Black Belts and Farewells in NC

So, my return to NC has been short lived. My return was not all I had hoped it would be, not the triumphant return but more of a slow meticulous tally of all the things that can go wrong in a life when you aren’t looking. So, it is time to move on again; leave the crash site.

That being said, some good did come of the trip.

I’ve been practicing karate for a number of years. Last year, when my Sensei was sent overseas for military service, I helped out by teaching his younger karate classes. I got to know a number of great kids and help them to gain skill and confidence in the martial way. I taught the kids to break boards, perfect their techniques, and even fight. Wednesday night Fight Club was always my favorite, maybe because of the bruises more than despite them.

This past weekend was a culmination of sorts, when I got to go on a camping trip with them for some training in the woods with my Sensei since he returned. Imagine 3 black belts trying to manage 16 kids for three days in the woods. We had a great time training in all kinds of conditions and I finally was awarded my full Shodan (Black Belt) rank in Go Ju Ryu.

The touching part came when my Sensei gave me hsi personal belt; the belt that his sensei awarded him when my sensei received his Shodan.

I’m sad to be leaving, but I’m excited for what is coming. One day, maybe I’ll be returning to a real life, with a certain special girl and all the promise of family and career and a semi-normalcy. Until then, I am something of a wanderer; a vagrant. Lost.

~The Unyielding Wolf

Córdoba magic: Lomito Completo, and the Red Death

Labor Day. Meaning that no one is actually doing any labor. Non-labor-doing is something that Argentines take very seriously.

The town looked dead. We had booked some days at a place called Córdoba Backpackers. After much walking, and very little signage, we arrived at our chosen crashpad only to be met with some confused resistance. As it was labor day, the attendant did not want to check us in early, and informed us that we would have to come back later. No Problem, we decided, but wanted to use the wi-fi in the meantime. it was then we were informed just how non-labor-doing this particular hostel was.

No internet. No Breakfast. No coffee. Not dealbreakers, but for the price the hostel was asking these sort of things are generally included. In fact, the website said all these were included; still not a dealbreaker.

Up Next: Dealbreaker.

Initially, we were shown one price sheet containing the price we agreed to when we pre-paid for the first night in Córdoba
through the hostel in Mendoza. Then after a few moments, our attendant put that price sheet away and pulled out a new sheet with higher prices and informed us this was the “new pricing” effective that morning. Dealbreaker.

Joe and I grabbed our bags from the luggage storage where we had placed them upon arrival and went to take on the city. After much walking and growling of stomachs, we found a cafe with open doors. The owner, who lived there with his family, happily obliged our aching stomachs and weary legs with chairs, coffee, and the saltiest omelets the planet has ever seen; it was a King’s breakfast. We left renewed and refreshed in our quest.

We found another hostel soon, as recommended in the Lonely Planet book, but it was dirty, smokey, and smelled so bad, we didn’t even consider it despite the tempting price tag. Some time later we happened upon our lovely new home away from home, the Córdoba Hostel. This place was ready with a decent bed at night and coffee every morning. Wi-fi was dependable and it had a great courtyard out back with a completely unusable foosball table.

We immediately met a girl from Sweden upstairs in the computer lounge outside our door. I can’t recall her name, but she was perhaps the chattiest thing I have ever met, and in need of company. She was constantly inviting us to come travel with her or go to a certain place to see a certain thing during our stay. She had been in South America learning Spanish for some time; looking for acceptance more than a language.

There was another dark chocolate haired Israeli girl staying there that neither Joe or I ever dared to talk to. She was all thick curves, ink, and piercings; daunting to say the least.

It was around this time that I decided to go for a hike back to our initial hosteling attempt because I, in my post-all-nighter funk had left both bottles of Russian Death in the luggage locker room. Irresponsible of me, to say the least. I managed to recover them, and Joe and I successfully unlocked his phone and were now able to communicate with the outside world.

Now, on to the real reason we wound up in Córdoba: Pato.

Patricia and I first met in Cusco at the Loki hostel. We established contact again upon the arrival of Team Awesome in Córdoba and immediately started making plans. True to her word to show us the city, Pato was at our side almost every evening after she had finished with work and studies. We never would have made it without her.

Truly, Argentina was a journey of discovery for everyone involved. There were some rough spots for sure. And then there were the highlights. Ladies and Gentlemen, I present to you… the Lomito.

The Lomito is a conglomeration of foods that Joe almost never eats. Pork, Steak, Fried Eggs, Bacon, and a few other accessories. This sandwich was GREAT!  Joe and I vowed to recreate this back in the USA, but we never really got it right. Woe unto us. We first stopped at a Lomito place a few blocks from our hostel one night when we asked Pato to introduce us to some local cuisine. It was a hit.

Pato was our guide for all manner of adventures in Córdoba. Dinner was always an adventure. Like the “All you can eat Meat” restaurant; including cow throat (not that bad, and blood sausage. Joe didn’t really like that one.

Neither did Pato.

The Lomito was just the first of many successful forays into food. Pato was kind enough to bring us Mate. Mate, a special cup filled with Yerba and hot water, is something of an Argentine staple. On nearly every bench or patch of grass, one can observe locals sipping away on fantastic bombillas, straws, placed in all manner of cups, generally a special kind of wood sometimes wrapped in leather or metal. This stuff is pretty great. It goes well with breakfast, lunch, dinner, or late night snacking. Mate is a sort of fuel for the masses.

