Please utilise this space to search this blog

Showing posts with label Castanera Sur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Castanera Sur. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Buenos Aires - I'm going to take you to a tango show!

Buenos Aires (Argentina)
28 March - 06 April 2015


The question I get asked by all and sundry is ‘What is it about Buenos Aires’? In the immediate moments after I hear the question I always find myself in that inevitable space of having to fumble for the appropriate verbs and adjectives, I simultaneously berate myself for not ever having developed a stock answer, but now, with the equivalent lucidity of a man that’s consumed three glasses of Malbec and has hit that ‘sweet zone’ of temporary enlightenment, I figure that I don’t ever really need to have one. The question is about as complex as answering ‘why are you in love?’, I mean how do you formulate an answer and provide a significant amount of justice to the weight of that feeling? I know that I can frame the response in terms of what initially drew me in, which was the steak, red wine and its vibrancy of life, but that’s basic talk, that’s just Buenos Aires 101 for the newbie.  I  could then add something about its energy, passion, lifestyle, architecture, sense of style, sense of self, nightlife, the cobble stoned streets of San Telmo, café con leche and medialunas in Dorrego Bar, the roar of the crowd in La Bombonera, the dog walkers handling 10 dogs at a time on the tree lined streets of Palermo, watching the afternoon sun light up the buildings with a glorious burnt orange hue over Puerto Madero, walking Defensa on market day, sipping cocktails and feeling the buzz of Plaza Serrano, looking at the uniquely framed Punta de la Mujer, infiltrating a cross fit class in the parks surrounding Madero, empanadas, dulce de leche, having three bites of walking across Avenida 9 de Julio, not grasping the weird locks of our apartment on Humberto Primo, talking about going to a tango show, actually going to a tango show…you see, the point ends up becoming so irrelevant because in the end it all rests within the realm of my own personal connection with the city and how this place makes me feel. That’s something that I can’t convey in it's entirety, you can’t simply give that to somebody, you can only hope that someone else gets the chance to have that experience and also, perhaps, feel the same sort of thing as you do. So when Inga’s flight touched down at Ezeiza on the 29th of March all I was hoping was that this town would somehow permeate her pores and pass on that same vibrant energy that had mesmerised me for so long.

San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina

Sunrise in San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina

Obelisco de Buenos Aires - Avenida Corrientes - Buenos Aires - Argentina
Puerto Madero panorama - Buenos Aires - Argentina

Drinks on Plaza Serrano - Palermo - Buenos Aires - Argentina 
When you front up to the starting line of a 3.5 month adventure you convince yourself that you have all the time in the world, whilst at the same time secretly whispering to yourself, in your 'other' internal voice, ‘yeah but time will pass us by so quickly’, and you know in yourself that you’re right. This adventure originated from an idea that was formulated in Paris, that when said out aloud at the time sounded like pure fantasy, and yet as I drifted through the now familiar streets of San Telmo, there I stood, in another city, on another continent, Inga in situ and me waiting for us to started.
The decision for both of us to do this was a huge roll of the dice on both parts. Travelling with friends, family members, partners, etc can be fraught with danger. The traps are an ever present reality. Spending so much time in the company of one another can quickly undo a relationship and turn it into a pile of rubble, but with that said, where there is risk there is also the chance for an equally large reward. So as I waited at the overcrowded arrival gates of Ezeiza airport and spotted that familiar face in a very foreign crowd all I was able to say when she approached was ‘hey, look at you’, not the most profound opening line of all time but at least I had time on my side to be able to improve on that!
Corridor entrance to our apartment - Humberto Primo - San Telmo - Buenos Aires
 
