Posts Tagged Buenos Aires Stopover

Argentina: Best Value in 2011

Argentina has made into Lonely Planet’s Best Value 2011 – which documents the best trends, destinations, journeys and experiences for the upcoming year.

7. Argentina

The Argentine peso is the currency that keeps on giving. In the middle of the last decade, incredulous visitors regularly queried bills for being too cheap after feasting on fine steak and red wine. While not quite the bargain it was during those years, Argentina still offers a terrific deal. Characterful mid-range hotels start at around AR$180 (US$46) per

La Boca in Buenos Aires

La Boca in Buenos Aires

night in Buenos Aires and Patagonia, and half that in other places. Argentina’s gourmet eating houses usually won’t charge more than US$30 a head and you can enjoy wonderful meals on much less. Best of all, you get great quality food, wine, lodging and transport throughout Argentina for your money.

Bounce up and down with some of Buenos Aires’ more raucous citizens at a fútbol (soccer) match. Terrace tickets for Boca Juniors, River Plate and others cost from AR$14 (US$3.60).

To find out more in Argentina, please visit our Website.

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Argentina the Most Popular in South America?

Recent reports have confirmed that Argentina has doubled its influence on the global tourism market since 2003.

In the last decade, Argentina has been trying to move away from being a relatively unknown South American giant with good beef, horsemeat and footballers. It is fast becoming the leader in South American tourism. Not only are many Argentineans traveling abroad, but a large number of tourists have been visiting Argentina itself.

The figure actually prove it as total of 2 million tourists arrived to Argentina last year, leaving revenue in the region

Buenos Aires - The capital of Argentina

Buenos Aires - The capital of Argentina

of $2.7 billion. Many of the visitors have been coming from neighboring Brazil, with the big spenders arriving also from North America. People are starting to realize that Argentina has the best educated population in South America, thus leaving them most prepared for the influx of new tourists. Argentina is also relatively safe, in comparison to many countries nearby.

The airline industry has reacted to the surge in Argentinean tourism by arranging more flights to and from the South American country. For example, there are going to be non-stop flights between London and Buenos Aires starting in 2011. Also the direct services between Sydney and Buenos Aires has had a significant impact on arrival numbers. As Argentina becomes more popular, other cities are certain to come into play throughout the country.

To find out more on Chimu Adventures’ Argentina tours, visit our website.

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Top 10 Bars in Buenos Aires

1. Ocho7Ocho

Away from the main drag of the ever-sprawling Palermo district and on the edge of up-and-coming Villa Crespo, this former speakeasy has recently gone above board. By night, burly doormen give the only indication of what lies behind the heavy wooden door, and yet even an out-of-towner can’t fail to find it (Ocho7Ocho – ie 878 – is its street number). Inside, exposed bricks form part of a stylishly “unfinished” décor that is typical of many of the city’s recent renovation projects. The main attraction, however, is the dazzling back-lit bar, offering an already legendary collection of whiskys.

· Thames 878 (between Loyola and Aguirre), Villa Crespo; +54 11 4773 1098

2. Milion

Home to gentrified houses, designer boutiques and the grandest cemetery known to man, Recoleta is one of the Buenos Aires‘ most affluent areas. For a taste of the highlife, make a beeline for this romantic, converted mansion. There’s little better than sweeping down its grand, marble staircase with a cocktail in hand. Although many of the city’s bars only warm up in the early hours, this place manages to draw a select crowd throughout the afternoon and early evening, with happy hour running until 9pm.

3. Congo

There’s no need for something as frightfully tacky as a sign when you have a reputation like Congo’s. Tucked away beside the railway tracks and in the shadows of a garish nightclub, this venue is distinguishable solely by the legions of devotees queuing outside its plain, brown door. However, in typical Buenos Aires style, the modest frontage leads to an expansive interior with enormous outside space. Retaining original features (including an old tree protruding through the roof), it is one of the best spots in town on a sticky summer’s evening.

4. Carnal

“Arrive early” is the often-heard advice for this similarly popular watering hole in Palermo. However, it’s quite possible you’ll arrive through its hallowed doors to find the street-level bar practically empty. Don’t be fooled: in summer, it’s all

Buenos Aires - The City that never sleeps

Buenos Aires - The City that never sleeps

about the rooftop terrace, which is consistently packed with style-conscious locals. When it’s time to move on, either take the easy option (the Niceto nightclub, directly opposite), or get some recommendations from Carnal’s fingers-on-the-pulse crowd. With so little room to manoeuvre on the terrace, intimacy is unavoidable and you’re bound to have made friends.

