Wednesday, March 09, 2005

Pictures (all of them)

Folks,

After many hours slaving over the computer, we're proud to release our photos for public viewing...

We present to you, "Juan & Juanita, The Best Of":

Argentina
* Buenos Aires
* Iguacu Falls

Chile
* Torres del Paine

Brazil
* Salvador (Carnaval!)
* Lencois
* Rio

Argentina
* Mendoza

Chile
* Around Santiago and Iquique

Peru
* Roadblock Fun
* Cuzco, Machu Picchu, and the Amazon
* Arequipa and the Colca Canyon
* Lima

Enjoy!

J&J

Buenos Aires (and the end of the road...)

Our last stop...

Buenos Aires... home to 12 million people, beautiful parks, delightful outdoor dining, good meat, and beautiful people; and everything is cheap! A wonderful place to hang out and reflect on our fantastic adventure over the last two months.

We didn't try to do too much in Buenos Aires, we essentially just hung out at restaurants, cafes and bars, and wandered the streets - soaking up the wonderful European atmosphere and enjoying the cheap prices. Very nice, very pleasant, and very relaxing. Oh, and we also went to a Beerfest.

It's hard to convey with words the appeal of Buenos Aires as a city, but suffice to say it is one of the places we definitely want to come back to (also Bolivia, which we unfortunately missed this trip)

The End.

J&J

PS Click here for photos (albeit not many) from Buenos Aires

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Foz de Iguazu

Iguacu Falls! Well what can we say... truly breathtaking. The best of Niagara Falls and Victoria Falls combined.

Our visit to Iguacu Falls was a bit of a mad dash as we only had 24hrs in the place (most people spend at least 2-3 days). We arrived in Iguazu Falls at ~4pm, and went directly to the Brazilian side of the falls to get the overview perspective - we arrived at the park entrance at 4:58pm, and discovered that they stop selling entry tickets at 5pm... perfect timing. After having a geezer at the Brazilian side of the falls we retreated to our hostel for some well earned meat and beer.

The following morning we were up at the crack-of-dawn (well 8am anyway) to make sure we had time to fully see the Argentinean side of the falls before our flight to Buenos Aires at 4pm. The Argentinean side of the falls is where you really get amongst the waterfalls (they've developed a great network of tracks), and get quite wet.

We wont prattle on anymore as photos are much better than words at describing the falls...

PS Click here for photos from Iguacu Falls
PPS Click here for an overview map of Iguacu Falls

Monday, March 07, 2005

The Torres...

Last time we wrote, we'd just arrived in beautiful (yet cold compared to the tropics) Patagonia - or Puerto Natales to be exact.

Aaroncito had done a fantastic job of finding us a hostel on the Internet that was not only out of the town centre, but also had a problem with a sewerage leak under the property (i.e. very bad smell) and happened to be right next door to a night club / massage palour. Nice. Despite all it's bad points the staff were fantastic, most of the guests were great, and for breakfast they did the best scrambled eggs and coffee that we'd encountered anywhere in South America - so we were reasonably happy chappies.

After arriving in Puerto Natales, we spent a day kicking around getting our stuff ready for the hike (e.g. more Powerbars than you can shake a stick at, a heap of dried fruit and nuts, plus some sexy shorts for Scottito), and then embarked for the Parque Torres del Paine at some ungodly hour of the following morning... 7:30am I think it was...

The Hike...

Day 1: After the early morning start we endured about 4hrs of bus journey before arriving in the parque. Once at the parque our poor out-of-condition legs faced what turned out to be the toughest part of the whole trek - an arduous 2hr hike up a rather steep valley. It was about this time that we met a fellow traveller (who happened to have worked for Aaroncito's company in Germany) who had decided to bring ALL his gear from Puerto Natales, not just what he needed for the trek... the embarrassing thing was that he ended up beating us to the top - and our backpacks weighed nothing!!! After the 2hr climb we ditched our bags at our luxurious accommodation (no joke) and proceeded uphill again, but sans-backpack, to see the famous Torres (see link to photos below). For those who haven't seen them, the Torres are quite something - in the same 'take your breath away' way that Machu Picchu, Angkor Wat or Iguacu Falls are. Words can't even hope to describe what we saw and the way we felt when we first set eyes on the Torres, so instead, have a look at our photo's, or better still, go visit Torres del Paine and see it with your own eyes.

Day 2: In some ways day 2 wasn't that eventful, so we'll start with a description of our luxurious accommodation... when you do the famous "W" circuit in Parque Torres del Paine you have two choices: (1) Carry your own tent and food and do it the 'traditional' way; or (2) Carry squat all, sleep in a nice lodge each night with 3 square meals provided (incl a packed lunch) and hot showers. Being tough kiwi blokes we obviously went for option #2. This made for a very pleasant trek - very light packs and a nice warm bed, hot shower and cooked meal (and did I mention wine and beer?) waiting for you at the end of every day, plus a great place to hang out and shoot-the-shit at night. Getting back to trekking on Day 2... it is quite a pleasant day really - you essentially spend the whole day leisurely walking gradually downhill alongside of a lake. Nice, but nothing as breathtaking as Day 1.