“Red Death” is rocket fuel for the Brave.

As Pato introduced us to mate, we thought it only fair to introduce her to the Russian Death. This stuff is spicy. Spicy like a time bomb. When it first hits the mouth, it is quite a lot to deal with. Most people equate it with jalapeños. Then in about 10 seconds, ones entire mouth simply explodes. I’m not sure what it is, but it reduced many people to tears and elicited a curse from more than one hapless experimental subject.

It was more than Pato could take. so, we decided to cut it with copious amounts of Red Bull. This is when things got interesting. The ensuing drink was dubbed, “Red Death.”

Results on test subjects are still pending, but the Red Death appears to be a total crazymaker; like batshit-hooliganism-helmetwearing-bonkers crazymaker.

We didn’t know this when we set off to dinner. Neither did the restaurant that allowed us in. We tried to find acceptable food in numerous locations.

We managed to find the only salad bar in Argentina. Then, we managed to turn it into a freakshow.

Argentine Spanish is unique in the world. They have words no other Spanish speaking country does and they have unique pronunciations for ‘y’ and ‘ll’ that them sound something like a cross between ‘j’ and ‘sh.’ This creates some interesting sounds, especially when pronouncing words like yo, meaning I. At this point Joe had been subjected to simply torrents of Spanish with only osmosis to really assist in interpreting. In the middle of a discussion between Pato and I over dinner, Joe sticks his hand out over the table and says, “Disculpe. Joe?”

We all laughed so loud and hard it was difficult to breathe for minutes. You really had to be there, but it may have been the funniest joke ever spoken aloud in multiple languages ever attempted by a human. I still laugh everytime I think about it.

Joe asks in retrospect, “How were we not kicked out? Or better yet, how did we not start an international incident?”

As previously noted several times, Joe had rarely a moment’s peace. he had been barraged by Spanish and ceaseless activity almost every waking minute of his trip; around two weeks. Patricia took us out to meet some of her friends and see the square where all the important speeches and New Years parties go down. We were all set to go out to the club when Joe finally lost his momentum and simply had to be put to bed.

Luckily for me, I found some Speed!

Patricia and her fantaaaastic friends took me out to a great, crowded club and we danced and joked all night. It was exactly what I needed. I was rolling in around 7 a.m. and was awoken a few hours later by light and noise to find Joe refreshed and ready.

After we had been in town for a couple of days and not gotten ourselves killed, Pato decided we should come hang out in her home town and kick it with her family. She gave us pretty explicit directions and we set off on the collectivo bus between Córdoba and her home town, “Onion River.”

A couple of stops before we were supposed to get off the bus, a somewhat soaked Patricia jumped onto the bus out of the rain that had just started up outside. Our aim for the day was to go see a cool lake near the Onion river. Unfortunately, inclement weather had added fog and enough rain to really dampen the experience. After we had climbed up to the dam, the rain bailed out and we actually got some cool views.

We spent the rest of the day playing with Pato’s sister, neice, and nephew. As soon as we showed the kids some photos from the racetrack Joe and I were instant heroes. We walked all around their town, sampled membrillo jam, took some great pictures, and saw two trees that had actually grown and fused into a single unit in the branches. I loved it!

Unfortunately, Pato couldn’t be with us every day, so we took the Fono Bus off to a city called Carlos Paz in the mountains. Neither of us really were struck by the city, but it was nice to get out and about, chill by the lake, go shopping at the Disco Supermarket and hang out with an old fighter jet they plunked next to main street for some reason. It was a lazy day and we both needed it.

The magic that Patricia brought to everything was evident, as we constantly had strange people from the hostel trying to follow us around and hang out. Sometimes it was welcomed; sometimes not. There was some awkward British kid hanging around us for a couple days looking for attention. I think Joe eventually scared him off.

It was with a heavy heart that we three convened on the morning of our last day together in Córdoba. We all took off for a walk to the nearby park and drank mate and goofed off.

We decided to have lomitos for a last meal of our Córdoba trio. The waitress really disliked Joe and after we explained that onions would kill him, she brought him a lomito filled with onion, so he and I had to switch. In honor of the homicidal waitress, we made a sauce with Danica Patrick mustard, salsa golf, and every other terrible ingredient we could find and dared one another to try it until a dog walked up begging for food. We got the dog to try it and he was instantly terrified of us and we were all quite glad none of us had tried it first.

On the trip back to the bus station, we all thought we would be late for the bus, but ultimately it was the bus that was super late, and we even had enough time to go buy some mate cups, bombillas, and Yerba to take with us. Patricia was simply fantastic, seeing us off on the bus and keeping in contact with us for the duration of the trip to make sure we didn’t gringo ourselves into any trouble.

One more super freaking long bus ride and we were bound for Iguazú and la garganta del Diablo!

How to get a police escort in Argentina

We knew things had reached a peak when Pablo offered us his ex girlfriend saying, “Two guys, no problem for her.”

Luckily for us, she was back in Buenos Aires and we were in Mendoza. I skipped a few steps there, so let me backtrack.

