Saturday, March 24, 2007

A slow news day...

Mar del Plata, Argentina

March 23, 2007
S 37°59.389
W 057°32.687

Good news, the weather report was wrong for today. The forecast predicted a 90% chance of rain, but when we woke at 10:00 AM the skies were slightly overcast with no rain in sight.

We headed out for coffee (not the hotel breakfast), to test the weather, and figure out what we the day may hold for us. As we walked to the coffee shop, we noticed people pulled out all of their winter jackets over night; they were wearing scarves, down jackets and boots. We comfortably strolled the streets in our shorts, t-shirts and Tevas in the slightly cool 69° F weather. These people obviously don’t know cold… they need to take a little trip to Torres del Paine.

We decided it wasn’t a beach day since there was an offshore breeze that cooled things down a little too much and was causing an occasional sand-storm. Instead we went for a long walk, bought our bus tickets for Buenos Aires and found a festival in the park playing live music. Marc was very excited to hear music live, especially the familiar riffs of Stevie Ray Vaughn.

We finished the day with beers and dinner at the Cevezeria Artesenal. We arrived right when they opened, at 8:00 PM, and managed to have a beer before the place was too packed. By 8:45 PM the entire pub was standing room only and a line was out the door when we left at 10:30 PM.

We slowly walked the mile back to Hotel Gran Manila and called it a night at 11:30 PM. I guess we won’t be hitting the night-clubs in Buenos Aires; everything we’ve read says if you arrive before 3:00 AM you’re a nerd… I guess we’re nerds.

Tomorrow is supposed to be perfect weather; at least perfect for the beach. If so, we’ll be heading to the beach for sure—right after our morning coffee.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Breakfast, Pork and Lesbians...Next!

Mar del Plata, Argentina

March 22, 2007
S 37°59.389
W 057°32.687

24x7x365: Marc and I have an ongoing debate about the “free” breakfast included in our room fee. Marc feels the coffee sucks, the pastry and juice are shitty and he is going to go out and pay for it anyway, so why should he waste his time? Marc wants to ask for a refund and take the money… it seems he doesn’t understand this isn’t “Let’s Make a Deal” and not everyone is Monty Hall. Me, being the budget conscious one, still encourages the breakfast… you don’t know what it will be like until you try it, right? We’ve stayed in several places without even trying the “free” breakfast, but today I stressed we give it a shot before heading to the local coffee shop.

We don’t eat much for breakfast to begin with; we typically have a cup of coffee and one medialuna, or croissant. Most locals order two medialunas with their coffee, but we are fine with one. The majority of hotel breakfasts include medialunas, toast, coffee and juice—right up our alley, so why don’t we take advantage, right? I convinced Marc to give the breakfast a try today, if the coffee sucked then I would give up on the breakfasts. Well, the jury is still out! The coffee was better than anything we ever had in Chile, but that’s not saying much… more to come.

We got a little beach time today before we realized the sun wasn’t going to burn-off the clouds and headed back to our hotel. We showered and went out for a nice walk to find the local Cevezeria Artesanal that opened at 8:00 PM. We were too early to grab a beer; we weren’t ready for one anyway, but really just out on a walk to check out a different part of town. After the Cevezeria reconnaissance, we crossed the street to check out a Parilla that just slapped a couple sides of pig and lamb on the rotisserie. We thought to ourselves it might be a good place to come back to for dinner.

Rain started coming down as we headed back to the center of town; we ducked in between store fronts in an attempt to stay dry. We hop-scotched back to the Gran Hotel Manila and spent a couple hours drying off and relaxing, before venturing out for the evening. Our plan was to hit the Cevezeria and make our way back to the center for dinner.

We found our way back to the microbrewery without getting wet. When we walked in we immediately saw coasters and posters from different microbreweries all around the world—including Sierra Nevada and San Francisco Brewing Company. We sat down and made ourselves comfortable at the long bar… we each had two beers, the first one was okay for both of us—Porter and Scotch, but nothing to write home about. The second beer—Imperial Stout and Creamy Stout—were both excellent. After we finished the second drink, it was close to 10:00 PM and we figured we should find a place for dinner.

