Thursday, March 26, 2009

Zero to Sixty in...60

Iguazu Falls, Argentina
On the tri-border of Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil
March 28, 2009

The summer I graduated from high school I went to New York City for the first time alone.  I'd been there many times before, but always with my family.  It was 1967--the "Summer of Love"--and hippies were everywhere.  While roaming around Washington Park in Greenwich Village I bought a pin that said, "Don't trust anyone over 30."  I was eighteen and thirty was, well...unimaginable.

That was 42 years ago.  In two days I turn 60.  Twice as old as that dreaded age I imagined in 1967.  What happened and how did I get this far so fast?  It truly does feel like "Zero to 60 in sixty seconds."  What do I do now?  Buy another pin that says "Don't trust anyone over 70?"

Last summer, while I was planning this trip, I knew I'd be away for this special day, and I knew I wanted to do something that neither my father nor grandfather had done on their 60th.  Where in this great, exceptional world of South America, would I really like to be on March 30th?

Iguazu Falls was the clear winner.

These are the biggest waterfalls in South America.  Indeed, they are the biggest in all of the Americas.

I have not looked forward to this birthday.  I know it's only a number, that all it means is that the earth has gone one more time around its orbit.

Still...60! But I am grateful, grateful beyond belief.  I think of all those who died prematurely, long before 20, 30, 40 or 50. I keep reminding myself that 60 is a gift.

"The gift of 60," I keep telling myself.

So, how will I spend the day.  I will wake to thanks, take a swim in the pool, eat breakfast and spend the day exploring the falls.  And, in keeping with my promise that I'm going to do something my father and grandfather didn't do.  I'm going to rappel down a waterfall, glide through the jungle on a cable, and ride some rapids--in other words, the "all inclusive Iguazu Adventure package."  And when the day is done, I'll eat a medium-rare Aregentinian steak, order a fine bottle of Diet Coke, and eat more dessert than I should.

And I will give thanks--again.

 


Cowboys and Palm Trees: Uruguay for the Unbeliever

Posadas, Argentina
March 26, 2009

I like small countries.  They're much easier to manage, which is why Uruguay was so appealing after the frenetic maelstrom of a month in Buenos Aires, a place I was more than ready to leave.

My first goal was the capital, Montevideo.  Geograpically, it's only three hours across the Rio Plata, but in other ways it's a world apart.  I boarded a fast boat on March 16th, crossed the river, met a bus that brough me the rest of the way then checked into a small hotel.

It always amazes me how neighboring countries can look and feel so different once a border is crossed.  Think of lovely downtown Mooers, NY and teh charming village of Hemmingford, Quebec.  It was a bit like that once I left Colonia, Uruguay and headed east to Montevideo.  Wha struck me immediately was the open space.  Uruguay is loaded with wide open speaces.  This was farm country.  Indeed, as I would come to see later, most of Uruguay is farm country.  I liiked it almost at once.


Montevideo was a delight.  It's not that Buenos Airest wasn't deglightful in its own way, but Montevideo was likeable for what it was not.  Unlike its neighboring city, Montevideo wasn't a city with attitude.  It wasn't diry.  The air wasn't full of carbon dioxide and cigarettes moke.  (Argentinian smokers are pigs who think nothing of smoking everywhere.  There wasn't caca de perro on the sidewalks.  In fact, I didn't see many dogs at all,  Maybe Uruguayans eat them.
It had a similar architecture, but it was much better maintained.  I love Art Deco, and Montevideo was loaded with beautiful examples of a `930's building spree.  And, unlike where Mexico City, where air quality has really taken a toll on this style of architecture, Montevideo's examples are in far better condition.


There were 25 kilometers of beaches in the city and, while the water quality wasn't the greatest, they're still wonderful. Unlike Buenos Aires which only had swimming pools, Montevideo's beaches were a wonderful way to wile away a day or two.


                                                                                                                                                                                   I spent five days in the city, and took two day trips out of it.  One trip was to Punta del Este, which is one  
of south America's premier beach towns. 
But it was early fall and much of the town had closed itself up for the season.  Still, our tour allowed three hours in the town and I spent most of it on its gorgous Atlantic beaches.  The water, which had traveled north from Antarctica, was too cold for my tastes. 

