Ring in the new year

I'm in Coyhaique, Chile.  I got here earlier this afternoon, after a series of flights from Buenos Aires.  The day has been an interesting one, what with getting slapped with overweight baggage fees (and then kicking myself because I definitely could've packed differently); staying awake all night in the BA airport waiting for my flight (but being able to fall asleep on the plane for once, twice); sailing through immigration in Santiago (but having my oranges taken away from me by customs); having a nice egg sandwich, carrot muffin, and chai latte in the most comfortable chair ever (but from Starbucks); boarding my second plane of the day to find someone sitting in my seat (but getting to sit by the window instead); feeling elated by the view as we flew over mountains next to the sea; finally getting to the hostel (but opening my duffel bag to find out that a shampoo bottle had exploded and the plastic bag it was in didn't keep it from getting all over); trying to withdraw money from an ATM and getting denied three times (but it finally worked, and then I found a casa de cambio as well); buying what I thought would be a quick microwavable dinner (which turned out to take over an hour in the oven); finally being one step closer to CP (but realizing how expensive food here and being grateful that I'll have zero expenses for the next four months) being amazed by the amount of light in the sky at 9:30 pm; trying hard to distract myself so I can make it to midnight...

This has been a day of more ups and downs than I've had in a while, but every time I felt discouraged I just had to remind myself where I was going.  It wasn't hard to do when I had a window seat on the plane and the bus from the airport.  We're not really even in the heart of Patagonia yet, and it's beautiful already.  I feel a big weight slowly coming off my shoulders, letting me relax after the apparent tension gifted by city life.  There's so much  s  p  a  c  e  out here that it feels easier to breathe.  I think tonight will be one of the best sleeps I've ever had.

I'm set to take a bus down to CP on Monday morning, but until then I'm killing time in this little dinky town.  I walked around a bit today on my quest for money and food, and I like that it's small, and there's grass by the sidewalks, and the tallest manmade structure around is at most two stories high.  Tomorrow will be a day of doing nothing, especially since it's New Years' Day and everything in town will be closed.

Thus far I've been taking advantage of the down time to load some more pictures of my recent adventures: here are some shots of Buenos Aires and Mendoza.  I'm aiming to get more up tomorrow, and get you all caught up with the rest of Argentina before my Chilean journey really begins.

Since it is the last day of 2011, the atmosphere calls for reflection on the past 364.9 days; ultimately, they've brought me a lot of change.  I wrote my thesis; I wrote and performed my own song for my last Ellement concert; I graduated from college; I got a new job at a rafting company; my internship with CP landed in my lap in the most welcome way; I traveled to two new countries and did countless new things.  This new year is starting off much the same way.  I still can't believe what I get to dedicate myself to for the next four months, and I can only hope that the positive vibes I'm getting from this part of the year will carry on through the rest of it.  This is the year where I really enter the adult world; no more going back to school for this or that.  I can literally do anything (and my mind takes advantage of that fact and comes up with crazy different schemes every other day).  And as much as I love the Mayans, they'd better be wrong about the whole end-of-the-world thing.

I'll end my rambling with 54 minutes until 2012 and my best wishes for all of us, that this year will be the best it can be.  Happy New Year!  Feliz año!  Love, your mountain girl come home.

T - 1.5

I'm back in BA, feasting on my first real meal all day (it's 3:45 pm), and mentally preparing to prepare myself to leave...cause I'm leaving.  On a jet plane.  Don't know when I'll be back again.  Oh babe, I hate/love to go.

Iguazú was amazing.  Willie, Monica, Alan, and I got to town around 3 in the afternoon and went to our hostel, and immediately after checking in, jumped into the POOL.  I haven't been in a pool in who knows how long, so it felt great, and it was a relief from the hot sticky humidity around us.  Brian showed up a little bit later, and we all headed into town to grab a bite to eat.  We walked around the little centro and perused a few restaurants, finally ending up at a parilla with lots of tables outside and no wait to sit down. We had a nice leisurely dinner and then headed back to the hostel to get ready for our early wake-up call.

6:30 am, Tuesday, December the 27th.  Beep beep beep beep, said my watch.  Time to go to Iguazú!  We all rolled out of bed, packed up our stuff, and hit the breakfast room a bit after 7.  We caught a bus to the park around 8:30, and checked in for the next tour at 9:45.  Walking our way to the meeting point, we wandered along concrete paths through tall plants and short trees, and we caught a glimpse of a family of coatis, a Latin American relative of the raccoon; but this would definitely not be our last encounter with them (ah, the suspense!).

We'd decided to go for the Gran Aventura (Great Adventure) tour, which included a jeep ride through the jungle and then a boat ride to get up close and personal with the falls.  In hindsight, none of this was absolutely necessary, especially not the jeep ride.  The jungle was beautiful, yes, but our guide kept talking during the whole ride and not saying much of anything important or interesting.  The boat ride was fun and beautiful, going up the turquoise Iguazú River towards the 1.7-mile-wide falls, which look like they've been transplanted from Jurassic Park to the border between Brazil and Argentina.  We all snapped plenty of photos, but then came the time to put all our belongings into dry bags and get ready for la ducha (the shower) they gave us by driving the boat right up underneath San Martín Falls.  We did get soaked, but on the hot day that it was, the cool water was welcome.

After la ducha, we unloaded from the boat, returned our life jackets and dry bags, and started along the Upper Trail, which ran across the tops of several waterfalls and provided wonderful views the whole way.  We took a lunch break when we found a place with food, and were again visited by the coatis, along with everyone else at the tables around us.  Sadly, these previously wild animals have gotten so used to humans, and human food, that they have no shame in crawling up on the tables where tourists are enjoying lunch and trying to get their own piece of grub.  They're smart animals and have a good tactic for grabbing food right out from under the noses of the unsuspecting, but once people noticed what they were doing, instead of just keeping the food away from the coatis, they started feeding them! Bad, bad humans!  Ironic that this happened right in front of a big sign pleading with visitors to not feed the animals for various valid reasons.  Ah, well, things happen.

After finishing the upper trail, we made our way back and hopped on a rickety little train to head up the the Garganta del Diablo trail, leading the waterfall sharing the same name.  This is, by far, Iguazú's crowning jewel.  The Garganta del Diablo (Devil's Throat) is a massive u-shaped falls that rumbles with the power of the mass amount of water falling over its lip and spits an enormous cloud of mist up into the sky.  It's loud, it's wet, and it's mesmerizing.  All of us at one point or another were rendered immobile, stuck staring at the blue sky, puffy white clouds, falling water, and rainbow below.  Sound perfect?  It was.