Our apartment - Humberto Primo - San Telmo - Buenos Aires
 
Our home in Buenos Aires was a great apartment on Humberto Primo, literally on the doorstep of Plaza Dorrego, a place where for me I believe that a person can find the essence of this city. On Sundays the plaza, and the avenue that it sidles up against (Avenida Defensa), comes alive with the chatter of people through its markets, the sounds of tango and the movement of people in dance, cafes filled with Portenos and tourists alike, parillas filling the air with the aromas of all sorts of grilled meat, the clinking of glasses filled with Malbec and the unique sound of Argentinian Spanish. For me it felt somehow important that Inga fall for Buenos Aires the same way that I did and the only way I could think of doing that was to throw the wall of Buenos Aires straight at her on arrival. Walking through the throngs on Defensa, heading up to Plaza de Mayo and admiring the uniquely coloured Casa Rosada, walking Avenida Pres.Roque Saenz Pena and being pulled into the central vortex of the city as represented by the Obelisco de Buenos Aires, an historical monument located at the intersection of Corrientes and Avenida 9 de Julio. This to me is how I believe a city can be truly experienced but especially a place like BA where walking the streets really allows you to feel the vibrancy and its pace of life. As I’ve commented many times before in this blog, I often find the best way of getting to know a city is to just walk, to go, explore and discover, whether that be with a certain intent or wandering aimlessly in the hope of acquiring those ‘happy’ accidental discoveries. I was more than happy that with Inga her modus was similar to mine, although I found out very quickly that she adopted the exhausting principal of ‘walk until you drop’, mitigated by only by the fact that refreshment stops for us both were for the most part cocktail sessions somewhere in the city. An outsider viewing our movements could quite easily have been fooled into thinking that our journey through this metropolis was nothing more than an extravagant bar crawl!
Gardelito, Defensa on a Sunday, he's just such a part of the city. This is the personification of San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
If it's a glass of Malbec then it must be Argentina - Puerto Madero - Buenos Aires - Argentina
Love this place - Dorrego Bar - San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
'Seriously Mafalda!?' - San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
The 30th of March brought with it an important milestone for Inga, her 30th birthday. It was this date and of course the 2nd of July, my 40th, which essentially provided the bookends to our intended South American adventure. It was these two dates that we selected months ago as being ones that we wanted both wanted to celebrate in this town. So, as opposed to the previous day where we experienced Buenos Aires on the street, I thought that, post morning champagne celebration, which also involved some extreme skill on my part where I caught the flying rebound of the champagne cork off the living room wall (trust me, it looked impressive), that we head out to the heliport at San Isidro and take to the air in order to gain some vertical perspective of what is the second largest metropolitan area in South America after Sao Paulo.
Somewhere over the Rio de la plata - Buenos Aires - Argentina
Puerto Madero from the air - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Looking back now, several months removed from where it started, you realise that in writing at ‘arms length’, the location of where a place resides in your mind is always punctuated by the moments that you carry in your memory for what and how those moments made you feel. I do recall on one particular evening whilst taking a walk through the parks surrounding Puerto Madero that we encountered a cross fit group mid-session. What’s fantastic about this area and I guess about Portenos in general is that they enjoy getting out and doing things, now that may be in the guise of going to cafes, restaurants and bars, or as in this instance, keeping fit. Puerto Madero of an evening is filled with inline bladers, runners, meandering couples and fitness groups, something that we of course intended to be a part of. So with the stealth and deft touch of a blind elephant in a China shop, we infiltrated one of these groups by mimicking exercises from the safe distance of 5 mtrs, because as a foreigner, you know, you’ll never be spotted with your cloak of invisibility!? Sure enough, within seconds the instructor was calling us out and beckoning us to join in, without a second thought Inga does and enters the fray and of course I follow. Now, I don’t want to say that the gringo ring-ins showed the Portenos of Puerto Madero a thing or two about exercise, but yeah, we absolutely owned them!


'El Che' mural - Carlos Calvo - San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina

 


Mothers of the disappeared mural - La Boca - Buenos Aires - Argentina

 


El caminito - La Boca - Buenos Aires - Argentina

 


 
Estadio Monumental - Belgrano-  Buenos Aires
 
Estadio Monumental - Belgrano-  Buenos Aires
 
Drinks at Floreria Atlantico - Retiro - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 

