Friday, September 28, 2007

Puno - Peru everyone hates it but us

Puno, I grant you, is not the most pretty city we have seen but we had a lot of fun there. First of all we stayed in a hotel that was only half built, always fun, then we had a two quid, 4-course lunch that was really really fantastic, then Kieran finally managed to get through to his sister on the phone to congratulate her on her new baby, even if she could hardly hear me. The baby's new name is Flo (change of heart) which I think is a fantastic name. Both Mother and baby are doing well and back home from hospital, even if the bottom half of the house is a building site at the mo. Donna Says that Flo is a dream and Jacob is acting like a proud big brother.

We then went on a floating island reed tour, which is suppose to be crap but we really enjoyed it. We met some lovely people and had a bit of a laugh. The people live on these massive reed islands, with even their diet and houses made out of the reeds, we tried to eat the reeds and it gave us indigestion.


MMM rabbit food



When the tribe has a bit of an argument they cut the island in half and away they go!!! I think it is a fantastic way to solve an argument, I hate you mum ... I´m going to live on the other side of the lake!!

We went to the main island and to our delight we saw three women in a reed phone box powered by a solar panel, they were probably phoning for a curry take away... fantastic!

Phone home


We came back to the town and they were having a bit of a fiesta with a massive brass band and a lot of ladies in sparkly petticoats, very sexy if it was not for the silly hats!! We met up and went out with a few of the people from the trip, Sinead , Carl and Harvey. While we were meeting up a Spanish women wanting help with her English came up with a old tape recorder, I think she was only learning English to snare a foreigner as she grilled the Irish guy Carl about his availability, I was not sure how his girlfriend would react until she proved her ownership by kicking him... yep he´s mine!!

The national dish in Peru is Guinea pig mmm can´t wait. I had a hamster when I was young that used to hiss at me like a cat and was one evil bastard so it will soon be payback time.

Copacabana Bolivia - Scummy traveller hang out

Copacabana seemed nice enough after we travelled back from the jungle on a slightly less scary plane ride, though the co-pilot did have leather fingerless aka Micheal Jackson gloves on, which concerned me a little bit.

We took a local rapido van from La Paz and the three hours was uneventful until we all had to get out next to Lake Titicaca (Te Te Ka Ka) and take a separate 5 minutes ferry to the van, very strange.

Copacabana had its Sunday market on when we arrived so it was very busy and colourful. We booked into our first lonely planet splurge hotel on top of the hill overlooking the town. It was a very nice hotel but the room stank of fags, so we moved into town the next day into a totally over the top room. It looked almost like a Bolivian museum, but the main "draw" ha ha was the fireplace, we missed our South Street fireplace so much that we had to have a fire.

The fire was lovely if a bit smokey




The next day was dead and we noticed a load of skanky travellers who had not found their way home. Get a job, wasters, and most important of all, wash your bloody skanky hair.

We went to the Isla de Sol - the biggest island in the lake - which is massive by the way, reminded me of a holiday with my family and the Breeze's to a lake in the south of France that was so big it looked like the sea.

The Island is the Incas birth place of the sun. To be honest the Bolivians did not take advantage of their historic resource: there were no signs to tell you what you were looking at and even the sacrificial stone that we were quite looking forward to seeing had a silly man in a nightcap hat on selling stuff on top of it. Plus the boats to the island are some of the slowest boats in history.

Ho hum, the three hour walk, made a bit harder by the altitude 3800 metres, from the north of the island to the south was one of the nicest walks we have done. On the first beach we looked up and the Sun had a massive circular rainbow all the way around it, it was amazing and we had never seen anything like it! Definitely an omen from the sun's birthplace. Unfortunately the omen was that we should put some sun block on as we both got a bit burned, kinda appropriate really.

Solar Rainbow


The next day we took a bus to Puno, the town on the Peru side of the lake. This was the first time we had to walk across the no mans land on foot. El kept complaining that Peru looked like Bolivia, oh well you can´t please everyone.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Rurranabaque - Pampas: crocs and pink dolphins

We started our 3-day Pampas trip with a torturous 3-hour jeep ride along a dusty and very bumpy road to a small town called Santa Rosa where we stopped for lunch in a strange restaurant, the garden of which contained a parrot, a spider monkey, a pig, various cats and dogs, and a goat helping itself to a stack of bananas. Our fellow tourists, Lauren (UK), Corey (Tasmania), Graham (Oz) & Rudy (the Germanator) certainly bought a bright spark to an otherwise boring journey.