Willie, Monica, and Alan left on a bus that night for Uruguay and a beach for New Years', but Brian and I stayed one more day, and took full advantage of the pool and sunny weather as our accessories to a lazy day.  I got on a bus at 5 yesterday afternoon, and through a combination of a book, sleep, and the radio, made it through to Buenos Aires today, right around noon.  Once I made it back to Robin's, a shower was my first order of business, quickly followed by a pasta, veggies, and salad feast (all I'd eaten until then were two little media lunas they gave us for breakfast on the bus).

I'm getting excited beyond words to finally make it to CP.  My flight to Chile leaves at 5:40 on Saturday morning, but because of the holiday, I won't be on a bus to CP until January 2nd.  The waiting, the waiting!  My boss, Paula, said that she's asking around to see if anyone is driving down that way beforehand, but either way, only a few days between me and Patagonia!  I have this unquestionable gut feeling that I'm going to love this experience, maybe more than anything else I've done.  High expectations, I know, but not unreasonable.  I just know it.

Feliz Navidad!

Hello beloveds,

It's that big important day, but it hardly feels like it.  Argentines aren't particularly zealous in their celebration of Christmas, so the first time I heard any holiday songs or saw any Christmas lights was yesterday in Kristin's apartment as we were cooking ourselves a little holiday feast for ourselves and two friends, Irving (Costa Rica) and Mario (Buenos Aires).  Here's our snapshot from the evening:
We had a wonderful evening together, eating, drinking wine (including a bottle I brought from Mendoza), and talking.  With the exception of Mario, we're all far away from our families and I think we were all wishing we could be at home for the holidays, but since we can't be, we got to be each other's family away from family.

So far, Christmas Day has been pretty mellow.  I watched all the normal Christmas specials online: the Grinch, Rudolph, Frosty, and Charlie Brown.  It got me a bit more in the holiday spirit, but it's still a surreal day.  I'm getting on another bus in a few hours' time, this time rumbo a Iguazú Falls, so Christmas is almost done.  I think I'm more distracted by the idea that in a week, I'll be in Chile at CP, starting the biggest chunk of my South American adventure...so exciting!

I'll sign off by sending out my best wishes to every one of you.  I hope you're enjoying this day and the people around you, and the year to come is the best yet; I hope you're happy, that you feel peace and love, and that you have many adventures that await you.  Loving you xx

All photography copyright Kendall DeLyser.

Rejuvenated

So Wednesday didn't end up being a mountain day.  Tuesday night, while cooking dinner, I met Louie (Montreal) and Stefan (Germany) and we stayed up pretty late sharing a beer and talking.  Louie and Stefan had just met that morning, but had decided to go trekking together for five days; it was an arrangement of convenience, because they'd both been looking for a hiking partner and just so happened to run into each other in our hostel.  Part of our conversation was them getting to know each other, and part was all of us talking about what we'd done and what we loved.  Stefan is quite a mountaineer, it turns out: he climbed Aconcagua last month and because they were driven by summit fever, he and his climbing partner pushed until they reached the top at 5 pm (when their turn-around time should've been 1 pm) and they got caught in a blizzard on the way down, which forced them spent the night out on the mountain because they couldn't see to continue hiking down.  Stefan walked away unscathed, and his partner got minor frostbite on his toes and the tip of his nose.  Quite a story, no?  (Reminds me of Dead Lucky, the story of the man who survived a night out on Everest)  Louie is a rock climber, and will be venturing around Chile and Argentina for the next two months, migrating from one climbing spot to the next.  He works as an engineer, and quit his last job to go on this trip.

All told, I crawled into bed at 1:30 am, and didn't quite feel like trying to wake myself up in three hours to catch the bus to Aconcagua.  So I slept in, deciding instead to take an easy day around town.  This turned out to be a lucky turn of events, because during my reading about Aconcagua Park in the morning, I discovered that one was required to get a permit in Mendoza before arriving at the park (so I wonder what would've happened if I'd just shown up at the guardaparques (ranger station) and wanted to go hiking).  I took care of that, spent some time reading in a park, and bought some bottles of wine for gifts.  All in all a successful day, one that left me better rested and more prepared for the full day of hiking to come.

Wednesday evening, I signed up for a four-hostel pizza party, and went with quite a few other people from my hostel to another one, part of the same hostel network, where I sat and shared some freshly baked pizzas with Amauri (Morelia, Mexico), Elsa (Marseilles, France), and Carolina (BA).  We talked as we stuffed ourselves, and then I took my leave of the party, although there was apparently a lot more to come throughout the evening.  I got back to my hostel just in time to skype with my mama for the first time from her new iPhone, which was really nice.  This time, instead of just talking on the phone, we had the advantage of video too, and of course she was sitting with my kitty Calla on her lap (such a mean thing to do, teasing me like that).  We had a few problems with the connection, but it was still nice to see each others' faces.  We chatted for a while and then I headed off to bed, to catch a few hours of sleep before my 5 am wake-up call for my date with the mountains.

5 am came too quickly, but since I'd organized everything the day before, all I had to do was roll out of bed, put on clothes, and grab my food from the fridge before heading off to the bus station.  Our bus pulled out of the station just after 6 am, as the first morning light was breaking over the vineyards.  I stayed awake for about twenty minutes, and then my drowsiness got the best of me and I dozed off for a couple hours.  When I awoke and started to groggily take in my surroundings, I was pleasantly amazed to find myself going through a huge, deep canyon with some of the coolest rock layers and formations ever.  Some parts of it reminded me of Utah, the canyons around Moab and Canyonlands National Park.  It was a nice start to the day, made even more wonderful by our arrival at Aconcagua Park right after 10 am.

I checked in with the guardaparques (at an elevation of 2800 m, or 9186 ft) and was given a numbered trash bag, with the warning that I'd be in big trouble if I didn't bring it back when I checked out (this was really effective, actually, in keeping trash off the trail; I only saw three pieces, and was able to pick up two of them).  I slathered on some sunscreen, filled up my nalgene, and set off.  There were a few other people and groups that I passed on the way, but I was moving at a quick pace and soon had a good buffer of empty space around me.  Exactly the way I needed it...just nature and me, a day to reconnect.  In two hours and fifteen minutes, I'd made it to my destination, a camp called Confluencia (3200 m, or 10499 ft) in the valley leading to the Aconcagua base camp.  During the entire ascent, I was heading straight at that massive mountain (6962 m, or 22841 ft, the highest in South America), capped with white snow that contrasted beautifully against the intense blue sky and surrounding red, green, and grey rocks.  Words cannot describe...

Luckily I took three hundred pictures to do the work for me (*sheepish grin*).

The day could really not have been more perfect.  It was completely clear, so the sun did a good deal to keep me warm.  Wearing shorts, my Chacos, and a long-sleeve shirt, I was fine when the wind blew, and warm when the air was still.  My feet and legs got filthy from the dirt trail, a fact I rejoiced in.  I avoided getting sunburned.  AND I got to get out of any type of city for the day and hike in an incredibly beautiful place.  I couldn't have asked for anything more.