Mendoza is an easy night bus ride from Buenos Aires. It is an entire world away from what I would have considered my life even at the first of the year.

Retiro is the main bus station in Buenos Aires. It is also connected to both underground and overground train stations. This place is a transport hub. From here, you can link up with numerous bus companies to get you to just about anywhere. If you are fortunate enough to have time to ask around, you may run into the company San Juan Mar del Plata. This bus has waiters, unending hot and cold drinks, movies, wi-fi, wine, whiskey, and even serves damn good meals. This bus was the bomb, and was cheaper than any of the other top tier service providers that offered the same trip. 20 hours on a bus is no joke; ride in style.

The next morning as we shifted restlessly in our seats, wondering how to work the onboard coffee machine, a pair of large almond shaped eyes capped by brown hair and surrounded by a Native American tan peeked over the seat in front of us. She asked us in perfect English if we were from the USA. I could feel Joe tense up in the seat next to me; he was enthralled. Later, Joe would refer to her as “the hottest girl ever.” She had perfect straight teeth, and an infectious smile and laugh. Soon, she and Joe were talking about everything under the sun, in the way that people with nothing to lose can talk. We learned the word for grape, “uva.” We learned that the grapes from this area are dependent on the irrigation that runs down from the nearby mountatins. She told us that the best beef is always exported from Argentina, and that the recent push for soy was ruining the land it was planted on and causing a huge outcry from the farming community. She gave her name as Mirabelle and exited the bus at Villa Mercedes before we ever made it to Mendoza. Joe was nearly in shock afterward with the realization that he had spent nearly the last 20 hours next to this girl and only had an hour of conversation with her. Mirabelle, if you are reading this, Joe would like to propose.

We finally got off the bus in the warm light of morning and went to find ‘Shark’ to get a ride to the hostel. Shark was sadly nowhere to be found, as we were very far from the ocean, but we did find a phone and a taxi. When we arrived at our hostel,  the front desk paid the cab, true to their world, and saved us about $2.

If you ever want to go hang out with a bunch of misplaced Rastafarians, try the Hostel Internacional Mendoza. You’ll love it. They have free parties twice a week and the music is matched in its awfulness by its volume.

Mendoza has its own rhythm. It is something to adjust to after leaving B.A. We spent the entire day walking around the city, bought some groceries that were to provide us several meals for the price of what we usually spend on one meal out, and layed around in the central park occasionally climbing trees. Towards the end of the day we found the peatonal, a caminito of sorts, a walking mall directly south of the main plaza and above the main street of San Martin. Everyone in town walks through this place for some reason during the day.

In one of our trips to the Carrefour, a store that simply does not exist within the USA despite being the second largest chain in the world after Walk-Mart, Joe and I managed to come up with the makings of some great guacamole. Part of this particular dish being onions, it may actually kill Joe if he ever ate it as such. So the plan was to make up the guacamole up, including tomatoes, garlic, lime, etc, without the inclusion of the onions so we could separate out a portion for Joe and then add onions to the rest. This wasn’t exactly how things panned out. About halfway through tossing a handful of onions into the mix, I remembered that I may be handing out a death sentence to my companion and panicked. We managed to scrape the onions off to one side and salvage the dish, but it reminded me of how much people with severe food allergies really have to be on the lookout while traveling. This was a constant battle while were were abroad, leading to one of Joe’s first Spanish phrases, “sin cibolla” meaning “without onions.” This didn’t stop several waiters and chefs from making similar attempts on his life, but Joe is still alive today despite all our best efforts and a distinct daily overdose of motorcycles.

The next day we booked a trip to go hiking and rappelling (abseilling) in the Andes and visit some natural hot springs. My friend Joe had never gone rappelling, so I figured this would be a cool thing to do. It was quite fun, though no gloves were provided. When I asked the guide, Leo, why this was, he said it was because you couldn’t feel the rope with gloves on. I replied, “Isn’t that the point?” I don’t think he got it.

We did, though. Rappelling in the Andes was a great opener for my teammate Joe who had never tried it before. By the time we were done, we were very ready for the ensuing hot pools at the base of the cliffs. And what a surprise was in store for me. Yet again, I ran into this magnificently friendly French Canadian girl I met in Chile and en route to Machu Pichu. (Chica, if you are reading this, I apologize profusely for forgetting your name yet again! I tried to find you to get your email, but you were gone before I could find you again. If you email me, I promise to come meet up with you when I am in Canada so I can buy you a beer.)

The spa was lovely, hot, and quite picturesque. It was a full day of adventure and we rolled back into Mendoza with greatness in our minds. Instead, we simply went for a walk. Mendoza seems to center any activity around certain areas. there is a tourist part in the morth west, then 4 quadratic parks surround the main park downtown which connects to the peatonal. Again we found ourselves in the peatonal and went to the same restaraunt for lack of any grand ideas to drink a grape beer they had there. Our same waitress waas there and we actually got her name this time and had some fun chatting about the city and her life. Yoha, short for Johanna, was a gem! Despite the fact that Joe could understand almost nothing of what she said, she made the city really come alive for both of us; such was her charm.