I wanted to explore more of rural Uruguay, plus I knew I had to head north to reenter Argentina later in the week to get to Iguazu Falls for the end of the month, so I chose the small border city of Salto, six hours north of Montevideo.  I'd chosen the place because it has so many hot springs nearby and i'd been told that the small resorts in the area are really pleasant.  How right they were.
                                                                              
As I headed north, the landscape began to change.  While Montevideo and Buenos Aires are on the edge of sub-tropical, the area I was traveling towards was definately sub-tropic.  Miiles and  miles of palms and eucalyptus and sycamores passed by window as  we travled north.  There were open prairies, grazing land, farms and small towns.  While coastal Uruguay is a bit hilly, the area north flattened ut.  I had the feeling I was entering big sky country.  It was sunny and clear and the horizon went on forever.


I spent four days outsdie of Salta as a spa/resort with three spring fed swimming pools.  It certainly wasn't cold in Salto, but I must that dipping into hot-thermal waters was mighty relazing.  The spa was wonderful, but I wanted to see more, so one day I rented a car and headed even further north.

One of the appealing things about Uruguay, at least for me, is its lack of population density.  From Salta I drove 100 miles north and only encounted two very small towns.  I would stop the car often to take pictures.  It was like being in Kansas, but Kansas with a twist.  The landscape was flat with rolling hills in every direction.  There'd be large stand of cattle and cowboys (gauchos) herding cattle.  Once I slammed on the brakes when I saw two emus at the top of a small hillock.  High prairie grasses glittered in the sun and goldenrod abounded along the sides of the road.  A dead armadillo gave me a clue to the ecosystem I was enjoying. 

By noon I wanted a bite toeat and especially to get something to drink.  There had been no stores along the road, so I was dependant on small towns where I knew I'd find small grocery stores.  Belem and Constitucion were delightful but, in truth, I'd go out of my mind if I had live in either of them.  Both were located on small lakes, both had a population of about 1,000 and borth were like stepping back in time.  I reallly needed to drink something at each town, but each town only had one store.  In belem, the store looked as if it hadn't been renovated since it openend in 1932.  The refrigerator coolers were ancient, the proprietor was ancient, the stores had shelves of old clothing, farm supplies and a small amount of foodstuffs.  The bus company that serviced the town used busses from the 1950's.  For a time, I thought I'd been time-warped..

It was a fun day, but the car rental was only for a day.  I would be quite content to spend the next day, my last, hanging out at the thermal fed swimming pool of my spa/resort

Salto and Uruguayan big sky country had seduced me with it all-day summer shimmer of brilliant sunlight and its long, bright, early autumn days.  It had seduced me with its prairies and small towns that stepped out of another world.  I could have stayed longer, but it was time to move on.  I had a date with destiny and destiny was not about to wait.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Cordoba, Argentina: Not the City--the Province

Salto, Uruguay
22 de Marzo de 2009


Once again solo in the city, it was to take a vacation from my vacation, get out of the city, and enjoy some of the good air of another part of the country.  I chose Cordoba because I'd heard nice things about the city, but I will admit I'd not done my homework.  I was totally unaware that that the city was located ten hours northwest of Buenos Aires, is not only a city but an Argentinian province as well.  ((t's a bit like "I live in New York.  No.  Not the city.  The state.")

 I reserved a seat on an overnight bus and it was my good fortuen to sit next to a young man who said to me, "You don't want the city of Cordoba.  You want the province."

OK.  As I said, I didn't do my homework and the more this guy told me of the state vs. the city, the more willing I was to let him make a few tweaks in my dismally laid plans.

The next morning we bypassed the city of Cordoba and disembarked in a much smaller city called Villa Carlos Paz.  Now, from what I could see, Villa Carlos Paz exists for reason, and one reason only--a city for tourists to hang their hats.  It's got great weather, lovely mountain vistas, three casinos and 250 hotles.  350!  It certainly wasn't hard to find a place to stay, especially since school had started the day before.

