The Adventure Continues

...in South America, leaving September 2019 

Friday, January 24, 2020

Foz do Iguazu and Back in the USA!


Foz do Iguazu, Brazil




                              Back home having collected a boat, 2 bikes, 2 ski bags, lots of empty food containers, + our backpacks and the roller... 

From whales to manatees to a snow covered yard full of deer tracks (and probably rhododendrons with no buds left...). From stormy seas to calm beautiful lakes in mid summer, but surrounded by snow covered volcanoes, to a nicely cleared driveway in a so far mild New England winter.
From foreign countries with many friendly people, to a party week with family and big dogs in Orlando, and finally home!
All within the span of a month.



The world is truly small, and despite the flight shaming and my eagerness to do what is best environmentally, I think it is very important we stay in touch with people everywhere. With family and friends, but I firmly believe also that the world benefits from people meeting new friends and experiencing life elsewhere - face to face. The scientists/engineers of the world would figure things out if only the old fashioned business types and politicians stayed out of their way.
We are fully aware of how lucky we are to have had this opportunity to again see new places.

Since we started making our dinners in Buenos Aires in mid October, our choices have been: stir fried veggies with tomato sauce, a couple of Thai type stir fries with curry paste & coconut milk, or more veggie stir fries with a Chilean spice mix called Merken. We should be well supplied with all the nutrients carrots, tomatoes, peppers, garlic, onion, ginger and potatoes offer. Craig will miss the potatoes of Patagonia - he says they were tastier than any we get here.
And anyone who goes grocery shopping with Craig should please remember not to squash his bread. I never knew this was so important - even the boring, sliced soft bread varieties we have on the shelves also at home should never act as protection for wine bottles!

                Manatees


How does this trip compare to Our Big Adventure? The language barrier was pretty constant in South America because I mastered mostly polite phrases. The last time, it was rare not to be able to use English.
Many of the people we could speak English with, had learned the language ‘on the job’ - we know people told us this in Ecuador last spring, and now at least in Peru, Chile and Uruguay.
This time we spent more time in poorer areas, we changed location more frequently, we scheduled 3 guided tours/treks in 4 months, compared to working around essentially 2 such over 10 months the last time. We have a good idea of what Uruguay looks like as a country, whereas the last time we focused on only a few places in each country. The biggest difference I think is that the last time the cultural variations were huge between the many areas we visited. This time my lack of language skills prevented us from experiencing the regional differences. But we got to see so many beautiful places, and it is nice to have a better idea of what the southern half of this hemisphere looks like!

The house is dusty, but if that is the price we pay, it’s a low one. 1.5 years ago we noted the world is big, and above I state it is small... it all depends on the context. We have many more places to visit, but for now we really hope we get visitors here at home!

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

The Lakes District in Chile




On the beach near Bahia Mansa mid summer!

The Osorno Volcano, from the Petrohue Falls

It’s time to come home! Small things now irritate me - like toilet paper holders that fall apart when you try to get paper off a full roll, a couple of lukewarm showers, dull knives, gas stoves I need to ask Craig to turn on because using the cigarette lighter sideways burns my thumb....

But that’s enough for the complaint section - the country side is simply gorgeous here in the Lakes District - a vast area. There is Valdivian Rain Forest with many trees we haven’t seen before, and have no idea what they are. Except we have now seen Monkey Puzzle Trees also in the wild - it is the national tree of Chile!

Link to Chile’s Lake District pic’s

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Punta Arenas and Whales!




It’s New Year’s Day and we have gorgeous views flying north over tall Andean peaks. Glaciers with beautiful lines showing their movement presumably, snow so white it hurt my eyes in the sun - and interesting formations from wind, or maybe avalanches.. glacial lakes of various turquoise and blue colors. Icebergs, rivers... I doubt a human has touched every part of this vast area. This is by far the most beautiful flight we have ever been on.

We arrived in Punta Arenas Xmas Eve, and the main reason for going there was our excursion aboard a research ship, with the goal of seeing whales.
About 20 years ago local researchers found a channel in the Magellan Straits, where humpback whales return every year after their migration south. This is in a large archipelago off the Chilean coast, west of the southernmost tip of the Americas, Cape Froward (not a captain’s name, but synonyms include ‘obstinate, unmanageable, difficult’ - the winds are challenging rounding this point). I had read about the Francisco Coloane Marine Preserve almost a year ago, and kept talking about it...
These researchers formed a business (Whalesound), built a camp on an island, and help finance their research by taking us there. They have very nice and spacious dome tents, hot showers, and they feed you. We spent 3 days aboard the boat, and 2 nights on the island. We saw no other boats or tourists until we were heading back to Punta Arenas.

Link to Punta Arenas and Whales pictures!