This was followed buy an even more torturous 3-hour journey upstream on a very hard wooden-seated boat, made bearable by spotting the oodles of wildlife to be seen along its banks. These included over 200 crocodiles, storks, some funny pig-or boar type animals, terrapins, chinchillas (little monkeys), a toucan, howler monkeys and also pink river dolphins which was a real treat.

It scared me rotten



After a relaxing dinner we went to the nearest bar to watch the sunset and down cervezas, and followed this with a night boat ride. To be honest all we saw were croc's eyes shining in our torchlight. Sadly it was rather spoiled by our guide leaping into the bushes and coming back with a baby croc in one hand for people to take photos of. El got rather cross and told the guide in no uncertain terms that it was wrong to interfere with nature, but when the rest of the group stared daggers at her she had to shut up and turn away in a silent moral objection.

Our second day saw us having a 3-hour (why is everything in batches of 3 hours?) walk around the swampy grassland looking for an Anaconda. Of course the guide said he'd catch it for photo opportunities and when El objected he pointed out that we'd not see anything.Who cares about a stupid snake anyway. In fact, what self-respecting Anaconda is going to let a group of 16 tourists come anywhere close to it? Of course there was no sign of a snake but some beautiful storks and birds, plus a wonderful array of pretty flowers which were more than adequate to enjoy.

Our 3rd day saw us get up early for a sunrise and then breakfast was followed by Pirhana fishing. Our guide, having decided as El was an eco-warrior that she would not want to fish and made her make a necklace out of beads made from seeds. She was a bit annoyed but in the end no-one caught any fish anyway so at least she got to take something home!

Kieran had a very bad belly ache and on the last day the guide gave him a jungle medician made from lemon, coco leaves and the bark of a tree called Diablo, it tasked rank but got me through the 6 hour back to town trip with out any "accidents"

Chilling in the Jungle


After a few relaxing hours chilling out in the hammocks we boarded the boat and jeep for the torturous journey back home. Tired, dusty, dirty and hot, but having seen some amazing animals in their natural habitat and hopefully given the guides some food for thought about their responsibility.

Rurranabaque - the jungle leaflet

After a hair-raising flight from Sucre in a really old-school plane where you entered through its bum rather than the side, and a mad dash around La Paz for 3 hours to do a bit of shopping and posting, we took an even more hair-raising flight to Rurranabaque, a town north of La Paz perched between the jungle and the lowland grasslands. I say hair-raising as it was a tiny plane with only one person either side of the aisle and no door to the cockpit so we could see everything the captain and his co-pilot were doing: even El got a tiny bit scared when we touched down on the grass runway...gulp.

We found a nice hotel though and were delighted at the change in temperature: going back to sandals and shorts weather was wonderful! Next day we headed into the jungle for a 1-day trip. The boat ride was fabulous through pretty lush trees, the odd one covered with bright red or bright yellow flowers. It was a long 3-hour trip but as we had the boat to ourselves we didn't mind.

We got to the jungle and went on a short (1-hour) trip into the jungle. Sadly our guide spoke no English and we could hear all the birds announce our arrival with their unusual calls so we were not surprised that all we saw were a few freaky spiders, a couple of birds and a termite nest. Oh and a nest of wasps which we made a hasty exit from!



It was a nice walk but a somewhat dumbed down walk as the path was extremely well-worn and we really didn't go too far. Nevertheless it was the jungle so that was cool. After a swift lunch with some others who'd been there for 2 days, we headed back to town in the boat. On the way back we stopped for a short walk to a nearby cliff filled with large holes where a number of parrot species live - namely the famous red and green ones you imagine when you think of the jungle. OK they were a way away from the viewing platform but it was pretty special to see these incredible birds screeching above us and flying around in their natural environment. El feels strongly that birds should not be caged so we really enjoyed seeing them - a real highlight.



Back to town for cocktails and readying for our 3-day tour into the Pampas Grasslands.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Congratulations the Baldwins!!!!!

BREAKING NEWS!!!!!

Kieran is delighted that he has become a new uncle for the second time. Donna, his sis, gave birth to little Florence Amelie on Saturday 15 September and all the family are doing well. She came a little earlier than expected but is welcome nonetheless, and Jacob is rapidly getting used to being a big brother.

Rest assured that we had a strong drink to celebrate!

Welcome to the world little Flo and all our thoughts are with you and your newly expanded family, and we hope Donna´s stay in hospital is short and comfy!

