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![]() " *JimH*" wrote in message . .. wrote in message oups.com... Sir Rodney Smithers wrote: Chuck, Glad you had a nice trip. Was this a business trip or a vacation, or the best kind a business trip where the company paid for expenses and you spent all your time on vacation. ; ) The Mrs. and I celebrated our 35th wedding anniversary in Buenos Aires. Pleasure trip. Great place to go in the winter. The weather down there right now is about like Los Angeles in late May. Everything is in bloom, shirtsleeve weather every day. It's ridiculously cheap. Most things are priced (in pesos) at a number that would make sense espressed in dollars, or less! Example: Dinner in a very nice restarurant with appetizers, 4 glasses of wine, duck a l'orange, 3-inch thick filet mignon, and two deserts. 100 (pesos) including a generous tip. Cost in dollars? Just over 30 bucks. Took the Tren de la Costa up to Tigre' one day and enjoyed a nice boatride on what just might be the most polluted river in the western hemisphere. A non-stop parade of garbage floating by. Wow. Not prepared for that. Smelled awful, as well. There's a mjor amusement park built on the shore of the river- and while we didn't bother venturing in it seemed like an odd place to go for recreation. Since this is a short summary to rec.boats, I can't avoid mentioning politics. :-) Argentina has had a lot of political turmoil over the years. The last time somebody attempted a coup, they apparently decided to use the subway to attack the Casa Rosada (Argentine "pink house", head of the executive branch of govt. This is the building where Evita Peron used to stand on a balcony and address the crowds in the Plaza de Mayo). Across the street from Cassa Rosada is the Minstry of Economics, with a marble facade just behind the exit from the subway. It's riddled with pockmarks from machine gun fire. I guess the govt decided not to repair the marble as a "reminder" to the next batch of rebels that sneaking up on the Casa Rosada through the subway ain't exactly a bright idea. It's a place where abject poverty and incredible privilege are elbow to elbow at all times. We befriended the owner of a business who moved to Argentina from Los Angeles a few years ago. One of his associates (who spends several months a year in Miami- where he owns an art gallery), has a penthouse with, supposedly, over $5mm US in furnishings and art. Down on the street below, and on every street in Buenos Aires, the major source of income for a lot of people is sorting garbage. The shops and apartments pile all of their garbage along the curb every night for an early morning pickup. The people descend on the garbage like an army of ants, sorting out glass, cardboard, aluminum, or anything else that can be recylced. They pile bicycles, carts, wheelbarrows, and enything else that will roll to incredible heights with bundled up recyclables. Young kids 5, 6, and 7 years old are scrounging through the garbage along with their older sibliings and parents. I know that more than a few are actullay hoping to find something to eat, as one little kid came across a sack of half-eaten rolls from a restaurant and you would have thought he'd found a rond trip ticket to Disneyland. On one of our cross town train trips, (cost under a peso for a 40-minute ride), we noted a group of "huts" in a depression next to the track. Cardboard, sheet metal, scrap wood, canvas, you name it- any sort of junk material imaginable had been employed in creating these rude shelters. These weren't temporary "homeless" camps, there was laundry hanging on lines, little kids playing in the dirt, etc. After a few hundred yards of "huts", we came to a fence running perpendicular to the track. On the opposite side of the fence were some tennis courts, and what appeared to be a very exclusive tennis club. Waiters standing around serving drinks, etc, to tennis players in crisp, white shorts and tennis shirts. The whole place underscores the importance of sustaining a viable middle class and illustrates what can happen when any group is allowed to prosper at the complete expense and without regard to its fellow citizens. Argentina is rich in natural resources and if it ever gets past all of its political and economic problems it could become a very powerful country in the future. Tax deductible? I do hope to write the entire thing off as journalistic research. I needed to confirm which direction the water circles around a bathtub drain in the southern hemisphere. (Clockwise, at least at the Kempinski Park Chateau in Buenos Aires). :-) Welcome back. Glad to hear you had a great time with your wife. Congratulations also on 35 years. Quite and accomplishment Chuck. Argentina sounds a lot like what I saw in Peru. |
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