Sunday, December 4, 2011

Argentina Nov 2011

Argentina, November 2011 - Cycling From the Salt Mines to the Jungle

November 7

The flights from Orlando and Miami were uneventful.  American Airlines is a step closer to International first class with pajamas and duvets.  But they're still in last place when it comes to liquor.

It really doesn't matter since I slept the entire flight.

November 8

After arriving, I took a taxi to the apartment I was renting.  It had recently been modernized and had everything you could need.  My only concern was security, the door had three locks.

I walked around most of the day, had pizza for lunch and steak for dinner.  The size of the steak is smaller then I remembered, but it was still cheap compared to USA standards.

November 9

On my second day I took the subway (still only 25 cents) to meet the cycling tour guide.  He explained the tour and the varying terrains.  I can't wait to start.

We went to a cycle shop where I bought a new helmet and an Argentine cycling jersey.
I walked all the way back to my apartment, about 3-4 miles.  I had delicious empanadas for lunch, along with a $2 liter of beer.

After a nap I headed to the main tourist section, but was met by a few dounpours before I got there.  So I headed home to read before dinner.

I left at 7:30 but discovered the restaurant didn't open until 8:00.  That was no surprise, the locals don't arrive until 9:00 or 10:00.  No need to guess, I had steak and fries.

November 10

Today the weather was perfect.  I read and relaxed in the morning.  I had empanadas at La Reina de las Empanadas (the queen of the empanadas).  They were excellent.

Then I walked and walked and walked and walked.  I walked for over three hours, visiting my favorite sights and some new ones.  I saw the Casa Rosada, Puerto Moderno, the Retiro train station, Florida Street and the Congress.  I ended with a well deserved gelato.



Casa Rosada


Eva and Juan Peron


Tall Ship in Harbor



Harrods on Florida Street - Still empty


Evita's Broadcast

Tonight's dinner was the usual, at a restaurant I've been to many times before - an amazing steak and fries.

November 11

Time to leave Buenos Aires for my flight to Salta.  Today was the day the air traffic controllers decided to strike - no flight.

I contacted the tour guide, Mariano, and told him I need to take the van.

I got to his apartment, dropped off my luggage, and had my only meal of the day - a steak, of course.

We loaded the van and left around 7:00 pm.  We picked up others along the way.  I took a sleeping pill at around eleven and faded off.

November 12

After a restless night, I just tried to entertain myself for the ride.  We did watch a DVD with Morgan Freeman and Angolina Jolie.  It was very violent, but in English.  I did not watch the second feature.

The ride was what books on tape were meant for.  I finished the last ten hours of The Trials of Zion.

Finally at 5:30 pm we reached Salta.  It took a while to find everyone else, and didn't make it to the hotel until 7:30 - 24.5 hours.  Salta is in the northwest corner of Argentina, next to the Andes.





We had a late dinner and I was off to bed.

November 13

The Bo Hotel in Chicoana was awesome.  The owners, Roxana and Tony could not have been any nicer.  The food was amazing.  I highly recommend the Bo Hotel.


Bo Hotel

After orientation we loaded onto the van and headed for our first downhill ride.  Out of 67 kilometers, only one might have been uphill.  We eventually started the downhill trek at 2:00 pm - I must remember I am on Latin time.

The first few kilometers were on paved roads, but the majority was on gravel, not my favorite.  After adjusting my gears, off I went.  The weather was great and the scenery even better.





We had lunch from 4-5:00 pm then another 30km to the hotel.  I got back after seven, but in plenty of time for Roxana's lomo (steak) dinner.

November 14

Today we started riding a little earlier - 1:00 pm, after a stop at the airport and the bike shop.

Today's ride was in the tropical rain forest, and yes it rained.  I donned my rain gear and pedalled uphill.  At least it wasn't cold.

At the peak we decided not to have lunch in the rain.  So we cycled downhill through the forest.  The highlight was the cows in the road.




Stretching after cycling

We finally had lunch at 4pm.  We then took the van for hours to our next destination.


November 15

First of all, the colors in the mountains were awesome.  You could see every color of the rainbow in Purmamarca..

We then took the van to the completely white and extremely dry Salinas Grandes -  Great Salt Flats.








After lunch we had a 4km uphill ride before the 37 downhill ride, this time on paved roads.  I really don't have cold weather gear, and at the peak it was about 45 degrees.  At one point I had two jerseys, two jackets, a long sleeve t-shirt and a sweatshirt on.  My only cold spot was my fingers.

As usual, I was last, stopping to take 100 pictures.