What it also had was a super network of tours that, for about $20.00, would whisk off the tourist on ten hour trips in multiple directions.  Not a bad deal at all!


CORDOBA, THE STATE, IS LOCATED ON A HIGH PLATEAU WITH THE SIERRA MOUNTAI
NS TO ITS WEST. THE SIERRAS, OF COURSE, ARE PART OF THE ANDES, BUT A MUCH SMALLER RANGE THAN THE ONES NEAR MENDOZA, WHICH ARE THE HIGHEST IN SOUTH AMERICA. CORDOBA WAS, IN A SENSE, THE ADIRONDACKS OF ARGENTINA, BUT THAT´S NOT A FAIR COMPARISON. THEY TOPPED OUT AT ABOUT 5,000 FEET, WERE COVERED IN VEGETATION AND INVITED HIKING. BUT THIS TRIP WAS ABOUT EXPLORING ITS MANY SMALL TOWNS AND ENJOYING THE VIEWS OF THE MOUNTAINS AND FROM THEIR SUMMITS.

A FEW HIGHLIGHTS: ON ONE OF THE TRIPS WE V
ISITED THE BOYHOOD HOME OF CHE GUEVARA AND TOURED A GORGEOUSLY RECONSTRUCTED JESUIT MISSION, NOW A UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE, IN THE PRETTY LITTLE TOWN OF ALTA GRACIA. ( JESUIT MISSIONS WILL PLACE A MORE SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN THIS TRIP WHEN I VISIT ANOTHER AREA OF ARGENTINA, PARAGUAY AND ONCE AGAIN IN BOLIVIA.)

SCHOOL HAD STARTED THAT WEEK AND, BECAUSE OF THE SLIGHT ALTITUDE, THERE WAS AN END-OF-SUMMER FEELING IN THE AIR. THE DAYS WERE GORGEOUS
--A DAZZLE OF SUNLIGHT WHILE THE NIGHTS COOLED DOWN COMFORTABLY. AND BECAUSE KIDS WERE BACK IN SCHOOL, THERE WERE FAR FEWER PEOPLE ON THE ROAD.


ONE PLEASANT MEMORY IS A SHORT HIKE A TOOK WHEN THE BUS STOPPED FOR LUNCH--ALWAYS A LONG AFFAIR ON THESE BUS TRIPS. WE WERE AT 4,000 FEET AND I HIKED UP A ROAD FOR ABOUT TWO MILES THEN RETURNED TO THE RESTAURANT. GARDENS WERE FULL OF LATE SUMMER FLOWERS--ZINNIAS AND MARIGOLDS, COSMOS AND DAHILIAS. GOLDENROD GRACED THE SIDES OF THE ROAD. SEPTEMBER AT HOME, BUT MID MARCH IN ARGENTINA.

LOTS OF GERMANS AND SWISS EMIGRATED TO THIS PART OF ARGENTINA AND SEVERAL TOWNS REFLECT THIS HERITAGE. ONE TOWN, EL CUMBRE, IS A SPITTING IMAGE OF A SWISS HAMLET--COMPLETE WITH CHALETS, FONDUE, GERMAN/SWISS MENUS AND STORES SELLLING ALL SORTS OF GERMAN ALPINE GOODS. EL CUMBRE WAS THE HIGHEST POINT WE TRAVELLED TO AND BY THIS IN MARCH SOME TREES HAD LAREADY BEGUN TO CHANGE. IT WAS STILL SUMMER, BUT AT THIS ALTITUDE AUTUMN WAS BEGINNING TO EMERGE.