As we walked out of the microbrewery the rain was coming down in buckets. Instead of heading back to town we decided to take a chance on the Parilla we saw earlier in the day.

Marc ordered the beef and I ordered the pork, which was one of the meats we saw on the rotisserie earlier. We tried pork at other parillas, but tonight was a different story. The meat arrived at our table—a big steak and five silver dollar size chunks of pork. I was immediately overwhelmed and thought we would be taking half of this meat back to our room and placing it in our mini-fridge. I was wrong.

The beef, delicious as always, matched perfectly with the tasty chimichuri. I didn’t have high expectations for the pork, but my mind quickly changed after one bite. It was absolutely fantastic, as it should be, since the pig was gutted and skewered on the spit in the restaurant—you can’t get fresher than that!

We both shared the beef and pork and decided the pork actually won the contest tonight. We were very pleased with our decision to try the parilla and thanked the rain for driving us into this incredible find. It was still raining when we walked outside; giddy with our find, we decided to walk back “home” and enjoy the weather.

We decided to sleep in tomorrow and skip the free breakfast. We will find something on our own terms.

BTW… has anyone seen the show MTV NEXT? We are lucky enough to watch this show on a regular basis since it’s one of the few English language shows on Argentinean TV. Marc decided he loves NEXT as soon as we saw the lesbian version. Nothing like watching hot 19 year old lesbians banter in pre-scripted sexual innuendo… oh how we miss American television.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

American Express or Visa?

Mar del Plata, Argentina

March 21, 2007
S 37°59.389
W 057°32.687

We had a great day on the beach. The weather was perfect, nice and sunny with occasional clouds to provide a little shade. I realized this is the first time I have ever been in the Atlantic Ocean; I’ve seen the Atlantic, but never actually put my foot into it. The water was cool, but nothing like the bath water in Montanita, Ecuador. As for Marc, he first set foot in the Atlantic Ocean on his cross-country trip with Mike; if you want to see the videos, just give Mike a call.

We know we should be over it by now, but we’re still baffled by the whole concept of Sietsa. However, we finally know what everyone does during siesta, at least in Mar del Plata. We arrived at a fairly empty beach right around noon today. At 1:30 PM the beach slowly started filling up with locals. They ate their lunches, relaxed, and some jumped in for a swim; the exodus started around 3:30 PM—just in time for siesta to end at 4: 00 PM. This definitely helps explain why everyone has such a great tan.

The only people at the beach the entire day were retired folks. We think Mar del Plata is the equivalent to Argentineans as Del Boca Vista, Florida is to New Yorkers. With a beautiful beach like this, who can blame them? Apparently, during summertime, the beach is so packed with tourists and retirees that there isn’t even room to walk. Luckily we arrived during the low-season… we definitely prefer walking room and a little space to breath when we hit the beach.

After a few hours in the sun we decided to do a little yoga. We found a fairly remote spot on the beach. The session was great in the sun, but we were completely covered with sand when we finished. We made tracks back to our room (stopping first to pick up a few cold beers) for a good shower to get all of the sand off of us—well, we got most of it.

Other big news today—Marc shaved off the Grizzly Adams beard he grew in Torres del Paine. It served its purpose in the cold, but in this beautiful beach weather it just makes him hot and he said it was starting to make him feel mangy.

Other notes:

The place we are staying, Gran Hotel Manila, is listed as a 3-Star hotel (0ur strained view of the beach is above). Clean with a private bathroom; our only hard requirements. Marc thinks the bidet is a nice bonus; he believes the bidet may be the only valuable contribution France has made to the modern world. The place has some character as well as characters… especially the old man who works the evening shift.

The little old chap is probably is in his mid-to-late 70’s and hard of hearing. When we checked in yesterday, it took us at least 15 minutes to complete the registrar with him. He would ask a question, we would give him an answer, a correct answer, and he would ask again. For example, what nationality are you? Are you Canadian? We responded Estados Unidos. He then asked us if we are English. Sure dude, we´re English. We figured it was easier than going through the list of countries with him again.

After we finally finished the registrar, literally 15 minutes later. We gave him our AMEX card and he tried to read it upside-down... first sign of trouble. After several failed attempts swiping the card through the new-fangled contraption he actually handed us the machine. When the machine gave an error, he would simply unplug the machine and plug it back in again. This went on for at least ten minutes; us attempting to decipher the Spanish abbreviations on the card reader and him explaining (in Spanish) how it “should” work.

