So, if you remember, my camera broke right before I traveled to the Iguazu Falls. After that, a lot of people offered to take pictures for me and email me them. Obviously that is quite a commitment and sure enough I have heard back from only one person. But that's ok!!! I totally understand it's not an easy thing to do, especially when you are/have been traveling.
Here are some of the pictures a young geography student took for me in Malargue
Volcano in the distance
Crystallization in the Cave of the Witches
Me in my miner hat, ready to enter the cave
Me on our hike to a little tiny waterfall
Monday, April 8, 2013
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Home
Hello! I am home, safe and sound!!! The flight back was uneventful, I just watched lots of movies and customs was nothing they didn't even look at the bags. When I have all my pictures sorted out I'll post some more but until then, lots of love!
Esther
Esther
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Mendoza
(I changed the title of this post because I didnt want to freak out my grandparents :) I didnt really drink THAT much wine. I just thought the title was sort of funny. But I think my English word-play has suffered during these past six months of Spanish. Not that it was ever that successful. As I said to my friend Lily, I basically just say whatever pops into my head and about 50% is really hysterical and the other 50% is absolute crap)
Hello Hello!!!!
I seem to be writing these posts always one province behind. Right now I am in Neuquen in a gorgeous town called San Martin de los Andes, but I got here on Tuesday from Mendoza. In Mendoza I was in three places. Mendoza capital, San Rafael, and Malargue. I hearted the capital big time, it is filled with gorgeous plazas and parks and the hostel was my favorite so far because they made us eggs in the morning!!!! I met a lot of really cool people from all over the world there and enjoyed exploring the city and one day biking from vineyard to vineyard wine tasting! We also got complementary wine from the hostel every night. I totally agree now with the peope who say legal drinking promotes responsable drinking. And then everyone i met was going to Chile and the crossover to Chile is supposed to be the most beautiful thing ever so I took a bus part of the way to Chile, up through the mountains to Uspallata. It was amazing, I am totally in love with the Andes.
Then from Mendoza I went to San Rafael to a gorgeous hostel outside the central area. San Rafael is in a little dip in the land so it was SUPER hot and the hostel had a pool and it was the best thing ever. I went one day to Valle Grande and saw some crazy moutain landscapes and (although I usually dont go for the "excursions" they are so fond of here) went rafting down a river lined by incredible orange and purple and black mountains.
Then I went to Malargue, which wasnt my favorite place ever, but I had several amazing food experiences. I ate an insane trout meal at a trout hatchery where you could watch them kill the fish out the window. Then one night at the hostel we all made Pollo a la Disco which is chicken cooked in a big pot over a wood fire together with veggies and wine. Another time we made homemade chorripan with guacamole and ensalada criollo and chimichurri. I also went to La Caverna de las Brujas where we went deep into this laberynth of caverns and saw stalagmites and cystals. And wore headlamps... And there was also a cool planatarium there and a famous observitory where they do work on cosmic rays. All good spanish practice!!!
Now, as I said, I am in San Martin de los Andes which is cold and beautiful and really relaxing. Google image it. I have been hiking, walking around the downtown, and I found a fair on accident where people took their used clothes to the park and did like a huge garage sale. As I said to my friend, I am a thrift store magnet. There I found a patagonian handknit wool sweater for 5 dollars instead of 100-200 like they all cost in town. Also when I went hiking I saw sheep and goats and chickens and what I think were the famous guanacos but could have been llamas. (This is later-Esther writing with the exciting news that they were indeed guanacos!!!) It surpised me how excited about everything farm related I still was after three months of that being my life. Then again, sheep are never going to un-cute themselves, its just not possible.
Also, PS I am fed up with the difficulty of picture posting on these crappy hostel computers with bad internet connections so if you can be patient and wait TWO WEEKS I will put absolutely EVERYTHING worth seeing (mrawr) on the blog.
Hello Hello!!!!
I seem to be writing these posts always one province behind. Right now I am in Neuquen in a gorgeous town called San Martin de los Andes, but I got here on Tuesday from Mendoza. In Mendoza I was in three places. Mendoza capital, San Rafael, and Malargue. I hearted the capital big time, it is filled with gorgeous plazas and parks and the hostel was my favorite so far because they made us eggs in the morning!!!! I met a lot of really cool people from all over the world there and enjoyed exploring the city and one day biking from vineyard to vineyard wine tasting! We also got complementary wine from the hostel every night. I totally agree now with the peope who say legal drinking promotes responsable drinking. And then everyone i met was going to Chile and the crossover to Chile is supposed to be the most beautiful thing ever so I took a bus part of the way to Chile, up through the mountains to Uspallata. It was amazing, I am totally in love with the Andes.