THE BEST TRIP I TOOK WAS TO A SMALL TOWN CALLED MINA CLAVERO, ABOUT 90 MINUTES OUT OF VILLA CARLOS PAZ. I WANTED A "TOUR FREE" DAY, SO I TOOK A LOCAL BUS, GOT TO MINA CLAVERA BY LATE MORNING, GOT MY BEARINGS AND WANDERED DOWN TO THE RIVER THAT CUT THROUGH THE TOWN. I SPENT A SUPERB AFTERNOON UNDER A WIDE ARC OF SKY, UNDER A BRILLIANT LATE SUMMER SUN, ON THE BEACH BANKS OF A CLEAR, CLEAR, COLD MOUNTAIN RIVER. IT WAS PERFECT. AS THE DAY WOUND DOWN, I REALIZED HOW LOW THE SUN WAS GETTING AND THAT I HAD TO FACE FURTHER NORTH TO GET THE FULL EFFECT OF ITS WARMTH.

CORDOBA WAS A DELIGHT. THIS IS PART OF ARGENTINA THAT I WOULD BE HIGH ON MY "PLACES TO RETURN" TO LIST. HOW NICE IT WOULD BE SPEND CHRISTMAS/NEW YEAR IN ONE OF THE SMALL MOUNTAIN TOWNS, ENJOYING THE LONGEST DAYS OF THE YEAR.

WE WILL SEE.

The Good Air of Buenos Aires, Argentina: Part II



All large cities, no matter how exotic they sound from a guidebook or armchair, share certain characgtferistics: they're big, often hot and dirty, noisy and crowded.  But some cities get classified as "wordl class"--like Buenas Aires, and when they get that classification, it's often easy to overlook some of their faults.  The good air of this crowded city provided me with more than ample opportunities.


Steve was here for a good chunk of the time. Together, we were turistas lunaticas--out of the apartment at noon and pounding the city's streets on foot, subte and taxi.  We'd arrive back home exhausted, but always satisfied.Buenos Aires has a museum for every day of the year.  There's even one dedicated to cheese, but we're only good for about 1.5 museums a week, so we'd spend most of our time ourxplorig the city's many parks and formal gardens--all of which are free and all of whice were in their full summer splendor. 


  The good air of Buenos Aires is a walker's dream.  We'd start twith "A" with "Z"in mind, then do an alphabetic meander, looking at everything there was to look at, to get to our destination.  Buenos Aires is well connected with an extensive bus system, so it was always easy to get from "Z" back home again.



What did we see in these meanderings?  The good air of Buenas Aires is loaded with lovely old 19th century Belle Epoque architecture blended in with great art deco architecture from the 1930's.  There were street markets and fantastic ice cream shops and restaurants all over the place.  It wasn't hard to spend a day just wandering.





Both of us like cemeteries, and the good air of Buenos Aires did not dissapoint.  Recoletta is the city's premier cemetary and major tourist site because it's where Eva Peron was laid to rest.  But it's packed with tourists, so we headed a bit out of town to Chacaritas, where thos less famous have been buried.  Well, buried isn't ther ight word.  There are literally streets and streets of mausoleums.  Porteno's--the residents of Buenos Aires--from the 19th century seemed to want to outdo each other.  What makes both of these cemeteries really interesting is that each mausoleum has a glass door and inside the mausoleum, for everyone to see, are stacks of coffins.  No where else in the world have I ever seen that.  It was almost as if the dead Portenos wanted to make a statement in the size and grandeur of their casket.  We even say workers inside mausoleums sweeping and polishing the brass.  All very cool.

About every fourth day we'd make an excursion out of the city.  One trip was north to the Uruguayan border town of Tigre.  It was a blistering hot day and we took advantage of an extended boat ride on the Parana Delta, hoping to see some of the wildlife our guidebook promised.  All we saw were other tourists.

Another day trip brought us to the serene littel town of San Antonia de Areca.  It was a Monday and very quiet, but a 19th century estancia--a large Argentnian ranch--was open for visiting.  Wealthy landowners from the 18th and 19th century built rambling estancias from which they governed their vast properites.  Today, many of these elegant old ranches have been converted to upscale boutique hotel or, in this case, mueums.  This one honored the life of the Argentinian writer Ricardo Guiraldes.  We spent a wonderfully quiet afternoon enjoying a long walk alone a quiet river's edge, sharing a meal in a small restaurant, only returning to the maelstrom of Buenos Aires late in the afternoon.