5. La Cigale

La Cigale is a reassuringly down-to-earth antidote to the new breed of design bars cropping up all over the city. With simple fairy lights decorating its black walls and a notable lack of pretension, it has become something of a Buenos Aires institution. Alongside hosting local DJs and live bands, it’s best known for its mid-week parties, when you’ll find it packed with an over-sexed crowd of locals, expats and travellers. Be prepared to queue for the renowned French night on Tuesday.

6. Bar Seddon

When the crowds of Sunday bargain hunters at San Telmo’s popular antiques market prove too much, duck in here to hide out among the cabinets of old china, wax-covered candlesticks and portraits of old tango crooners. Seddon makes a good daytime stop for a cheeky beer or glass of Malbec. Or, if you’re suffering from the night before, start by lining your stomach with a submarino (a chocolate baton stirred into a tall glass of warm milk). A must on an Argentina highlights tour.

· Defensa 695 (and Chile), San Telmo; +54 11 4342 3700

7. Miloca

If you want to enjoy BA nightlife to the full, your body clock will need to adapt – quickly. This is a city where people think nothing of dining just before midnight, where bars don’t get going until the early hours and where clubs often run until 7am and beyond. If you can handle the pace, join the locals for sunrise (or a post-dawn nightcap) at Miloca. If you’ve come this far on your BA baptism of fire, then bypass the darkened interiors and head straight up the skinny spiral staircase to the fully exposed rooftop bar, where you can end your night in the full glare of the Argentinian sun.

8. Los Cardones

There aren’t many places that make you feel a long way from home and completely welcome at the same time, but this seems to strike the right balance. In the spirit of folk revival, patrons are encouraged to help themselves to a collection of instruments kept behind the bar and burst into song as they please. Naturally, the results are varying, with no night ending up the same. On some occasions the bar will be filled with understated little groups, strumming guitars quietly to themselves; at others times, a particularly talented performer might command the attention of the whole room. Either way, a campfire-style singalong in the middle of a busy metropolis is something you don’t find every day.

· Borges 2180, Palermo Viejo; +54 11 4777 1112

9. El Federal

This old-fashioned joint in San Telmo is ideal for an afternoon cerveza and a picada (a plate of cheese and cold meats served on a wooden board). Inside, you’ll find walls lined with dusty old bottles, an enviable antique coffee machine and old wooden tables with initials carved into the surface. It’s been pulling in the punters since 1864 and is still going strong.

· Carlos Calvo 599 (and Peru), San Telmo; +54 11 4300 4313

10. Acabar

Imagine a whole place decorated with acrylic flowery wallpaper in clashing colours, and you’re halfway there. This massive bar, with rows upon rows of kitschly decorated tables, is hugely popular at weekends. You’ll find an innocent, fun-loving and very social vibe here, plus a whole bookcase of oversized boardgames. Quirky touches include bathroom washbasins standing on old sewing machines and a menu presented on colourful cue cards. The food itself definitely needs some help, but you can’t knock the atmosphere.

· Honduras 5733 (between Bonpland and Carranza), Palermo Hollywood; +54 11 4772 0845

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Aerolineas Announces Possible New Buenos Aires – Cusco Flight

Argentine airline Aerolineas Argentinas announced that by the end of this year it would begin flying from Buenos Aires to Cusco, with a stopover in an Argentine province that has yet to be determined.

The state-run airline, the largest domestic and international airline in Argentina, expressed its interest in covering this route at Expo Perú in December 2009.

Machu Picchu - Cusco's biggest attraction

Machu Picchu - Cusco's biggest attraction

Aerolineas Argentinas official Jorge Lopez said the company’s interest has not changed due to the recent adverse weather conditions, particularly heavy rains in many Cusco areas.

“We are still keen to fly to Cusco because it is a favourite destination for Argentine citizens and a major attraction in world tourism,” he told Andina.

“The progress of this project will depend on the company’s future performance and its criteria for prioritizing investment projects, including that of Cusco,” he added.

The project would be great news for Long – haul visitors to South America from Australia and New Zealand in particular. Greg Carter of Chimu Adventures says this would give a chance for tourists visiting Argentina to have a quick stop over in Cusco to see the world famous Machu Picchu ruins – “Usually, visitors flying into Buenos Aires that want to see Machu Picchu, have to endure another  flight to Cusco via Lima which can be quite long and not always have desirable connections. However, with this new flight from Aerolineas Argentinas, travellers have the opportunity to fly to Cusco in a lot shorter time giving greater access to the ancient ruins.”

