Wow, it took a long time to get this updated. I’ve been busy, I haven’t had my own computer until this week, and I’ve had a variety of technical problems as well. But all is well in the Will blogosphere now. Updates should be a little more frequent now, I should expect. Also, wherever you see this icon
you can click on it and Google Earth will open and zoom to the place that is being talked about.
I’m now living in Santiago, Chile in the middle of the second week of my TEFL course (teach English as a foreign language). This is all going really well and keeping me pretty busy. I’m living in a nice spot with two really cool Colombian guys, so nothing to complain about. I went to Valparaíso this past weekend to pick up my laptop and some other stuff I’d left there and had a really great time doing it. But I’m going to talk about all of this later. This post will only talk about the last two weeks or so I spent in Argentina. I should be doing a catch-up post in a few days and then proceed as normal from there.
IguazúFalls
were absolutely amazing of course. Looking back though I’m not really sure that it was the best idea to go, considering that it took me two days to get to Santiago on bus from there (although there was something totally hilarious on the way, I’ll tell you later…). I would have liked to stay that extra day in Buenos Aires as well. I spent almost a month there, but the dynamics of any place, especially a place like Buenos Aires, are always changing and compelling reasons not to leave sometimes emerge. Add to that the fact that I have every intention of going back to Iguaz’u sometime and it seems pretty clear that it was a long way to travel to see something I intend to visit in the future anyway. But what can I do now and what can I say? It was still awesome.
Coming up on it, it looks like this:
And then you see this. This panorama was taken from the top of La Garganta del Diablo, or the throat of the devil, which is the largest fall of the whole complex.

Here’s a video of it:
And here is the heart of the garganta, or at least the top part of it, with a nice rainbow.
Here is the same fall from a distance:
You can see a viewpoint on that second tier waterfall on the Brazilian side (left), which I didn’t visit. I took the video and those previous photos from a platform on top of the falls and to the right. The land mass that you see on the right side of this photo is actually an island that separates the garganta from the other side of the fall complex, which is pictured below.
You can see that there are some boats going in there, which I didn’t go on. Come down here to visit and we can go together…
By the way, I didn’t go into the Brazilian side because us Americans have to pay $100 dollars and jump through some hoops in order to get a tourist visa. Sucks being so loved around the world, doesn’t it? There was one agency that I heard could take Americans without visas through but they were closed when I wanted to go. When I return I’ll be spending a lot of time in Brazil so it should make the whole business of getting the visa worthwhile.
The Biggest fall that you see in this photo is called Salto San Martín, though there are several others. And yeah, it rocks.

There are a bunch of names for all of these falls and it probably wouldn’t make the slightest difference to you if I told you.
These are the same falls from a different angle, p’oh.
There was quite a lot of wildlife running around the park, much of which I’d never seen in the wild before.
So there on the right is a caiman, which is somewhat different from a crocodile or an alligator. That¡s a tucan on the right of course. They’re both pretty bitchin’.
These are coatis. There were tons of them running around the park. They actually range all the way up to the Southwest United States and I saw quite a few when I was in Costa Rica, though these looked a little distinct.
There were a ton of butterflies around, which was pretty neat. These are my favorites among the several photos I took of them.
This pitiful looking creature wasn’t in the park but in the city Puerto Iguazú. It’s actually only the second most pitiful dog that I saw in that city and you should be thankful I didn’t photograph the first. I guess they don’t take care of the strays in Argentina like they do in Chile.
These three murals were in a plaza in Puerto Iguazú and were cut out of wood and painted. There were a few more, but these were my favorites.

They really did come to bring Jesus, silly indians.

We are the land and the land is us. And the plants and the animals they are land and the plants and the animals ate each other…

Split open that eyeball brother, yeah! Raise a fist!
I came out here with an Australian friend of mine and one of the locals was kind enough to give us a ride in his car. In the foreground is Argentina, across the river to the left is Paraguay, and across to the right is Brazil
. If you follow the river that goes to the right you will end up at the falls, and if you follow the river that goes over the horizon you will find one of the largest dams in the world, or so I was told.
This is the obelisk marking the Argentinian side. There are similar ones on the Paraguayan and Brazilian sides, each with their proper colors of course.
The set of the many other photos I took up in Iguazú can be found <here>.
Yup
So Before I bussed myself on up to Iguazú I was living the life down in Buenos Aires. Still so much to say about that place…
The last night I spent there in Buenos Aires a few of us went out for Thai food, which was amazing. We sat on the floor too, just to be cool.

