Monday, June 22, 2009
Monday, May 25, 2009
The porteños bundle up

Fernanda found me a bicycle that was almost my size, so she took me out to explore a little more of Buenos Aires. This wide street with the trees down the middle is the Avenida 9 de Julio. (July 9th is Argentina's Independence Day.) Look at these webcam views - it's twelve lanes wide in some places.




Here's a view of some shrubs in their fall colours, and here's a picture of the Madagascar periwinkles blooming in Fernanda's garden. I have to tell you, it does not feel or look like winter here!


Fernanda and her friend had a game of tennis, while I rode my bicycle round and round the court. After they tripped over me a couple of times, they asked me to be the umpire instead. On the way home, we met a couple of men in uniforms. The man in the white hat is a naval cadet. That means he's going to navy school. Look at his sword! I can't decide now whether I want to be a gaucho or join the navy when I grow up.
Because this is Buenos Aires, we stopped at a patio restaurant for a little smackerel of something.
On the way home, Fernanda said that she had a surprise for me. We took a detour, and found ourselves in a little park. At first I couldn't understand what was so special about it, and then she pointed to the name on the sign.



The other man was helping me to get onto that rainbow horse. (There are fancy horses like this one all over the city. Somebody said that Toronto had a bunch of moose statues just like them.)


Sunday, May 17, 2009
Buenos Aires - a little smackerel of something

For one thing, they take their food very seriously. They're very proud of their big juicy steaks, their asados, and their wines. They are much more interested in the quality of their food than we seem to be. They also take their decor seriously; one restaurant even had a piratical theme.

For another thing, they enjoy breaking up their day with a snack and a chat at one of the cafes. They linger over their food, talking and laughing and watching the world around them. At home, we just eat quickly and get on to something else.

Another difference is that they have supper waaay after my bedtime. Usually they don't seem to sit down to supper until 10:00, and sometimes even later. Their evenings just get started at 11:00. Fernanda says that most milongas (places where you can dance a tango), restaurants and bars are open almost all night long, and you can have supper at thre o'clock in the morning!
Fernanda and I went shopping for fruit one bright fall day; we found red apples from the south of Argentina, pineapples and bananas and green apples from Ecuador, and delicious vegetables from farms outside Buenos Aires.



Then we went looking for an asado. We found this gaucho busy with his facón cutting slices off the roasting meat. Normally a gaucho never, ever lets anybody else touch his facón, but he let Fernanda hold the handle as a special favour.



After dinner we went to a birthday party where we had pizza; slightly different from ours, but I still had three slices. One of my teeth came out, and I put it under my pillow at bedtime. The tooth fairy doesn't visit Latin America; Ratón Perez collects the teeth instead. I tried to stay awake to see him, but it was after midnight. When I woke up, the sunlight was pouring through the window and this was under my pillow.
I think I'll spend it on another empanada.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Pots, pans and protests

Buenos Aires is a crazy place, especially after the peace and tranquility of Tierra del Fuego. The traffic is confusing and noisy, and many drivers seem to ignore the traffic signs. When cars do stop, kids often rush right out into traffic to wash their windows or juggle to earn a bit of money. The streets and sidewalks are more crowded than anything I've seen. At night, there was a street march where everybody banged the on their saucepans. It all made me feel dizzy. Whenever we went outside I held on tight to somebody's hand.
Luckily this is a country where there's nothing weird about that. I've never seen anyplace as kissy as Buenos Aires. Everybody kisses everybody. Friends kiss each other. Kids kiss their moms, their dads, their friends, their friends' moms and dads, everybody except their teachers!
Fernanda's house is full of musical instruments, and everybody seems to be singing all the time. Her son, Pedro, even plays in a jazz band. You can see him playing the piano while I dance to the music.
Fernanda's house is full of musical instruments, and everybody seems to be singing all the time. Her son, Pedro, even plays in a jazz band. You can see him playing the piano while I dance to the music.
This is her youngest daughter, Mercedes, with her friend Mariana on the left. The oldest daughters are Paz and Flor. I love being in such a big family.




When they aren't singing or playing guitar or piano, the García family watches a lot of soccer (which they call football). Do you think the Stanley Cup playoffs are crazy? It's nothing compared to being at a soccer game in Buenos Aires. People yell and cheer and sing; sometimes they set off fireworks; they throw streamers and papers and balloons - I have never seen anything like it in my whole life. Everbody seems to be a
fan of either the Boca Juniors (they have a smiley yellow heart for a mascot) or of River Plate. Here you can see the Boca Juniors stadium behind me. It's called the "candy box" because of its shape.

One cool fall morning, Fernanda took me to visit the Pink House, which is where the President of Argentina, Crístina Fernandez, works. (She lives in a different house.) This is at one end of a huge park called the Plaza de Mayo. It's surrounded by palm trees and jacaranda trees, which are covered by a mist of blue flowers in the spring.


One cool fall morning, Fernanda took me to visit the Pink House, which is where the President of Argentina, Crístina Fernandez, works. (She lives in a different house.) This is at one end of a huge park called the Plaza de Mayo. It's surrounded by palm trees and jacaranda trees, which are covered by a mist of blue flowers in the spring.
Saturday, May 2, 2009
El Fin del Mundo - beavers and murderers

The beavers had been invited down from Canada 70 years ago, and had made themselves a little too much at home. Now their great-great grandchildren are killing the forests of Tierra del Fuego, and nobody seems able to get rid of them. When I get home, I'm going to send Fernanda some recipes for beaver!







Then we met Cayetano Santos, the "big-eared midget". Now he was scary. He seemed to have spent a lot of time killing children and animal
s. They say that he cut off his ears to disguise himself, but they grew back bigger than ever.

I knew he wasn't real, but he scared me so much that I asked Fernanda if we could visit a different prisoner. So we did, but then Fernanda got so scared herself that we decided it was time to leave.
When we weren't eating asado or spider crabs, we just made our own lunches. Here are some of the groceries we brought back from the store. Can you recognize any of the labels?

You know, every place I've visited has been beautiful; but I think that Tierra del Fuego tops them all. They say here that if you eat calafate berries you will return. As you can guess, I ate quite a few.
I want to be sure that sometime, somehow, I will see the Southern Cross again in the skies above Ushuaia!
besos,
Sally
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