The Son of the Sun


Quito, Ecuador

I got a sunburn today.  I am pretty happy about that.

Nowhere in the world does the sun play a greater role in the daily lives of the people than in Ecuador. Ecuadorians don’t just celebrate the sun; they worship it.  The sun plays a significant roll in regional art, it shows up in patterns on clothing and home décor, and it penetrates the language.  

When the Spanish brought Roman Catholicism to South America, they were obliged to incorporate elements of sun worship and symbolism into their teaching, or the people would not have adopted it.



Quito is the closest city to the sun.  

The earth bulges slightly at the equator.  With the Andes Mountains straddling that bulge and Quito perched high on a mountain ridge, we are closer to the sun here than at the top of Mount Everest.


The sun casts short shadows in Ecuador.

The sun’s arc barely breaches the horizon for half the year in Canada; as a result, objects cast long shadows all winter.

At the equator, with the sun directly overhead, shadows are unfamiliar to those of us who live on the forehead of the earth.  


We visited this temple to the sun and the equator today.

Bear is in the northern hemisphere; I am in the south.


Coriolis Effect

We have all heard of the Coriolis Effect, where water in a sink in the northern hemisphere drains in a counterclockwise direction, and clockwise in the southern hemisphere.  Until today, when we visited the Middle of the World Monument, I didn’t realize that the fluid in our body reacts the same way.  Watch this video of Bear attempting to walk along the equator with the fluid in her inner ears swirling in opposite directions.


In the afternoon we visited Inca ruins at Rumicucho.  

The Inca were keenly aware of the movement of the earth in relation to the sun. They celebrated equinoxes and solstices and paid daily tribute to the sun.


… The Son of the Sun.





6 Responses

  1. Millie Watson

    What wonderful and interesting experience you two are having there. I am intrigued with the shadow or lack of and the photos you find for comparison to same. As for the Hemisphere thing, I immediately compared it the the Date Line in England! I have always credited those that discovered how these elements on earth were understood…and then capitalized the science to each. I’m always amazed. Love to follow your emails.

  2. GG

    Oh my, vertical shadows. Now that’s something that taxes my photographic brain, but I bet it would be fun taking photos there. I’m looking forward to some stunning ones.

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