This is me looking sad because my bud Pete has killed an entire cow for his dinner. I only let them kill a fish for me.

“For relaxing times, make it Suntory time.”

This is Evalina, from Sweden. Ya.

I’m heartbroken that I can’t remember the name of this Israeli girl. She was really sweet though.

At the bar afterward I think Pete and I really irritated her with our ¨We’re Americans, f’ yeah!¨type talking.

Evalina was cool with it though. She’ll laugh at just about anything. (just kiddin’… Errr, now laugh…)

This is Pete and I. I know you’re probably thinking that it’s about the gayest photo ever. I don’t even know why I posted it.


At the end of the night we went home in this cab because we thought it would be funny, and somehow managed to live. Hilarious! I didn’t take any of these last photos by the way. They’re Pete’s, and his flickr is <here>. (if you click on this link you’ll notice that Pete doesn’t have that flickr account any longer, which also is why the preceding photos don’t work. These issues may be corrected in the future.)
A couple of days prior to that I went ice skating with some friends of mine.

Several more went than are pictured here, but these are the cool ones. (Don’t really mean that… Respect.) But here we have two Israelis, Two Argentians, a German, and a gringo. See if you can tell who is from where! I don’t want to give any hints, but Laura and Andrea are in there, and they were two of the better friends I made in Buenos Aires.
You might notice that the quality of this photo is substantially better than the rest. That is because Randall is behind the lens with his badass camera that is bigger than your head. (Unless you are reading this Vik, your head is a bit over-sized for being such a short fellow). Randall traveled all the way to Argentina from the States and should be coming to visit in Chile, where I will be helping him find a boat to New Zealand (or so we plan). His photos are really amazing, and he has photographed some really interesting events such as one of the uprisings in Oaxaca, Mexico. I highly recommend that you check them out. His flickr is <here>.
The story moves on…
Here we have Gorge from Chile and some Swiss guy whose name I have forgotten. Lost his email too on accident. Both are really cool guys. Gorge and I should be hanging out some here in Chile. Andrea was with us at this time, and we later went up to here apartment and had matte with her parents. The Swiss dude couldn’t come because he was just starting work in the restaurant we’re sitting in here. He’s actually been traveling all over South America and working whatever jobs he manages to get.


We passed this house on the way that’s supposed to be haunted and that’s supposed to be me being scared by that face on the wall. The truth is though that I don’t get scared at anything at all, so it’s totally a set-up.
Andrea and her family live on the top floor of an apartment complex and this is the view from the top. This was really one of the more genuine experiences that I had in Argentina. We stayed for a couple of hours just talking and passing around the guitar playing and singing songs while taking matte. Nobody from outside the Southern Cone of South America but me.
So you look at all these pictures and you think that it’s all good times and babes and kicks and that it’s easy to be in a place like this. Maybe you could do it too? No! You can’t. This is what they do to unwary tourists who don’t watch themselves in Buenos Aires. Not kiddin’.
Really though, these signs are all over the city. Didn’t they know that someone would do this?
All the other photos I took in Buenos Aires that weren’t of buildings are <here>.
This is right by the capitol, on the opposite side of the park.
A Lamppost and the steeple of a really cool building near the capitol.
And finally here is the capitol itself
.
In your face!
From the rear!
Reflection of the dome from a neighboring building.

In a city with so much amazing architecture that buildings that would stand out anywhere else become lost to the background, this is one of my favorites. It’s called El Palacio de Agua, or the Water Palace
. It is so called, because it is actually the water utility building for the city. An odd use for such an amazing building. Unfortunately none of these pictures does it any justice; really just needs to be seen in person.
Sportin’ the flag.
The front.
Here is a statue with a pigeon sitting on its head. Respect.
This is a memorial plaza built beside the Israeli embassy, which was targeted in a suicide bomb attack in 1992. The sign says, “In this place 29 people died, please respect their memories.”
This is the Bauen Hotel
. It is being run by the workers and there are no bosses. There’s a whole movement of worker collectives running businesses that failed after the economic collapse in 2001. There is a really great documentary in English about the movement called The Take that I highly recommend watching (notice that the name links to the film’s web site). I went inside to check it out and things were pretty lively and it had a really nice atmosphere.
I took a ton of photos of buildings and stuff like that in Buenos Aires. They are all <here>.
Alright, I’ll update youz folks on coming back to Santiago, my class, my trip to Valparaíso and everything else in a few days.























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