Once at Confluencia, I ate a quick lunch , refilled my water bottle, and then began my descent, wanting to make sure I had enough time to hike all the way out of the park and down to see the Puente del Inca (an impressive rock bridge of the Río Las Cuevas) before catching a return bus at 4:45.  My timing was perfect, and I was again lulled into sleep on the return journey, worn out as I was by having hiked for six hours and covered 21 kilometers, or 13 miles.  This time I slept through the canyon I'd seen on the way up, and was awake to see what I'd slept through in the morning, another impressive canyon.  Some parts of this one reminded me of the Bighorn Sheep Canyon, right outside of Salida, and it was something like the cherry on top of the cake.

We pulled back into the bus station in Mendoza at dusk, and I walked back to my hostel before dark fell.  I immediately headed for a well-deserved shower, which, though it was cold, still felt incredible.  The water coming off my legs was laughably dark brown, a sign of how much dirt I'd accumulated throughout the day.  After cleaning up, I ate a little dinner, and then skyped with Sammi and Hillie together.  Unfortunately, we weren't able to video chat with each other because we didn't have the right version of skype, but at least we could all catch up with each other (it had been long overdue).  It felt almost like we were all sitting together back at school, except for that we're actually thousands of miles apart.  Oh, the marvels of skype...

Today is my last day in Mendoza, and I'm taking advantage of a free morning to catch up with these posts.  More pictures will be coming soon.  This afternoon I'm going on another wine tour, visiting two more bodegas and an olive oil factory.  It'll be nice to get one last adventure in before catching another late bus back to BA, where I'll be until Sunday night, when I head off to Iguazú for a couple days.  It'll be a bit of a whirlwind until this time next week, and then I'm off to Chile!  Love, your happy-as-a-clam gal in a sea of sunshine.

Rewind

I realized that I completely skipped writing about my weekend in Buenos Aires before coming to Mendoza.  It was full of such an interesting sequence of events that I feel I do have to write about it.  It says something to me about the character of the city, though I can't quite figure it out yet.  But, without further ado, here's what went down:

Thursday.  A pretty normal day until the evening came, when Robin, Troy, Mike, and I went on a rainy bicycle adventure to help make bracelets as a fundraiser for kids in the hospital.  The whole project was started by one of Willie's friends named Kyle, and the idea goes like this: the poor little kids in the hospital write Christmas cards to Santa asking for presents, then we make bracelets to sell to raise money to buy the presents the kiddos wanted.  Thursday night was the big Pulsera Party, where about thirty of us came and went and made lots of little woven bracelets.  It took me back to summer camps days like crazy - how fun!

Friday.  I met up with Kate, Aminah, and A's boyfriend Massimo for a little jaunt around the centro.  We decided to meet in Plaza de Mayo, the one in front of the Casa Rosada (President's office), but just as our meeting time arrived, the sky suddenly decided to vomit big fat slushy drops of rain.  Literally out of nowhere.  Luckily I had grabbed my rain jacket as an afterthought on the way out the door, so I had something to cover myself and my camera as I joined a crowd of others dashing for dry land.  It went on for about five minutes and then stopped and the sun came out.  Silly weather.

Our original plan was to visit a few museums, but we didn't end up doing to a single one.  None of us knew or remembered the addresses of the ones we thought sounded interesting, so the afternoon turned into a few hours of wandering around, going into random shops and stopping for a snack at a café.  Kate's iPhone told us that there was a museum close to us, a giant building modeled on Dante's Inferno, with each floor representing a different stage of heaven and hell.  We found the building and went in, only to find out that the building tours didn't happen until eight at night, and they cost eighty pesos.  Not exactly what we were hoping for.  So back to more wandering around, which was actually really nice because I got to spend some time with good friends and I'd never just walked around the center of town for the fun of it; I always went there with the purpose of going somewhere specific.

Friday night brought me to Bonkers, a dub-step club in the city center.  I went with a big group of people, some of whom I knew and some of whom I didn't.  The club was in a basement of some big building downtown, and the music bounced around like crazy off the concrete floors, walls, and ceiling.  It was largely populated by kids.  Like sixteen-year-olds.  Going to the restroom was like a throwback to high school dances, where entire groups of friends would go together, stand in front of the mirror making sure they looked their best, and gossip about "oh my god, that guy I was just dancing with...".  To top it off, every girl was dressed up as sexy as can be (we unfortunately witnessed one friend lifting another's skirt, only to find a thong).  Contrast this with Kristin and I, in jeans and tank tops and sandals (Chacos for me!) and who cares what we looked like (I wore what I'd been wearing the whole day).  It was a surreal experience, shall we say.

For a while I enjoyed the dancing, but got tired soon after and decided to leave with Kristin, who lived five blocks from the club and had a spare bed with my name on it.  We all showered once we got back to hers, so being clean and sleeping on a bed felt like gold after being on the guys' couch.  I slept like a baby till two in the afternoon (probably a record for me).  I woke up to the sound of Kristin and her roomie Brett (the girl from Durango who was the guide for the bike ride I went on) talking, and I wandered out to the living room, only to be offered breakfast, coffee, and HOT SAUCE.  Let's take a moment to digress and say how much hot sauce has been the object of constant desire in BA.  You can find some in Chinatown, but it's not your good ole chipotle hot sauce like Cholula (which is what I feasted on that morning with eggs, beans, rice, and veggies).  Best breakfast ever.  I have Craig to thank for that; he's Kristin's ex-boyfriend who had just arrived in BA from the States a couple days prior, and brought a wealth of hot sauce with him.  My hero.

Saturday.  I was really impressed with Kristin and Brett's apartment, which turned out to be a long-term vacation rental.  It just had so much character to it: brick walls, tapestries everywhere, half-wall mirrors all around the guest room, funky wall angles...hard to describe, but it instantly caught my fancy.  So unique!  After such a wonderful welcome and breakfast from the girls, we all headed to Plaza Francia, right by the Recoleta Cemetery, to peruse the artisanal sidewalk market there.  Kristin and Brett were on a mission for Christmas gifts for friends and family, and Craig and I tagged along, just taking it all in.  We ran into Robin with one of his bike tours there, and so we talked for a bit before going our separate ways.  There were loads of beautifully-made things in the market: shoes, clothes, jewelry, art, bags, mates, hats...you name it.  We wandered for a few hours and the girls found quite a few of the gifts they were looking for, while I enjoyed the sunshine and seeing everyone's incredible crafts and feeling like a slacker.

