Iguazu falls is right at the border of Argentine, Brazil and Paraguay. I found a tour at the bus station to Foz Do Iguazu (Brazil) and Ciudad del Este (Paraguay) for 110 pesos. The last I checked is I will need a visa to Paraguay but since the tour mentioned that I won’t need a visa for a day trip so I just sign up for the Tres Paises En Un Dia tour (3 countries in one day tour).
[mappress]
A van picked me up from the hostel at 8am and after passing through the Brazilian immigration checkpoint, the guide drove us to Ciudad Del Este. We just drove through the paraguay checkpoint without stopping. The city is famous for shopping and is the third largest free-tax commerce zone in the world and is the gateway for counterfeit goods and contraband into the South American market. Bought a headphone at one of the stores (US$1.70) for skyping.
Then we went to Foz Do Iguazu, which is at the Brazilian side. the city is much bigger than Puerto Iguazu. We visited the Iguazu National Park and I heard someone spoke in Taiwanese dialect and approached them. Turned out that the 2 aunties are taiwanese businesswoman. They have lived in Brazil and Paraguay for more than 20 years and owned businesses in these 2 countries. I was told that right now Brazil is giving out permanent residencies to foreigners (once every 10 years) so this might be a good opportunity to move there.
Hang out with my new met Buddhist friends at the park. The monk actually tried to recruit me and mentioned that I have potential to be a monk.
The waterfalls is at the Argentinean side but at the Brazilian side, we get a better view of the waterfalls. The waterfall system consists of 275 falls along 2.7 kilometers (1.67 miles) of the Iguazu River.
The tour included a buffet lunch. I ate like a camel so the meal was considered my dinner too. After lunch we stopped by at a place where we can see the 3 borders as well as Parana and Iguazu river.
The tour was supposed to bring us to see Itaipu Dam, the world second biggest after The three George Dam, but because of swine flu, the road to the dam at the Paraguay side was closed. Swine flu is big news in South America even though we don’t care about it that much in US. I read on Bloomberg about a prediction that swine flu might kill 90,000 americans this year, scary. Story
Took a bus to downtown in the evening to purchase my bus ticket to Rio. First I missed the bus stop and then the bus broke down. Got to the bus station an hour later but fortunately still manage to get my ticket.
A friend provided me a feedback to put larger pictures..so here is it. Feel free to provide comments and feedbacks.
Arrived at Puerto Iguazu at 1.30pm after 18 hours of bus ride. Took another bus to Hostel Inn which is a pretty nice hostel 5km away from the bus station. The concierge advised me that I won’t have enough time to see the water falls since the park close at 6pm. However, I went anyway. Paid 60 pesos for the park entrance fee.
There are 2 major waterfalls, Garganta del Diablo which means the Devil’s throat and Circuito Superior
Picture speaks louder than words and video speaks even louder..
Walked to the bus station at Retiro today to get bus ticket to Puerto Iguazu. This will be a pretty long bus ride of 18 hours (1380km). There are 2 types of seat, Cama and Semi Cama. Cama is sort of like business class and Semi Cama is consider economy. Cama cost 270 pesos and Semi Cama cost 215 pesos. Since I took the first class seat from Mendoza to Buenos Aires which is pretty comfortable, this time I will try taking the semi cama.
[mappress]
Walked around Calle Florida again, it’s pretty crowded on Saturday
Prostitutions are common in Buenos Aires and there are advertisement everywhere
Choripan for lunch (5.5 pesos)
Laura and Alle brought me to Cafe Violatas, famous for pastries. Argentineans have a very sweet tooth and I heard that’s one reason they have many diabetes cases.
Then tried Mate which is the national drink of Argentine. Similar to tea drinking.
With Laura and Alle’s 5 months old
It’s very nice of Laura and Alle to bring me to the bus station.
Had cereal and bread with Dulce de lecheh (which is a kind of very sweet jam) breakfast at the hostel this morning. Since today is options expiration week, I gotta log in to my IB account to adjust some positions so I won´t get stuck with some stocks next week. The stock market went up again, what an incredible rally since March. IMHO I still think there will be a leg down for the stock market but who knows..hmm.
Uruguayans really like music from the 80s such as Madonna and MJ. Everywhere I heard songs from the 80s but not many people speak english though.
Walked to Mercado De Puerto with Emily and Jamila. The market is famous for Parilla (BBQ and steak).
Walked around the old city
which is just a few blocks from the Atlantic Ocean.
Visited Theater Solis and joined a short tour in Spanish.
Emily and Jamila who are quite fluent in Spanish helped explaining to me what the tour guide says.
Walked around and have lunch (chicken with fries) at a small deli. Again, I helped Emily finished her food but I am no Kobayashi.
With the crew
Deciding whether to take the overnight bus to Tigre then to BA to save money (save $10 for the bus and $10 for hostel) or just take the Colonia Express back to BA. Finally decided to pick the later option and managed to catch the 5.10 bus/ferry back to Buenos Aires. I was just in time 10 mins before the bus leaves. The funny thing is after I sat down, Michelle and Heather (from Berkeley) which I met at the free BA tour few days ago got on the bus too. What a small world..
