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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Vacation on Vacation



After spending two weeks in Santiago, it was time to see some more of this long and narrow country. After consulting many guidebooks and locals alike we had settled on the town of La Serena for our weekend trip, it’s a seaside town about 500 kilometers North of the capital, and the basis for all trips into the Elqui Valley. Danny and I spearheaded the operation, and started making plans a week in advance however birthday after birthday and going out every night we found ourselves on Skype at the last minute trying to book rooms for 14 people in a town we knew next to nothing about. Luckily we found a hotel and were able to make reservations… the only thing we needed now were bus tickets. Friday morning two people had decided not to go which left us with 11 students and our professor’s son Poncho. 12 was a good number to travel with.

On our way to class that morning we stopped by the bus station and picked up 12 one-way tickets to La Serena leaving at 2 PM. We went to class and had to slip out a little early as we had a bus to catch. We grabbed some snacks and hopped on the bus where we would remain for the next seven or eight hours. The seats reclined nicely, and it was like sitting in a lazy-boy chair without all the padding; we travel in style. After about six stops we were in La Serena and we made it to our hotel. Time for some serious vacationing;

Showered, changed our clothes, headed out on the town, found a small restaurant and squeezed 12 people into a corner and had a meal and some drinks, walked around in the cold looking for our next stop, walked into a cold dark club with overpriced drinks and too much smoke so we left, found a local bar filled with college kids where we polished off a bottle of cheap tequila and some more beer (the buying power of 12 students will get you pretty far), played some music on the jukebox, walked to a rock & roll bar, befriended a local, bought him a shot, half the group had gone home, the rest of us stayed out another hour.

Next day woke up around 11, went to the mall to get some mediocre Chinese food, walked to the beach which turned out to be a 2 mile walk, bought 5 kilos or oranges out of the back of a pickup truck, went to a light house, spun some fire on the beach, played in the sand, had an afternoon cocktail, back to our place for some pregaming before heading to some world famous observatories, drove up a mountain, bought artesian olive bread off of a chef in the park, headed to observatory, made friends with a Ukrainian woman named Roxalana (who I would only address in the voice of Sting; Rooooooooooooooooooxalana), watched the stars, the Milky Way was close enough to touch, the moon could be held in your palm, and we saw the fabled Llama in the night sky. As I tried to bend over backwards to get a better look I stumbled into a rock wall and did beautiful tuck and roll that would make a stuntman proud, except for all of my change falling out of my pocket in addition to my room key. Went into the observatory, looked at the stripes on Jupiter which made me feel so insignificant I can’t put it into words, I put my headphones on, listened to Pink Floyd, and had a very existential experience looking out into our galaxy. Got back in the van, headed down the hill and went to bed.

Next morning woke up early to head into the Elqui Valley, which is where much of Chile’s agriculture comes from. Headed up the valley to a papaya farm and winery. Papaya in Chile is very different than anywhere else. We had some jelly and a papaya juice, and bought a bottle of white wine made from pisco grapes for us to drink on the bus, and the group bought a really nice bottle for our professor as a gift. Kept heading up the valley where we went to a large hydroelectric dam that produces 5 megawatts of electricity for the city. There’s a metal structure or harp that’s supposed to make a pretty noise when the wind blows up there but it was pretty calm. We continued up to Gabriela Maestral’s house and saw where the Nobel Prize winning poet lived. They grow tons of citrus, avocados, and grapes up on theses hills, it’s really beautiful, and very warm, but all the mountaintops are still covered in snow. We walked around there, grabbed a pisco sour, and then headed down the hill to the solar restaurant. They cook all their food in solar ovens outdoors that are covered in mirrors. Ate some goat that was cooked to absolute perfection. We were all stuffed and tired when we got back on the bus and headed to the pisco distillery, but excited to see where our new favorite spirits originated. We walked around the grounds and tried some 134 Proof pisco that burned all the way down but had a great fruity taste to it. We then bought a few bottles for cheap and felt pretty good on the ride home. Got back to our hotel around 7PM, went out to dinner, got back and watched some TV and then went to bed.

Monday morning we woke up late, extended our checkout time, walked around town and grabbed some lunch. Had some amazing soup called cozuela and drank an awful shot of some apple liquor. Got back to our hotel, sat in the sun for a bit then headed down to the station. Got on our 3:15 PM double-decker bus headed for Santiago. This one was gorgeous, must have been brand new. Had a very interesting conversation over a box of wine, made it back around 9:30 PM and took the metro back to our apartment. Found out that two students had gotten Swine Flu while we were gone, switched rooms with the girls (from our bunk beds to two double beds) and got some sleep for class in the morning.

