Monday, July 18, 2011

Public Transportation: The Real Enemy

This might just be because I'm home again and want to have a bit of a dig at cityrail, but isn't public transport just a little bit terrifying?

It's not just the smelly passengers, or the over representation of crazy f***ers, or the suspicious looking stains, or any of these side concerns. It's that trains and buses seem to be purposefully messing with us. The inexplicable delays? The sudden slowing right when you're moving between carriages? The button that magically stops working right when you're about to pass your stop? The buses that suddenly slide too close to the curb and nearly hit you in the face with a mirror [I swear this happens to me every other day]? I don't trust these beasts anymore! It's purposeful! There is no doubt in my mind about this one: I'm absolutely sure that public transport wants us all dead.

That slow building sense of mistrust we've all been developing since the first time we were allowed to ride the bus to school? We should be paying attention to that! Instead, we accept these little oddities as mere frustrations. They're expected by now! My theory: this is what they want. Eventually, we're going to start hearing about deaths on the bus. Suspicious vanishings between one train station and the next. And we'll start to accept that, too! As another frustration! Just the risks of public transport!

They'll take us out one by one, until the only folks left are those with their own cars. And that's when the humble automobile will turn on us, too. It's not robots who are going to take over humanity: it's cityrail. And all the others like it. 

You have been warned.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Architecture - South America

Well, hours in transit haven't allowed me much energy for writing. So here are some photos of buildings instead. Because hey, that's awesome.


Cordoba, Argentina

Montevideo, Uruguay

Montevideo, Uruguay

Buenos Aires, Argentina

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Leaving (for) home

On the penultimate day of quite a long trip, you would think feelings of either relief or devastation would be passing through me. Strangely, neither emotion has made an appearance, and my casual approach to completing my journey seems to be ticking people off. The nerve!

It seems I missed the memo that the ending of a trip must be accompanied by fanfare and dramatics. People are oddly perturbed when I don't tear up at the idea of leaving them behind or burst into sobs of joy because I'll see my friends back home. Don't worry (dear friends), I do love and miss you, but does it really bother you that much that I don't base my entire existence around your presence in my life? Really?

Seriously. You're not that great.

Uruguayan morning tea- another thing I'll miss
What I have missed, and what I am going to miss is food. I miss home cooked meals so badly that my first may leave me in fits at the dining table. I miss baking, I miss cooking, I miss the cheap Indian place near my house and I miss my normal supermarket. But my god I'm going to miss Argentinian icecream. Holy crap! This stuff's so good it would make Adriano Zumbo say “holy crap this stuff's so good”. (Yeah, the Z-man and I are tight)

What I won't miss is the smell of mate. Mate (the E is audible) is a herbal tea everyone here drinks at every possible opportunity. It's foul. The smell haunts me in my sleep. Hate hate hate hate hate.

But you know- it's cultural, so I guess I'll have to pretend I miss that, too. Otherwise more strange looks from fellow backpackers will result. Jeez.

Marketable Oddities

Snapped this photo on Sunday at the markets in San Telmo, Buenos Aires. These happen weekly and seem to be Argentina's answer to what to get the person who has everything.
These markets are all over the place, but the San Telmo ones are perhaps some of the greatest. They run all the way along Defensa avenue, taking over Plaza Dorrego and about ten or more buildings, courtyards and alleyways along the way. Along with unusable items like the above, they also have stalls selling food, jewellery, touristy trinkets and hundreds selling antique silverware. 

Thursday, July 7, 2011

You know you're in Argentina when...

You can purchase a motorcycle in the supermarket.

The street signs are “proudly brought to you by” various companies.

People are queued up all over the place for no apparent reason.

Your tour bus stops repeatedly to pick up hitchhikers.

At 2am, bars are just starting to open, not close.

Wearing the wrong coloured tshirt to a sports event could easily result in your death.

Naked women being strangled by feet are appropriate artworks for public shopping centres.

Your glass of wine isn't “half a glass” or “up to the line”, it's a goddamn glass of wine- as full as they can carry it.

No matter what you order, the portion is the size of your head.

You pull up at the lights and someone runs in front of your car and juggles for spare change. Like, circus stuff.

Instead of coffee or knockoff designer bags, the street vendors are selling “useful” items. And by useful we mean dog collars, tape measures, barbie dolls and coffee mugs.

The mullet surrounds you. And is still thought to be fashionable.



This post is odd since I'm writing from Uruguay. But dude, Argentina's pretty cool.

World Vision's version of Sudanese politics

"World Vision urges North and South Sudan to resolve differences ahead of 9 July independence"


There must be something horrendously wrong with me since I found this press release title to be the funniest thing I'd ever read. Yeah, yeah, my mind's messed up. But don't you just love the idea of World Vision sitting down with Omar Al-Bashir and Salva Kiir Mayardit and starting with 

"I'm sensing a lot of negativity between to two of you. Now does someone want to tell me how this argument started?"

Because I'm thinking World Vision's placid attempt to make the two kiss and make up isn't going to fix the problem.