Our best day trip was to Colonia del Sacramento, in Uruguay, across the Rio Plate, about two hours from Buenos Aires.  The river is massively wide, and it's really not possible to see one side from the other.  A day trip to Colonia is popular and boats are full of people out for the day.  We toured the town, its old forst and visited a couple of museums and the lovingly restored church in the center of town.  Today, Colonia is a UNESO World Heritage site, but 350 years ago it was a Portugese settlement establisehed to make smuggling easier between Brazil and Argentinia.  It's a beautiful small city, lying on the wide, caramel-brown shores of the Rio Plata.  By early afternoon we'd had enough of touring and spent the rest of the day on one of the city's many beaches, only returning to the good air of Buenos Aires after dark.

The good air of Buenos Aires is loaded with street markets, especially on the weekend.  Two of the bst, but by no means the only two, are in the popular tourist centers of San Telmo and Recoletta.  Way too much money was spent at these markets, but let's just say that all of our Christmas shopping down for 2009! 


The good air of Buenos Aires has more than its fair share of theater, dance and music.  I was able to see a Spanish version of Hairspray, a musical about Eva Peron called "Eva," two tango shows and a whole lot of great jazz.  Plus, the streets, especially on the weekend, were were loaded with musicians playing for free and selling their CD's for about $5.00. It was also a lot of fun to watch really good tango dancers strut their stuff. 



It was always snice to come home to an apartment.  Last fall, I'd arranged to rent a place via a web page I'd learned about.  For $33.00 a night, we had a large, one bedroom apartment, albeit sparsely furnised, in a nice building in the upscale neighborhood of Palermo Viejo.  Best of all, it had a balcoy which did not get the morning sun.  It was a great place to spend the early part of the day and, after the sun dipped behind a neighboring high rise, to spend the late afternoon and evening.
By early March there was a definite feel of autumn in the air.  Days were noticeably shorter.  Kids had returned to school, and stores began advertising for Autumn/Winter 2009.  After Steve left, I lingered on two more weeks.  But solo in the city just wasn't the same.  Earlier, I'd connected with a small group of expats who live in Buenos Aires during the northern winter months, and I was grateful for the times I spent with them, enjoying evenings of music and late night dinners.

On the Saturday afternoon of my last full day in the city, the good air of Buenos Aires pushed in clouds and heavy rain.  It had been a lovely day, but by early evening the rain was steady and the winds so strong that they blew over a cabinet in the laundry room.  At midnight, my iPod went a little crazy; whenit settled down it was 11:00 pm.

By Sunday morning, the clouds and rain were gone.  Daylight was an hour earlier and the day was clear and absolutely autumnal.  My thermometer read 59 degrees--the coldest it had been since I left Plattsburgh two months earlier.  The front had blown out summer, blown Argentinians back and hour and blew in fall.

It blew me out as well.  Sunday I revisted a few favorite places, packed and cleaned the apartment.  Monday morning, march 16th, I caugght a fast boat across the River Plata and arrived in Montevideo a few hours later.


But the city has left its mark.  There were more tango steps to learn, more jazz to hear, and more milangas (tango clubs) to haunt.  As for its museums, I'd only seen a week's worth.  The good air of Buenos Aires stilll had more to offer, and even though i was leaving, I had a feeling the city had not seen the last of me.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The Good Air of Buenos Aires, Argentina--Part 1

Buenos Aires
March 10, 2009

Let me tell you something about the good air of Buenos Aires. When I arrived almost a month ago, the good air of Buenos Aires was rich and sweet with the dry heat of a mid-summer´s day. Ahh, I was told...do not be deceived. This is an aberration, not normal, not a typical summer´s day. Whoever told me that was right.
Within a day the good air of Buenos Airs has turned thick with humidity; the temperatures soared into the low 90´s. The skies were still blue, but the ambient temperature was a force to reckon with. The good air of Buenos Aires had turned stifling--wet, breezeless and uncomfortable. Still, with shade and access to air conditioning, all things are possible. But then, there was the good air of Buenos Aires´ metro system, know locally as el subte. No air conditioning exists below the surface of the streets and no air conditioning could be found on any metro car. Trains were packed, standing room only, and easily 5-7 degrees hotter than outside. On really hot days the good air of the subte resulted in sweat pouring out of every gland, water beading on the skin, a bone drenching dehydration waiting to happen. Fortunately, rides were short.