Cruise passengers on the popular Buenos Aires – Santiago route are also set to benefit as Chimu Adventures will be unveiling a promotional Machu Picchu side trip package, including return Buenos Aires to Cusco flights, when the flight becomes operational.

Chimu Adventures offers Buenos Aires stopover tours as well as Cusco and Machu Picchu tours, the famous Inca trail to Machu Picchu and longer Andes & Amazon tours. Visit www.chimuadventures.com for more details.

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Street smart: Corrientes Avenue, Buenos Aires

To understand Portenos (the people of Buenos Aires), one has to head to the places they live, dance, dine and mingle. First stop is the famous Corrientes Avenue. Known as the Broadway of Buenos Aires, the principal thoroughfare cuts a swathe through the city. This is home to sexy tango clubs, famous theatres and late-night cafes. In a further ode to sister city New York, Corrientes Avenue is known as the street that never sleeps. No Buenos Aires tour is complete without a trip to this famous street.

THE OBELISK

The Obelisk was erected in 1936 to commemorate the 400th anniversary of Buenos Aires’s birth. At 67 metres, with a base girth of 49 square metres, it certainly makes its presence felt as an icon of the city centre. A favorite gathering

The famous obelisk in Buenos Aires

The famous obelisk in Buenos Aires

spot for celebrating sports fans, it has been used as a prop by acrobatic troupes and was swathed in a giant pink condom for World AIDS Day.

Corrientes Avenue, at the intersection with 9 de Julio Avenue.

TANGO HISTORY WALK

A group known as Friends of Corrientes Street Association aims to preserve the history and culture of the thoroughfare, even as skyscrapers sprout up alongside the old-time bodegas. They’ve put up 40 commemorative plaques on street corners to honour the city’s most important tango dancers and musicians. No tour of Argentina is complete without learning about the national dance and some even say tango started in the smoky clubs and intimate bars of Corrientes Avenue. Learn all about it on this self-guided walk, starting at Teatro Gran Rex.

LIBERARTE

ARGENTINIANS are great readers — not surprising for a nation that has produced notable authors such as Jorge Luis Borges, Jose Hernandez and Julio Cortazar and several whose names begin with letters other than J. If you’re in town in April, check out the huge writers’ festival known as Feria del Libro for its lectures, book sales and the chance to hear famous authors read from their latest works. At any other time, browse the shelves at Liberarte, a left-leaning bookstore filled with offbeat journals, novels by local intellectuals and several cage-rattling political manifestos.

Corrientes Avenue 1555.

TEATRO GRAN REX

IT’S worth a visit to this grand theatre just to peek at the art deco architectural style and 1930s-era glam details. When it was unveiled to a giddy public in 1937, it was the largest cinema in South America, with a glitzy interior modelled on Radio City Music Hall in New York. Today, it’s the venue for international touring musicals, pop performances and other large-scale shows. For an authentic Porteno experience, book ahead to see some of the city’s most dynamic tango dancers strut their stuff on the stage.

Corrientes Avenue 857.

CAFE LA PAZ

LEGEND has it that revolutions have been planned here, no doubt by turtleneck-wearing, beret-bearing student activists who sip whisky late at night as they plot to overthrow the capitalist regime. In a handy position close to cinemas, bookstores and theatres, the ambient cafe is also an appealing open-after-midnight destination for gourmet pizza and a nightcap. The most popular beer in the city is an icy Quilmes Cristal; local Argentinean white wine is also inexpensive and delicious. The revolution can wait until tomorrow.

Corrientes Avenue 1523.

Source: The Sun-Herald

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Vamos Boca!!

Chimu Adventures consultant and football fanatic Karel Topic describes his amazing experience at a Boca Juniors match in Buenos Aires:
La Bombonera in Buenos Aires

La Bombonera in Buenos Aires

“As a big football (soccer) fan I always wanted to see a traditional South American match and see if the atmosphere is as good as everyone describes.

Therefore I couldn’t miss my chance when I was in Buenos Aires doing a Buenos Aires Tour for 5 days.