Some nights of the week, the Mendoza Hostel International hosts a pizza party. If you are ever there and thinking of attending, I warn you it is a terrible idea, and for the sake of yoru health and sanity, you should avoid this cacophony of pain and horror. The hostel even offers all-you-can-drink tequila. Now, this is the first time in my life, I have ever heard of all-you-can-drink aaanything, let alone something as disaster filled as a bottle of tequila. Now that I have experienced this, and a couple other instances of all-you-can-drink, I can accurately tell you this is a horrible idea also. Just don’t do it. If you choose to drink, do it with quality, not quantity. This tequila was something reminiscent of cheap vanilla liqueur marinated in a radiator, then watered down runoff from a urinal. I mean it: don’t do it.

Obviously, to be able to say this so adamantly, I, solely for the sake of research, did do it. For any of you who have ever seen me drink tequila before, or have seen me on a neighbors lawn with no pants on after having drunk tequila, you know that this probably didn’t end well. Only my traveling partner knows just how wrong this went. And I hope he is not telling.

The following morning following the level of distaste, and perhaps disgrace, Joe and I had with this particular hostel had reached a breaking point. So we picked up and wheeled across town to check into another roughly equivalent hostel. It was here that we made the amazing and brilliant plan to get some bikes and go ride around to many of the wineries in the area. For the Mormons reading this, Mendoza is known for great wines and perhaps the best Malbecs in the world. Thanks to the worlds cutest couple, Max and Tasha, we knew that the place to get bikes was Mr. Hugo. We did not know that it would give us soooo much more.

We set off in the morning to the main train station, something of a crash site in itself with all the 4 a.m. arrivals lazing about until the hostels allow check-in. The directions to get to Mr. Hugo’s bike rentals are simple. Get on Bus 10, tell the bus driver you are going to Mr. Hugo’s, then get off when he tells you to or when everyone else does. With my newly acquired spanish skills this was less of a problem than it would have been several months ago. I’m glad we followed the directions.

Jumpin on bus 10, I informed our bus driver of our needs.

“My good man, we need to go to Mr. Hugo’s. Will you tell us when to get off?”

Yes, of course, get off right now.

“But we need to go to Mr. Hugo’s. We are taking bus 10, this bus, we just need to know when to get off.”

Yes, I know. Get off right now. You need bus 10, but not this bus 10. get the next one. I’m not stopping there.

I am Jose’s false start.

Eventually we manage to find the correct bus 10 along with several other travelers. As it turns out, we didn’t really have to worry about when to get off, as an emissary from Mr. Hugo’s climbed onto the bus a couple stops before we needed to get off so he could give we new pilgrims the directions to our Promised Land.

Mr. Hugo’s is a mildly orchestrated zoo on the surface; bikes are wheeling in and out of the front gate, a dozen languages are flying around, and for some reason, the owner was pouring out wine to all the renters, even though we were going to be riding around to wine tastings all day. When one of his kids (or grandkids) makes a grab for the wine vase I heard his wife tell them not to because it is the “Gringo Wine.” I’m not sure what that meant, but I downed a glass to take the edge off the hangover.

The bikes were everything I would expect from a bike rental place that caters mostly to low rent alcoholics; basic, bent parts, few gears, durable. I ask for one with a basket on the front because I could never get away with that crap in the USA. It was easier than wearing a backpack all day.

We immediately set out for sustenance. Which we didn’t know was about 7 km away… and we would have to wait for about 30 mintues after arrival for food to arrive. This particular winery, nameless as it shall remain, served us the usual meat con carne and some rather underwhelming wine derivates. This sets the pace for the day with the exception of two places.

Bodega Tempus Alba. If I had to pick one building in all my Latin American travels that I would most love to return to, it would be this winery; Italian man kissing aside. I’ll get to that in a minute.

After a day of muuuch bicycling, average wine and narrow misses with the traffic we were nearly ready to turn in. We knew there was something out there awaiting us, or neither Mendoza nor Mr. Hugo would be so popular. We found it. Tempus Alba is amazing. It lacks all of the rustic backwater feel that I had been surrounded by for months in Latin America. It is pure European svelte awesomeness. The music was fantastic lounge electronica, the fields were beautiful, the breeze was perfect, and the sun was just right. Then came the wine. If you could drink a mixture of silk and ambrosia it would taste very much like the wine we had at Tempus Alba. The only reason we left is that they asked us to leave because they had closed some time before.

On the way out of the winery, the owner came out to see us, as we had been there for much of the afternoon entertaining the employees and guests alike. I’m not sure what the hell he said, but he walked up to both myself and Joe and embraced us and gave us a heartfelt kiss on the cheek before asking us to return when we could. Joe and I walked out in a combined state of tipsy acceptance of our first mankiss, and set off for the only place we knew to still be open on the list of top sites; A La Antigua.

Antigua is unlike the other wineries in Mendoza in that it is not really a winery. Antigua makes all manner of things from chocolates to liqueurs including spreads, james, olive oil, etc. This is where Joe found Absinthe. This is where I found the Russian Death.

Yes, I said Russian Death.

The limiting factor of enjoyment at A La Antigua is that there are so many different things to try, that they cannot let you try everything, there are only so many items you can taste with your roughly $5 entrance fee, that you really must choose wisely. Joe went straight for the Absinthe. May I suggest… the Muerte Rusa.