When you think of Buenos Aires there are places and things that immediately come to mind, places that punctuate your consciousness, but in the same way these places and events are unique in the manner in which you experience them. So when I think of us in San Telmo I remember the mural of ‘El Che’ on pasaje San Lorenzo, the accompanying words which I now know to say ‘For love, use a condom’ or I think of wandering the multi-coloured streets of La Boca and El Caminito and remembering that greater than the vibrant colour was the acquisition of the best Pisco Sours in the whole of South America ( we didn’t know it at the time but our extensive testing over three months was definitive, Buenos Aires (La Boca) owned the title even though Chile and Peru disputed intellectual property rights) or I think of the inspired 3am suggestion by Inga whilst lying in bed that going out for drinks would be a much better way of passing our time (and I had to agree) or I think of rocking up to the well known restaurant of La Brigada in San Telmo well after midnight and the waiters responding almost incredulously to our question of whether they were still open ‘…but of course we’re open’…but of course we repeat to ourselves, this is Buenos Aires and this is where a so much living is done between the hours of midnight and 6am. This is a town where you can walk into a florist, waltz passed a very non-descript door and descend stairs to one of the coolest bars in town (I’m looking at you Floreria Atlantico)  but it’s also a town where old school charm is still maintained and none better than within the four walls of the well known Café Tortoni. It’s a city of passion, as encountered by our trip to Estadio Monumental where one bright April afternoon we caught the local derby between River Plate and their inner city rivals San Lorenzo, and it’s a city of culinary delights, mostly of the carne persuasion, as typified by our visits to Don Ernesto, La Brigada and Desnivel but more importantly highlighted by our expert opinion which of them had the best chimichurri (The most necessary of condiments in Argentina – and - It was Desnivel by the way). The ‘key’ to feeling a city, this city, is to immerse yourself the best  way you can in whatever it has to offer, and sometimes, if both you and the city are on the same wavelength then something magical can happen. Buenos Aires to me is some place that I have to feel and not just see, and, far more importantly I think, one of those rare places that even though it isn't home it somehow still allows me to feel at home, and if I  mayspeak for Inga also, I think it’s a place that she fell for in the same manner as I have and did again. Why and how that happened is not so important as the fact that it did and the fact that I really hoped that it would. Buenos Aires never ever seems to disappoint and is always able to give so much, this occasion was certainly no exception and for that, Buenos Aires, we say ‘Muchas gracias!’.

We were there! It says so!! Don Ernesto - San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Buenos Aires - la noche está en pañales


Buenos Aires (Argentina)
26-29 of August 2012

'It's a Sunday morning and I'm standing out on the Reserva Ecológica Costenera Sur' I literally say that line in my head as I'm standing there, in fact I remember the  time when I first wrote it, where I was when I wrote it and how I was feeling at the time. The reserve is a low lying area of land on the eastern border of the city and it fronts the mighty murk of the Rio de la Plata. It's quite a large area that is criss-crossed by a myriad of nature trails more than are suitable for cycling, running or just strolling in the BA sunshine ever so casually, as is the Porteno way. It also allows a person to quite easily lose themselves from the movement,beat  and eternal hum of this city. I know this place, where I'm standing right now, I know it. In in a different guise and in a different time, but it's emblazoned in the timeline of my mind. I carry a piece of Costenera Sur with me always, I carry an event of something that happened two years earlier and one that in my mind will never 'unhappen', or so I hope. For right now however I'm going to quote my own words that are taken from the evening that I'm referring to just so that you know where it is, that on this glorious Sunday morning in Buenos Aires, with only 20 pesos in my pocket,  my mind took me, a moment of my life in two separate times. One in the present, one of the present remembered:

13 October 2010
 
'I'm standing out on the grounds of Castenera Sur, an ecological park on the eastern border of Buenos Aires which fronts the Rio de la Plata. Rage Against The Machine have for over the last hour delivered a ferocious, brutal set that has lit the fuse of testosterone amongst a predominantly male audience. The intensity of the performance, the power of the delivery and the common themes within the lyrics of their songs of raging against the establishment, fighting oppression and standing up for ones rights are not lost amongst the Argentinian faithful. The tumultuous political history of this country and some of the horrors suffered by its people fits the message that Rage delivers like a glove. As if by design the rain increases in intensity during their set, assisting in the transference of an invisible electric current through a 50,000 strong audience so that at the point where they drop the bomb of 'Killing in the name of', the charge is released, lifting the crowd off their feet in unison, bouncing bodies off one another like protons in a nuclear reaction.....
 