Boca Juniors is easily the biggest club in Argentina. It is one of the most successful clubs and home ground for the legendary and infamous Diego Maradona. Sunday evening is the time all true Boca Juniors fans meet in the suburb called La Boca in which lies the colossal stadium La Bombonera. You can see everywhere the blue – yellow color combination, yellow jerseys, blue scarfs and all kinds of souvenirs.

As I was caught up in all the color and excitement of match-day, I forgot we are in South America where it is not easy to find ATM machine to withdraw money, neither to pay for your ticket with credit card! This caused me a bit of troubles as I usually don’t walk around with much cash. I started to be a bit desperate when the clock showed 45 minutes to the beginning of the game, so I was wandering around and tried to find a solution. Luckily I met a Dutch guy who was so generous to lend me some money even without knowing me! So we bought couple of tickets on the street and the gate was open for us.

As I entered the ground I was in awe at the brightly colored blue and yellow stadium with steep seating along the sides has capacity for 50.000 spectators. The game I attended could have around 35000 spectators and it was Boca Juniors vs Gymnasium. Who cares that Boca is not doing so well this season, the fans were crazy. The standing areas were totally full of the fanatical fans who start to sing chorals 30 minutes before the game starts. The atmosphere is amazing during the whole match, fans sing without stopping and soon after the opening goal the vibe is so intensive that without knowing I became a Boca fan too. You can feel the pride all around when Boca scored their 4th goal of the day.

Fanatics of Boca Juniors

Fanatics of Boca Juniors

At the end there was a big celebration, attractive game, great stadium. Argentinean passion… all for less than $50. Next time I will be doing a Buenos Aires tour I will plan my schedule around a Boca Juniors home game.

And at the end of the story? Next day I found the Dutch man in his hotel and paid for my ticket.”

Chimu Adventures has a fantastic Buenos Aires stop over tour. Visit our website for more details.

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Not Such a Bad Year for Chimu Adventures

While I was reading the travel today e-newsletter I noticed an article describing how Stella chief executive Peter Lacaze has branded 2009 the “worst year in living memory” for the travel and aviation industry. While no one can dispute that it has been a tumultuous year for the travel industry, Chimu Adventures has gone against the grain and had the most successful year in our history. Bookings and sales have increased by over 200% in what was supposed to be one of the hardest years facing the travel industry in Australia.

We feel there are many reasons for this dramatic growth, one being the ever increasing popularity of South America as a tourist destination. South America is a continent that offers absolutely everything a traveler could ever want; from the cultural and sacred Inca Trail to Machu Picchu in Peru, the stunning wildlife of the Amazon and the Galapagos Islands, the cosmopolitan cities of Buenos Aires and Rio plus the mystical glaciers and mountains of Patagonia. South America offers this and so much more and there is little wonder why travelers are flocking there in record numbers.

Another reason is the success of Chimu’s multi-country tours which were introduced earlier this year. These give you a real taste of South America’s highlights but take into account that most people can’t take more than a couple of weeks off work. Tours like the South America circle and Buenos Aires to Rio have exploded in the previous year and are now among our most popular tours.

Another reason has to be the amazing airfares that we have seen to South America. Flights from Sydney to Buenos Aires return for as little as $1200 which was just unthinkable a couple of years ago.

2009 certainly was a fantastic year for Chimu Adventures and 2010 is shaping up to be an even bigger year. What surprises do we have in store? You will just have to wait and see.

Happy holidays to everyone!!

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The Famous Steak of Buenos Aires

Having lived in Australia all my life I had thought we didn’t do too badly in terms cooking up a nice juicy steak on the grill but having been in Buenos Aires in Argentina recently my perceptions of aAmazing steak from La Cabrera-Buenos Aires good steak changed somewhat. The venue that changed my opinion on Australian steak was located in the trendy Buenos Aires suburb of Palermo-with it’s designer shops, leafy streets and many restaurants. It was called ‘La Cabrera’ and has become so popular in recent times that a second La Cabrera opened a mere 5 metres down the road on the same street. As you would expect, if no reservations are made the wait for a table can be a hefty one but at La Cabrera, this is half the fun. Waiters pour out free champagne and serve little samplers as a mixture of locals and tourists mingle creating a real outside bar atmosphere. Our table was then ready at the rather early dinner time of 11 30 pm, early for Buenos Aires they tell me, and we were seated and greeted with a menu offering the biggest selection of steaks I have seen, all at very reasonable prices. Without having too much idea, I decided to go for the dry age beef steak accompanied by a fine local bottle of red of course. As I was trying to not fill myself up with bread the anticipation was building until, a lot faster than you would think, a giant mouth-watering piece of steak was placed in front of me served on a giant metallic and wooden board. It was without a doubt the thickest steak I had ever seen but once my huge steak knife slid through the meat like butter it was obvious that this had been cooked to perfection-something which I never thought would have been possible with a steak so thick. The taste, as had been hyped by many people, did not disappoint. It’s a real cliché in the culinary world but it really did melt in your mouth. It was so soft, so succulent and so tasty that the dinner table conservation died off and everyone was too busy being taken to steak heaven to talk. What’s equally as impressive as the meat is the huge accompaniment of sauces they bring you, all included when you order a steak. There was no less than 8 special home-made sauces to try and little side-dishes like garlic mash potato and asparagus, making each bite a unique experience. After being full to the brim with steak and wine from one of Buenos Aires’s finest steak houses it was time to retire, very satisfied and not that badly out of pocket.