Day 3: Ahhh... day 3... the first of our 'solid' days. Up into the stunning Valle de Frances we climbed on Day 3 - 21kms of up-and-down and rough terrain. The Valle de Frances is a glacial valley with stunning peaks (and small glaciers) all around, and the walls of the valley are polished like nothing I have ever seen before. It was also blowing like crazy and friggin' cold.

Day 4: The second (and last thankfully) of our 'solid' days... 24kms; the first half of which was ridiculously easy, while the second half was less so... The first half of the day we walked past the opening to the Valle de Frances again and then continued on past a number of beautiful lakes (not unlike down Wanaka / Queenstown way in NZ). The second half of the day you walk up a different valley towards the MASSIVE Glacier Grey. We knew Glacier Grey was going to be big, but we weren't quite ready for exactly how big it was... it made Fox and Franz Joseph glaciers look like ice cubes. What's more impressive is that Glacier Grey is just one of many, many, many glacial 'fingers' coming off a massive icefield in southern Chile that we were told stretches for 350km and is 1.6km deep in some parts. Now that's a lot of ice.

Day 5: We awoke on Day 5 freezing cold (thanks to the massive chunk of ice known as a glacier on our doorstep), but amazed that it was still sunny and that we were going to finish our trek without getting wet - something we had never dreamed possible given what we'd heard about the weather in Southern Chile. The only issue on this day was that we had to be at the ferry terminal to catch our ride home by midday (next boat was 5hrs later) and we had a short, but tough 11km trek to get there. We thought we were making good time (we were both clock-less), but at roughly the half-way point we met a girl who told us that we had used up 2/3 of the time we had, but only covered 1/2 the distance... at which point we freaked out a bit. So for the next couple of kms we walked like madmen, often breaking into a light jog hoping to make that ferry. You can imagine how we were feeling when we then checked the time with another chap we met on the path and found out that the girls watch had been at least 30mins fast!!! Grrr... oh well, we ended up with enough time for a very relaxed beer before we had to get on the ferry, so it wasn't all bad... It was also on this last day that it was confirmed to us that a massive forest fire was burning near the other end of the park (where we had started on day 1) - apparently some goose had been a bit careless with his camp stove. A few days later we heard that the lodge we stayed at on the first night was evacuated in the middle-of-the-night as the fire had crested the ridge overlooking the lodge - exciting stuff! In some ways we're disappointed we weren't there for the night-time dash for safety...

Until next time,
J&J

PS Click here to see photos from Parque Torres del Paine

Monday, February 14, 2005

!!!!!!!CARNAVAL!!!!!!!!

Not quite sure where to start with this one. I´ll kick off with a brief desciption. Unlike Rio which is more a spectators Carnaval, Salvador´s Carnaval is a monsterous series of street parades that happen all over the city. There are two main circuits Barra and Campe Grande. The circuits that the parade takes (each approx 8 - 10 kms) is lined with 3-4 story temporary multileveled stands that people watch the parade from. The parade itself consists of many Blocos. A Bloco is a huge modified truck (effectively a mobile sound system with massive speakers) with a famous band playing on the top of it. Back from this is a support truck with a bar and toilets in it. Surrounding all of this is about 500 - 600 people holding a rope and inside the rope is about 3000-4000 people seriously partying for about 5-6 hours as the Bloco slowly moves around the circuit. Some of these Blocos stretch about 1 km long. In each of the main parades there would be about 15-20 Blocos one after the other. The rest of the city is going off with smaller parades and lots of other activity. This is a MASSIVE party!!!!!!!! In the four days that we were involved were lucky enough to go in three Blocos and got free tickets through our friends in Salvador to the invite-only Military Police stand on the side of one of the circuits. Here we could look down on the party from funky couches with free food and drinks. During Carnaval there are only two speeds, on and off. When you are not partying, you are sleeping getting ready for the next party.

Recover......

The plan was after the craziness of Carnaval to chill out on the beautiful island of Morro de Sao Paulo, two hours off the Coast of Salvador. The problem with this is that a fairly sizeable chunk of the Carnaval goers decide to do the same thing. So the Carnaval effectively moves across to the island (as I am sure that it does to many other parts of the country as well). Morro is an absolutely postcard perfect tiny white sand beached island filled with funky pousadas (hostels) and a few bars and restaurants. At night the streets come alive with cocktail stalls where you buy freshly made fruit Caiprifruitas (fruit cocktails). During our three day chill out period here we managed to see the sunrise twice with Caiprifruitas in hand. So much for recovery...

The Long Haul....

After a day back in Salvador we hit the airport for a 6 hour flight to Santiago, Chile, and then a 4 1/2 hour flight down to Chilean Patagonia. Scottito had managed to get himself sick again at this point so spent as much time in the airplane toilet as his seat. Seriously bad timing. We arrive in Patagonia at around midnight and walk out of the airport in our shorts and tees from the extremely hot and humid climes of Bahia to be hit by the winds blasting up from the Antarctic. My God it is cold. We are in another part of the world now. We hit the trails tomorrow, time yet again for some sleep.........