Once we reached Purmamarca, we took a 3km ride around town.  Of course my bicycle gears went wacky.

For dinner I had tenderloin of llama.  Well, it didn't taste like chicken.  I ordered it rare, but never saw any pink.  My friend Cristian, from France, said it tasted more like goat.  I think llama is off my list.  I did have alpaca in Peru years ago, that was much better.

The gate to my hotel was locked, so Christian boosted me over the wall.  What am I, twelve?

November 16

Today we left Purmamarca for our normal two hour ride before cycling.  We unloaded our bikes for our toughest day yet.  We would go uphill 14 km and down 28.  I told Mariano that my gears still were not working.  After 1/2 hour of trying to fix them, he gave me his bike.  It was a gravel trail uphill, at about 4000 meters.

So off I went, a half an hour after the pack.  The first kilometer wasn't that bad, but then it seemed that the incline kept growing.  I started having trouble breathing at this altitude.  So I took it real slow and stopped often.  Finally, after what seemed a marathon, I saw the van in the distance.  This was only 10 of the 14 uphill kilometers.



That's the road I just climbed

I made it but realized I had exceeded my limit.  After lunch I opted for the van.  It took me the whole day to recover.

The van ride was extremely scenic.  It was similar to the mountains in Arizona, but distinct.  The final 10km was next to a dry riverbed.  I will have to figure out why it was dry.  It is spring here so the snow should be melting.

We arrived in Iruya and made our way to the simple hotel.  There is no better way to describe it.

I expect dinner to be the same.

Dinner turned out to be very good.  I had chicken Milanese with salad.  I'll probably have the same tomorrow.  I skipped desert and opted for bed.

November 17

Today was a break from cycling.  We were hiking 16km to a small village, San Isidro.  I thought it would be easy.  Well the start was.  We hiked 2km downhill (Yes I know I will have to walk the 2km uphill later.)

Then we started the uphill trek.  We came to a small stream and had to cross by stepping on rocks.  Not too bad.  Well the next crossing was much longer and the rocks not as evenly spaced.  Everyone, except Danny and I went across.  We looked for alternative crossings, but there were none.  So we took off our shoes and waded across.  Mariano, the guide, said the future crossing would be easier.  Well he told the truth.  I didn't like crossing on rocks, but I did it 12 times.

We reached our destination and spent an hour or so in this tiny village.  I found out the village just got electricity two years ago.  We hardly saw a soul, except the children escaping from school.


This was the lock on my Iruya room.  Primitive, but it worked.






Going back we had two choices - the high road or the low road.  The high road had narrow paths near the cliffs.  I opted for the stones across the river.  I counted 12 crossings.  Danny and I even crossed the difficult spot without taking our shoes off.

The hardest part, as I mentioned before, was the last two uphill kilometers.  Tomorrow I will be glad to get back on the bike.

November 18

Today is another high altitude ride - starting at 3200 meters and climbing to 3700 meters, before a 32km decent to 2800 meters.  I've opted for only the last two kilometer climb.

We started from Iruya for our normal two hour ride to the start.  After 3km, the van died.  They attempted to fix it until we gave up and cycled back to Iruya.


Today was the day the senior citizens received their Social Security payment.  The all took there money and made their monthly purchases at the street fair below.


I think the quality of goods at the street fair were probably better then the one's at Lake Eola in Orlando.


Here I am on a suspension bridge across the river, going to the suburbs of Iruya.

We waited a few hours before we decided to take a three hour public bus ride to Humahuaca.  Most of the ride was on narrow dirt roads, next to steep cliffs, my favorite.   From there we took another bus to Tilcara. 

We heard the van was repaired, but it died after 5km.  So it looked like our final day of cycling was canceled.  I was secretly glad because this was the most difficult day, almost all uphill.

November 19

We slept late.  Everyone went for a hike, but I read instead.

In the afternoon we took cars to Salta (where I stayed the night), and others took a bus to Buenos Aires (not another 24 hours for me).

Salta is pretty, but my two hour walking tour was more then enough.  The shops were on the Kmart Woolworth ilk.




Who knew I would be there for the Salta Marathon.

Whenever I travel, I bring lots of NY Times crossword puzzles.  I only have a few left.  I also download 6 or 8 a day when I have wifi.  I would have gone crazy without the crossword puzzles or the books on tape.