Arrived at Porto Mendoza at around 10pm. Since the theme of my trip is budget travel, so I was pretty proud of myself in finding a local bus no. 130 to Calle Corientes then walked 6 blocks to my hostel without taking a cab. Even though I only save a few dollars but the journey was more exciting.
Took a public bus this morning to Plaza De Toros (a bull fighting ring)
Bumped into William who I met at the Hostel Florida. Then took the 1pm bus from Colonia to Montevideo. It’s 2.5 hours ride and cost (185 Uruguayan pesos, around $8.5)
[mappress]
Took a bus to to El Viajero-Ciudad Vieja Hostel which is the same one I stayed in Colonia. Since there’re only a few hours before the sky gets dark (sky gets dark at 6pm since it’s still winter), spent some time walking around the city with 2 Americans (Emily and Jamila) I just met at the hostel.
Statue of Artigas At Plaza Independenzia (Artigas is a national hero of Uruguay, sometimes called “the father of Uruguayan independence)
Ate at the hostel for dinner, 2 hamburgers for 60 pesos
At the hostel
After spending a week in Buenos Aires, next stop will be Uruguay. There is a ferry to Colonia from Buenos Aires. It’s an hour ride and the fast ferry cost 129 pesos (around $35).
Decided to save money and took a public bus (1.20peso) to the port but went the wrong way and then ended up taking a taxi instead which cost 20 pesos which is around $5 because I was late.
The ferry is super fast and felt like the boat was jumping on the wave all the way to Colonia.
Colonia is consider a UNESCO world heritage site because of the many old colonial building in the town.
An intro copied from wikitravel..
Colonia del Sacramento (Nova Colonia do Santissimo Sacramento) was founded in 1680 by the Portuguese (Manuel Lobo), sandwiched in between the Portuguese colony of Brazil and the Spanish Vice Royalty of the River Plate (later Argentina, Uruguay and Southern Brazil). Its strategic position and use as a smuggling port meant that its sovereignty was hotly contested and the city changed hands several times between Spain and Portugal.
Met a Belgian at the hostel and went to a restaurant close by. I have Cazuela again but it’s slightly from the Cazuela in Santiago. This has pig stomache in it. (90 pesos, around $4.5)
Joined the BA free tour this afternoon. I just thought about the free tour since I did the free tour once in Berlin and figured that there must be similar tours in big cities. There are around 10 people joining the tour and everyone is from US. After the Argentinean pesos weakens, many Americans move to BA since things are cheaper and at the same time BA offers everything a big city has, good food, nightlife and entertainmets.
Today is a public holiday in Argentine, it’s San Martin Day. San Martin is regarded as one of the Liberators of Spanish South America and is the national hero of Argentina.
Since it’s a public holiday, Laura and Alle decided to make a short trip to Tigre which is around an hour away from the city. It’s a nice day to go out plus the weather is warm. However there are so many cars so we have to turn back and went to a park instead.
Parque Presidente Sarmiento
Like always, Argentineans love BBQ (Parilla)
Tango Dance at Calle Florida
Attended an event called BA Pub Crawl at night. Interestingly enough, I met an American (Carlos) who works on the same floor as me in 55 water st in downtown New York and he was here for a short vacation. Small world.. I told him not to tell my previous boss that we met..lol..
Decided to move to a different hostel (Hostel Florida) since the place I am staying is a party hostel and after partying for few nights, I will need to find some place quieter. Heard about some good reviews about the Hostel Florida from travelers too.
True enough, this is one of the nicest hostel I have seen so far, with room cleaning service, nice lockers and own bathroom in the room for 36 pesos ($10).
Room
Lobby
Laura and Alle again showed me around the city. At River Plate stadium (River Plate is a huge rival of Boca Junior’s, however River Plate is situated at a wealthier neighborhood and Boca Junior’s s at a poorer neighborhood)
Then on Sunday, Laura bought me to visit her church. It’s a taiwanese church but everyone speaks in Spanish, mandarin and taiwanese is a second language here.
Church
Went to a local argentinean restaurant to try out the local food.
On the left is Tamales and the right is a kind of argentinean soup with beans and beef.
Dinner at a Parilla (BBQ)place
Dinner with Laura and her friends. It’s pretty interesting to see Asians speaking spanish with local Porteno accent.
Spent today walking from City Center to San Telmo, then to La Boca. It’s around 2 hours walk.
[mappress]
A tango show at a square in San Telmo
Boca Junior’s Stadium
La Boca neighborhood
Got off at Juramente subway station, walked 6 blocks east and arrived at Buenos Aires Chinatown.
There are many Chinese in Buenos Aires. More than 80% of the Supermercado (Supermarket or mini market) in Buenos Aires are owned by Chinese. It’s easy to spot a Chinese supermercado since it looks like this one. Since I can’t speak Spanish, so whenever I got lost I can just go to a supermercado and ask for directions in Chinese since there’s one at the corner of every 2-3 streets.
Went to a CrowBar which is a techno club with some friends in the hostel. Argentineans party late, the party here usually starts after 2.30am and goes until the morning. There is a cover of 60 pesos for the club.