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phileasdogg
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Trips:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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Coffee & TV - Blur
Colonia del Sacramento
,
Uruguay
It may have come to your attention that I´ve been running out of interesting entry titles for my blog posts for a while now, so I´m now going to headline them with whatever song is in my head, usually the last one that I listened to on my iPod!
Decided to get out of the hustle and bustle of BA for a couple of days, so took a one-hour ferry ride over to
Colonia del Sacramento
in
Uruguay
. It´s an attractive seaside town that apparently used to be a key base for the Portuguese to smuggle goods into the Spanish colonies. Or something like that. Anyway, it has the feel of a Greek island with it s cobbled streets, green plazas with pavement cafes and Mediterranean-influenced architecture. For some reason there are also a lot of very old cars parked along the streets that don´t look like they´ve been moved for many years. But it´s a town with a lot of character and is a welcome refuge from the heat and crowds of BA. We haven´t done much here apart from take a bike ride out to some of the beaches nearby (on possibly the worst bike I´ve ridden since I was 10 - no gears, steel frame and a saddle that might as well have not been there).
written by
phileasdogg
on January 20, 2009
from
Colonia del Sacramento
,
Uruguay
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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No hablo espanol
Buenos Aires
,
Argentina
So we´ve had a full week in Buenos Aires now, and apart from the searing heat, it´s been great. Strangely it seems to be hottest at around 4pm in the afternoon, and got up to 38 degrees the other day. The city reminds me a bit of Paris, with its wide boulevards and beautiful architecture (in places). In order to improve the old espanol I registered for beginners Spanish classes from 9am to 1pm Monday to Friday, and they were good fun. It was a good group of students (including Dolly Parton´s cousin!) and although I couldn´t be called fluent at the end of the week, I can probably now make myself understood in a restaurant which lessens the likelihood of ordering an intestine and anchovy pizza.
Spent one evening down at Cafe Tortoni, an Argentinian institution incorporating a restaurant upstairs and a tango show downstairs. I´m not sure where it stood on the tourist vs authentic axis, but it was an entertaining night out nonetheless. The body clock needs adjusting a bit out here. It seems nobody goes out before 10pm, and when we went for a night out on Saturday in Palermo, there was virtually nobody in the bar we were in until 1am. We were being escorted round by a guy from Buenos Aires, and by the time it got to 4am he told us we should go to this bar that would just be getting going! He seemed surprised when I explained that back home people would normally be passed out on their sofas with pieces of kebab stuck to their shirts.
There are some great street markets here, with impromptu entertainers performing all over the place (a higher quality variety than their South Bank equivalents) and the food has been good too. Although it´s difficult to get what you´d call a balanced meal here. If you order meat, you get a plate of meat, and if you order salad you get a huge bowl of salad. It doesn´t seem possible to get a steak and chips with a side salad. It´s one thing or the other. But the steaks are great! We went out for a day to a town in the Pampas which is Argentinian gaucho (cowboy) territory. Hoped to see poncho-clad gauchos on horseback lassoing errant cows, but sadly it was a bit tamer than that. But enough to get a sense of Argentinian history prior to the importing of culture from Europe in the 19th century.
Impressive city though it is, it is still a city with all the dirt and noise that goes with that, so it´ll be good to get down to Patagonia in a few days and get back to a bit of nature.
written by
phileasdogg
on January 18, 2009
from
Buenos Aires
,
Argentina
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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El otro, erm, side
Puerto Iguazu
,
Argentina
Apparently you've got to see the Falls from both sides to really appreciate them, so we hopped over the border into Argentina yesterday and took a boat ride out to the bottom of the Falls. Obviously got completely soaked but it's a great perspective. However, nothing else to do here, so straight on to Buenos Aires tomorrow courtesy of, yep, you guessed it, an overnight bus. The Argentinian buses are allegedly very comfortable. We'll see...
written by
phileasdogg
on January 15, 2009
from
Puerto Iguazu
,
Argentina
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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Muchos agua
Foz do Iguacu
,
Brazil
Another overnight bus trip, this one taking 18 hours. I actually slept pretty well, probably because I was so knackered from the night before. Anyway, reached the
Brazil
ian side of the Iguazu Falls, where
Brazil
, Argentina and
Paraguay
all meet on a baking hot day. They're spectacular for their range rather than their height or water flow. They stretch like one long curtain for what must have been well over a kilometre. Really very impressive. Couldn't hang around too long because it was so hot, but thankfully the place we were staying had a swimming pool. Also good to be able to sleep in a horizontal position for a change!
written by
phileasdogg
on January 9, 2009
from
Foz do Iguacu
,
Brazil
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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Bus boredom
Sao Paulo
,
Brazil
So the first overnight bus trip deposited us into Sao Paulo at 5am. And the next one isn´t until 8.30pm. Hmm, what to do? The bus was actually fairly comfortable, with seats that reclined 45 degrees, enough to make you think you should be able to sleep, but not quite enough to convince the brain that it´s a bed. So not much sleep was had.