Early evening rolled around, and with it came time to go to Kristin and Brett's friend's birthday party.  I contemplated going back to Robin's, but realized there was really no need to go back, as I had been fed and clothed so generously by the girls.  The party was a pretty small gathering when we arrived, so we all got the chance to sit around, munch, and talk to each other.  More people joined us as the night went on, and by the time we left around ten there were a good amount of friends there (a good thing for the birthday boy, because Kristin had been relentlessly teasing him that he didn't have any friends in town because no one came to his party).  From there we went to a small concert at a nearby bar, where another friend's band was playing.  The music was basically a band (drums, upright bass, guitar, and keys) playing jazz, over which the one person I knew, Jay, rapped.  It was nice, not incredibly upbeat but more in a chill vein, and Jay was the last person I would've expected to rap (a little taller than me, white skin, shoulder-length blonde wavy hair)...I think I was just a victim of stereotypes, because once he started rapping it was obvious that he loved it and it seemed to fit with what I knew of him.

After the concert was over, we hung around the bar, killing time until we could go to a house party that Willie knew about.  I talked to quite a few interesting people in that time, including Mariana (from Mexico, on vacation), Isabel (from Bolivia, studying in BA), Joe (from CA, unemployed English teacher), and Eduardo (odd porteño actor), among others.  Just a show of how international the city is.  Once three in the morning rolled around, we piled into a few cabs and headed to the house party, which was laid out as following: big basement for dancing, ground floor for hanging out, upstairs terrace for more hanging out.  We all started out down on the dance floor, but after a while we all tired of the pounding beats and ventured up to the terrace for some fresh air.  I stayed for a few minutes, but then decided it was time to leave, as I was at the end of my rope for dealing with parties and things were getting awkward between Kristin and Craig.  I made my farewells and began to walk back to Robin's place, only a few blocks away.  Bummer was that I walked a few blocks in the wrong direction first (I had my doubts as to whether or not I was right, but kept telling myself I'd walk one more block and see if I came to the street I needed to find), and had to backtrack a bit once I realized my mistake.

Crossing one of the bigger streets on the way, a guy caught up with me and started talking to me.  At first I was wary of The Guy, but after a couple minutes I got the sense that he was harmless, which turned out to be pretty accurate (we walked by a guy passed out outside of an apartment building and we both turned around to make sure he was alive; upon seeing that he was, The Guy woke him up and got him started walking home, concerned that otherwise he'd be robbed).  The Guy actually had a really interesting story: he's from Paraguay and is in BA to study for his Masters in Psychology.  Apparently this is taking a lot of money and he doesn't have enough to live on, so he's a prostitute by night.  And he's addicted to coke (and he wonders where his money goes...).  The Guy actually had a bag of it on him and took little sniffs as we walked and asked me to make sure he didn't have any residue on his face.  Then he started talking about how he likes coke because it helps keep his sex drive in high gear, and the effect was obvious on him as we walked.  Sketchy.  Cue my exit.  Luckily, by the time this happened, we were close to Robin's and it was light out, so I took my leave of The Guy and took a roundabout way back home, just to be safe (but not before he gave me a big hug and thanked me for my company on his walk).  By far the weirdest experience I've had in the city thus far (unsettling as well).

Sunday.  I met up with Kristin and Craig in the afternoon to peruse the San Telmo market, another sidewalk show of artists with jewelry, antiques, clothes, leather jackets, music, sunglasses, etc. that's at least fifteen blocks long.  This market, compared with the one in Plaza Francia, was less refined, and actually had less variety as well.  It had a more commonplace feel to it, while the other had more of a fine-arts atmosphere.  On a great stroke of luck, I ran into Kate and Brian and stopped to talk to them, losing Kristin and Craig in the process (though I did find them later on).  Kate, Brian, and I wandered down the rest of the market, stopping to watch some tango dancers and a hilarious clown who squeaked instead of spoke.  Brian and I got burritos from the well-known Mexican burrito man: cheap and delicious, and with hot sauce.  We parted ways at the end of the market, and I made my way home to pack for my trip to Mendoza, in time to meet a few CELTA classmates for some farewell drinks with Kate.  The place we went was very eccentric, with tartan napkins, flower-painted sheet metal on the walls, old mismatching wooden chairs, and an ample selection of board games for anyone's use.  They served us wine in pingüinos (ceramic jugs shaped like penguins), and we all enjoyed each other's company.  I was the first to leave, as I had to catch the bus, and you know the rest of the story.

I'm sure some parts of this story aren't exactly what you want to read (I can imagine my family's reactions to the part about me walking home with a coked-up prostitute).  But I didn't leave anything out in the effort to illustrate just how many different things can happen in the city.  It's still a new thing for me to get used to; things like this don't happen in small-town Colorado.  It's important to experience, because it shows the high and low sides of life in BA.  However, I think it's added to my restlessness and impatience to get to CP and establish a routine more like the one I'm used to, working and living in nature.  On that front, I am buying a tent from one of the interns who's there now and is trying to lighten his load for his upcoming travels, and I learned through an email from the girl who's currently the hostess in the lodge that the month of January is booked pretty solid with visitors, so I'll be busy right off the bat.  Bring it on.

Mendoza

I'm finally here!  It's almost the same feeling of elation I got at Machu Picchu, after reading and hearing about this place for so long and finally physically being here.  It's sunny, dry, and hot, and the city has a buena onda (good vibe) to it that's very attractive.  I got here yesterday afternoon, after a fourteen-hour bus ride from Buenos Aires.  I walked from the bus station to my hostel, and was immediately met by two very nice staff members that checked me in and explained all my options for tours of this and that.  I'm staying at Hostel Internacional Campo Base, which is nice in a few ways: it has the same kind of youthful and relaxed feel as Pariwana did in Perú, and it's cheaper than anything else I found in Mendoza.  Score.

This morning, I went on a wine bike tour, where our group was driven to a winery in nearby Maipu and dropped off with bikes, which we rode to the next two wineries.  My hostel collaborates with several others around the city, using the same tour company for everything they offer.  As a consequence, there were quite a few people on the tour, and they were from everywhere: Argentina, Ireland, Australia, Scotland, South Africa, Israel, Denmark, France, and the US.  The first winery we stopped at was the best one, called Bodega Cecchin.  It's an organic winery, which means that their grapes are grown in typical organic fashion without chemicals, and they also add much less to their wines.  Once you open a bottle, you have to drink it within two days, because there aren't any preservatives in it to keep it from getting bitter.  A typical bottle from them contains 30-40 parts sulfites, as compared to 150 parts in other commercial wines, and it actually makes a difference in the flavorfulness of the wine.  We tried three wines there: a rosé, a malbec, and a carignan.  The rosé smelled sweet, tasted spicy, and had an aftertaste of honey.  I don't think I've ever experienced so much different sensation and stimulation in one glass of wine, and it was the first one of the day.  Wow.  It surely set a tone for the rest of the day.  The other two wines were delicious as well, and I'm on a mission to buy some bottles in town and find a way to ship them or carry them with me.