We finally suggested a Visa card… “Ahhhh, si, si, si, si! Visa es muy bueno!” he replied. We allowed the old-timer two tries with our Visa card when it was apparent he had no fn clue what he was doing (obviously not his fault… just a training issue). We suggested cash… “Ahhhh, si, si, si si! Efectivo es muy bueno!” and we headed out the door to find the nearest ATM.

We wondered why the hotel is paying a monthly fee to Visa, Mastercard and AMEX when their own employees clearly can’t use the machines. We knew better than to “ask why”… for some things down here it’s just the way it is.

We gave our night-clerk 400 pesos and all was good. The whole process was mind-boggling! We finally got in our room, took a shower and headed out to dinner a bit later. When we came downstairs old-timer was taking a little siesta in the lobby chair with the television blaring. We didn’t want to wake him (he had a hard day – new fangled contraptions and all) so we left our key on the counter and attempted to head out the door. Unfortunately, the door was locked and we had to wake him from his slumber to unlock the door to let us out.

When we returned home around midnight old-timer was still at his post, standing guard, at the Gran ol’ Manila… no wonder he needed a siesta!

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Back to the beach...

Mar del Plata, Argentina

March 20, 2007
S 37°59.389
W 057°32.687

I insisted we sit on top of the double-decker bus for our ride to Mar del Plata. I really wanted to see the views from the top as we crossed the countryside and had our first views of the Atlantic Ocean.

Well, we sat on the top of the bus, and next time I will request a seat on the bottom. We had the very front seats and could see everything happening right before our eyes—this included all the near misses as we passed one semi-truck after another. Being on the second level you’re farther from the bus’ center of gravity; thus every little shimmy and shake is greatly accentuated sitting 15 feet above the pavement. As we traveled down the narrow two lane road the on-shore winds didn’t help the situation. With the wind ripping I was amazed at how our driver passed trucks—including those coming towards us. We felt every single truck we passed accompanied by a loud WWWHHHOOOSSSSHHH! I finally put the curtains up in front of me to avoid seeing the road and to protect us from the blazing sun.

After seven and a half hours we arrived safely in Mar del Plata to an abundance of sun, beach cabanas, and thong bikinis. We found a little place to stay two blocks from the beach, and we even have a slight ocean-view if you strain your neck.

24x7x365:
We’ve received a few questions about how we’re doing as a couple being together every day, all day long. We’ve been together 24x7 for the past 70 days and probably a little more since we had time together preparing for the trip.

We’re doing very well and get along great… Marc thinks so too ;-). There have been a few tense situations like the “bag incident” and a few misunderstandings with locals due to our inability to fully understand the language. This doesn’t result in any serious issues between the two of us. We’re able to get by with the limited Spanish, but there are times when we don’t have a clue what is being said. We normally just laugh these issues off… what else can you do?

We definitely know each other’s annoying habits, most we knew before the trip, but some are new or more exposed being together 24x7. Marc started making fun of me and my stray hair fetish. I don’t like it when I can feel a hair on my shirt, tickling my arm or chest, and I have to find the damn thing. This sometimes results in us stopping and searching for this one annoying hair. Other examples include Marc’s knuckle cracking or post beverage burps… classy American.

Another challenge that Marc finds funny and I find frustrating is dinner conversation. As most of you know, Marc already tends to be a man of few words. But when we are together all day long, and see and do the same things, dinner tends to be me talking about nothing in particular and Marc occasionally nodding. We figure when we get to Buenos Aires we will spend a few hours apart a day while I attend Spanish Classes and Marc takes pictures.

Overall, I think we enjoy every minute, well almost every minute we spend together, and would hate to see something during the day that the other misses. This way we see all the great sites and share all the memories together. I think this is a pretty good trade-off for an occasional lull in the dinner conversation… More 24x7x365 to come.

Monday, March 19, 2007

So this is Bahia Blanca...

