Posts Tagged ‘argentina’

Northern Argentina and Futbol Feverrrr

June 23rd, 2006

Hola. I am still in Argentina and am now finishing up more than a month-long “family circuit.” I have a LOT of family here (my mother is Argentine) and have visited just about everybody in the extended family, which means that all I’ve done in the past month is eat lunch, tea, and dinner in different homes. Am getting soft and lazy. My mouth hurts from talking so much and my cheeks are actually permanently sore from smiling all the time. I’ve started piecing together a family tree, which has been interesting (albeit a bit massive).

A highlight of the month was when my dear friend Rachel came and joined me for 2 weeks of travel – the poor thing even sat through a few of the aforementioned lunches and dinners. Her Spanish got pretty good by the time she left, though! Helps that she´s brilliant. Anyway, it was definitely not a typical tourist experience; she got to see some of everyday Argentina. At a couple of points, though, we managed to veer off the family trail and check out Iguazu Falls and La Quebrada de Humahuaca in northern Argentina, both of which were spectacular. We drove through a tourist-less salt flat at over 3000 meters and saw the stars at night. Unforgettable!

Iguazu Falls, Argentina

Iguazu Falls, Argentina

Rachel next to a giant cactus in La Quebrada de Humahuaca

Rachel next to a giant cactus in La Quebrada de Humahuaca

I am also proud to say I got a group of Argentines in Córdoba to talk like Pirates. :) Viva ARRRRgentinaaaa!! Unfortunately for the rest of the population, this may catch on. heh heh heh. I will keep trying.

Now everyone has World Cup FUBTOL FEVER. I’m sure you all are well aware that Argentina is number 1 in its group. :) Yay! We are all hoping to see them play in the finals. Unfortunately, I will miss some games as next week. Will hiking somewhere in northern Peru, trying to shed off some of the croissants, steaks, and chocolates on which I’ve been gorging myself.

Viva Argentina!

Viva Argentina!

The games are entertaining and worth mentioning. EVERYTHING shuts down. Schools let children go home with their fathers, and those that remain in class (usually the girls) have little argentine flags painted on their faces, felt white-and-blue caps on their heads, jerseys, noisemakers, and they watch the game at school. I was lucky enough to witness one of these full-blown screaming sessions.

No one works. Everything stops. Stores and banks close. Workers sit around TVs. Even in the bars, the waiters ignore you as they watch the game along with all the patrons. Not like anyone wants to order, that would involve breaking eye contact with the television. All eyes are glued to the screen. There is no line at the toilet. Until half-time, that is. ;)

Huge firecracker-and-battery bombs are fired off in the street at every goal. You don’t even need to be watching the game to know Argentina’s score!

One of my friends went out into the street in the middle of the game just to check it out, and on coming back he laughed that there was absolutely NO traffic, and the only car he saw go by had a woman at the wheel, probably whizzing home with more beer and snacks for the family.

After the game, central plazas in all the cities fill with fans and noise and white and blue. In reality, the whole day is shot. If we lose, everyone would be depressed (but this hasn´t happened yet, so cross your fingers and knock on wood). If, no, when we win, everyone is ecstatic and in a festive mood… therefore no one wants to work or do anything serious for the rest of the day. :) I trust you will all be watching the Argentina-Mexico game on Saturday, siii????

Sometimes I wonder why I didn’t just get a ticket to Germany. Oh right, $$$! Would love to see a live World Cup game someday, though…

I have yet to upload pics of the feverrrrr (arrr) but will do so as soon as possible.  So that’s about it! The next update will be from Peru! I leave on Monday. Wish me luck.

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They Call Me Papa Frita

March 28th, 2006

If there were ever an update where I really hoped you guys would check out the pictures, however disorganized, this is the one! :) I’ve been hiking in Patagonia, spent about a month in a tent, and hung out with some interesting people. It’s been an adventure… everything I’ve been looking for!

Ushuaia was fantastic. Situated on the Beagle channel, you could just imagine Darwin and his crew wandering around, meeting the locals who lived naked in the cold (apparently they lathered whale grease on their skin to keep warm). Saw a bunch of penguins, sea lions, interesting birds, and the sky which was ALWAYS interesting to watch. I managed to get myself lost and found in a random valley, as well, which was quite exciting.