Muerte Rusa. Russian Death. This overlong bottle of green liquid with questionable bits of hot chili pepper at the bottom, is a source of energy and mirth the like of which the world has never before seen. I didn’t know how powerful this stuff was when I bought two bottles of it. Had I know, I would have ordered a case to be shipped to the USA. More on this later.

Leaving A La Antigua, Joe and I were in a rather disheveled state. We had been up most of the night before drinking something awful. We started the morning with Bread con pan and Gringo Wine, then proceeded to Meat con Carne and about another 2 dozen glasses of wine over the day to finish with absinthe and Russian Death. This was the effing Olympics of drunken bicycle riding.

Joe and I have plenty of exprience riding things on two wheels; we race motorcycles. We have plenty of experience crashing things on two wheels; we race motorcycles. That being said, there was surprisingly little crashing on this particular day; more like a sloth race meandering back and forth across a lane of traffic powered by laughter and Spanglish. It wasn’t long before we were seen for the world class maniacs that we were.

By the Policia.

The Argentine paddy wagon appeared behind us rather suddenly and crept along at our snails pace for a block or two. We eventually noticed it and then decided to continue on our way and see what happened.

Then the lights came on.

Blue lights sprayed the walls and pavement around us like a K-Mart firestorm. Joe turned to ask me if they were pulling us over. I assured him with the certainty of the Righteous that if they were, then they would use the sirens; we were cool to keep going. For once, I was right. The police followed us for what seemed like miles with their lights on until we could get back the relative safety of Mr. Hugo’s courtyard where Mr. Hugo and his family had a full blown party going.

Among this fiesta were a few very cool cats from New Zealand and some local boys. Gringo Wine was flowing like water and madness tinged the conversation everywhere. The Kiwis talked tirelessly about their home country and the greatness there. Black sand, white sand, red sand, jade forests, double rainbow fish, the list went on and on. As all of us steadily marched our sodden parade toward drunkenness Mr. Hugo and the family made the rounds telling all the extranjeros that the last bus 10, the correct bus 10, was pulling up in a few minutes. Winding everything up, tipping the cups, I noticed that the local boys weren’t faring too well, stumbling a bit more than the rest and talking at loud volumes with our Kiwi friends. The locals revealed that there truck was parked outside and recommended everyone pile in and go party in town. Even Joe and I knew this was a matter of taking your life in your hands, but the Kiwi bunch, undaunted, jumped into the back of the truck and it ripped off into the night and what could well have been it’s final voyage.

Tango being one of the large motivating factors for my stay in Argentina, I wanted to keep up the practicing while in Mendoza. While lessons were a little harder to come by, there is a tourist information bureau near the southern end of the peatonal that has fliers and information for lessons and milongue. One of them takes place in the lower level of a bank. This was the first one I attended. It was wonderful. Gone were the silly tourists, absent were the aging experts; the room was filled with 20 and 30 something women and men who seemed to be having a great time. It was time well spent. I was constantly being reminded of what a bad dance partner I was, but I made definite improvement towards the end of the class, and with renewed vigor I made plans to attend two more classes that week at other locations. This didn’t work out so well, since at both the other occasions, the mix of attendees was never as favorable, including mostly old expert couples and first time tourist males. This just meant Joe and I spent more time with our favorite waitress, Yoha.

It was at this restaraunt that I met my all time favorite beggar of all time. Joe and I were deep in conversation over grape beer when a young man rocked up and asked us for money… for an operation for one of his sick family members. We politely declined. He then looked at the table, pointed, and asked, “Then, can I finish your beer?”

Instant Classic.

Eventually, our time in Mendoza was drawing to a close. The first Argentine I had ever met, Pato, lived in Córdoba which was almost en route to our intended destination of Puerto Iguazú and the Iguazú Falls that join Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina in an otherworldly wet mess at the Devil’s Throat. Joe and I decided to reward ourselves with a night out and some good food. In the often-wrong Lonely Planet guide there was a recommendation for a pasta restaurant that had amazing sauces; 390 Pasta.

This is where we met Pablo. This is where things went mad.

Things started out innocently enough with a bottle of wine. For some reason, the outside seating area was unpopulated despite the majesty of the late summer evening. Joe and I were free to talk loud and long with Pablo, our host at 390 Pasta. Initially, this went smoothly, Pablo made magnificent recommendations for sauce and wine pairings, he managed to keep the onions out of Joe’s food, and even made sure our dipping sauce for the bread was constantly refreshed. Somehow, we felt a fast friendship with Pablo, as he felt one for us. Pablo started bringing us free glasses of other wines to try out, then gave us the name of a friend across town who would hook us up with similar treatment if we mentioned his name, writing the information on a brown paper bag for us. Then he brought out some desserts we hadn’t ordered simply because he thought we would like them. And we DID! Then new wine, then champagne, then coffee, all of which simply appeared, unbidden and gratis. Soon we were discussing travel plans with Pablo, he was giving us recommendations and directions on what to avoid and what we must not miss. When he found out we were planning to return to Buenos Aires before leaving for the USA, his eyes lit up. He said we must call his ex gf when we arrived. She would show us around. “Great,” we agreed. This seemed harmless enough and was quite welcome. Then he hit us with a bombshell.