All in all, Buenos Aires and La Cabrera is a must for steak and wine lovers. The only issue is that your perception of a good tenderloin steak may change forever.

Chimu Adventures offers a fantasctic stopover tour to Buenos Aires and many great tours to Argentina as well. Visit our website for more details.

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Highlights of South America

A recent article in the Sydney Morning Herald discusses the beauty and history of the South American continent. An increasing mecca for tourists, South America is one of the fastest growing tourism destinations on the planet.

Easter Island Sunset

Easter Island Sunset, South America is growing in popularity, and is one of the fastest growing tourism regions on the planet.

To stand in front of the 15 gigantic stone statues at Ahu Tongariki on Easter Island is to marvel at, and be moved by, humankind’s inventive powers. Some visitors weep here and at nearby Rano Raraku. Many more rejoice in the power of the place.

UNESCO described these and other statues in the island’s national park as “a masterpiece of creative genius”. Jared Diamond, the scientist, wrote: “No other site that I have visited made such a ghostly impression on me as did Rano Raraku, the quarry on Easter Island where its famous gigantic stone statues were carved.”

The earth’s most remote inhabited island is full of ghosts. The statues, or moai, are visible reflections. There are 887 in various positions, from defiant, vertical prominence to impassive, horizontal repose. Those standing measure up to 12 metres tall. The longest, 21 metres, known as Paro, still lies at Rano Raraku, in the volcanic rock from which it was carved but never separated.

The moai represent old Polynesian kings and clan leaders. The ghosts of thousands more ordinary people hover here, a small civilisation that virtually committed suicide. The long, prone Paro must have been shaped when the carving had to stop. He was stillborn.

There is a terrible irony about Easter Island, or Rapa Nui, as the islanders know it. Although the moai are the main reason why tourists come all this way – Chile is 3700 kilometres to the east and Pitcairn, the nearest populated land mass, 1900 kilometres west – the moai were most probably the main cause of the civilisation’s collapse. The island’s economy now relies on tourists who witness the folly of the former islanders and of humankind in general. That is why admiration for what was achieved more than 500 years ago so stirs the emotions.

Some trees grow now on Easter Island but none of the Rapa Nui palm that once made a forest. The 15th century, around the time Paro was abandoned, marked the end of the forest. The islanders had cut it down to build canoes, to burn, to plant gardens and to transport their moai.

According to legend, the moai walked from the quarry. Yet, without the wheel or draft animals, palms must have been used to make ropes and sleds for islanders to manhandle the moai into place.

With the woods destroyed native birds, that had pollinated the trees’ flowers and dispersed their fruit, disappeared. Wooden fishing canoes could not be built, good soil blew and washed away, clan wars erupted over the last of the wood and the dwindling population took to caves for shelter and to cannibalism. The stone giants fell over, or were pulled down by fighting clans.

Archaeological estimates of the population at its peak are between 10,000 and 20,000; in 1877, only 111 people lived here and only 36 had offspring. The population is now back to about 5000, mainly Polynesians and Chileans. The legacy of loss has brought the people recognition disproportionate to their population.

The first Polynesians came here in canoes about 4000BC. We come from Machu Picchu, the lost city of another lost civilisation. This journey around South America provokes questions about civilisations, empires and how beauty and nature can endure but do not always do so.