Dancing Penguin

Dancing Penguin

I visited the old prison in town (that’s how the town was born, like Staten island… and Australia) :) and partook in a “tour” where they dressed everyone up like convicts and marched us around, yelling, shut us in cells, etc. That was an interesting experience. We couldn’t stop giggling, which just got us yelled at more and more. :) Funny to think we paid to be treated like that!

I didnt do it!

I didn't do it!

Next came Chile and the Torres Del Paine National Park. That’s pronounced PIE-NEH, not PEN-NEH, which is what I did for a while, effectively calling them the “Penis Towers.” Yeah, I´m going to go hike the Penis Towers. I need a tent for the Penis Towers. Have you seen the Penis Towers? Are they very big? Has anyone climbed the Penis Towers recently? How hard are they? Etc. I’m surprised it took as long as it did before someone spewed water all over the table.

Torres del Paine, Chile

Torres del Paine, Chile

Cesar and Julian freezing as we wait all toooo long for sunrise. Misinformed!

Cesar and Julian freezing as we wait all toooo long for sunrise. Misinformed!

What. a. spectacular. park. Did the circuit hike in 6 days.. a bit too fast (they recommend 7-9) with two Chilean guys, Cesar and Julian. I met them in my hostel in Puerto Natales, and given how much they took the piss out of me for the amount of food I had spread out in preparation for the hike, I figured they had ample experience in the mountains. Only when we’d actually set off and they ATE all the food did I realize they didn’t have as much trekking experience as I’d originally thought! Day trippers. ;) We had a great time, though… they provided the comic relief and I the food. Ha. By the end we were like a giant married couple – oscillating between genuine bickering and roaring laughter. As for actually walking, they were fast, which was great. We were going about 20 kilometers a day with 20 kilo packs. We passed a LOT  of people. I was happy to be with Spanish speakers, not to mention locals! They kept trying to “fix” my thick Argentine-Gringo accent and called me “Papa Frita” (French Fry, or Chip). =) No one knows why.

Glaciar Grey

Glaciar Grey

Lago Pehoe

Lago Pehoe

After the Torres, I headed back into Argentina, past the Perito Moreno Glacier to El Chaltén, home of Los Glaciares National Park and Fitz Roy , another spectacular granite peak.

Perito Moreno Glacier, Argentina

Perito Moreno Glacier, Argentina

Fitz Roy

Fitz Roy

This time I stayed in a free camping at the base of the trail into the park and hung out with some bona fide hippies. These people were the real thing, hearts the size of melons. One Columbian guy had been travelling for 25 years, all in South America and made a living off of making wire keychains in a tent. There was an American who played the Dijeridoo (sp?), an Aussie climber who spoke French and Spanish, Chilean brothers who continually played music, and then the French “Rasta” group who made string bracelets and necklaces with the Argentine ceramic artist who got his materials from the local stream. Another Argentine girl was a yoga instructor, and I had my very first yoga class trying to balance in the strong Patagonian winds, face in the sun. Amazing.

Ali the Colombian, travelling 25 years

Ali the Colombian, travelling 25 years

We had a grand “Asado” (Argentinian bbq, meat grilled over coals), hosted by Jesus who had a voice like The Godfather. :) I didn’t eat a bite of it, unfortunately, as I’d earlier gotten sick from eating some bad mayonnaise. That was fun. Wake up in the middle of the night, crawl out of the warm sleeping bag into cold wind and rain, teetering to the outhouse to projectile-vomit into the hole in the floor. Mmmm. Followed by diarrhea the next day. Weee! That’s for those of you who think all this travel is a continual paradise.  ;) Let’s just say I´m over my post-hike bread + mayonnaise craze. I know it sounds disgusting, but it’s gooood down here. :) No fridge, so no more.

Jesus (drinking the wine) hosted an Asado

Jesus (drinking the wine) hosted an Asado

When I finally got OUT of El Chaltén (stayed a few more days than I would have liked because busses only leave in the direction I was going 3 times a week, not to mention the getting sick part), I had a 30 HOUR bus ride where I met a Paleontologist who was telling me all about the history of the area – the fossils she´d found and petrified forests… definitely something I want to go back to see! She also had quite a cocky attitude in approaching Sudoku, and got extremely frustrated when it posed a challenge. Interesting bus ride, for sure.