It was my first Friday in Buenos Aires and I was enjoying the good air of the subte. It was the start of the line, the car began to fill. I was waiting on the subte´s A line--a classic, 1950´s line complete with old cars of a New York City vintage, circa 1955--all wooded interiors, windows that opened. It was hot. A group of rag-tag, Dickensian-type children were sprawled all over the seats, racing through the cars. It was still summer vacation and school was out of session. Barefooted and dirty, these urchins were the center of attention.

People gathered, the train took off. The children regrouped and the ragamuffin kids staged a mini-show of bottle and ball juggling, and a silly little dance routine. 
It was a great spectacle, a theater of poverty.  The young rascals had talent. were good. People applauded and little hands begged round for pesos. Then they were off to another car. I remember thinking I was glad they weren´t going to be in my classroom.

And that is when I came to love Buenos Aires. (A similar thing happened years ago in Mexico City when I walked out of the metro and watched a fire breather entertain drivers at a red light at rush hour. I always like the bizarre and that was when I fell in love with Mexico City.)

At times the good air of Buenos Aires was heavy with the smell of smoke--cigarettes and exhaust. Way too many people smoke and there are few laws that outlaw it, except in restaurants. But bus drivers smoke, the guy standing next to you waiting in line for something smokes, as does the woman next to you on a park bench.

Too, there´s the rich, wonderful smell of exhaust from the millions of cars and buses that don´t seem to have very strict emission standards. One afternoon, a rather hot one, I was standing on a corner waiting to cross the street. My eyes were watery from some allergic reaction to something. I could literally see carbon monoxide hovering in the air. Pull out the eye drops, hope for the best.

And then there is the good air of Buenos Aires´ dogs. There are leash laws, of course, but not poop laws. The good of air of Buenos Aires, at times, and dependent on location, could be filled with the aromatic aroma of caca de perro. Little landmines waited for discovery. Of course, the professional dog walkers who can lead up to ten or fifteen dogs at a time do pick up their clients´ caca, but they seem to be the only ones who do so.

The good air of Buenos Aires did not stay wet hot all the time. After a brutal three day period in mid to late February, when the temperature climbed to a 104, with a humidity to match, a front moved in that pushed out the deep heat. We woke that morning, opened the doors to the balcony, and were met with a cool, dry, late-August, "you-know-fall-is-in-the-air" sort of day. There was another week of summer vacation and it felt just like home in the days preceding Labor Day.

From then on the good air of Buenos Aires was fresh and pleasant and it´s been that way ever since.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Mendoza, Argentina--Beautiful Mendoza

Buenos Aires
March 9, 2009

Mendoza.  Even now the name Mendoza evokes strong images: long, eternally blue summer days; the rich, redolent smell of eucalyptus and the fresh summer-afternoon-smell of newly cut grass.  Wide, beautiful, tree-lined streets; an Andean backdrop of glaciers and 15,000+ foot mountains; the flat Argentinian pampas and a thousand vineyards surrounding the city.  A brilliant waxing moon seen "down-under", where the moon waxed from the left to right instead of right to left, then waned as my days in Mendoza dwindled down.

Mendoza.

I'd arrived early in February from Valparaiso, Chile.  After my return from Easter Island, I spent a few more days in Santiago, then went to Valparaiso--one of Chile's UNESCO World Heritage sites--on the Pacific Coast.

It's a bit difficult not to fall in love with Valpa.  It's directly on the ocean, rises up a series of ten hills, or cerros, and it's full of twisty, fun, colorful streets.  From everywhere there's a full view of the Pacific.  Of course, this was only after the early morning marine layer had burned off the clouds.  By noon, the sky was a deep, gorgeous blue and the temperatures were moderated by the sea.  Early February on the coast of Chile.