Then from Mendoza I went to San Rafael to a gorgeous hostel outside the central area. San Rafael is in a little dip in the land so it was SUPER hot and the hostel had a pool and it was the best thing ever. I went one day to Valle Grande and saw some crazy moutain landscapes and (although I usually dont go for the "excursions" they are so fond of here) went rafting down a river lined by incredible orange and purple and black mountains.
Then I went to Malargue, which wasnt my favorite place ever, but I had several amazing food experiences. I ate an insane trout meal at a trout hatchery where you could watch them kill the fish out the window. Then one night at the hostel we all made Pollo a la Disco which is chicken cooked in a big pot over a wood fire together with veggies and wine. Another time we made homemade chorripan with guacamole and ensalada criollo and chimichurri. I also went to La Caverna de las Brujas where we went deep into this laberynth of caverns and saw stalagmites and cystals. And wore headlamps... And there was also a cool planatarium there and a famous observitory where they do work on cosmic rays. All good spanish practice!!!
Now, as I said, I am in San Martin de los Andes which is cold and beautiful and really relaxing. Google image it. I have been hiking, walking around the downtown, and I found a fair on accident where people took their used clothes to the park and did like a huge garage sale. As I said to my friend, I am a thrift store magnet. There I found a patagonian handknit wool sweater for 5 dollars instead of 100-200 like they all cost in town. Also when I went hiking I saw sheep and goats and chickens and what I think were the famous guanacos but could have been llamas. (This is later-Esther writing with the exciting news that they were indeed guanacos!!!) It surpised me how excited about everything farm related I still was after three months of that being my life. Then again, sheep are never going to un-cute themselves, its just not possible.
Also, PS I am fed up with the difficulty of picture posting on these crappy hostel computers with bad internet connections so if you can be patient and wait TWO WEEKS I will put absolutely EVERYTHING worth seeing (mrawr) on the blog.
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Buenos Aires
Here I am! In Buenos Aires! Writing from a fancy apartment in Recoleta where I am staying with a friend.
The city is huge, and there is way too much to do, but I am having a blast and trying to split my time between touristy and non touristy activities.
Here are some of the things I have done:
Touristy
Visited important/pretty places like Teatro Colon and La Casa Rosada.
Taken a doubledecker tour bus around the city, using the provided microphones to learn a little history.
Been to Bellas Artes museum, the Eva Peron museum, a boat museum, a holocaust museum, and one more whose name I can never remember where there was an exhibit on HARRY POTTER.
Went to a tango show outside at the obelisk and a drum concert.
Less touristy
Ate the best hot pastrami sandwich of my life.
(FINALLY) went thrift store shopping (more on that later)
Used-book shopping.
Eating choripan. (sausage and fried egg sandwiches sold on the street).
Went walking around searching for Synagogues.
Shabat services on Friday night.
I hope everyone is keeping warm back in the states, dont feel too jealous of me, someimes it is 97 with humidity on top which in Buenos Aires is really pretty disgusting. Although for the most part the weather has been lovely for me.
Love and snuggles and pictures because I have no control over the format of these posts right now...
Esther
The city is huge, and there is way too much to do, but I am having a blast and trying to split my time between touristy and non touristy activities.
Here are some of the things I have done:
Touristy
Visited important/pretty places like Teatro Colon and La Casa Rosada.
Taken a doubledecker tour bus around the city, using the provided microphones to learn a little history.
Been to Bellas Artes museum, the Eva Peron museum, a boat museum, a holocaust museum, and one more whose name I can never remember where there was an exhibit on HARRY POTTER.
Went to a tango show outside at the obelisk and a drum concert.
Less touristy
Ate the best hot pastrami sandwich of my life.
(FINALLY) went thrift store shopping (more on that later)
Used-book shopping.
Eating choripan. (sausage and fried egg sandwiches sold on the street).
Went walking around searching for Synagogues.
Shabat services on Friday night.
I hope everyone is keeping warm back in the states, dont feel too jealous of me, someimes it is 97 with humidity on top which in Buenos Aires is really pretty disgusting. Although for the most part the weather has been lovely for me.