Monday, September 17, 2007

Sucre

Sucre was one of the most beautiful towns in Bolivia maybe down to the fact that it was once the Capital of the country, lots of plazas and white old colonial buildings giving the town a lovely feel.

We booked into one of the best hotel rooms on our trip, one that made you feel like you were some big head honcho. Well it made me feel like it, not sure about El; a big space with shutters on the windows and big old doors to the room, it was a fantastic room.

We hung around on Sunday and for once it really felt like a Sunday and we had no choice but to hang around. Remember in England when nothing, and I mean nothing, is open: it was just like that. We walked around and tried to get some purchasing opportunities in but were stopped at every stage. It the end we had to kick back and watch the main plaza from a restaurant balcony and watch the slow Sunday life go by, quite nice as it turns out.

At a height of 2800 metres we felt a bit better than at other places that are over 4000 metres, maybe that is why after a lot of talk of having a few "rest" days we decided to book ourselves on a paragliding jump in the morning and a 4 hour dirtbike tour in the afternoon, or maybe the altitude really was affecting us.

The Paragliding was amazing and with the top standards of Bolivia's heath and safety were made even more "exciting". Mum you may not want to read this, I've always wanted to write that.

Why am I going first...hey


We started with an "exciting" trip to the launch pad, and hour along a mountain range, that was made really cool as the guide spoke really good English and kept pointing out local plants and trees and hamster-like creatures that the locals eat, plus I could have a good chat about Bolivia and its people and politics.

El and I flipped a coin and she won, so she went first. She looked a bit nervous, so I gave her all the encouragement that I could, "Don't worry it does not look that far down" and "its not too high a cliff you are running off, you will only break a leg" etc., etc.

She ran when the instructor told her too, but at the last minute the wind changed and she was dropped down to the ground from about a metre up and slid along the earth for a few seconds before taking off proper. After reviewing the video she came within half a metre of some nasty sharp rocks...the force is still stong with this one, but she still managed to rip her jeans and get a graze on her knee.

After a nasty take off she had a fantastic flight and said that it was very relaxing flight and was quite funny to land in a field next to a few pigs.

My take-off was a little different, video to follow. I did not even get a chance to run at the cliff face, mmmm shame. The wind changed again and the bloody thing just took off vertically. Elenaor was joking with the instructor that after her take off he said "Oops" and I told him that I wanted no such oops on my take off.

Well as soon as we took off I was thinking to myself "this is cool we can just glide from here", but as soon as I thought that the bloody guide says "Oops" but with a note of panic in his voice, uh oh, I thought.

We managed to clear the edge of the mountain after a lot of shouts of "move to the right" "move to the left" and I though that it was going to be all cool from now on when I realised that we were not going down, quite the opposite we were going up. The instructor had me take control of the parachute while he did something that reduces the surface area of the canopy, so that finally we started to come down, I did start to enjoy the flight then, with the occasional shout of Thank God!

When we finally landed, the guide and I had a manly hug and he kept on saying that flight was "Rock and Roll". He explained in half-English and Spanish that if we went over the other side of the mountain it would have been dangerous and the canopy would have collapsed, so I'm glad that did not happen. The bonus of all this is that as the Instructor said the next flight I take I will be saying is this all !! Where is the rock and roll baby!!!

The afternoon was quite cool, El took the back of the guide's bike and I had my own and we rode into the countryside around Sucre where El took a few hours lessons and I took off down a nice road for an hour or so. It started to look a bit grim so we headed back to town and it started to rain, its was at this point that El's guide - a Sucre motocross champion - while not looking where he was going, nearly ran into a pile of gravel that is there for the bikes to do stunts on and FELL OVER, what a berk.. I had a massive heart attack when I could no longer see them in my mirrors.

Both were OK and suffered mirror cuts, but El got an identical cut to her right knee to go with her left one that she got paragliding, and quite a few bruises, I think that after the shock wore off that she was quite proud of herself for being so hard core and freestyle, I certainly was! But she doesn't really want to go on the back of a motorbike anymore after 2 falls from them as a pillion.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Potosi and the big bang

We had a lightning fast trip to a town called Potosi, a famous mining city that made much of Spain's fortune in the 16th century, and also boasts to be the highest city in the world (4060m). The streets are again steep but with a colonial charm that was lacking in La Paz: lots of cobbles and pretty buildings.