PS Click here to see photos from Salvador and Carnaval
PPS Click here to access videos of Carnaval

time to chill

........unfortunately for us, the rains also decided to head north to the beach. We took a 22 hour bus trip (scheduled to take 16hrs) to Arraial D´Ajuda, a beautiful, albeit extremely touristy, beach resort in Bahia. The major highlight with the weather as it was, was a day spent in the biggest water park in South America. This place had a crazy cool collection of slides, pools, eateries, and bars. To top of the day they had a stage erected on the edge of the main pool and we had a huge dance party in the pool to a famous Bahian band called Olodum. These guys are wicked.

After Rio and D´Ajuda, and with the upcoming monstrosity of Carnaval looming in the near future, some balance was required. To the west of Salvador is a National Park called the Chapada Diamantina, with a cool little town called Lencois in the middle of it. Here we chilled out with a one day hike up a river to a water fall and another day checking out two sets of caves (one a huge walk thru calcified staligtite/staligmite styles, and the other submerged snorkeling styles, as well as some cool rivers and stuff). We could have seriously spent some more time here if time allowed, and they could seriously have spent some more money on the road and the bus that took us there. We never thought a bus ride could feel like a rollercoaster.

PS Click here to see photos from Lencois

....Rio

´The Marvelous City´ ...well, I certainly struggle to imagine a crazier or more beautiful geographic location for a city. This place is just gorgeous with hills absolutely everywhere. One hill stops to let another one start. Spread around the hills are lagoons and the most beautiful white sand beaches and coastline. We got an amazing view of all this from the top of Corcovado (Cristo Redentor), as well as got the chance to take some cheesy photos with some crazy English lasses hallucinating on Larium... (there were definitely NO monkeys! not even ones that resemble Fordham)

Here we experienced the first really social hostel of the trip so far, the Botafogo Easy Hostel, here we partied every night with the coolest bunch of people (both Brazillians and gringos) - as often as not initiated by us. It also became a default standard to have a leaving party when you moved on, even if you had only been there for 2 days!

We managed to get in a futbol game at the Maracana stadium as well. What an amazing experience. These fans seriously support their teams (even if they are crap); an exciting mix of joyous singing and aggressive edgyness that never feels far from escalating into full scale rioting. When we were there the stadium was only 1/2 full - it'd be amazing, but perhaps a little scary, to see it packed out for Brazil v Argentina... madness.

It was about this time that we discovered one of the absolute highlights of our time in Brazil (and perhaps Aaroncito's favourite aspect of Brazil).... the Kilograma, or more generally known as "Comida e quilo" -> "Food by the kilo". And eat it by the kilo we did... They had it all... salads, meat, veggies, meat, desserts, meat, seafood, and did we mention meat. The budget places you *could* get a wholesome, balanced meal for only NZ$2.50 and the more fancy places with a full on churrascuria (where you could get every type of meat imaginable, and beautifully cooked to boot) only cost about NZ$6. We say you '*could* get a balanced meal', because Aaroncito developed a passion for meat that Scottito had never seen the likes of before - he would proceed to load up his plate with every type of meat available (a real meat fiesta) in large-cat sized portions, and then grace his plate with just enough salad and vege to make a nice garnish... Hmmmm.... Needless to say, this meat-eating diet played havoc with his estomago...

We also took a tour through a Favela (slums that grow up on the hills surrounding the city). The land that the Favelas are built on is owned by no one (OK, loosely owned by the government but gifted to the masses) There are also no building codes, no taxation paid, people tap in and steal the electricity, and the whole place is run under the controlling eye of a number of drug families. We experienced this first hand when while walking down one of the numerous winding alleyways past the food sellers and kids playing beside open sewers, our guide taps us on the shoulder and tells us to blend into the wall to make way for a 14-15 yo kid with one hand full of cash, the other full with a gold plated revolver (status symbol, this guy is seriously high up the food chain) and with a couple of grenades on his hip (the latest fashion items). We also saw a lot of the arts and education programs that there are trying to put in place to keep the kids from working for the drug families and bringing in 3-4 times as much money as their fathers, tough ask!! If you are ever in Rio, this is a serious worthwhile thing to do. It is an incredible experience, and the money that you spend in the favelas goes straight to the people that need it. There are so many beautiful people trying to make an honest living against the odds, ´City of God´ is only one side of this.

.....then the rains came, we were lucky enough that after coming back to the hostel after an allnighter we still had enough energy (or alcohol) left in us to walk (4 of us arm-in-arm like the front row of a rugby scrum the whole way) and catch the first cable car up Sugarloaf mountain. This meant that not only did we have the whole mountain top to ourselves but we got back to the hostel as the rain started. This rain did not ease up for the rest of our time in Rio (and unfortunately stopped our plans to rock climb up Sugarloaf... bugger). Time to head north to the beach, we thinks...

PS Click here for photos from Rio