November 20

My flight from Salta to Buenos Aires was uneventful, luckily.  I went to the Axel Hotel, where I've stayed before.  I was tired and exhausted, and all my clothes were full of dust.  I called American Airlines and was able to change my ticket to fly home tonight.  I spent the afternoon wandering the street fair in San Telmo.  I bought six little framed photos of Buenos Aires.  I had a fantastic steak before heading for the airport and my journey home.




Thursday, September 15, 2011

Las Vegas and Grand Canyon - Sept 2011

Eric and I went to Las Vegas and the Grand Canyon for a few days.  I had received a great promotion from Hilton Grand Vacations which included a $100 credit, $30 in gambling chips and a free night at a Hilton.  All I had to do was sit through a boring time share sales presentation.  I remember when I would sit through these just for a beach towel.


This is a chocolate fountain in one of the newer hotels.  I could just imagine opening my mouth under the dark chocolate.


Here's a canoe sculpture.  It amazes me how artists get their ideas.  Maybe I'll dream up something creative to glue together.


I always enjoy the choreographed fountains at the Bellagio Hotel.  We were lucky and saw two or three shows back to back, since they were testing new songs.

The casinos were very good to me.  I turned my $30 of free chips into $35 of real money.  I can't believe I played $25 on one spin of roulette.  The slots were kind to me also.  I won every day except one.

Everything has gotten really expensive in Las Vegas.  I remember when the dinner buffet was about $10.  Now it is about three times that.  Breakfast was about $35 for the two of us, whether we ordered off the menu or had the buffet.



Can you guess which is the Paris Hotel in Las Vegas and which is the Eiffel Tower in Paris?


We took a day trip to the Grand Canyon.  Eric had spent 8 days rafting down the Colorado River and now he had a chance to see the canyon from the rim.  There were no barriers at all.  I'm sure some people go over the edge.  The closest I got was about 10 feet from the edge.



Another Las Vegas hotel hits the dust.  The Sahara closed earlier this year.  They were selling whatever was left to the public, but we couldn't fine the entrance.


This is a reflection of a condo in the unfinished bankrupt Fountainbleau project. 

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Helsinki - August 2011

I arrived in Helsinki on Monday, August 22.  I took the bus to the city center.  If I wanted to take the train, I would have to wait until 2014.  The apartment I rented was only a few blocks from the main train station, smack in the middle of Helsinki.  I could not have picked a better location. 




I found an amazing grocery store in the basement of Stockmans, a large department store.  It reminded me of the food court in Harrods.  I bought dinner, coffee and food for breakfast. The following day the sun was shining and the temperature was perfect.  I walked towards the port, passing the city hall
and the presidential palace.  There was a nice outdoor market near the port.  I could have purchased a reindeer pelt, but there's no room in my luggage.



These are the only reindeer that I saw.

For lunch I had salmon paella.  If you don't like salmon I think you're out of luck here.  The prices were back in the normal range after Zurich.



I visited the cathedral which was very different from the rest I've seen on this trip.

In the afternoon I searched for a Finland cycling jersey.  After five attempts I gave up.  It started to rain so I took the opportunity to update my blog text - I'm over a week behind.

The following day I purchased a Helsinki Card - good for sightseeing, transportation and museums.  The first thing I did was a sightseeing tour.  Some things looked familiar, so when I got home I checked my pictures from my Baltic cruise in 1998.  And guess what, I was here.  Finland wasn't on my countries list, so I assumed I had never been here.  I just added it as my 65th country that I've visited.




The two highlights of the tour were cathedral built in a rock formation and a modern sculpture.  I had pictures of both from my previous visit.  We also drove past the 1952 Olympic site (postponed from 1940 due to the war).





After lunch I visited Suomenlinna, one of the world's largest maritime fortresses.

I ended the day by visiting the Design Museum and the Contemporary Art Museum.  Both were small and not very inspiring.


Are you surprised to see another train station?


These outdoor urinals are at the Olympic stadium.  I've also seen them on the streets in Amsterdam.



On the following day I planned on doing an 8 kilometer walking tour of the city, but to my surprise, I had already seen everything.  After visiting the Olympic site I returned to Stockmann's department store and bought an excellent bagel with lox. 



The bagel was as good as NYC.  I think I bought most of my meals there, and probably spent less in four days then I did for one day in Zurich.




Later in the afternoon I took another walk since the weather was amazing.

As I write this blog, I'm enjoying a split of Champagne - thinking of Ann and Norman.

Tomorrow my journey ends and I fly home through London.  This turned out to be a good thing, since my original plans had me changing planes in JFK just as Hurricane Irene was passing through.

I hope you have enjoyed the postings from my August 2011 trip to Europe.