“She take good care of you. Two guys at once, no problem for her. You will see. You must call her.”

Joe and I both decided it was time to take our leave of Pablo before things reached any more new and uncharted territories.  Soon we were off to the Bus station to hop yet another 20 hour bus ride to Córdoba and our new friends.

We awoke in a new city, famished and blearily tired, on the morning of a national holiday that, for we foreigners, simply meant no one was working: no one was serving food, or coffee, or driving a taxi. All of this took a back seat to the one burning question in our minds: Where was our hostel?

Buenos Aires Photo Gallery

Buenos Aires was HUGE for me. This place was a constant wonderland filled with amazing characters. Despite getting my camera stolen just a few days into the adventure, we managed to get a ton of pictures of everything we ran into. Here are some of the highlights that are just too good to keep to myself.

Buenos Aires and the reunion of Team Awesome

It is hard for me to actually put into words just how excited I am about this one.

After over three months of traveling solo, I am about to be reunited with one of my closest mates.  Traveling from the USA to Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, and now entering Argentina, I am looking forward to actually having a full fledged traveling partner!

Back in the USA, my team mate, Joe is winding down an extensive career with a rather sizable software company. Not sure what to do with himself he decided to come down to South America and relax for a while to burn off some vacation days in between trips to the race track. Team Awesome Racing (often referred to as Team F@#$%*^ Awesome, or Certified Awesome) started up last year rather unexpectedly, as most good things do. We had a great run last year and are moving forward this year with the addition of another rider in my absence.

Joe was the reason that my schedule over the previous few weeks was something of a concern. I needed to get out of Peru, through Bolivia, Chile and Argentina to make it to Buenos Aires in time to catch him at the airport. I made it, but just barely. The Manuel Tienda Leon bus leaves from across the park from the main bus terminal downtown. It is 45 Pesos per person, so if you are rolling solo, this is a pretty decent deal. If you are two or more people, flat rate taxi to or from the airport should be 110 pesos. Don’t pay more than that. One soon-to-be-poor british kid got charged 330 pesos

America to America may not seem like such a big jump, but it can be taxing. So I decided to take it easy on Joe for his first day. After reaching the old Milhouse, we dumped our bags and set off on a walking tour of Recoleta for the rest of the day. Brilliant!

We discovered markets, parks, weird facts about the city, gigantic space flowers, confusing menus, and the fact that 5 years in country gets you a shot at citizenship with Argentina. Lunch was a lesson in typical customer service in Buenos Aires. Everything took inordinate amounts of time, the waitress simply seemed to forget our table and the fact that she was at work a number of times, and nothing really came out quite as we ordered it. It is just something you need to get used to in B.A.

Finally, we came to the Recoleta Cemetary. This is on every “must see” list for Buenos Aires, and I was guardedly excited to see what the buzz was all about. It is quite remarkable.

Recoleta is an eyeful. Ghosts walk the ways, accompanied by gangs of cats that feed on the rats that feed on the leftovers of the ghosts. Names of the rich and famous adorn every crypt in the cemetery. Eva Peron, better known as Evita, is buried here under her maiden name. As it happens when the last member of a rich family dies and no one can continue to pay for the crypts, the bodies are exhumed, buried elsewhere, and the crypt and space is sold to the highest bidder. Often this results in renovations to the existing marble; construction supplies and chunks of demolished marble are not uncommon. This is certainly a place to see.

I mentioned the name Milhouse earlier. Milhouse is the name of Buenos Aires’ “premier party hostel.’ There are two buildings a short ways away from one another and there are things to do every day and night. It also holds free tango lessons a few nights a week, organizes transport to Tango shows and is a short walking distance from La Ideal; an awesome Tango hall that holds classes and milongas almost every day of the week. As learning the Tango was the main reason for my trip to Argentina, this makes Milhouse the place for me. Here are some highlights.

I can’t say enough good things about the staff at the “old” Milhouse. They were endlessly engaging, entertaining, helpful, and all around awesome. They helped us with walking tours, bike tours, tango lessons, directions, reservations at restaraunts, tickets to the Ministry of Sound party at Pacha and answered our every retarded extranjero question. If you get the chance, go there!

This is not to take anything away from the staff at the “new” Milhouse. They were great, too. One of them actually ran several city blocks to return a camera part I had forgotten in their hostel, catching us just before we got on the subte (subway). I just felt that the experience at the “old” Milhouse was a little more personal. I attribute this to the fact that the older building is smaller, housing less people, and allows the staff a few extra moments to help you out.

It is almost impossible for me to sum up how weird, welcoming, and wonderful my experiences in Buenos Aires were. There was so much to see and do and touch and smell and taste that it was an endless playground/disaster area for the senses. After being so enamored with Colombia, I was a little shocked to find that I fell in love with Buenos Aires so fast. After pickpockets, thieves, cocaine addled taxi drivers, and parties that didn’t start until 2 a.m., I guess you could call the city just that: Shocking.

San Pedro de Atacama, Chile

I knew that getting out of San Pedro would be a challenge, but I thought I had timed it right. I was wrong.