Our main aim was to visit the mine and we were collected at 9am sharp by our tour guide. He took us around the streets of Potosi explaining some of the culture of the city, including details of how the miners were exploited terribly by the Spanish and how the miners revolted and now most have formed co-operatives. The next stop was the miner's market where we bought gifts for the miners, including coca leaves, 96% alcohol (for offerings), cigarettes and dynamite. Yes, dynamite, you know, like you do when you go to the market!

On to the mines where we donned helmets and waterproofs and headed into one of the shafts. Silver was what made Spain's fortune but now the mine produces zinc and other minerals. The people who work there earn about 25 Bolivianos per day, just under 2 quid, and most die of nasty diseases within 5 years because of the toxic chemicals they are exposed to.



After offering some coca leaves, a fag and some 96% alcohol (of course having a wee nip is obligatory), and El kissed the idol's knob (for fertility, of course), we ventured into the mines. Every now and then we let 3 men pass with the old style mine carts reminiscent of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Health and safety in this place is a token for the tourists as we wandered past open holes and cables draped all over the place.

Still, it was a fascinating insight into these guys' lives and they appreciated the little extras we gave them as a beer and a fag don't half help the day go by. Finally, we returned to the outside for the piece de resistance: a dynamite demo. Actually, this is REALLY what Kieran wanted to see and once the fuse had been lit we all held the stick of dynamite for photo opportunities before our guide legged it over the way and back while we waited for the big bang.



It was big. And it banged!!! Cool!



That over, nothing else in Potosi really floated our boat. The museum seemed boring and after a slap up meal we hopped in a taxi to take us to Sucre, a city supposed to be somewhere to chill and take it easy for a few days...

Uyuni: Salt, flingos, geezers and drunk Brazilians

After a suitably horrendous overnight bus journey (how many times have I said 'never again?'), we arrived at Uyuni, a small town on the edge of one of Bolivia's craziest features: salt flats.

We started the tour at a cemetery for trains where great rusting hulks of steam trains are left to rot to nothing. A beautiful yet sad place, it made for a great number of photo opportunities and a curious start to our trip.



At a similar altitude to La Paz, there is a vast area which was once an ocean but has long since dried up, leaving this strange landscape of dead flat, dead white, well, salt plains. Rather than being small crystals, as you'd expect from your salt pot, it has crystalized into crazy geometric crystals - not unlike quarz crystals - that form a hard and seemingly impenetrable crust covering a mammoth 12, 000 sq km. It is white almost as far as the eye can see and unlike anything you can ever expect to see: bonkers.

Because of the uniformity of the landscape there are numerous opportunities for humorous 'perspective' photos and our group for the next 3 days had lots of fun with this. Our group consisted of 3 lovely Israeli lads (forgive me lads but I can't spell your names), and a nice, but alcoholic, Brazilian, Louis, plus our driver, his wife and little girl (2 years) who was a great source of entertainment.


Kieran sits on El's tongue

In the middle of the flats is a crazy island, covered in strange rocks and huge cacti - the largest being over 12m tall. It is such a random thing to find in the midst of this salt flat and climbing the hill gives you amazing views of the area.

The first night we stayed in a hotel (almost) made entirely of salt: walls, tables, chairs, and floor (crushed to resembled gravel). We felt slightly guilty as the Lonely Planet does say it is an illegal structure but we weren't about to sleep outside in protest: the days are quite warm in the sun but the nights are BBbbrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

Our second day took us into the mountains beyond the salt flats and we visited a few huge lakes of various colours (made so by the minerals and algae within) and the magnificent sight of flocks of Flingos (Flamingos to non-Hayeses). They are such beautiful and elegant creatures but they are pink. I mean...pink...?????!!!???? We also came across some strange rocks sculpted into odd shapes by the wind and the sand...a bit like being on another planet.



We arrived at our second hostel at 3pm just as the sky turned white and the snow started falling. We were really glad that we purchased some long johns, Alpaca socks and extra vests in La Paz as the temperature dropped considerably. Luckily the Israeli's had some spirits and they taught us a great new card game that rapidly turned into a drinking game. Unfortunately for us, the Israelis were dab hands at it and both Kieran and I lost the first 2 rounds, resulting in having to down some dodgy black herbal liqueur. By this point the forfeit had turned into running outside in the snow naked. Kieran and I both lost this round but he gallantly stripped off to his pants and legged it outside. El Stupido!