For this last hour I've been carried along by both a wave of emotion and the immovable force which is the vast sea of people around me. This moment and this particular time however, for me, has been more than just the music, more than the energy, even more than the sum total of the individual components of the event. Drifting in and out of my own thoughts whilst relinquishing myself to the ebb and flow off the human tide that has consumed my being has strangely enough given me the opportunity of being able to connect with myself without distraction. As strange as that may sound, the unanswered questions that have been rolling around my head for some months, those of which I really hadn't attacked, for some reason at this point in time and in this space required a little attention'

P
Puerto Madero - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Puerto Madero skyline from Castanera Sur - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Puerto Madero tramway - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
If you feel like reading the entry from where those paragraphs are taken then it can be located here - Buenos Aires - The Quickening. I also recall that I wrote half that entry on an overnight bus ride out of Buenos Aires to Mendoza and finished it off in a small hostel in that city working on a PC that was so slow that it took me all night to upload the photos, (seriously I saw the sun come up that morning), to finish it off. To quote one Mr Oscar Wilde, 'Memory...is the diary that we all carry around with us'. As I've mentioned quite a few times in my entries over the years, I feel more than fortunate to have the memories that I've had in the places that I've had them in. I like the idea that for me there are many places around the world where I can return to, stand, drift off and remember another time in the very same space whilst simultaneously appreciating the moment that I'm currently in. Looking at the backdrop of thehigh rise buildings of Puerto Madero on this morning I recall the very same scene of that evening, I also remember the incessant rain that came down during the set, the lights of the buildings refracted and magnified through the drops of water falling from the blackness of the sky and I remember Rage Against the Machine grabbing the crowd by their collective collar, lifting them up off their feet and then triggering the reaction that released an explosion of pure energy and fury. It was a violent assault, an unforgettable moment...and so far removed in time from where I was on this Sunday morning. Still, it made me smile now, as it did then.

I didn't have the opportunity to wander through the ecological reserve on my last occasion in BA, and now, well it was about the only thing I could afford to do until my funds became available the next day, but truth be told I had set aside a day to do this in any case so it kind of worked out perfectly. Also it just so happens that on Sundays there is an outdoor street fair on the main promenade of the Castanera Sur. Apparently more 'authentic'  and more of a 'tourist free' environment than the Sunday markets in San Telmo, although in all honesty I didn't notice the difference other than one being more crowded than the other. What I did appreciate however were all the food stands, unlike the fair weathered 'fair crowd' that habitate the promenade only on Sundays these food stands are ever present and their culinary angle made it feel as though they had been built specifically to cater for my carnivorous cravings! It's meat a meat haven! Morcillas, morzipans, choripans, bondiolas, hamburguesas, vacipans - it's like Buenos Aires sourced Henry Elisher for culinary guidance then just went 'Yup, that's what we're gonna go with!'.

Did someone say meat? Castanera Sur - Buenos Aires - Argentina

It was only 10am when I hit the boardwalk of the Castanera Sur but the smells from the grills were so intoxicating that I commenced mentally reconstructing the manner in which I would need to divide and utilise my bountiful  sum of 28 pesos that I had for the day until I made the pick up from Western Union. Those damn choripans were looking so good and for just 8 pesos where worthwhile investment in satisfying the small screaming Argentinian 'meatavore' inside me! I loaded it with chimmichurri and then drifted of into my culinary nirvana, floating contentedly into the wilds of the reserve.


Reserva Ecologica - Castanera Sur - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Reserva Ecologica - Castanera Sur - Buenos Aires - Argentina

Losing yourself within the space of the reserve doesn't take a fist full of IQ points. Buenos Aires is to your back as you enter and drops so quickly from sight that you really feel as though you could anywhere else. It's quiet. It's peaceful. And under the warming high noon sun of a South American Winter the rays sing their own sweet silent lullaby, cajoling the willing participant to partition off their own piece of Rio de la Plata real estate and drift away on the currents of their  day dreams for an hour or so. The sultry seductress can be persuasive and who was I to deny an hour in bed with Buenos Aires?