Love and snuggles and pictures because I have no control over the format of these posts right now...
Esther
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Iguazu Falls
Hello Hello!
I have just spent the last week in Misiones, at the Iguazu Falls. They are incredible!!!! I went two days to the Argentina side of the falls and I cannot go to Brasil or Paraguay, which are both right here, because of the visa costs for United States citizens. We charge EVERYBODY and so they charge us, so it goes. But I rented a bike and biked to the triple border and saw Paraguay, Brasil, and Argentina all at the same time!!! The climate and wildlife here is super different from anything I have ever seen, and so I also tried to bike for a while in the forest but its so touristy here that everything was still pretty developed. Still, I have seen monkeys, lizards, parrots, weird bugs, coatis (like an opossum) and a million new plants.
The youth hostel where I am staying is really nice. I have a room that I share with three other girls and we have airconditioning at night! And the bathrooms and kitchen are nice too. I am enjoying cooking on the outdoor stove, swimming in the pool, reading Harry Potter 7 in Spanish in the hammoks, and eating the mangos that are harvested every morning from our personal mango tree!!!! It is such a relaxing summer vacation.
Unfortunately my camera broke, so all the pictures I put here of the falls are REALLY crappy phone camera pictures. Hopefully a nice German girl I met at the falls who had a really nice camera and took a picture of me will remember to send me her photos.
It looks like I have found another farm to volunteer on in this area for around two weeks, so that I do not have to do the 21 hour bus ride back down south twice in one week. When I am there I will tell you how it is. But for now I have two more days booked at the hostel and I am enjoying meeting people from all around the world and practicing my Spanish!
Pictures (I just figured out the phone camera was dirty too, you have no idea how upset I am...)
Lots of love!
Esther
I have just spent the last week in Misiones, at the Iguazu Falls. They are incredible!!!! I went two days to the Argentina side of the falls and I cannot go to Brasil or Paraguay, which are both right here, because of the visa costs for United States citizens. We charge EVERYBODY and so they charge us, so it goes. But I rented a bike and biked to the triple border and saw Paraguay, Brasil, and Argentina all at the same time!!! The climate and wildlife here is super different from anything I have ever seen, and so I also tried to bike for a while in the forest but its so touristy here that everything was still pretty developed. Still, I have seen monkeys, lizards, parrots, weird bugs, coatis (like an opossum) and a million new plants.
The youth hostel where I am staying is really nice. I have a room that I share with three other girls and we have airconditioning at night! And the bathrooms and kitchen are nice too. I am enjoying cooking on the outdoor stove, swimming in the pool, reading Harry Potter 7 in Spanish in the hammoks, and eating the mangos that are harvested every morning from our personal mango tree!!!! It is such a relaxing summer vacation.
Unfortunately my camera broke, so all the pictures I put here of the falls are REALLY crappy phone camera pictures. Hopefully a nice German girl I met at the falls who had a really nice camera and took a picture of me will remember to send me her photos.
It looks like I have found another farm to volunteer on in this area for around two weeks, so that I do not have to do the 21 hour bus ride back down south twice in one week. When I am there I will tell you how it is. But for now I have two more days booked at the hostel and I am enjoying meeting people from all around the world and practicing my Spanish!
Pictures (I just figured out the phone camera was dirty too, you have no idea how upset I am...)
Lots of love!
Esther
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Off again!
I´m off again! I am leaving tomorrow at noon for the Iguazu Falls! It is a 21 hour bus ride, how crazy is that??? I am booked at a hostel for seven days and then, we shall see!
I should have internet there, so I will put up more pictures and news as soon as I can.
Also, most exciting thing ever--Flor had her baby, his name is Octavio, and he is the cutest!!!!
Un Abrazo,
Esther!
I should have internet there, so I will put up more pictures and news as soon as I can.
Also, most exciting thing ever--Flor had her baby, his name is Octavio, and he is the cutest!!!!
Un Abrazo,
Esther!
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
DON´T SEND ME MAIL
I should have written this post a month ago but NO MORE MAIL. Its not because I dont love it, I do. And thank you so much toeveryone who sent me letters! I have left the farm and I now have NO permanent address. Send me an email. Look for me on skype. Facebook. Whatever. But NO MORE MAIL.
Lots of Love,
Esther
Lots of Love,
Esther
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