Anyway, refreshed with a juice/granola breakfast snack (not quite up to Rio´s standards) we ventured forth to see the sights of Sao Paulo. And 15 hours was more than enough to see them! It´s not that it´s a particularly unattractive or unpleasant city, it just doesn´t seem to have much in the way of sights. There´s a lot of churches. And a lot of slab-sided skyscrapers that would get Prince Charles´s aesthetic radar twitching. But there´s no discernible centre to the city, just a bunch of areas loosely strung together. In the end it was quite a relief to get back on a bus, and I didn´t think I´d be saying that 15 hours earlier. Although the previous journey was only 5 hours, and this one is 16. Sooo glad we´ve booked a couple of flights for later on in the trip. I´ve had my fill of long-distance bus and train journeys on this trip!
written by
phileasdogg
on January 8, 2009
from
Sao Paulo
,
Brazil
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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More precipitation
Parati
,
Brazil
It seems my weather luck has followed me from NZ to South America! Arrived into Paraty yesterday afternoon to glorious sunshine, so went straight down to book up a day´s sailing for the following day. Needless to say the following morning produced grey clouds, which finally deposited their load mid-afternoon. The snorkelling and lazing on beaches just weren´t quite so appealing as they´d been 24 hours earlier!
So having decided that we might be better on land than water, we hired some bikes the following day and ventured a few kilometres out of town to see some waterfalls nearby. Again, having reached the furthest point out from town, the heavens opened. So got thoroughly soaked on the homeward journey. Hey ho. The waterfalls were lovely!
Paraty itself is an attractive old colonial town, with some beautiful old buildings arranged on a grid system along cobbled, traffic-free streets in the old town area. It´s a major tourist resort, so is fairly easy to get by without speaking Portuguese here. And although the weather has been a let-down, it´s been a relaxing few days here, just what was needed before the next leg of the journey - two successive overnight buses, one from Paraty to Sao Paulo and one from Sao Paulo to Foz de Iguazu. Not good.
As a slight aside, I´ve noticed South Americans make the French look positively uptight when it comes to PDAs (public displays of affection). Everywhere you go there are couples draped all over each other, engaging in most acts of affection bar actually stripping off and getting down to it. I can assure you that there´s nothing that ruins an appetite quite so much as seeing a pair of septuagenarians nibbling each other´s ears at the neighbouring table!
written by
phileasdogg
on January 7, 2009
from
Parati
,
Brazil
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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At the Copa, Copacabana...
Rio de Janeiro
,
Brazil
Ever since arriving in Rio I haven´t been able to get that damn Barry Manilow song out of my head. I thought they´d be playing it everywhere, but for some reason it´s all samba and rumba. Unbelievable!
Anyway, Rio is a naturally beautiful city with its mountains and beaches, but there´s been some fairly unsympathetic urban planning over the past 100 years or so, so the urban sprawl does detract a bit from the natural beauty in a way that it doesn´t in Cape Town, a similarly-sited city. Admittedly Rio´s population is much bigger than Cape Town´s. And Copacabana, where we´re staying, may have the reputation but as with Bondi in Australia, that doesn´t necessarily make it the best area. It´s choked with traffic, the beach is really crowded and it has a bit of a seedy feel to it. Ipanema, the next beach along is a much nicer area.
But anyway, Copacabana is where it all goes down on New Year´s Eve, so that´s where we headed, along with a couple of Caroline´s friends who are also out here on holiday. And it was a great night. There were about a million people down there, and all along the beach front there were street vendors selling all types of food and drink, including copious quantites of caipirinha, a drink that´s more likely to cause you to collapse through sugar OD rather than alcohol! And there was some great Latino live music going on too. The fireworks display at midnight was incredible, made even more spectacular by the presence of 7 ocean liners lined up off the coast, all lit up themselves.
In spite of the jet lag, we pushed through until 3am, then called it a night. Needless to say the following day was activity-free, though in the few days I´ve been here I´ve managed to get up the Sugar Loaf, and Corcovado which is home to the statue of Christ, and more importantly, affords a great view over the city. But perhaps the greatest thing about Rio is the juice bars which are all over Copacabana and Ipanema. They sell all manner of freshly made juices and smoothies for not much more than a pound each. I´ve come to the conclusion that a freshly squeezed mango juice with ice on a muggy afternoon in the tropics is an even better rehydrator than a cold beer, or dare I say it, a cup of English Breakfast tea!