I'd been here before--in the form of San Francisco and Laguna Beach, in California, but this was more funky.  The streets were irregular and steep, and a series of funiculars could get you up the worst of the hills.  From there it was just fun to wander up and down the steep footpaths of the city's hills.


Pablo Neruda, Chile's Nobel Prize author, lived for a time in Valpa and his home is now a national treasure.  Built on five level, it's perched on one of the higher hills above the city.  It was all glass and vista--almost a bird house--and the views from the fifth floor studio were fabulous.  It would not be hard to call this home.
Unfortunately, my time in Valpa was short-lived. Perhaps that' sbest. All the more reason to return and hold up for a much longer visit. I'd booked myself into a laguage school in Mendoza, Argentina, and that forced my hand to exit Chile.

So early on a Sunday morning, I left Valparaiso on a Mendoza bound bus. Because I rarely create travel expectations, I was a bit unprepared for the amazing journey that would bring me out of Chile, up and and over the Andes, to Mendoza. We left sea level and within minutes started to climb away from the coast, into the Chilean foothills of the Andes. Within an hour or so, we were steadily climbing until we reached the Chilean/Argentinian border at 8,000 feet. We passed several significant ski centers--Portillo being one of them--all of which were summer-empty. Come June, though, they fill up with South Americans, ski teams from many northern countries and Americans and Europeans who just can't get enough of one ski season.

The mountains were polychromatic marvels, barren and free of vegetation.  The day was clear and blue which made the vistas from my bus window seat all the better.  At the border, the traffic was such that we had to wait three hours to clear customs.  This was all fine because it gave me an opportunity to do a bit of hiking which got me closer to the megaliths I was seeing.  I still marvel, whenever I'm at high altitudes, that.these mountains were all submerged at one time and had beed been pushed by unimaginable forces to elevations that exceeded 20,000 feet.

On the Argentinian side of the border, it was all downhill for the next three hours.  At one point, we passed Aconcagua, the highest peak in South America at about 21,000 feet.  It was clear, sunny and blue and we had a full panoramic view of the mountain.  What frustrated me, was not being able to stop.  Mountains became smaller until we entered the flat, dry Aregentine pampas and the lovely city of Mendoza.
My plan was to spend two weeks in Mendoza, live with a local family, go to school part of the day, and put my totally inadequate Spanish to use.  And that is exaclty what I did.

Again, it was my good fortune to live in the home of Malena, 60 something, divorced and a marvelous cook. Sharing the house was a young woman from Switzerland who spoke no Spanish and was just getting her feet wet in the language.  Malena would prepare us a light breakfast, then we'd set off for class.  I'd arranged for four hours a day of one-on-one work with a teacher who'd stretch my vocabulary and require me to read material I'd otherwise avoid. 

Classes finished at 1:00 pm and most of the students would gather in the school's garden to eat lunch.  What impressed me so about this school, and the student body, was that no one spoke English.  We were all in the same linguistic boat, and it was sink or swim, and most of us swam very well. 

By 2:00 p.m. there was always an afternoon outing--to a local museum or a hot springs. At least once a week the school went to a different vineyard for a personal tour. (Mendoza is Argentinia's premier wine growing area with over 1,000 vineyards, or bodegas, surrounding the city. This was also when I was introduced to tango.

By late afternoon, I'd return to Malena's, shower (it was always 90+ during the day), do a bit of homework, commit new vocabulary to memory




As is the habit of Argentinians, dinner was not served until 9:30 or 10:00 pm.  We'd sit on the patio of Malena's lovely back yard, enjoy her superb cooking, struggle on in Spanish and finally call it a night around 11:00 pm. 

In hindsight, I feel this was one of the best language environments I've ever been in.  Teachers were well trained, students were serious, and the course load was demanding yet reasonable.  And because Mendoza was such a likeable city, with wide streets, huge parks and a ton of natural wondes surrounding it,, I can see why students linger on for weeks.  It's certainly the only school I would ever consider returning to.  And I just might.

But all things must come to an end, and my my stay in Mendoza was running tight.  I'd scheduled an apartment in Buenos Aires for a month and on February 11th it was time to move on.