30 Hours to where, you ask? To El Bolsón, near Bariloche. They say the local mountain is one of the “energy centers” of the planet. It has hippie roots and was the first in the world to declare itself a nuclear-free zone. They don’t give you bags in the grocery stores to take your food home. If you don’t have dreadlocks (or at least long hair) you feel a bit out of place. Once again, I stayed longer than I should have. Partly due to recovery (getting over the illness plus extremely long bus ride), partly due to sheer laziness. Not to mention the best ice cream EVER and a nice little market where I bought a ring and necklace and promptly lost them. After all the hiking and rough weather, it was nice to be in a calm, sunny place for a few days… or a week, as it were. It really reminded me of home, actually. Pretty much the same latitude!

My El Bolson Campsite - mine is the purple tent. Energy center mountain in background.

My El Bolson Campsite - mine is the purple tent. "Energy center" mountain in background.

FINALLY escaped El Bolsón’s mysterious clutches and made my way back into Chile. Here I’ve picked up the pace considerably. Phew! Climbed a live volcano (nearly passed out from the sulfur fumes at the top) but didn’t get to see any lava, and then descended it on a mountain bike. This was the most extreme mountain biking I have ever done. Put those eyebrows down, I haven´t done much. But it was enough to get the heart racing a bit! Good day.

Volcan Villarica - summited on foot, mtn biked down. Fun day!

Volcan Villarica - summited on foot, mtn biked down. Fun day!

Summit of Volcan Villarica

Summit of Volcan Villarica

Mountain bike descent

Mountain bike descent

Then I met up with Cesar and Julian again in Temuco! We went out a couple of nights and danced until dawn. It was certainly a change of scenery for us three – I was used to all of us being grimy and tired, and here we were in actual civilisation and shaking the hips to “Reggaeton,” a Latino-Reggae-Hip-Hop combo that is ever so popular down here.

Moving North. Last night I visited an observatory in Vicuña and saw planets and stars through a pretty big (though not the biggest) telescope. It was amazing! Also visited the oldest Pisco brewery in Chile. Pisco is the national drink here – it’s a liquor made from white wine. YUM. :) Now I am in the north of Chile, camping in the Atacama desert.

Pisco brewery

Pisco brewery

I’ll be home again for a month in April (working on the UK visa) and then it’s back to South America. Weee!

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London Pavement Rage to Argentine Tango

February 13th, 2006

It’s been a little too long since I’ve written a post. I’ve just been quite, well, lame about writing. And the longer I wait, the harder it is to catch up on everything. So enough of the dribble. You have enough to read as it is. I’ll start with a couple of sexy pictures for you, from where I am now…

Tango in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Tango in Buenos Aires, Argentina

So I popped home for Thanksgiving and Christmas. It was great to spend time with the family and not pack & unpack the bag every few days… to have a shower that didn’t involve carrying a bunch of soap/shampoo/towels into a crowded room with a wet floor, using a bucket, or fighting for a mirror (if there is one)… etc. I had good home cooking, saw good friends (although not for enough time as I would have liked – not having a car can be quite an annoyance in the states) and generally had a fantastic time.

Home

Home

Come new year though, it was time to go again. This time it was off to England, with a brief  New Year stint in Kitzbühel, Austria. I stayed in a random hostel owned by a guy named Dave who LOVED to tell you to f*&k off, but didn’t quite understand why people might ever rate his place poorly on Hostelworld. I actually liked the guy for some reason, but that’s because I was on his good side, for an even more unknown reason.

Anyway, what were doing there? SKIING, of course! Yay! It was great. Powder was easy to find, even off the groomed runs, so I was happy. I also learned how to play “Texas Hold-Em” poker, from a bunch of Kiwis and Aussies in Austria. How random is that?

Kitzbuhel, Austria

Kitzbuhel, Austria

So yeah, England. The UK nearly rejected me at the airport. I’ve never been so close to being turned back by Customs. Why? Well, I was an idiot, frankly. I’m so used to easy border crossings that I didn’t give a second thought to putting ‘UNEMPLOYED’ under occupation, and say ‘oh, about a month or so, I dunno…’ for how long I’d be travelling, ‘LONDON’ as my address in the UK. Hmmm… did I have proof of onward travel? No. Did I have proof of sufficient funds? Um… no. ‘Here’s a credit card!’ I’m surprised they did let me in, in the end! But thank God, they did.