We biked on to our next winery, a new one that just opened in 2007, called Vistandes.  In comparison with Cecchin, which had a rustic feel to it, Vistandes was more modern, explained by its age.  Everything used to process the grapes and start the fermentation process was stainless steel, which changes the flavor of the wine from the very start.  This winery made three different lines of wine, depending on how long they were aged, and whether or not they ever saw a wooden barrel.  The two wines that we sampled here, a rosé and a cabernet sauvignon, were from the middle-grade reserva line, fermented for an extra six months in an oak barrel after going through the basic fermentation process.  After the full flavors and bodies we tasted at Cecchin, these wines felt flat and light.  I'd be curious to try them again without the comparison to the organic wines we'd previously consumed, because I don't think they were given a fair chance.  The rosé faired better than the cab did, because it still had a nice element of spicy and sweet to it.  The cab tasted watery.  Bad wine or unfair circumstances?

The results were similar at our third bodega, Viña el Cerno.  At this one we weren't given a tour at all (boo) and were given one full glass of whichever wine we chose to try, rather than getting to sample a few.  I tried the malbec from their high-end gran reserva line, and while it was strong like a malbec ought to be, it was pretty bitter, and my first taste face must have looked somewhat concerning.  Again, I wonder how much of my impression of that wine was affected by the fact that I'd tasted five wines prior, starting with the best ones of the tour.  Just before leaving, myself and a couple other guys took a sample of a white wine, a torrontes, and it was much better; sweeter, flavorful, but not too strong.  Maybe I asked for an overpowering glass when I went for the gran reserva malbec.  Who knows.

My tour companions were a bit disappointed with the tour because they'd apparently been promised additional visits to an olive farm and a chocolate factory, in addition to the wineries.  I think their hostels gave them incorrect information, because as far as I knew, the wine bike tour I'd signed up for was exactly what we got (besides that they came to pick me up an hour later than I'd been told).  The poor tour guide had to field all their discontent and make phone calls to their respective hostels to arrange for some kind of compensation for the unhappy tourists.  Aside from the delay in starting, and consequently later ending than scheduled, I enjoyed myself; I met some really interesting people and got to go on a bike ride!  Always a good thing.

Tomorrow I hope to have a mountain day, going on a tour up into the Andes, seeing a few passes and lakes in addition to going to Aconcagua Regional Park.  I'd like to figure out how to do this without a tour and the price it commands, but I think it's too far away for me to manage.  Thus far, the Andes are hazily visible from Mendoza, but pretty far in the distance, and my Colorado heart just needs some good ole montañas.  Stay tuned for more adventures!

In the meantime, take a look at the pictures I've posted of Tigre, the Presidenta's inauguration (scroll partway down), and Mar del Plata.  Love, your aventurera who's getting impatient to get to Patagonia.

Back

Well here I am, back on the couch in Buenos Aires.  I got back yesterday afternoon and it's funny how it felt like coming home.  In some ways I think it's just because I had a place to go and people to see, instead of being an anonymous stranger in some tourist town.  But I realized, while I was gone, that I actually do feel fond of Buenos Aires.  Yes, it's a big city, but it honestly doesn't feel that way in the little sphere I've developed.  I'm fine cruising around from Palermo to Belgrano to the Centro; it's what I'm used to.  It's when you start leaving the city that you realize...it just keeps going.  And going.

I'm still trying to figure out what makes this city tick.  I've noticed so many little things about it; I'm convinced it's got at least five personalities.  In one sense, it's trying so hard to be European.  It feels more like a city in Spain than a city in Argentina (at least, according to that typical Latin American style - difficult to explain unless you've been to one or both places and know from personal experience). The supermarkets here are the same French and Spanish chains I saw in Europe; the sidewalks are made of big tiles, not concrete.  Transportation's well-organized: the subtes run right to the major train stations out of the city; taxis are metered; buses are well-marked by their routes and every bus stop is indicated with the number of the line and the stops it makes along the way.

Speaking of, the subte is an interesting place.  Everyone on the subte is going through some part of their daily grind: getting from here to there, sometimes studying or planning along the way.  There are the people who wear their sunglasses, and the people with their ipods, and then the people with the sunglasses and the ipods (which means "Don't talk to me").  There are the parents with strollers, and the businessmen in their suits.  There are the students going to or from class, and the little old people (viejitos) going who knows where.  Everyone wants a seat on the subte, but if a viejito or a pregnant lady get onto a train, there's always someone offering up their chair.  During rush hour (yes, this happens without cars too) we're packed as tight as sardines, and it's a common occurrence for someone to lose their balance as the train takes a corner.  Of course, they fall onto other people, who in turn stumble into other, and so on, but people seldom hold a grudge about this; in fact, if you're falling, most of the time someone will reach out to help you.  Street vendors and musicians think the subtes are good places to try to hawk their wares (anything from socks to headphones to coloring books) or play a song for someone's pocket change.  I'd be curious to follow one of these guys or gals around for a day and see how successful they are.  I have a hard time imagining that they'd make enough for it to be worth their time, but since they're still doing it, apparently they do alright.

Many people have remarked to me that they find the porteños rude and unhelpful.  I've found that they're nice and willing to lend a hand (take the time on my birthday that I emerged from the subte feeling dizzy and that nice lady offered to call the ambulance for me, for example).  This is curious to me because the friends that see porteños as hostile are from other places in Latin America, and consequently have darker skin.  Is Buenos Aires suffering from some kind of European or white supremisism?  Odd, since it's arguably populated at least as many outsiders as locals, or so it seems.  It is, I suppose, akin to the race issues that our own country has dealt with and is still facing today.  (On that topic, but completely unrelated to Buenos Aires, I read this interesting and provoking article in Forbes, thanks to my dear friend Angela.  It sparked quite a debate amongst our friends from CC (which is why I love our school) on Facebook.  I'd be interested to know your reactions, so have a look: If I Were A Poor Black Kid.)  I still remember, and question, the day when Andrés (the elder) told me that he thinks people here look down on him because he's from Colombia.  He's under the impression that all of South America hates Colombia, because of it's (changing) reputation as a country overrun by drug lords.  I don't doubt that he feels discriminated against in certain places, but I wonder if he's exaggerating about the entire continent?

I remember, on the night that the Andrés' took me downtown, they said that Buenos Aires was full of tourists from everywhere (de todos lados).  I've noticed this too, and it's hard to tell who's Argentine and who's not, until you hear them talk.  This city seems to be an ex-pat trap, so to speak...in my time on Robin's couch, I've met quite a few people who came to this city with the intent of taking Spanish lessons for a couple months...and three years later, they're still here.  I can see how that's possible; it's easy to get sucked into staying here for this or that event, or staying because you've established a comfortable routine and don't bother to get out of it.  Buenos Aires lends itself to opportunity, I think, for helping these contented or suckered ex-pats stay put.  Take Robin and Mike, for example: they've both managed to establish businesses here that are growing and doing well.  And you can bet that they're not the only ones.  There's Buenos Aires Delivery, there's Buenos Aires Pub Crawl, there's...the list goes on.  All great ideas, all started by foreigners.  I was talking about this with Robin last night, pondering at why it is that the services for tourists are all run by tourists, and he said that while Argentines may come up with equally brilliant ideas, they lack one thing that takes them that extra mile: service.  It's true.  Waiters leave you waiting for minutes on end before they come to check on you.  Shop owners don't scowl at you, but they don't make you feel all that appreciated either.  I suppose it's just the Argentine way of doing things, but when you're from a different country (like the US) where service is so highly valued, it's gonna feel different (for most tourists, in a negative way).  Robin said that's why it was so easy for Biking Buenos Aires to get into the Lonely Planet guide for Argentina: the LP rep said that they prefer to promote local businesses, but they won't send tourists to companies that won't take good care of them, so to speak.