Timing is pretty difficult in Latin America for a North American. Punctuality is encouraged and expected more than most places in the world short of Japan. To try to plan trips and meals and a life in a place where noone is on time and nothing ever happens by the clock is something of a challenge. Hence, I am stuck in Chile.

San Pedro is a tourist trap. In the purest sense of the word. The bus for Salta, Argentina only runs three days a week. It runs Friday morning. It left about an hour before I arrived. Timing.

There are a couple bus agencies that leave out of San Pedro, but for wheer honesty, I recommend Geminis. The other main agency told me a bunch of crap to try to get me to spend my money there. The moneychangers here are also ridiculously crooked. Use the ATM for mey if at all possible. San Pedro is also riddled with tourist agencies offering all manner of things to do like:

  • Bike Tours
  • Sandboarding
  • Geysers
  • Sightseeing

Me, personally; been there, done that. So I decided to use the couple days respite I had been given and catch up on some writing and learn the town. San Pedro really has one main street; Caracoles. You’ll find most of the restaurants here and a good number of gift shops. San Pedro also has the cheapest bandannas I have ever seen. Even cheaper than Wal-Mart in the USA, which is no mean feat.

The most important thing in San Pedro is this: do not eat cheap meat or consume cheap milk products. Things like cooling and refrigeration are considered something of a luxury this far out in the desert. Hence, many of the budget restaurants, simply do not have refrigerators for their food. It is not uncommon for the meat to simply sit out overnight. Be wary!

Food prices run the gambit in San Pedro, so shop around. I will tell you that you can pay whatever price you want and eat well here. I will tell you that you should spend a few lunches simply bouncing around to the nicer restaurants and just having a coffee or a beer. Each of the nicer restaurants generally has a special type of small layered bread and some amaaaazing sauces that they serve as a free appetizer. This stuff is great! There is a restaurant on the main drag that serves a vegetarian lasagna that I maintain is the best Italian food I have eaten in my entire life. I wish I could remember the name of that place.

I spent a pleasant couple days in San Pedro simply catching up on my journal writing. unfortunately, I didn’t write much about Chile, just about the other countries I had been lazy in documenting. San Pedro also has blindingly fast internet when compared to anywhere in Bolivia so I was finally able to back up all my pictures. Though, as I was holed up in a hotel room or a cafe writing most of the time, I didn’t take many pictures of the pueblo itself.

The hostel I stayed at, Hostal la Ruca ( a place I highly recommend), had a number of fantastic characters staying there as well. Among the best were Sophie and Nick. A couple who had been off traveling consecutively since 2008. They were full of great advice, neat stories, and smiles. I eventually even swapped ipod contents with Sophie and made off with all her good music!

San Pedro is absolutely perforated by hawkers. Every street you walk down you will be constantly waylayed and hollered at, sometimes even followed for blocks, by people trying to get you to come purchase their services or tours. Get ready for it.

My second morning in the city, I was feeling quite good after a decent nights sleep in the agreeable temperature and decided to go out for breakfast. As I was seated for my 3,500 peso breakfast, an older woman sat down at another table nearby. I asked her if she was flying solo this morning, and she informed me she was with someone.

“Here?” I queried. We were the only two people in the place.

“Well, not in the building, but I have a friend.”

“That must be very lovely for you. Congratulations on making a friend!” I joked. She was not amused.

Eventually she came and sat at my breakfast table and we swapped stories of traveling and the things we had seen. Then things got wierd.

“Well, you don’t seem American at all,” She said.

“Why do you say that?” I asked.

“Well, you know, Americans are quite stupid.” The words seemed to float from her mouth and just hang there in the air for a tencount while I did mental monkeybars to keep a straight face and see where this was going. She obligingly continued.

“Americans, as a whole are so uncultured. They are oblivious to the world around them. They are rude, and ignorant, to be sure.”

I don’t know what my face looked like as she said all this. I was doing my best to keep stoic, but it certainly wasn’t easy. After several more minutes, I realized she actually had completely missed the fact that she had insulted me, my entire family, and the vast majority of everyone I had ever met. She just didn’t connect the dots. Every negative thing she said, she seemed to just be describing her own actions. Finally, I had had quite enough and put some money on the table for the bill and excused myself to go back to my journal.

A few days of rest and relaxation were a godsend after the trundling dust covered frozen highlands leaving of Atacama, but I was on a virginaly tight schedule. I had managed to pad two days into my schedule through sheer luck, but those days had been eaten alive by San Pedro bus schedule. Now it was time to get the heck outa Dodge. On the walk to the bus with Nick and Sophie, I encountered the delightful French Canadian girl from my ill fated Machu Pichy excursion. I feel like a retard because even now I can not remember her name! We talked for a while about what had transpired since we last crossed paths, and I found her to be genuinely good natured and honestly care about the people around her even though were were hapless traveling flotsam. This is of particular note as my experience with most French Canadians has been decidedly negative. Much like the old French woman I had breakfast with in San Pedro.

The bus ride from San Pedro, Chile to Salta, Argentina is no joke. The ride takes the better part of half a day, and covers a great deal of boring terrain and many, many curvy roads. I have gotten into the habit of packing motion sickness pills as I almost lost it a few times on particularly windy bus rides. Sophie confided in me that she often gets motion sick, but bravely declined my last motion pill, saying she should be fine.

