Saying goodbye to Argentina My last meal in Argentina was filete rellena. It couldn’t have been a more fitting final meal to see me off from this fantastic country. The waiter brought me this ridiculously huge steak. The sheer size and scale of the thing was beyond my comprehension. I knew immediately I was in …
Category: Travel Journal
Thoughts about everywhere we’re going and everywhere we’ve been.
Salta, we salute you
It didn’t take long at all. We climbed off the night bus into Salta at around 11:00. We knew we couldn’t check in to our room until 13:00 but flew by the place we were staying to drop our backs off. Rather than just grabbing breakfast at a local confiteria, Maria who we were staying …
Back on the road and back in business
Travelling west across Argentina It has been great staying in Puerto Iguazu for a week, even if things didn’t go exactly as planned. Since we left Barcelona, we’ve had a manic few weeks. We moved around a lot in the UK, while squeezing in all sorts of activities like weddings, catching up with family and …
Iguazú Falls: As close to paradise as you’re going to get
Legend has it that back in the day there was a beautiful woman called Naipi. She was so beautiful that a god was going to marry her. Naipi loved another, however, and the two sailed off together in a canoe. This royally pissed off the god who was after Naipi. In a truly Trumpian way …
Rained in and planning ahead
So, after a rather comfortable 18-hour bus journey from Buenos Aires to Puerto Iguazu we find ourselves within touching distance of one of the world’s greatest natural wonders, but still a week away from getting there. We arrived here on the morning of Sunday September 23rd and that is the only day the weather has …
Cobbled streets, sunsets, and tourists
Colonia del Sacramento was the first ever town in Uruguay. It regularly changed hands between Spanish and Portuguese colonialists, which means today it offers an interesting mix of two colonial styles and some really beautiful streets to explore and corners to hide in. The mix of influences have left a truly beautiful town. Colonia faces …
Bouncing off Montevideo
Where the massive mouth of the Parana river kisses the freezing cold waters of the Atlantic Ocean is all that lies between the capital cities of Argentina and Uruguay. After a whirlwind few days in Buenos Aires we took a one-hour ferry from Tigre, to the north of the Argentinian capital, to the Uruguayan town …
Delta de Tigre
We’ve been quite busy running around a lot, so I’m a bit behind on what we’ve been up to. We’ve just got back into Argentina after a four-day trip to Uruguay. Those four days in the South American country with the highest standard of living are in the backlog though, for now I’m concentrating on …
A bit about the blog
I feel like I need to set a few things straight after my last blog post. I’m not a journalist travelling to various places to report on some objective facts, I’m just a lad travelling from place to place with his girlfriend and this blog is just a way for me to document what we …
Buenos Aires Part 2: Other people’s mistakes
Buenos Aires is a truly magnificent city, it is plain to see. It looks like a tired old town though. From crumbling pavements to makeshift train station platforms there is a lot of work that needs doing if this city is to shine like it should. You notice signs promising the work, but away from …