I guess this is where Argentina starts to take on a more Latin American feel, in an endearing way.  There's a holiday every month, and government offices are closed.  Nice for the locals, to be sure.  Sometimes frustrating for visitors.  There's no set time for when the subtes run: they just start early in the morning and then go till some time around ten at night, or whenever the drivers feel like stopping.  Some days they don't charge you to ride, and if you show up late in the evening or during lunch break, the ticket sellers just let you walk through the handicapped door.  The city centro is dotted with manteros, street vendors who spread their wares on blankets on the ground and try to catch your interest as you walk by.  The Argentine government declared them illegal a couple weeks ago, but the law won't go into effect until March, and even then, no one seems to think it will actually make a difference in their presence on the streets.  It just means that they'll have to pack up and run if a cop comes by (like happens in Europe, ironically).  Then there are the cartoneros, who sort through all the bags of trash set out on the street and pull out anything recyclable, leaving the rest for the garbage men to pick up.  At first, you'd think this was no good, just making a mess for the poor garbage men.  But if you think about it, it's smart: makes sure that the recyclable things get collected and actually recycled, and it creates jobs for more people (apparently the cartoneros get paid decently by doing what they do).  Cool, right?  You'd never see this kind of thing in the US, but here it works.  Thank you, Argentina.

Two last things I notice about this city:  One.  There are lots of parks and plazas.  And the parks are actual, proper parks with grass expanses where one can sit and enjoy some air and sunshine.  Which lots of people do, especially on weekend afternoons.  People go with friends, books, guitars, drums, blankets, bottles of beer, dogs, sunglasses, and smiles.  It's a nice atmosphere to be in, albeit a bit overwhelming at first when you see lots of groups of people dotting the lawns.  Two.  Porteños have a fierce pride, both in their city and their country.  I noted this a lot in our CELTA classes; the topic of travel or events or suggestions would always come up in someone's lesson, and it would inevitably turn to "Give us some advice about things to do in Buenos Aires".  We heard lots of different suggestions this way, and Ana Maria (from the pre-int) class even started bringing in brochures of different places we could visit, first around BA and then around the entire country.  They were eager to share their knowledge with us so that we could come to love it as much as they do.

Their trick worked.  I'm growing more and more fond of this country, and this city, all the time.  I never thought I'd actually enjoy living in a big city, and I still don't think it's the lifestyle I want to lead forever and ever, but I'm surprised at how much I am liking it.  I'm content to stay here for a couple more days visiting friends before I journey to Mendoza, which is a place I fully expect to be enamored by.  Wine, olives, and mountains...what can go wrong?  Let's hope I'm not tempting fate with that one.  Sending love from Buenos Aires, where I'm about to abandon my computer for Pride and Prejudice, the paper version.

On the road again.

It's early Sunday morning, I'm in a beach town, and it's cloudy and cold.  Ironic?  (Alanis this is your cue)  Maybe, but let's focus on the fact that I'm in a beach town!  Mar del Plata, to be more precise.  It's a resort town south of Buenos Aires, where a lot of the porteños go for summer vacays.  Luckily, I'm hitting it before the high season and at the end of a weekend, so it shouldn't be as crowded as it will be in a couple weeks.

But backtrack for a second and talk about earlier this week.  Since my last post, I've done a bit more adventuring.  Thursday was a pretty normal day, and I spent a good chunk of time figuring out what my plans would be for the time between then and Wednesday, the day of Lívia's farewell.  It was another national holiday, this time for La Inmaculada Concepción de María (Mary's Immaculate Conception), and so all the government offices were closed...meaning I tried but failed at buying a train ticket for coming here.  Oh well, I told myself, it'll work out, and it did.  That evening I went to Crossfit with Troy, one of my roomies.  I'd heard about it many times, both from the guys here and from friends back home, and I was in desperate need of some physical activity.  I fully expected it to kick my butt, and it did.  In the best way possible.  There are two trainers that do it every day, named Percy and Max, and as far as I know they're both from the States.  It only costs ten pesos per session, which is way cheaper than going to a gym where they make you pay a monthly membership, and I think once you'd gone for a while you could just remember the workouts and do them on your own.  None of the moves are complicated, it's just the way they string them together and push you hard that make Crossfit what it is.  You can fully expect me to have remembered exactly what we did that day and be repeating it every day that I can.  My muscles are still sore and it's been a couple days.  Inner athlete satisfied.

Friday I made my first venture out of Buenos Aires, to a town called Tigre about twenty miles north of the capital.  It's situated on the Delta Para, where the river splits into many different smaller channels and creates a network of islands that can only be accessed by boat.  I went with Jess, a fellow CELTee, and we took an hour train ride for a peso to get there.  It was crowded on the train, since Friday was also a national holiday (called a bridge holiday, connecting the real holiday on Thursday to the weekend) and lots of porteños were looking to escape from the city just like we were.  The city doesn't ever stop between the train station and Tigre, so when we first got off the train at our destination I felt like we'd never left Buenos Aires.  However, walking around I quickly realized that everything had a more laid-back feel to it.  Jess and I wandered over to where the boats launch for tours of the area, but overwhelmed with options and feeling hungry, we opted to look for lunch before choosing one.  We found a nice air-conditioned cafe (we arrived at 1 pm so it was hot outside) and sat for a nice slow meal and some cheesecake for dessert.

We asked our waitress if she could recommend a tour or a boat to us, and she said they were all pretty much the same in price and quality.  Armed with this information, we headed back to the dock and talked to a couple kiosks before finding a tour that suited our needs: 35 pesos, hour and a half in length, leaving in five minutes.  We went on a lancha, or a long covered wooden boat, instead of a catamaran (a huge two-story monstrosity), which I liked better.  As we sailed along, the tour guide told us various things about what we saw.  As we got farther and farther from town, I felt instantly more and more relaxed.  I was honestly amazed by the way that people had houses on the waterfront with docks, just like we might have driveways.  Addresses were house numbers and the name of the river.  And everyone was wearing swimsuits, lounging in hammocks or lawn chairs or swimming in the cool water or doing any other number of relaxing things.  I finally understood why it was such a popular spot for long weekend getaways...if you could rent out one of those houses for a few days, it would feel like paradise, completely disconnected from the bustling city life.  There were even some islands with beaches that you could take a water colectivo to and spend your day lounging in the sun and sand.  Ahhh.