Archaeologists generally agree that the first civilisations were those of Sumer and Egypt, both emerging about 3000BC. The Sumerians lived in city states with the first irrigation systems, invented the wheel and set down the first written stories. Sumer was part of Mesopotamia, the Persians made it part of their empire in 538BC and, through war and the British Empire’s redrawing of borders, Sumer is now in Iraq and the irrigated farmlands have become saltpans.

Ronald Wright, the historical philosopher, doubts in A Short History of Progress whether civilisation is a story of inevitable progress. The civilised British invented the concentration camp during the Boer War, for example; the circuses held by the civilised Romans involved slaughter for entertainment; the Spanish Inquisition, Aztec sacrifices, the atom bomb and Nazi death camps were conducted or invented by civilised societies. Argentina, where the Captain’s Choice journey begins, was a neutral country until World War II was virtually won, after which Juan Peron’s government protected refugee Nazis.

Spanish conquistadors had arrived in the River Plate in 1536, the people of Buenos Aires staved off British attacks nearly three centuries later and General Jose de San Martin declared Argentina independent in 1816, proceeding to free Chile and Peru from the colonial yoke and joining forces with Simon Bolivar, the other major liberator of South America. Travellers in Buenos Aires watch the tango in varying degrees of sexiness, visit the colourful, poor district of La Boca, buy football shirts with the number 10 worn by Argentina’s troubled champion Maradona and eat huge slabs of meat. Yet history is everywhere. The people once flocked to the presidential building, the Casa Rosada, to hear Peron lecture them. Now they stand reverently before the family vault of his second wife, Eva Duarte, who died at 33 but has become at least as famous as her husband on account of the musical Evita. And they still talk about their people – up to 30,000 – who “disappeared” during the rule of the generals between 1976 and 1983.

Such human folly has not touched Iguacu Falls, higher than Niagara, wider than Victoria and one of South America’s greatest sights. Yet the name itself speaks of lost civilisations. The falls are on the border between Argentina, settled by Spain, and Brazil, by Portugal. The name, however, comes from the local Guarani Indians, meaning “Great Waters”. There are 275 falls altogether.

The statue of Christ the Redeemer towering over Rio de Janeiro speaks, too, of the rise and fall of belief systems. Ninety-five per cent of Brazilians claim a religious faith, mainly Roman Catholic. While Catholicism declines in parts of the Western world, 45 per cent of the world’s Catholics are South Americans.

Brazil is one of the world’s four fastest growing economies – one of the BRIC nations, with Russia, India and China. Growing affluence has pushed many Cariocas, Rio’s poorer inhabitants, into favelas, or shanty towns, on the city’s steep hillsides. The biggest, Rocinha, houses up to 150,000 people and is an urban slum rather than a shanty town. Successive governments vow to clear the favelas and move the residents but the people stay.

Living is cheap, only a kilometre or so from the beach, and the infrastructure in favelas includes banks with ramps for the disabled, schools, health services, cable television, fresh produce shops and well-stocked butcher shops. The garbage-strewn streets are unsightly but there is no obvious malnourishment and no begging. An entrepreneurial local offers visitors the wonderful view from his sturdy three-storey home, for a modest fee. Mikhail Gorbachev came here during the 1992 Earth Summit, held in Rio largely because of the threat to the Amazon; Michael Jackson shot a music video for his They Don’t Care About Us. Bono had his hair cut here.

Other travellers are more interested in traditional Rio delights: a mini carnivale with samba show; the cable cars to Sugarloaf Mountain; a lunch of feijoada, the meat stew with black beans; the beaches of Copacabana or Ipanema, although those looking for the mysterious girl from Ipanema are likely to be hustled into jewellery shops.

Manaus, on the Amazon, is accessible only by air or the river. It is best known for its opera house, built by rubber barons early last century. The city decayed when the rubber ran out, until the government made it a free port. Now, apart from the opera house, the only reason for visiting is to explore, at least in a small way, the Amazon, which produces about one-third of the world’s oxygen and is the planet’s most diverse botanical garden.

Manaus is named after the Indians who inhabited the region but Brazilian Indians are a declining population. In Peru, dozens of Amazonian Indians died in June while protesting against government decrees facilitating oil exploration, commercial farming and logging. In Brazil, a guide tells us the annual rise in the height of the River Negro, a tributary of the Amazon, had reached 30 metres, against the previous record of 29 metres in 1953. He blames deforestation.

We arrive in Cuzco, the old Inca capital and the oldest continuously inhabited city in South America, after sailing through half of the Panama Canal and spending two nights in Panama City, where Donald Trump is adding his tower to the growing number of skyscrapers and the traffic makes Sydney’s look free-flowing.

