Olmedo, cool and moist, down-to-earth and as rural as you can get, replete with folks now piling on to the bus in their muddy farming boots and bags of produce to sell in Cayambe.

The end of the line for this route was Cayambe, an honest and hardworking “big town” as far as farmers are concerned, so it maintains a rural flavor. Cayambe is well known for the production of greenhouse roses sold all over the world, as well as for biscuits (bizcochos), string cheese, and trout fishing.

But as much that can be said about the particular towns after La Esperanza, the best part is the breathtaking countryside between them, all of which you can enjoy on the bus for about $2 and 90 minutes of your time.

Indigenous Otavaleña woman in Cayambe
Photo by Kali Kucera, 2016

My trip back to the concrete forest

To get back to Quito from Cayambe, all I had to do was walk westward four or five blocks from Parque Central until I reached the main highway, and looked for the big traffic circle to the left. Walk past the traffic circle and cross the street where you will notice a bus stop with several people waiting in front. The Flor del Valle buses stop there every ten minutes and load passengers to take them to the Ofelia terminal in Quito. From Ofelia terminal, cross the street and board the Metro, one of the city’s express mass transit articulated buses. Get off the Metro at Seminario Mayor, and then walk down the hill and you’ll be right in the heart of the Mariscal district.

Even though my legs were still sore, I arrived back in Quito all the more amazed that in the space of less than two days, I had seen and visited such radically different biodiversity, from big cities to mountaintops, cool green valleys to hot and dry páramo, and along the way seen as many different local subcultures of Ecuador’s incredibly dense Sierra.

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