Drunken Bet


Our last day took us to geysers, hot springs (only one of the Israelis made it into the pool but dipping our feet in felt delicious), more coloured lakes and flingos and then to a huge volcano (not live though). At this point we were at about 4900m and the volcano was about 6000m and the air was thin and really cold. We dropped off the pissed Brazilian at the Chilean border and headed back to Uyuni. It was a long trip but much fun, seeing awesome landscape and wildlife, and having great fun with our amigos (who we will be visiting in Israel, whether they like it or not).


So far Bolivia has proved itself to be a fascinating and beautiful place. Barren, yes, and yet everywhere there are plants and animals. Cold, yes, but clear blue skies and lovely warm jumpers. We are excited about the rest of our time here as we are loving it!

La Paz, Bolivia - getting high (it´s at high altitude)

After a smooth flight over some stunning reddish-brown landscape, we landed in La Paz in Bolivia, at 3660m, the highest place we've ever been to. You can be affected by altitudes of more than 2500m so we were wary of feeling unwell. Luckily apart from a low headache and being out of breath if you go anywhere too fast we have been lucky enough to be fine (phew)!

La Paz is an incredibly steep city - there is no such thing as a flat road - and it is immediately a completely different place to anywhere we have ever been. The streets are thronging with indigenous people: short, plump ladies wearing full skirts, coloured shawls carrying goods or babies on their backs, and topped by the oddest bowler hats ever seen since Mary Poppins!

Most of the buildings look run down and unfinished but step inside and you are met with pretty courtyards, cute olde worlde style rooms, and very low ceilings. We are giants here compared to the locals (yes, even Kieran) and although we stand out a mile as gringos, the locals don´t really seem that interested.

We stayed in La Paz for just a day or two and managed to do nothing more than take advantage of purchasing opportunities, book various transport and tours for the next 2 weeks, and go to the obligatory coca museum complete with cafe where you can sample the subject of the museum. We spoke with a lovely girl over our coca tea (don´t worry mum, it had no effect) and she gave us the lowdown on South America and showed us how to properly chew coca leaves (um, ok mum, this one does have an effect). To be honest it tastes like you're eating raw teabags and quite frankly I (Eleanor) didn´t feel anything, although Kieran did profess to have a numb mouth and feel a bit more lively. Give me a G&T any day!


More purchasing opportunities

Sunday, September 09, 2007

The end of chilling in Chile

Thanks babel fish (from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy "don´t panic" web translation tool) with out you it would have been a lot harder!


We have now come to the end of our chilling out in Chile. Going back to school and leading a "normal" life for a week has been strange but nice, Bianca has been lovely and the people at school have been great as well. I cannot say that I am fluent in Spanish but my ability to hear key words and get the gist of the conversation has greatly improved and I feel confidant in getting around asking for bus tickets and hotel rooms, etc. Eleanor was the star pupil and really raced ahead of me, on the third day she left me in the A1 dunces group and joined the A2 I kind of know what I am saying group. She can now hold a broken conversation with Bianca now and can even explain complex cultural differences like married men "walking the dog" (going down the pub).

School outing to the market, I bought some for a pizza they seemed to work!


We took Bianca to a restaurant called the Vaca Gorda (fat cow) to say thank you for her hospitality, we had our first Pisco Sour and a lovely bottle of the local diablo vino.

We managed to finally get out of the city yesterday to visit a port town called Valparaiso, a two-hour bus ride out of Santiago. It is famous for "knee trembling" buildings and old lift-cum-trains as the town is built on the side of a hill and these lifts really help getting around. I am not too sure if my knees trembled at the buildings but they did going up these antique wooden lifts. I think that that makes up for not doing a sky dive in New Zealand.

Going up


There was a massive scouts jamboree going on that was a bit random. Even more random was the fact the policeman had a few riot vans ready around the corner, maybe they were afraid that the girl scouts would run havoc on the streets.

We wondered around a bit lost until a woman came up to us and said no mapa no camera. We got a bit freaked out and escaped the rough end of town and headed back to the tourist part of town.

We ended up in a lovely restaurant and met a English couple (Rob and Emma) who are going almost exactly the same trip as us, just a few months behind us, we had a good bitch about India and swapped email address, so maybe we will met up in Bolivia

Vamos lets go to La Paz, and hope that we do not get altidute sickness as it is above 3000 metres.

Saturday, September 01, 2007

Santiago - Chile: tear gas and red wine


View over Santiago with the mountains in the background...and smog

We have been in Chile for 6 days now, at first we booked into a nice little hostel called the Chili Hotel, and tried to recover from the jet lag.