Next stop is Paraty, a coastal resort about 250km south of Rio. Although now that it´s Brazilian holiday time, it might resemble the Costa del Sol in mid-August. Just without the fried egg and chips, or copies of the Mirror.
written by
phileasdogg
on January 3, 2009
from
Rio de Janeiro
,
Brazil
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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Travel lethargy
Mendoza
,
Argentina
Well I managed to negotiate my way on to the correct bus to
Mendoza
, and it was a spectacular ride up over the Andes. Although on some of the narrower roads with sheer drops on one side, it was a bit disconcerting to see small memorials erected seemingly every 500 metres or so!
I´ve been here for 3 nights, and although it´s been good to find some other English speakers, I actually haven´t done that much apart from reading and watching DVDs. Been suffering from jet lag, and have woken up at 3am every morning since arriving in South America, so been pretty tired during the day. And on top of that, I seem to have picked up some sort of infection on my lower back, with a swelling under the skin that´s quite painful to sit or lie on. I got a doctor to come out and he prescribed some antibiotics (that was a fun conversation with the chemist!) so hopefully it should sort itself out in a few days. So all in all not the greatest start to the great South American adventure!
Mendoza
is Argentinian wine country, so I did manage to get out on a wine tour for half a day, but a shame to miss out on some of the hiking opportunities around here. Still, plenty of those opportunities later in the trip. And I did manage to get my first (of many) Argentinian steaks. And when you order steak, that´s just what you get - a big lump of meat on a plate. And very tasty it was too. Anyway, it´s back to Santiago today, then a flight to Rio tomorrow where I meet up with Caroline, a friend from London who I´m travelling with for the next 5 weeks. And another language to learn - my Portuguese makes me look fluent in Spanish!
written by
phileasdogg
on December 29, 2008
from
Mendoza
,
Argentina
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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Christmas. Again.
Santiago
,
Chile
So because I crossed the international date line, I had the strange experience of leaving
Auckland
at 5pm on Xmas Day, and arriving in Santiago at midday on Xmas Day. And it was a bit of a chalk and cheese experience. NZ - nice brunch with KP, Brad and his family;
Chile
- in a bedroom that resembled a jail cell, no shops open so nothing to eat, and seemingly nobody who could speak English! Sniff, sniff.
It´s clear straight away that my Spanish is going to have to improve. Very quickly. Which shouldn´t be difficult seeing as I´m starting from a base of three words - Hola,
Gracias
and Que (and the third one is only thanks to Fawlty Towers). It´s not like being in Europe where you can be fairly sure that most people will know a bit of English, at least in the cities. Here, they don´t know any. So even the British method of just talking in English slower and louder is going to present problems. So I spent most of the second half of Christmas listening to Michel Thomas language tapes on my iPod and poring over the Lonely Planet Spanish phrasebook. Not necessarily one of my most memorable Christmas days, but needs must. And on the plus side, I´d learned enough after a few hours to book myself a bus journey over the Andes into
Mendoza
in Argentina tomorrow. At least I think I did. If no more blog posts follow this one then I obviously buggered it up!
written by
phileasdogg
on December 26, 2008
from
Santiago
,
Chile
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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End of chapter 3
Auckland
,
New Zealand
As if to rub my nose in it, Christmas Day in
Auckland
was an absolute blinder, in the high 20s. Went round to Brad´s place in the morning for a top-drawer Xmas brunch, then KP dropped me at the airport for the flight to Santiago.
New Zealand
has been good. The scenery is undeniably spectacular,
Auckland
and Wellington are both friendly, unintimidating cities, and the people are very friendly too. But I think my expectations of NZ might have been a bit high - everyone I know who´s been has loved it, and it didn´t quite hit those heights for me. The weather hasn´t helped - frankly it´s no better than the English climate, but I think the bigger thing for me is that, with only 150 years of history since Europeans arrived, there´s just not much character or soul to any of the places we visited - most towns seemed carbon copies of each other - just a bunch of prefabricated, box-shaped houses and shops set along a thoroughly practical street layout. And with only 4 million people in the whole country, a lot of the places I stayed at seemed virtually deserted. It´s that more than its geography that gives it a sense (for me) of overwhelming remoteness.
But in spite of that I´ve had a good time here, especially the north island with KP. But I´m ready to move on to the final, and longest leg of the expedition, South America, with stops in
Chile
,
Brazil
, Argentina,
Bolivia
and
Peru
. Now there´s a place that shouldn´t be short on character. Where´s that Spanish phrasebook?
written by
phileasdogg
on December 25, 2008
from
Auckland
,
New Zealand
from the travel blog:
Planes, Trains & Taxiwallahs
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