Francisco Pizarro arrived in Peru in 1532, captured the Inca leader Atahualpa, held him to ransom and, although the ransom was paid, had him killed. The Spaniard then marched on Cuzco, near the Urubamba Valley, the Sacred Valley of the Andes. He wrote to the king: “We can assure your majesty that it is so beautiful and has such fine buildings that it would even be remarkable in Spain.” Francisco de Toledo, a Spanish viceroy, wrote that the Incan capital showed the work of the devil because “it does not seem possible that the strength and skill of men could have made it”.

The conquerors built a new city on the foundations of the Inca architecture; temples became churches. An earthquake in 1950 badly destroyed the Church of Santo Domingo, built on top of the Coricancha, which had been covered in gold, but the Inca architecture survived. Cuzco is a UNESCO world heritage site.

The Spaniards didn’t make it to Machu Picchu, high up between the Andes and the Amazon; a cathedral does not sit on top of the Temple of the Sun. We arrive on the afternoon of the winter solstice and the sun shines on the temple. If we had been in place at precisely 7.45am, we would have witnessed the extraordinary sight of the sun’s rays shining through a particular window at a particular angle.

The Incas, inspired by their sun god, built Machu Picchu’s temples, plazas, dwellings and workshops, overseeing agricultural terraces stretching down towards the valley. Although the Incas had no written language, nor the wheel, they knew about the sun and had a sense of engineering that enabled them to carve huge stones and fit them into place on top of a mountain. Yet their empire lasted barely a century.

Dutch explorer Jacob Roggeveen arrived at Rapa Nui on Easter Island in 1722. When Captain James Cook arrived in 1774, he found the Easter Islanders poor and miserable and the moai toppled. European diseases came later and Peruvian slave raiders, stealing men to work for British industry.

Now the islanders have escaped poverty through tourism. Cheerful staff at the Hotel Gomero offer fine food and smiling service, making the most of their ghosts and asking that we come back to try for deeper understanding.

source: www.smh.com.au

Chimu Adventures offers a host of tours accross South America. From Iguacu and Brazil to Patagonia and everywhere inbetween. Chimu Adventures are proudly associated with Boomers on the go – A travel club for over 45’s, offering discounted tours for baby boomers on tours all over the world.

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Places to stay in Buenos Aires – Boutique hotels

I thought I would take the liberty to post an arcticle recently written about an Australian connection to Buenos Aires’ boutique hotel boom. With over 200 boutique hotels, there is no other city on the planet that can match Buenos Aires (BA) in the small hotel stakes. Competetion is feirce, and with Chimu Adventures we can get you into pretty much any of them. Our Buenos Aires stopover is a very popular tour and can be ammended to fit in any of the below mentioned hotels, or any that takes your fancy!. Our well travelled staff are on hand to help you make the decision! From the Finisterra 248 to Home, to Own to the Art hotel – we have you covered. That and the rest of Argentina.

Joel Gibson explores Palermo Viejo, the former ghetto that has become the hottest barrio in Buenos Aires.

It was a crowded house of a different kind that led one of Australia’s favourite musicians to become a Buenos Aires hotelier. As they gathered in the Argentine capital to see two friends marry in 2001, Crowded House bass player Nick Seymour and his fellow guests had trouble finding low-key but hip and comfortable digs that could cater for them all.

Former Depeche Mode sound engineer Tom Rixton was to marry Patricia O’Shea, the manager of a Dublin restaurant owned by U2 frontman Bono’s brother, where Seymour was a regular and had introduced the couple.

So the guest list at the wedding was a motley crew of music industry types who had grown out of trashing hotels – or were too polite to ever start. They were accustomed to the boutique haunts of Covent Garden, Darlinghurst and St Kilda; in Seymour’s words, they were “music business people who had stayed in a lot of hotels but really wanted a creative, home vibe”.

Accommodation aside, Seymour liked what he saw in the city that bills itself as the design capital of South America.

He was inspired by its live music scene, impressed by the brazenness of its famous transvestites who strut at the city’s notorious “ladyboy park” and touched by the monument to tens of thousands of “disappeared” political dissidents. And he saw plenty of similarities with Australia, where he grew up and toured with his brother, Mark, later the frontman of Hunters and Collectors.