After our tour was over, Jess and I wandered around the waterfront a bit more, and found a bench in the sun where we sat and enjoyed some cherries.  There was a wide walkway along both sides of the river, with plenty of grassy space in the middle of it, dotted with lots of people on blankets sharing mate and taking siestas.  We watched them for a while, and saw one guy get pooped on by a bird.  Bummer for him, but funny for us, and for the two girls he was with; they insisted on taking a picture of it before helping him clean up, and were shaking with laughter so much so that they couldn't hold the camera still.  Around 5:45 we noticed a mass exodus of people leaving the park, and we figured there must be a train coming soon, so we got up and followed them.  Sure enough, fifteen minutes later we were moving back towards the city, albeit somewhat reluctantly.  We had to stand again on the way back, but this time it wasn't quite as crowded, and the rocking of the train lulled me into an even sleepier state than I'd already been in.  I got back home fully prepared to take a nap, but the guys got back not long after I did, so the nap never happened.  Still, I had an easy night, watching an episode of Human Planet with Robin, Mike, and Troy.  (By the way, if you've not heard of Human Planet, look it up right now.  It's made by the BBC in the same style as Blue Planet and Planet Earth, but it's about the crazy and incredible ways that humans interact with nature, instead of just documenting the nature itself.)

Yesterday was the official inauguration of the Presidenta, Cristina Kirchner, who was reelected a few weeks ago to her second term in office.  As a result, the Avenida de Mayo, all the way from the Casa Rosada to the Congreso, was blocked off and full of festive supporters, sporting banners, t-shirts, and drums to celebrate the Presidenta.  I went to the Congreso, or Congress building, where she was giving a speech to the crowds amassed there, and there I was met with a bit of a conundrum.  She won in the election with 54 percent of the vote, which is a good majority.  Yet most of the Argentines I've talked to up to this point (Greta and our CELTA students) don't like her.  Her speech yesterday focused a lot on the economy and how stong it's become since 2001, and how she's helped to reduce the amount of foreign debt to only eight percent, big corporations are lessening their hold on the GNP, and she's ''not the president of the corporations, but she's the president of the people, of the forty million people who call Argentina home.''  This sounds good, right?  So why don't people like her?  Time to investigate.

But that will come later.  After I tired of being in the hot sun listening to the political hoopla, I took the subte down to the train station to see about buying a ticket for Mar del Plata.  I half expected them to be sold out, since it is a popular destination, but lo and behold, I got what I wanted without a problem.  Mission accomplished, I headed home, and arrived just in time.  Mike and Willie were cooking brunch, and included myself and our friend Kristin in the meal.  The final result was reminiscent of that big bowl of food I got at the market in Cusco: rice, potatoes, tomatoes, beans, eggs, avocado, and hot sauce.  It was a real mountain of food, and oh so delicious.  After cleaning up the meal, we headed to a nearby park for a little bit of chill time before heading back home at six to watch the futbol match between Barcelona and Real Madrid.  It was a big game in many ways, because of a good rivalry and the closeness of the two teams' standings in the Champion's League in Europe.  It just so happened that all of us there are Barça fans, so we had a great time watching our team win 3-1.  The goals were all good, and the passing...wow.  In short, it was two hours well spent, but as soon as it was over I had to finish packing and get going.  I stopped at Kate and Aminah's apartment for a reunion and yummy dinner, which Aminah's boyfriend Massimo cooked for us (Kate likes to call him their live-in Italian chef, since he's staying with them while he's here and he is, after all, Italiano).  It was sweet and too short, but we promised to meet up again when I get back to town next week.

I left theirs in a hurry to catch the subte.  I'm never sure how late the last train will run, and in this case I had quite a lot of ground to cover before they stopped running.  Worst case scenario, I could've taken a pricey taxi, but luckily it didn't come to that.  I arrived at the train station with a little time to spare, and got settled in my seat before we pulled out on our way to Mar del Plata at 11:05 pm.  The seat next to me was empty, so throughout the night I tried a variety of sleeping positions in an effort to get comfy.  It turned cold during the night and I think we went through some rain, so between the change in temperature and the not-very-successful attempt at finding a comfortable way to sleep, I didn't catch more than a few winks together.  We pulled into the station here at 5:30, and I walked the nineteen blocks to my hostel.  The exercise was nice, and I felt it was early to be knocking on their door at 5:30 in the morning.  Not that 6, when I did actually knock on the door, is much better, but so far they've been very accommodating.  Of course, the bed I have reserved is currently occupied, because it's been a busy weekend, so I'm here waiting for breakfast so I can fill my tank and venture down to the seaside.  Hopefully the sun comes out in the meantime...then we'll be in business.

Sunshine and shenanigans

The past few days in Buenos Aires have been a blast.  I finished my CELTA course on Friday and, of course, went out that night to celebrate with my classmates and some other friends.  All together we were a contingent of about twenty people from the US, England, Scotland, Australia, Sweden, and Argentina...it made for a good time, but the bar that we went to wouldn't let us pull together tables for our entire group, so we got split up.  Boo.  However, we all still had a great time and, true to Buenos Aires fashion, I didn't crawl into bed until 11:30 the next morning, all things told.

Needless to say, I was tired on Saturday, but I made myself stay awake for most of the afternoon so that I could try to keep a more regular schedule for my body.  I hung out with Alec and Brian that night, but we were mellow, just playing music and talking.  Sunday was a lazy day in the morning, but then in the late afternoon I met up with Robin and his friends Willie (California) and Lívia (Brazil) and we went on the Masa Crítica, or Critical Mass, a massive bike ride around Buenos Aires.  There were literally hundreds of people on two wheels, all celebrating bicycles and relishing in the fact that we could take over literally entire streets and even the highway and cars could do nothing but sit and wait for us.  The tradition started in San Francisco in 1992 as a celebration of bikes and to remind everyone about cyclists' rights on the road.  Since then, the idea has gone viral and there are events all over the world.  Here in BsAs, it happens the first Sunday of every month.  On our ride, we started at the Obelisco in the center of town and made our way in a big loop around the city.  We did go on the highway for a while, and blocked out four lanes of traffic, who had to follow along behind us at our slow pace.  Unfortunately, there were some boys who threw decent-sized rocks onto the highway and they caused a pile-up of cyclists.  Luckily no one was hurt, but it put a (temporary) damper on the joy of riding a bike on a sunny Sunday afternoon.  I met a few interesting people during the ride, including Gabriel, a local property manager who loves the camaraderie and organized chaos of the Masa, and Ciaran, a Londonite who's been here for six months teaching English and took the same CELTA course that I did, only in August.  Small world!  I took my camera along (duh) and took a bunch of blind pictures, just holding up my camera and shooting pictures without looking through the viewfinder.  They turned out really well, actually, so I posted some of them here: Masa Crítica.