Reserva Ecologica - Castanera Sur - Buenos Aires - Argentina

Rio de la Plata - Reserva Ecologica - Castanera Sur - Buenos Aires - Argentina

Feeling refreshed after my little tryst I spent the next 2hrs meandering on the most eastern border of the reserve, contemplating, reflecting, appreciating, throw in any other adverb and currency based activity restriction here and you've pretty much got where my head space was. I'd say it was definitely in tranquillo territory, although with that said, my internal Argentinian was starting to feeling hungry once again and was screaming out for another choripan - 'Una mas chori mi amigo, por favor...vamos muchachos!'. Mathematically I knew it could be done, I could take out another  chori and still have a whole 12 pesos for an evening take away munch from El Desvivel on Defensa. Internally I was satisfied with that result and that's the way I decided to play it out. Convinced and content once more I headed back to Defensa in San Telmo. It was Sunday after all and that meant the Sunday markets were going to be in full swing. I love the San Telmo markets, it's a stage of petty commerce, trade, sights, sounds and smells. It activates all your senses, and even though I had only a couple of dollars in my pocket it felt as though the day was turning into an unplanned win, almost as if BA was attempting to make up for what it had unintentionally put me through the day before.


Puerto Madero from the Reserva Ecologica - Castanera Sur - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Welcome to San Telmo
 
 
Samba crew - San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Che Guevara mural - San Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Streetscape - Sant Telmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Old school cool - Bar El Federal - Buenos Aires - Argentina

Late in the afternoon I cruised back to the Ayres Portenos and crashed out on my bed for a while. It was during that time that I met Mike from Mendoza. Mike was an older American guy, I'd say in his late 60's, and was on his way to Colonia de Sacramento, a short ferry ride across the Rio de la Plata. He kind of had an odd presence about him but we started chatting never the less. That's the cool thing about hostels, they kind of force you to engage in conversation, a particularly great thing for me because I'm not naturally an instigator at all, I need to be pulled into a conversation. Mike explained that this was his first real stay of any length in Buenos Aires and mentioned that just in the surrounding blocks he thought that he'd been lined up for the old Bird poo on the jacket scam (look it up, it's well known). I dropped to Mike that I'd read of the scame but never encountered it and thought it to be an urban myth. I then went on to induldge Mike in my own tales of woe that originated  in Montevideo a couple of days earlier. As I reflect on the ecounter now I think there was a small part of me that was testing Mike out so as to see how nice he was, actually I was kind of banking on it. After I led Mike into the details of my misfortune the conversation continued like this:

'Well, how about I just give you 100 pesos until tomorrow' - Mike

'Oh no, thanks for the offer Mike but I'm ok' - Henry

'Are you sure now?' - Mike

'Absolutely, it's very generous of you but I'm fine' - Henry

I was slow playing Mike like a champ. Although if nothing came up it then it really wouldn't have bothered me either, I mean the offer genuinely was nice. Still, we remained quite for a few mins and then it came...

'You're going to make me do it aren't you?' - Mike

'What's that?' - Henry

'You're going to make me take you to dinner! C'mon, the place on the corner does a great steak and their Malbecs are fantastic' - Mike

'Why thank you Mike, ok, lets do that then' - Henry

So we walked the 20 paces out of the Ayres Portenos to the restaurant door, a place called Parilla del Plata. Now it was sweet Malbec and bife de chorizo time, oh yeah! Mike and I chatted for quite some time. I discovered that he had purchased himself an estancia in Mendoza when he had retired and that was now his gig. He had lived in Canada previously and was US born, from Texas, but America and American ideology, specifically that of the South, was just not his deal. His life in Argentina was just the way he wanted it. Comfortable, relaxing and entertaining. Without question Mike appeared to be interesting character and with each passing glass of wine quite the conversationalist, but each passing glass also brought out the sleaze in Mike. It wasn't something that I was expecting and certainly not something that I really wanted to hear from this silver topped old timer, but there I was, caught in my service of gratitude, indebted to Mike for shouting me dinner, and thus there I remained. I was Mikes' guest for the evening and now I had to listen to him wax lyrical about his 'love' of younger girls, particularly those from Eastern Europe - ewwww dude, I wasn't mentally prepared to hear any of that! I mean I could retell the tales but they're not anything that I really want to be reading now or any other day in my future. On the whole Mikey boy was still OK and we sat it out at the restaurant until closing, which in Buenos Aires on any day of the week is late!