This was not the case.

Eventually, Sophie rejoined us from her trip to the lavatory and I gave her my last motion pill in case things made a resurgence and she soldiered on. There was a strange old man sitting next to Sophie who, according to her, had been around almost the entire world. His wife had died a couple years back, and now he was traveling to Argentina, the one country he hadn’t really explored because he wanted to see it before he died.

Our traveling gentleman handed me his camera at one point, refusing to speak English, instead speaking in his native French and gesticulating with sign language. This, I decided, was worth being answered in kind. He wanted a picture of the landscape out my window. Instead, what he got was a fashion show of me, the Canadian next to me, Sophie, and every wild face we could possibly make as he wildly gestured and babbled for me to return his camera to him until we three were all laughing too hard to even lift a finger to click the camera buttons any more. I mean it when I say that this is the hardest any of us have laughed in our entire lives. This simple shenanigan is the funniest (sic) thing I did in my entire Latin American trip. Fun with cameras. Fun with seniors.

At the border crossing into Argentina, I met a monk of the Order of John the Baptist. He had been regaling Nick with wonderful Christian stories the whole bus ride. It nothing else, it made for a good picture.

After a LOOOONG bus ride watching random scenery and the fruits of the dreaded Canyon Lasers ™, we all arrived rather late in Salta, AR. When you get there, take a moment to talk to the employees of the local hostels wandering the terminal; they are quite helpful. There is free wireless at a bakery at the North(?) end of the terminal if you need to do some research. Welcome to Argentina. Let the games begin!

The Atacama Exodus and the famed Chile Border Crossing; Uyuni Day 3

There were no neighbors. Just piles of rocks and holes in the ground. The fart smell of steam, the welcome scent of gas cans in orange pyramids on top of the jeeps. The Atacama Geysers.

This morning was cold, as I mentioned before, and nearly lightless. The geysers that had drawn us out of bed at around 4 a.m. As you can see I was still a little bit punchy.

All the cold and steam and early morning lead up to an amazing sunrise over more wild landscapes.

Driving through the wilds of the Atacama, we were promised a reward of natural hot springs and a delicious breakfast. The hot springs, we were told, had changing rooms built around them to shelter you fromt the wind and cold while you suited up and down. it was a beautiful sight.

The food had been getting better the whole trip. The first day was a little lackluster but had been improving the entire time. Today was no exception, though there is only so much you can do so far from what passes for civilization in Bolivia. From here it was off to the Chilean border. A border crossing that was notorious for not allowing anything resembling food or drink across. Everyone, myself included, was divesting themselves of food items, handing them over to people traveling into Bolivia or just throwing them in the garbage. The border was something of a minimalist statement. Yes, that dot in the distance is a guy on a bicycle. Yes, there are people crazier than me in the world.

For some reason, another girl who had to make the crossing with us thought she could sneak a llama fetus through the border. For a peek of what these look like, check this out. My first impression is that if they are stopping Pringles cans, they may balk at letting dessicated unborn animal carcasses. 😀

The border was pretty tame as far as crossings are concerned, other than waiting around for a while. One thing to note about crossing into Chile, by bus there is no fee. If you are flying into Chile, there are reciprocity fees totaling around $135 USD for a U.S. citizen. Since this whole trip is el cheapo, I’m glad I made it by bus. 🙂

The Atacama High Desert; Day 2 of Uyuni Tour

It’s cold. The kind of cold that makes you think about what good firewood the bodies of your friends would make. We are all just meat popsicles. I can see my breath in the air in front of computer screen. We had two hours of power earlier from a gas generator somewhere on the premises growling away in the evil night. It was enough to cook some food and drink a toast with our strange band of travelers.

In the predawn flashlight my thermometer reads minus 8 Celsius… inside our hotel room. Yesterday was a picturesque but challenging day.

I first had an inkling of what we were in for when our guide bought a large sweatshirt at a snack stop in the morning. Seriously, the guides will not tell you how cold it is going to be. Our guide did warn us about the elevation; which in itself is no joke. 5000 meters above sea level is the real deal. Most of us had coca leaves and catalyst to chew on to alleviate some of the effects and I had some elevation sickness medication as well.

Even with all this it was quite easy to be short of breath after a short run, people were burning from the sunshine relatively quickly, and the cold was bitter even in full sunlight as there was little protection from the wind. For both sun and wind protection, I resort to bandanas. Again. I would encourage anyone traveling anywhere to bring several bandanas.

We did get to see some amazing rock sculptures while truckign through the desert. It really was this beautiful.

The rest of the day was less impressive to the color impaired people on the trip. We spent a large remainder of the day visiting lagoons of varied colors (red, green, blue, brown, silver, etc) and looking at the flamingoes that were indigenous to each pond.

Parts of the trip truly felt like another planet; As if we were stranded on another planet. Nothing but odd tracks through the rocks for as far as the eye could see. This is not a place to explore on your own unless you are insanely well prepared… and insane. Trust me, stay on the barely beaten path for Atacama and Uyuni.

Now preparing to leave the negative 8 hotel for the last day of our Atacama Uyuni tour, I am glad that I’ll be heading on to Chile instead of trying to make the entire return drive in one day, as many of my compatriots will be doing later.