Bahia Blanca, Argentina

March 19, 2007
S 38°43.060
W 062°15.923

We woke up yesterday morning in a complete haze and tried to decipher the events from the night before—everything seemed a dream. It wasn’t a nightmare though since it did have a happy ending.

We finally managed to get out of our room around noon intent on finding some coffee. We only had one hour before siesta, and since it was Sunday we knew a lot of things would be closed. We found a cafĂ© got our “fix” and started roaming the vacant streets of Bahia Blanca; a town of over 300,000. We wondered where the heck the 300,000 residents were on a Sunday afternoon. The streets were barren, occasionally a car would buzz past us, and only a few people (seemingly wandering around with no direction), including us, populated the main square of town. We figured everyone must either be at church or still in bed.

We wandered the streets for a few more hours to get the blood flowing in our legs after the bus ride. We grabbed a few lunch-snacks at a cute little deli that just happened to be open and headed back to our room. Since we have wireless access we were able to take care of several things: book an apartment in Buenos Aires, update our blog, book a car for New Zealand, manage our Fidelity accounts, review our home rental statements, and catch up on email.

Bahia Blanca was like a completely different town at 8:00 PM as compared to earlier in the day. The streets were buzzing with people, restaurants were open, tables were scattered across sidewalks, and soccer was on every TV. The craft-market was set up in the middle of the park and food vendors lined the streets selling everything from hamburgers to cotton candy to popcorn. We even found another microbrewery that called our names.

Good thing we didn’t give up on Bahia Blanca; especially since we decided to stay another night to recover prior to our next bus ride to Mar del Plata.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Muy Bueno Karma!

Bahia Blanca, Argentina

March 17, 2007
S 38°43.060
W 062°15.923

The bus station and streets of El Bolson were pretty much deserted at 7AM; with the exception of stragglers coming home from the discotechas or those still drinking in the park. The lady where we were staying even questioned the existence of a 7AM bus since it isn’t common for Argentineans to be up that early—that was clear as we boarded the bus.

The bus from El Bolson took us as far as Bariloche. We waited an hour before transferring to another bus that was actually heading to Buenos Aires—a 24+ hour journey. Thank goodness our journey was “only” 13+ hours. We boarded our bus at precisely 10 AM and headed towards Bahia Blanca, our destination, on what should have been a long and uneventful day.

We headed out of the Lake District and took one last look at the perfectly colored sapphire blue lakes with picturesque mountain backdrops. As we headed east, the landscape changed to an agricultural setting with a labyrinth of irrigation ditches meandering through the fields next to the roads. The fields were lined with poplar trees, 30-50 ft tall, almost hiding the fruit trees behind them. The poplars provided shade and a wind brake to the cherries, apples, pears, plums and, of course, grapes.

We passed through several little towns very reminiscent of small California farm towns (Reedley, Lemoore, Clovis, Hughson, Denair) during the 60s and 70s. (Of course I have only seen pictures from the 60s.) We passed several 18 wheel trucks carrying wooden bins, stenciled with local farmer’s names or initials (LORI, LUGAR, IMF, TATI), full of fruit and headed for the cannery. After several hours we left the rich, agricultural soil and headed into a rough looking desert.

The entire trip was on a two lane road, but I think we spent as much time in the lane of on-coming traffic as in our own lane. At one point I think we passed a dozen semi trucks in a row and then darted back in our lane. Thank goodness I couldn’t really see out the front of the bus to know how close we really were to a head-on collision.

We stopped at several more bus stations before finally arriving in Bahia Blanca around 11:30 PM; 30 minutes after our scheduled arrival. We were happy to finally unload ourselves from the bus and couldn’t imagine another 12 hours to BA. Trust me; we would have taken a flight before enduring that bus ride!

Knowing we would be arriving close to midnight we pre-booked a hotel. We also decided to splurge a little for a place with a few more amenities, such as wireless access. We grabbed the first taxi we saw, a small white Fiat hatchback that could barely fit our two packs. We finally got everything in and closed the hatch and were on our way to the hotel. We made small talk with the driver on the short drive to the hotel (yes we’re from San Francisco -- Estados Unidos, yes we love Argentina, etc.). A wedding reception was just ending and the bride and groom were pulling away as we arrived. We got out of the cab and gave our driver a decent propina, or tip. We could tell he was surprised by the tip and seemed to enjoy spending a few minutes with a couple gringos from Estados Unidos.