Plaza de Mayo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Punta de la mujer - Puerto Madero - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Puerto Madero - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 

27 August 2012

Monday morning, time to get some cash from Western Union. This time  the transaction  occurred without alarm. Two days earlier would have been nicer but OK, was the hand that I had to play with. This day was an absolute cruise with no real agenda. I strolled through Centro and took down the necessary souvenirs for family and friends and generally wandered aimlessly. Somehow I made nightfall without really knowing how time had passed me by.

In the evening I headed down to Puerto Madero and tried to locate a restaurant that I had been to two years previously. A place that has greatest meat buffet you could imagine. A smorgasbord of every meat you could possibly desire all washed down with an imperious and I must say requisite Mendozan malbec! Like c'mon people, how smokin' was my life for this evening!?


28 August 2012
 
My final day in BA took place in the barrio of Recoleta. One of the most stylish and most European of the city. I had the aim of visiting Recoleta cemetery and seeing the final resting place of Eva Peron, which I did. A totally unremarkable burial plot in convesely an absolutely remarkable cemetry. It holds pride of place in Recoleta and is probably some of the most expensive real estate in Buenos Aires. The cemetery itself is intriguing and kind of oddly beautiful in a macabre type of way. Well worth the time I dedicated that to make my way through the 'little city of the dead'.
 
Recoleta cemetery - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Recoleta cemetery - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Recoleta cemetery - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Recoleta cemetery - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Recoleta cemetery - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Walking back to Centro I headed down Avenida Sante Fe and stopped in at the most incredible bookstore that I'd ever seen anywhere in the world. This place is built on the site of an old theatre. It's three stories high, spectacular and dramatic, and quite the display for a dedication to the written word. Obviously 90% of the texts were in Spanish but that didn't bother me at all. I was more than happy to spend quite sometime walking around and mentally spending my pesos on items that I would have dearly loved to have taken back to Australia.
 
Family tomb of Durante, the burial spot of Evita Peron - Recoleta cemetery - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Recoleta cemetery - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
Recoleta cemetery - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
The EPIC bookstore on Avenida Santa Fe - Recoleta - Buenos Aires - Argentina

La noche está en pañales - it's Argentinian slang for the night is still young. As I walked back down Avenida Santa Fe I convinced myself that as the saying suggests, the night was still in diapers. Like Madrid and San Sebastian, this town and I just have a magical fit. I don't quite understand how it works, I don't know how it is that there are some places in this world  where I don't have family or friends but am still able to feel right at home. Buenos Aires me is that type of town to me. Perhaps to a certain extent it's because the language is not completely foreign, I have an intermediate grasp of Spanish and it's improving all the time, but it's more than that. BA has a feel that inspires me, it's a sense of excitement, anticipation and comfort all rolled into one. I gain pleasure from her, enjoy her company and perhaps those are the more pertinent aspects of our 'relationship'.
 
Band practice! SanTelmo - Buenos Aires - Argentina
 
 
Malbec from Mendoza, what could be better!?!? Puerto Madero - Buenos Aires - Argentina

As the evening settled in I headed back down to the restaurant that I had occupied in Puerto Madero the previous evening. The food was magnificent and the malbec was just the tonic to sooth those pangs of loss that I was already feeling for having to leave once again. In those moments it didn't take me a long time to realise that very soon I would be making plans to come back once again, creating more of those evenings in Buenos Aires that would once more be young and full of promise!

29 August 2012

I dozed prior to my flight from Ezeiza back home. One of those rare peaceful sleeps that you somehow manage to have in public places. Odd but enjoyable, althoughI think in airports it's acceptable to sprawl out whenever required and where space can be found. My time in Buenos Aires on this occasion was short, but the tme spent won't be my last. I'll be back, that you can count on!
 
Time to head for home - Ezeiza airport - Buenos Aires - Argentina


'Gracias Buenos Aires por una bien tiempo. Debo irme ahora pero voy a volver pronto.
Hasta luego hermosa!'


Aerolineas Argentina flight - Buenos Aires to Sydney

Icebergs in Antarctica! Taken from 40,000 feet!

That's just a little bit massive! Somewhere over Antarctica!