I'm just saying.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Universal Hostel Soundtrack

One thing you notice very quickly when travelling is that there seems to be a single mix tape that gets passed around all the hostels. I thought I was imagining things at first but apparently; there really is one! Three of the hostels I've stayed in in Argentina (my current country of residence) have been associated with Hostel Inn. It was whilst I was staying at the second one that I began to notice that breakfast was always accompanied by the same backing music. Showers were the same. Don't get me started on the “party mix” that played after 10pm. Once I reached the third one, I was curious enough to ask the staff. And that's when I was let in on the big conspiracy.

They really are playing the same mixes! They have an easy listening mix, a local mix, a pop mix, and their mix mix for every day use. I knew it!

So here are some tracks to get used to if you're planning on travelling anytime soon. I heard each of these a minimum of nine or ten times in each hostel and I'm still not sick of them! I'm not sure if that says something about the music or me.

Santeria - Sublime
San Francisco - Scott McKenzie (hated it to start with, but it's become a bit of an anthem)
Feel Good Inc. - Gorillaz
Your Woman - White Town
In This World - Moby
Home - Edward Sharpe (this one's getting iffy- might not be able to handle another dozen plays)

And as an extra special bonus, here are some of the songs I am sick of:

E.T - Katy Perry
Born this Way - Lady Gaga
Party Anthem - LMFAO
Back to Black - Amy Winehouse
Pursuit of Happiness - Kid Cudi (and I really used to like this song)

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Maturity

For most of my youth, admiring travellers from a distance, I considered independent travel to be a sign of maturity. All the “adults” I knew had done it and all had returned; better for the experience. In terms of “growing up” it was of wine swilling, tax evading, lease signing, hymen tearing significance. I regarded it with a peculiar mix of trepidation and self assuredness. It was a daunting concept, but one the fourteen year old version of myself was quite certain she could handle better than anyone (and everyone) else. Ah, the follies of youth.

With all the enlightenment of twenty one measly years and several accompanied and unaccompanied overseas jaunts, I do indeed feel much more adult than perhaps I would if I had stayed home. The advantage I have over my younger self, however, is an awareness that this is bull.

I'm no adult, I'm a child playing dress-ups in entire countries. Smugly certain that I'm achieving international cultural sensitivity whilst simultaneously putting on an embarrassing representation of the Australian people.

So, to the people of Australia and those foreigners forced to tolerate me on their turf: I am truly, truly sorry. 


Not going to stop, though.

Things that felt like a good idea before I tried them

...Going clubbing from midnight til six with a 10hr bus ride awaiting me the next day.

...Using a discount bus company to get from Puerto Iguazu to Resistencia, with the massive saving of $40 pesos (about $10) and the sacrifice of my sanity.

...Taking advantage of the super cheap coffee served at football games in Buenos Aires. Later witnessing them filling up the thermos from the hot tap in the bathroom. 

...Not factoring shots and vaccines into my budget and then telling my doctor to give me everything she felt might be necessary. Just as a point: $800.

...Drinking four glasses of... something and falling asleep on Serendipity Beach without sunscreen.

...Making eye contact with beggars in Cambodia.

...Not checking myself into a French hospital because of a cold. Turns out I had whooping cough.

...Convincing myself that watching a Nat Tran video substituted reading an actual guide book.

...Letting friends choose their own present for me to bring back. (Australia limits the amount of alcohol you're allowed to bring through customs)

...Refusing to embarrass myself by asking the bus driver if I was at the right stop and instead wandering around south Mendoza for an hour and a half, convinced I was in Maipu.

...Two flavoured vodkas, chocolate liqueur, absinthe, five glasses of wine and a beer, then trying to cycle 5km back to base. Actually, I lie. No regrets for that one. It was totally awesome.

Friday, July 1, 2011

A Lament to the Volcano

O Ash! O Smoke! O Rock!
Vulcan whose might we mock,
Trembling and spewing out with mighty roar
When the skies you took will you unlock?
No more -Oh, never more!

Whether the day or night
No one has taken flight:
Had you but attention craved before
Pray, move your clouds and give my heart delight
No more -Oh, never more

(with sincere apologies to Percy Bysshe Shelley for the butchering of his work)

Luckily, my flights have yet to overlap with the Chilean volcano, but I have not been unaffected. Bariloche, a beautiful city in the south of Argentina, was supposed to be my next stop. However, with the city covered in ash and snow, (making a mucky, dark mess) the place has mostly shut down. All warnings are indicating it's not worth the time it would take to get there since most places are closed and most sites I wanted to see are still inaccessible. So yeah, Bariloche's an unfortunate no go for me.

Now, butchering classic poetry might seem excessive for the insult given here, but there is one important detail I haven't yet mentioned. Besides its river access and natural beauty, Bariloche is known for one other thing: Chocolate. This nasty bint of an eruption has kept me from the home of great chocolate in all South America. That kind of offence cannot stand. Puyehue-Cordon Caulle, you just made my list.