In Argentina, as in Australia, even city dwellers cling to a rural idyll for their national myth. North America has its cowboys on ranches, Australia its drovers on the world’s largest stations and Argentina has gauchos on majestic estancias. “[The gauchos] are down-to-earth types and, some might say, kind of feral. But if you grew up in Australia, you really know where they’re coming from,” Seymour says.

But it was leafy Palermo Viejo, the former ghetto just north-west of the centre of Buenos Aires, that really appealed to Seymour. With its vintage Ford Falcons and legalised graffiti murals, the area where Jorge Luis Borges grew up writing about knife fights and street gangs experienced a revival in the 1990s on the back of a boom in the TV and film production industries. After the national economy all but collapsed in 2001, the barrio is thriving again with an atmosphere reminiscent of New York’s East Village, Sydney’s Surry Hills or Melbourne’s Fitzroy.

“They’re all culture vultures,” Seymour says of the Portenos, as the city’s urbane inhabitants are known. “They’re highly cultured people in exile, just like Australians.”

He liked Palermo so much he decided to put down roots and hatched a plan with O’Shea. “We had this hare-brained idea to start a little hotel in the neighbourhood,” Seymour says.

Eight years later, the sides of Buenos Aires’s buses declare it “the city of design” and its reputation for tango, horsey fashion and faux-Parisian barrios such as Recoleta, home of the opulent cemetery that houses Evita’s tomb, is being eclipsed by the buzz about its nightlife.

Palermo’s leafy grid of streets has been divided by realtors and hipsters into three districts – “Soho”, “Hollywood” and “Queens” – and they are alive from dusk until dawn.

Borges, Argentina’s renowned man of letters, once complained of not feeling a real man because he had never been in a fight, though he grew up watching razor gangs at war on Palermo’s streets.

But Borges was no fan of football or the gaucho myth or Evita either, making him a most unusual Argentinian. “He was much more popular overseas than he was here,” says an Argentine friend who lives below Borges’s old apartment. “He was so English. If you got in the elevator together he would say, ‘Top of the morning to you!’.”

Now the slum of Borges’s youth is giving the city a reputation for the worldliness he espoused, rather than the traditional Argentine pursuits he despised. At Osaka, celebrated chef Daniel Delgado Jitsuya fuses Peruvian and Japanese flavours in dishes such as fish anticucho with cilantro sauce. Some consider the staff snooty but a local friend rates what’s on the plate as “hands-down” BA’s best. The sesame-seared tuna is among the best we’ve eaten anywhere.

A few blocks away at La Cabrera, well-heeled locals drink champagne as they queue on the footpath for “al carbon”, beef slow-cooked over coals, a method that makes Argentinians the true kings of steak, even if it hurts to acknowledge it.

After waiting so long that we’re told to lay off the bubbles, we fall upon half a kilo of Kobe wagyu beef for about $20.

When dinner winds up about midnight, we find plenty of digestives on offer at 878, a bar masquerading as a plain doorway in a residential street. And at the notorious Club 69 on Thursday nights at Niceto nightclub, showgirls mix with drag queens and businessmen on a dancefloor full of Portenos with not a tango in sight. Argentina is a puzzling place that fancies itself as European and can put you in mind of Italy, France and Mexico as much as anywhere in South America.

Though O’Shea laments that Palermo Soho’s boho character has begun to change, the barrio remains the doorway to the “new” Buenos Aires and Home Hotel and others nearby, such as Bo Bo Hotel, have thrived as launchpads for those wanting to explore it.

It helps that these hotels are among the most impressive examples of modern design in the city. Home is designed around O’Shea and Rixton’s own collection of vintage wallpaper, teamed with polished concrete floors, sexy lighting and reupholstered vintage furniture from the area’s flea markets and second-hand dealers.

O’Shea writes and regularly updates the pocket-sized Home Guide, a sort of Lonely Planet for foodies and tragic aesthetes that ensures you won’t get caught on the wrong side of fashion. Rixton plays his impressive store of records on Friday nights in the pool garden during summer when guests wait for BA’s almost comically late nightlife to start.

Home’s customers are mostly from the US and Europe, with the number of Australians up about 15 per cent since Qantas started flying direct to Buenos Aires in November.

With a spa and staff too young to have learned the Porteno habit of curt service, the overall effect, Seymour reckons, is that of “a really well-appointed Australian beach house”.

Which is just the sort of place you wish you were after a night out in one of South America’s most hedonistic cities. Buenos Aires is a site to behold, and a must do for any lover of good cuisine and culture!

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