After the ride on Sunday, I went home and packed up my room so that I could move out on Monday as planned.  I really enjoyed staying in my room and made good friends with some of my housemates, but it was time for me to move on (and onto Robin's couch) while I figured out my traveling plans.  Since being here in his apartment, I've had a lot of fun going on bike rides and meeting new people.  There's a good expat community here, and it seems that lots of the people that I've met know each other in some way or another.  Example: Willie, one of Robin's flatmates (and now mine too), knows the Swedes I hung out with on Friday night through a Spanish class, and he met Brian and Kate, two of my fellow CELTees, while working for the BA Pub Crawl on Monday night.  Funny little connections...I think it's fun how everyone knows each other.  One of the highlights of my week was Tuesday, when I went on the Heart of the City bike tour with Robin's business and got to explore parts of the city I'd wanted to see, like San Telmo and La Boca.  Our guide was a girl named Brett who's from Durango and here for two years doing a grad school program about urban development.  Again, small world!  She was really cool and friendly, and knew a lot of the history of the areas we rode through, which I ate up because I find history fascinating.  There was a Canadian couple from Vancouver, Fred and Teri, and a Aussie, Tori, on our tour as well, so it was small and personal.  We rode around for almost 5 hours, including a lunch stop, and all enjoyed ourselves.  I also broke my vegetarian streak at lunch and tried part of a bondiola, a very traditional pork and cheese sandwich with choose-your-own toppings like veggies and sauce.  It was pretty tasty, actually, and as long as I didn't think about the fact that I was eating part of a pig, then I enjoyed it.  My stomach didn't have any kind of adverse reaction to the meat either, so it was a good experience.  This doesn't mean that I've converted back to being a meatosaurus; it just means that I feel more confident in my ability to handle eating meat if I ever want to or am in a situation where it would be socially awkward not to (invited to a delicious homecooked meal that turns out to be all meat, for example).  Check out some snapshots here: Buenos Aires.

After I got back from our bike tour, I was home for about an hour before Kate invited me to go with her and Brian to the Recoleta Cemetery, where Evita Perón, among other famous or important people, are buried.  Here's a fun fact about why that particular graveyard is so full of influential figures: in the early days of Buenos Aires, the neighborhood of San Telmo was one of the first places inhabited, because it used to be right on the river and thus had easy access for trading and travelers.  It was an affluent neighborhood until the yellow fever outbreak of 1871 sent the richies running for a safer place, which they found in Recoleta, and there they stayed.  As a consequence, Recoleta is a nice neighborhood and the people buried there come from rich families.  The cemetery is actually beautiful, reminiscent of the one in the new Phantom of the Opera movie, with big stone housings for the coffins and belongings of the deceased.  AND it's overrun with kitties, which I loved, and so I got a little animal loving in as well as a visit to one of the biggest attractions in the city.  See what I saw: Recoleta Cemetery.

Tuesday night I went to a big hip hop/dub step party at a club in Palermo, which I found out about and got free entry to thanks to Willie, who worked for the event.  I met a bunch of new friends through Willie, and actually ran into our mutual Swedish friends there, and got to dance for hours, which was the best part.  It was another night of dancing till daylight, but well worth it...I think I needed a good dance party, as I hadn't really had one here yet.

Since then, I've been tossing around many ideas of what my travel plans could be.  I think I've finally decided:  I'll do a few day trips and other local excursions around BA until Wednesday, when we're having a farewell party for Lívia, who's going back home to Brazil.  After that, I'll head to Mendoza and Salta for about a week and a half, making it back to the capital for Christmas Eve.  The day after Christmas, it's off to Iguazú and then Uruguay with friends, until my flight leaves for Chile on 5:40 in the morning on New Year's Eve.  It's still a very fluid plan and likely to change, but for now that's what I've figured.  Stay tuned!

In the meantime, check out the websites for Robin's and Mike's (Robin's flatmate) businesses: Biking Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires Fútbol Amigos.  Both are great ideas and I'm trying to help them out as much as I can, so spread the word if you know of anyone headed this way.  Hasta pronto x

Más Fotos

I put up the pictures I took during the last two days of my CELTA course here.  More will be coming soon of Buenos Aires as I explore the city with all my free time!

a shout out

I'm officially done with my CELTA course!  I couldn't be happier, really.  I had a great time and I'll miss my classmates for sure, but it's such a relief to have it done and be able to have a freer schedule now.  During this past week, I've wanted to give a lot of people credit for things they've done, so that's what today's post is about.  So here we go:
  • Firstly, a shout out to my fellow CELTees, because we did it!
  • A nice thank you to my Colombian housemate Andrés (the elder) for giving my wish to have mashed potatoes.  (Monday night, we were both sitting in the kitchen doing work and he decided to make some rice, meat, and potatoes for dinner.  He had extra, so I got some rice and potatoes with tomato sauce.  Simple but yummy.  And since I was still craving mashed taters after thinking about Thanksgiving, well, icing on the cake.)
  • A farewell to my other Colombian housemate Andrés (the younger), who is going back home on the 7th to report for his mandatory military service summons and try to get himself out of it because he's still a student.
  • A woo hoo for Pentatonix, the five-person a cappella group who won the Sing Off on Monday night!  I don't honestly know how they make so much sound when they only have five people.  And three of them are only 19 years old.  Daaaaamn kids, nice work.  Here's my favorite song of theirs:

Perhaps more indicative of their hip-hop style is this one:
But really you have to watch all their videos because in each performance they do something cool and different.  I look forward to hearing their record when it comes out!
  • Here's to all the Argentine women with beautiful long wavy hair down to their butts.  I'm suffering from a case of hair envy here, for sure.
  • A cheer for my dear miss Riley, who is now (or very very soon will be) a certified yoga instructor!  (Also she's so into what she's learning that she's teaching classes to her family and friends and coming home every day gushing about all the new info she's picked up...that's my girl.)
  • Another cheer for my dear miss Maria, who has by now (I believe) finished her clinicals for the semester and is one step closer to being the best nurse anyone's ever had!
  • A third hooray for my dear miss Jaycie, who is a few short days away from finishing the semester and getting her degree!  I'm so proud of you all, really.
  • A hallelujah for Costa Rica for overturning a law that would've allowed a Canadian company to open a really nasty gold mine close to the border with Nicaragua.  No environmental damage for them!
  • (on that note) A thank you to Marco, who shared this documentary with me:
 
You can watch the whole thing for free on Youtube if you follow this link: Home.  Woo!
That's all, folks!  (for now, anyway)  Sending love from a free woman in Argentina!