Great trip, great people, great time.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Update


Not too much going on lately, been going to class every day, and going out at night celebrating birthdays and any day really. had a good time in Valparaiso, just put some pictures up on facebook. It was nice to get out of Santiago; all the Chileans say "Santiago is not Chile," and they're definitely right. We took a harbor cruise, walked through some of the poor neighborhoods, and took one of the funiculars (elevators on a hillside). Heading North to La Serena which is a seaside town that's near some world famous observatories because the deserts nearby make it one of the darkest places in the world and the stars look incredible. In Chile the skies are s bright at night that their constellations are composed of the negative space in the night skies where the stats aren't... I can't wait.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

One Week In



So I'm just over a week into it, and have slacked on the blog per usual. Santiago is pretty great, the weather's been perfect, and according to everyone we've talked to this has been a mild winter, and as a result the smog is not as bad so we can see the mountains fairly clearly each day.

We've had class all week, and been checking out the sites after that each day. Had some great meals, and have sung an obscene amount of karaoke. Visited Pablo Neruda's second house in Isla Negra, and today we're taking a bicycle tour of Santiago. Everything feels safe and clean although one girl had her wallet stolen out of her backpack... it happens. Bought a canvas and some paint and am going to try and paint a picture of the place... we'll see how that turns out. Tomorrow we're headed to a place called Valparaiso which is supposed to be beautiful so I'll take plenty of pictures.

- Josh

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Bienvenidos a Chile


Made it to Chile around 9am yesterday morning after about 17 hours of traveling. Flying over the Andes and watching the sky turn red as the sun came over the horizon was absolutely beautiful. Changed out of my plane clothes and donned my new winter apparel that was purchased at a deep discount in summertime Boston. Got to our apartment and am rooming with my friend Dan from the YMCA three years ago, and two girls, one of which is best friends with Kristen’s roommate in China.

Hung out in our apartment for a while then left to go to the supermarket for some snack foods for our pad. Chile is the only other country I’ve been to that gives out free samples of the foods in the store… pretty awesome. Picked up some Chilean wine (3 bottles for $6 US) then came home and made an amazing breakfast sandwich with ham, egg, cheese, avocado, and salsa on a baguette and a pitcher of sangria. Went out to dinner with the group to and then wowed some Chileans with a lovely duet of Summer Nights with a Columbian girl… they then made us sing about half a dozen Michael Jackson songs, before I floored them with my rendition of Sweet Child of Mine. Epic. Kept the party going for a while with some tequila in non-regulation shot glasses (read; huge glasses) before moving onto a bar called PubLicity, an Irish pub, then back to our place for some sleep.

This morning fell back asleep after breakfast in bed (complimentary room service breakfasts daily) and strolled to our meeting place about 25 minutes late… which is acceptable in Latin countries… except this time. Almost missed the tour of Pablo Neruda’s (Nobel Prize winning poet from Chile) house that was actually really awesome and quirky. Kind of what I’d like my house to look like some day. Ate Filet Mignon for lunch with some great wine, then siesta at the apartment before we go out tonight. This place is beautiful, weather is like early fall in Boston, leaves are almost all gone and those that remain are bright orange and red. We’re surrounded by the Andes Mountains, and this city feels like it could be Denver if Denver were a fraction of the size, and closer to the Rockies.

Cerveza tiempo

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Birthday Layover

An explanation of the previous post, for those that haven't figured it out yet.

My ticket home from Hong Kong wasn't until June 30th. I was thinking about going to Taiwan and staying with a friend, but our emails missed eachother, and that was becoming less and less of a possbility, and my funds were getting smaller each day. I'd spent the last 3 nights sleeping on the floor of my friend's hotel in HK, and I was kind of getting bored in the city. Plenty to do if you've got money, although not too much for the backpacker. This is when I hatched the plan to leave 9 days early, come home and work, and enjoy Boston for a while... Of course I didn't tell anyone this.

So on the 21st I walked into the front door of my house and said hello to all of my roommates as if I'd just come home from class rather than a 16 hour flight and a 5 hour bus ride from New York City. Needless to say they were shocked... My brother couldn't believe his eyes; but this was just the beginning. The next morning I woke up early and headed down to the lovely town of Hebron, Connecticut to try and track down Kristen, whose address I vagueley remembered from exchanging addresses and credit card numbers to book flights for the past 2 months.

I found her house on the second attempt and her brother let me in the house and showed me where her room was. I walked in while she was still asleep and woke her up. I'd say it was the best surprise of all time (especially since she had been talking to me in Hong Kong (my couch in Boston) just 8 hours earlier.

Spent a few days in CT, headed to Boston, went to work, Kristen came up and stayed the last week with me. 4th of July, Tyler's birthday, my birthday yesterday, shopping for warm clothes for Chile (next Saturday's low is 28 degrees) and on Thursday I begin the second half of Travel Summer when I fly to Santiago, Chile where I'll stay for a month and spend the following month bummin' around South America. 3 Continents in 3 weeks isn't too bad.

Adios,
Josh