On to baggage claim. My connecting flight in Copenhagen had been severly delayed due to a snow storm. They decided not to load ANYONE’S bags in the plane because it was too snowy. They could load people and fly, but they couldn’t load bags. Does that make ANY sense? So I had no luggage. And I was going to Austria the NEXT DAY to ski with no luggage which meant no winter gear, at all. Yeah. I think the UK was giving a giant finger on arrival. ‘We don’t want you here!’  Oh, and I chose not to mention the fact that I was applying for a work visa in the UK! (which, by the way, was ACCEPTED! YAY!)

Classic bicycle in London

Classic bicycle in London

Living in London for a month was an interesting experience, coming from laid-back SE Asia and then laid-back Keyport, WA. London is fast paced; people run you over if you dawdle in the street and then curse you for it. Eye contact = aggression (like in the world of apes), so you’re supposed to duck and run in the masses of people on the sidewalk to avoid pissing anyone off. They don’t default to one side of the sidewalk in organized “people-flows,” either. I thought everyone would be walking on the left side of the sidewalk (called “pavement” here). Nah. It’s all out pedestrian warfare; survival of the fittest. Road rage meets the sidewalk. “Excuse me” means “get out of my f-in way” and “sorry” means “excuse me.”

And let’s not talk about the tube (the underground)… ok, let’s. The main thing to know is you keep your eyes down and it’s best if you have a trashy paper to read. Actually I believe there are two separate worlds in the tube. That of people who look up, and that of people who don’t. Those who look up sometimes connect eyes and telepathically agree, nay, bond yeah, we’re in the world of people who look around. This feels great, until you get the freak who decides to come up to you and have a chat. Then you learn to always, ALWAYS look down. And best if you have some sort of trashy paper to read.

In the end, London is not a bad place. The people warm up a LOT when the sun (yeah, it actually does come out now and then) goes down and everyone heads to their local. Ale + Gossip, whether political, global, or local is endlessly entertaining.

Kind of love it, actually.

London

London

However, without a job, London can get a bit boring. Yes, I did just say that. Being a bum is no fun when crossing the street isn’t a life & death dash (although crossing the sidewalk might be!) and there aren’t any good hiking trails nearby. I’m not really much of a museum person, and after a few days of museums and battling the sidewalk, I felt I had saturated London´s capacity for entertaining a homeless, jobless vagabond. I made pathetic attempts to shop, but the city is so expensive I more doubled my monthly budget! And I wasn’t even paying for lodging. With a job, things could certainly be a lot more fun.

So I was supposed to go to India after London. That didn´t exactly work out as expected, so I spun the globe and took a fresh look. Decided to go to a whole new hemisphere. Back to warm weather! Don´t Cry for Me Argentinnnnaaaa… I am writing you from the southernmost city in the worrrrld. Ushuaia.

Tierra del Fuego National Park, Argentina

Tierra del Fuego National Park, Argentina

Usuaia, Argentina

Usuaia, Argentina

Cool bus in Usuaia

Cool bus in Usuaia

From here, people go to Antarctica. Unfortunately I don’t have 4 grand to spare, so I likely won´t go unless I can fit in someone’s suitcase. I dare say I might actually try it. To see Antarctica would be a dream come true. I will get to realize another dream though – Patagonia. I’m very excited about the trekking prospects.

Before this, I stopped in Madrid for a couple of days, then Buenos Aires, saw some Tango, learned how to play cribbage (wha? that’s not spanish!), and ate some steak… ahhh, nice.

It feels good to be here. My Spanish is coming back like a flood. It’s nice to be in a place where I feel like I fit in. In fact, I was just thinking that the other day.. walking along the sidewalk in Buenos Aires, no one running into me, enjoying the sun on my cheeks… thinking  Yeah, I fit in here. And that feels good. And just as the thought grew to the point where it was almost cocky, overconfident – I stood a little straighter and strutted like a local – I fell FLAT ON MY FACE. I was fully sprawled on the sidewalk, arms spread, groceries everywhere, people staring… Doesn’t matter that there was a huge gaping hole in the sidewalk. Locals just don’t do that.  That is grace for you. Yeah I fit in REAL good.

More Tango in Buenos Aires

More Tango in Buenos Aires

…And now I’m in this new, unknown town with no guidebook (again) or any idea what I should do (again). I’m sure I’ll figure something out soon. :) As usual I am completely unprepared and disorganized. It’s 11pm and I haven’t eaten dinner. We’ll see what happens!

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