The first day we walked around the city and discovered the main Cathedral which was quite beautiful. Interestingly the priest holds the confessions from a box but the confessor kneels outside of the box for all to see. All I can think is that their sins are not so sinful here if they can confess where everyone can see them. We ended up outside in a lovely cafe later that day and had the Menu of the day which was a five course meal for a fiver. I think I am going to like South America.

The second day we got up late and took a funicular train up a hill in the centre of Santiago, to vist the Virgin Mary on the hill where they pipe religious musak over the speakers. We had a nice walk around and ended up in a student bar and hung out on the streets with the cool kids. The beer here is good and cheap, about a pound for a litre, and there is a great energy around the student area which makes for a great place to chill out and people watch.

Like a virgin



The third day we took a wine tour to Concha Y Toro http://www.conchaytoro.cl (shell and bull) winery as we spotted a bottle in the local bottle shop that we drink at home and realised that the winery was only outside of town, yay lets go!.

On the way we ran in to a student demonstration - yes the same students that I was praising above - and El and I got a load of tear gas in the face, and that was from a block away. I cannot imagine how painful it is up close. It makes your eyes and face sting like hell and took ages to go away and lots of people on the tube seemed to be suffering as well. Very exciting and quite interesting to see a good bit of civic unrest.

Els face after the tear gas


The grounds of the winery were beautiful, lots of French objects were imported over when it was first built and the Castillero del Diablo (Cellar of the Devil) was very impressive, we even saw the devils shadow! The owner of the winery discovered that as the wine was sooo good some bottles were disappearing, so he spread rumours that the devil lived in the cellar to put off the thieves, and it worked!! I think I might have to buy a house with a wine cellar, maybe without any resident demons though.



We have booked ourselves into an intensive Spanish course for 5 days consisting of 6 lessons a day, 10-4. The professors only talk in Spanish so it is quite hard on the brain, but good as it immerses you in the language. We have only had one day of our course so far and have the weekend to do our homework and soak up some more South American Spanish culture. http://www.escuelabellavista.cl/

Eleanor is fantastic and is learning really fast. I am stumbling along but I did manage to say last night to the waitress, "I will have what ever they are having", while pointing to a massive jug of beer some locals were drinking.

I also had the local meal of what tasted like sheep's or cow's stomach. I have never had it before but that's what it tasted like. I only had it because the waitress said it was animal meat and stroked her stomach. I thought that she though it was meat and very yummy, not that that's where the meat came from!

I just googled the name of the dish Callos a la madrileña

INGREDIENTS: (6 people)
1/2 kg of calf calluses
1/2 kg of nose of cow 200 gr. jamón
1 Blood sausage
1 Garlic sausage
1 onion
1 heads of garlic Pimentón Laurel
Oil Pepper Salt

How can you eat the nose of a cow!!!! If I get a cold today I know who I got it from: Daisy.

We are now living with a lovely Chilean called Bianca, a niece of Susan who is a work colleague of Eleanor's Dad. Susan kindly said that we could stay in the apartment with Bianca and Bianca concurred. This is fantastic and works like a home stay program as Bianca´s English, though much better than our Spanish, is not good enough that we don´t have to make the effort to speak Spanish to her or at least look up words in Spanish and then mime our meaning. The first night we resorted to babel fish to help us out, http://babelfish.altavista.com, but we´re slowly getting the hang of it.

Bianca took us out last night to meet a few friends and we went to a club, at the very early Chilean time of 1.30am to dance to traditional Chilean pop music like Humano Leagueo and 1920 swing and YMCA!


Bianca and Patrick show us some traditional Chilean moves after hours

Santiago has a lovely charm, to it. It is a vast city stretching for miles in each direction. In fact, you can´t see the edges of the city as they are obscured by smog - an unfortunate problem that the city is finding hard to solve. The mountains to the East are huge snow-capped beauties, again rather marred by the smog - the snow looks yellow from a distance. It is not really a touristy town though and on a number of occasions we have been mistaken for locals which is a nice feeling as in Asia we stuck out like sore thumbs! One of the unmistakably Latin American things about Chile is the number of couples necking in random places. In a 5-minute walk we saw about 10 couples, on park benches, in the tube station, at a pedestrian crossing. But we don't mind the Spanish passion and occasionally have a neck ourselves...just to fit in of course.

Para mi, una copa de vino tinto, Me encanta esto.
Ciao Darling