Feeling very grimy after being on the bus for so long I immediately jumped into the shower. After my shower I started searching for our second water bottle, attached to Marc’s bag, to purify more water for the next morning. I scanned the room and couldn’t find it. I finally asked Marc. “Oh Fuck,” he exclaimed, “I left it in the cab.”

Marc’s bag is a shoulder type sling-bag that holds his camera, telephoto lense, memory cards, and, at the time, his iPOD. The vast majority of the photos on our blog our taken with Marc’s camera with only a few from mine. Fortunately, we shipped 3 of 4 memory cards home last week and we’ve been diligent about backing up our photos for situations like this. Needless to say, this was a big loss and very stressful… after several minutes and a few deep breaths we realized neither of us was hurt by the loss and everything was replaceable.

We immediately went downstairs and did our best to explain our situation to the two men (Mario Mariani & Ariel Mayor) working the night shift; it was about 12:45 AM at this time. They were the same men who helped us when we arrived at the hotel. They asked if we remembered the cab number or cab company, but after a 14 hour bus ride, noting the name and number of a cab was not high on our RADAR. In fact, at this hour and after that ride, we were lucky if we could remember our passport numbers. We explained we had no idea… they both solemnly shook their heads and we could tell they didn’t see a happy ending to the story.

Regardless, the nice men quickly got on the phone and started calling the various cab companies to report a lost bolson negra (black bag) left in the back seat. They suggested we go back to the bus station (picture to the right is the bus station during the day) to cover all of our bases. Now 1:00 AM, we jumped back into a cab and arrived at a nearly empty bus station a few minutes later, and explained our sob story to the information desk.

A police officer walked to the front of the station with us, told a few cab drivers what we were looking for and asked them to broadcast the information on their radios. He took our name and information, and told us he would call our hotel if it was returned. If we didn’t hear from him, he didn’t find the bag—it was that simple. Exhausted and dejected, we once again jumped back in a cab and headed back to our hotel.

Nothing changed when we arrived back at the hotel. We thanked the men and asked them to call if anything showed up in the middle of the night. We headed back upstairs; it was almost 2:00 AM at this point. I told Marc that I truly believed if the cab driver found the bag, he would return it. He seemed to like us and appreciated the tip. The unknown was if someone else found the bag first.

As Marc started putting a list together of everything he needed to replace immediately, and things that could wait until we returned to San Francisco (in a month), I looked up the word “reward” in my Spanish-English Dictionary.

In a last ditch effort I headed back downstairs. I told the two men we would give a “recompense” of 100 Argentina Pesos (~$33USD) for the return of the bag. They got back on the phone with all the cab companies and explained the reward. I thanked them again, reminded them to call, and headed back upstairs. We finally tried to get some sleep around 2:30 AM, but both of us were still disappointed about the loss and the effort required replacing everything. We accepted our fate at this point, it had been at least 2 ½ hours since the cab driver dropped us off and there was no sign of the bag. There was nothing more we could do.

The phone rang at 4:45 AM! I jumped out of bed immediately and told the men downstairs I would be right down. They informed me a cab driver was there and he claims he has the bag. I was dressed and at the door before Marc (just in his underwear) could even get to the edge of the bed, but I slowed down and waited as he handed me a 100 peso bill. I ran out the door without my glasses or any shoes. The wedding party was just returning as I hit the lobby, they looked fuzzy without my glasses. The cab driver was waiting just behind them. He explained he found the bag, but wasn’t sure who it belonged to until he heard the message over the radio.

I walked out to the cab with the driver. Marc’s bag was sitting all by itself in the front seat, waiting to be reunited with its owner. I told the guy how important the bag was to my husband and we really appreciated his honestly and efforts to return the bag. I handed him the 100 peso bill which he quickly refused—I insisted. This was more money than the guy probably made working all night long and we felt he deserved to buy something extra for himself, or his family.

I continued to thank the cabby profusely, and before grabbing the bag and heading back into the hotel I told him Muy Bueno, Muy Bueno Karma!, not knowing how to translate Karma into Spanish. He smiled and knew what I meant.